Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Graffiti" ¶ 117
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Oxford and University
The compilation work was undertaken by a number of interested crystallographers in the Department of Mineralogy of the University Museum at Oxford.
Editors for Volumes 1, and 2, were M. W. Porter and the late R. C. Spiller, both of Oxford University.
Now, not only are there considerably more laity as students and professors at Oxford, but there are also numerous houses of religious orders existing in respectable and friendly relations with the non-Catholic members of the University.
Essays on Plato and Aristotle, Oxford University Press, USA.
Oxford, UK and Indianapolis, US, The Fridtjol Nansen Institute & The International African Institute in association with James Currey and Indiana University Press.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1999.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.
* Robin Le Poidevin, ( 2010 ) Agnosticism: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-957526-8
* Guide to the Elements Revised Edition, Albert Stwertka, ( Oxford University Press ; 1998 ) ISBN 0-19-508083-1
New York: Oxford University Press.
F. Rahman, Avicenna's Psychology: An English Translation of Kitab al-Najat, Book II, Chapter VI with Historical-philosophical Notes and Textual Improvements on the Cairo Edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1952.
* Lewis Ayres, Nicaea and its Legacy: An Approach to Fourth-Century Trinitarian Theology ( New York: Oxford University Press, 2004 ).
* Sarah Parvis, Marcellus of Ancyra And the Lost Years of the Arian Controversy 325-345 ( New York: Oxford University Press, 2006 ).
* Hiscock, Eric C .; Cruising Under Sail, second edition, 1965 Oxford University Press ; ISBN 0-19-217522-X
An Annotated Anthology of Hymns, Oxford University Press.
* Peter Heather, The Fall of the Roman Empire: A New History of Rome and the Barbarians, Oxford University Press ( 2006 ) pg. 151
: Platonists on Aristotle from Antiochus to Porphyry, Oxford University Press, pp. 191 215.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.
* Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium, Oxford University Press, 1991.
* The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium, Oxford University Press, 1991.
Oxford University Press.
* Alexander Fleming: The Man and the Myth, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1984.

Oxford and Press's
With the advent of computer technology and increasingly harsh trading conditions, the Press's printing house at Oxford was closed in 1989, and its former paper mill at Wolvercote was demolished in 2004.
Hubert Foss, the Oxford University Press's musical editor during the 1920s and 1930s, writes that rather than creating his music from the known possibilities of instruments, Delius " thought the sounds first " and then sought the means for producing these particular sounds.
Furthermore, some of her own literary works have been included in Oxford University Press's Early Modern Women Poets: 1520 1700: An Anthology, as well as World Poetry: An Anthology of Verse from Antiquity to Our Time.
Since 2008, Grove Music Online has served as a cornerstone of Oxford University Press's larger online research tool Oxford Music Online.

Oxford and art
* Smith, Gary Scott, Heaven in the American Imagination ( Oxford University Press ; 2011 ) 339 pages ; draws on art, music, folklore, sermons, literature, psychology, and other realms in a study of how Americans since the Puritans have imagined heaven.
The Oxford English Dictionary defines the term " Kung-fu " as " a primarily unarmed Chinese martial art resembling karate.
The undergraduate literary and art magazine at Miami University in Oxford, OH, is named Inklings.
In 1861, the decorative arts firm of Morris, Marshall, Faulkner & Co .( later described by Nicholas Pevsner as the ' beginning of a new era in Western art ') was founded with Morris, Rossetti, Burne-Jones, Ford Madox Brown and Philip Webb as partners, together with Charles Faulkner and Peter Paul Marshall, the former of whom was a member of the Oxford Brotherhood, and the latter a friend of Brown and Rossetti.
The Grove Dictionary of Art will have none of this confusion, and says flatly: " Over the centuries the word has been applied to a wide variety of winding and twining vegetal decoration in art and meandering themes in music, but it properly applies only to Islamic art ", so contradicting the definition of 1888 still found in the Oxford English Dictionary: " A species of mural or surface decoration in colour or low relief, composed in flowing lines of branches, leaves, and scroll-work fancifully intertwined.
The Ashmolean Museum in Oxford opened on 24 May 1683 as the world's first university art museum.
Atkinson-Wood studied fine art at the Ruskin School, Oxford University, where she performed with Rowan Atkinson.
The earliest use of the term " state of the art " documented by the Oxford English Dictionary dates back to 1910, from an engineering manual by Henry Harrison Suplee ( 1856-post 1943 ), an engineering graduate ( University of Pennsylvania, 1876 ), titled Gas Turbine: progress in the design and construction of turbines operated by gases of combustion.
* Felix Slade-a lawyer and philanthropist, who endowed three Slade Professorships of Fine Art at Oxford University, Cambridge University and University College London, and bequeathed most of his art collection to the British Museum-lived and died in Walcot Place, off Kennington Road.
The Ferdowsi Library, ( formerly the Ashraf Pahlevi Library ), specialising in Persian literature, art, history and culture, is unique among the college libraries of Oxford.
The first was Letters from Oxford, a collection of letters written by Trevor-Roper between 1947 60 to his close friend, the American art collector Bernard Berenson.
In conjunction with Sir Henry Acland, Liddell did much to encourage the study of art at Oxford, and his taste and judgment gained him the admiration and friendship of Ruskin.
In an episode of In our time broadcast on Thu, 20 Oct 2005, 21: 30 on BBC Radio 4, Angie Hobbs, Lecturer in Philosophy, University of Warwick ; Miriam Griffin, Fellow of Somerville College, Oxford ; and John Moles, Professor of Latin, University of Newcastle discussed with Melvyn Bragg the idea that Antisthenes and Diogenes in ancient Greece practiced a form of performance art and that they acquired the epithet of cynic which means " dog " due to Diogenes behaving repeatedly like a dog in his performances.
Out of 132 universities and colleges, the OU was ranked 43rd in the Times Higher Education Table of Excellence in 2008, between the University of Reading and University of the Arts London ; it was rated highly in specific subjects such as art history, sociology ( below Oxford and Cambridge ) and development studies.
Clark was educated at Winchester College and Trinity College, Oxford, where he studied the history of art.
* Frederic Seebohm, The Oxford Reformers ; J. H. Lupton, Life of John Colet ( 1887 ); art, in The Times, July 7, 1909.
His father, Martin Robertson, was an internationally distinguished professor of classical Greek art and archeology at the University of London and Oxford University, and in his youth Thomas lived or worked in France, Italy and Greece.
Burne-Jones was closely involved in the rejuvenation of the tradition of stained glass art in Britain ; his stained glass works include the windows of St. Philip's Cathedral, Birmingham, Holy Trinity Church, Sloane Square, Chelsea, St Martin's Church in Brampton, St Michael's Church, Brighton, Cumbria, the church designed by Philip Webb, All Saints, Jesus Lane, Cambridge and in Christ Church, Oxford.
He studied art at the Dartington College of Arts and the Oxford School of Art, then part of the Oxford College of Technology, which eventually became Oxford Brookes University.
From 1885 to 1886 Ramsay held the newly created Lincoln and Merton professorship of classical archaeology and art at Oxford and became a fellow of Lincoln College ( honorary fellow 1898 ).
For the British War Memorials Committee, he produced a design for a " Hall of Remembrance " ( 1918 ) that would have been in the form of an art gallery, and for New College, Oxford, he created a design for a tiny memorial chapel ( 1919 ).

0.394 seconds.