Examples of using Smithson in English and their translations into Ukrainian
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
Amy Smithson.
Smithson Alison.
James Smithson.
Smithson, Alison, and Peter.
Robert Smithson.
James Smithson was born in France about 1765.
Robert Smithson.
Robert Smithson,"Spiral Jetty" in mid-April 2005.
Charles Henry Smithson.
Smithson Tennant" For his various Chemical Discoveries communicated to the Society and printed in several volumes of the Philosophical Transactions".
Peter Smithson.
Will you go with us, Mr. Smithson?
James Smithson.
Your thoughts on this, Mr. Smithson?
Who helped Smithson write it?
Its founders are considered to be English architects Alison andPeter Smithson.
This unusual bequestwas even more strange in that James Smithson has never been to the United States of America in his lifetime.
Tennant Smithson Smithson Tennant" For his various Chemical Discoveries communicated to the Society and printed in several volumes of the Philosophical Transactions".
Rosalind Krauss argues that by 1968 artists such as Morris,LeWitt, Smithson and Serra had"entered a situation the logical conditions of which can no longer be described as modernist.".
The opening mimes were filmed on the Plaza of The Economist Building in Piccadilly, London,a project by‘New Brutalists‘ Alison and Peter Smithson constructed between 1959- 64.
According to US chemical weapons expert Amy Smithson, this is so the offensive weapon's production could more readily be hidden within a legitimate commercial industry.
In 1784 he accompanied Faujas St. Fond in his journey to the Western Isles, and in the English translation of the Travels in England,Scotland and the Hebrides(1799) Smithson is spoken of as"M.
Before traveling to Ukraine, Rundo and another RAM member, Robert Smithson, visited the German town of Ostritz to compete in a mixed martial tournament at the Shield and Sword festival, a white power convergence held on Hitler's birthday.
The discoveries of iridium(named after Iris, goddess of the rainbow, because of the variegated colour of its salts) and osmium(from the Greek word for“odour,” because of the chlorinelike odour of its volatile oxide)were claimed by the English chemist Smithson Tennant in 1803.
Rosalind Krauss argues by 1968 artists such as Morris,LeWitt, Smithson and Serra had"entered a situation the logical conditions of which can no longer be described as modernist."[12] The expansion of the category of sculpture to include land art and architecture,"brought about the shift into postmodernism."[52].
His use of the term covered the period 1966- 1976 and applied to the work of Eva Hesse, Keith Sonnier,Richard Serra and new work by former minimalists Robert Smithson, Robert Morris, Sol LeWitt, and Barry Le Va, and others.[38] Process art and anti-form art are other terms describing this work, which the space it occupies and the process by which it is made determines.[51].
We call it site specific. One of the things that Smithson wanted to emphasize was a kind of a distinction between, you know, the site of the work of art, and the traditional site of the work, which would be a gallery or a museum or private home and kind of breaking down barriers, saying, is a work of art only to be contained by museum or can we also find it elsewhere?