vimarsana.com

Page 30 - மேரிலாந்து நிறுவனம் கல்லூரி ஆஃப் கலை News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Small paintings Crossing by Brooksby - Carré d artistes

Sculptor Bill Burgess will leave a legacy with Continuum, other art work

Ralph Sutton worked on the installment of a sculpture fountain in America the Beautiful ParkThursday morning. He works for Springs Fabrication Inc. and was actually were inside the hollow area tightening bolts. The stainless steel sculpture created by artist Bill Burgess and architect Dave Barber will rotate four revolutions a hour on a base. A wall of water will flow from the top of the circle and spiral into recirculation at the base. The piece called Continuum by the designers, was inspired by water and the circle of life said Burgess. photo by carol lawrence

[WEBCAST] Artist Roundtable: Visuality

Royal Sumikat. Join Blaffer Art Museum, Asia Society Texas Center, and the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft for this artist roundtable, held in conjunction with  About the Artists Stephanie Syjuco works in photography, sculpture, and installation, moving from handmade and craft-inspired mediums to digital editing and archive excavations. Her recent work has focused on how photography and image-based processes are implicated in the construction of racialized, exclusionary narratives of history and citizenship. Currently The Visible Invisible is on display at Blaffer Art Museum through January 10. Syjuco has exhibited her work widely nationally and internationally, including at the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, the MoMA/P.S.1, the Whitney Museum of American Art, The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, The 12th Havana Bienal, The 2015 Asian Art Biennial (Taiwan), among others. Smithsonian Artist Research Fellow at the National Museum of American History in Washing

Research news tip sheet: Story ideas From Johns Hopkins Medicine

Credit: Johns Hopkins Medicine Media Contact: Vanessa McMains, Ph.D., vmcmain1@jhmi.edu Recent interest in developing therapies from hallucinogenic drugs has scientists exploring how these chemicals work in the brain. Recently, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers imaged the brains of people who had vaped salvinorin A, a drug used in Native Mexican rituals, and found that, like other psychedelic drugs, it increased the communication across parts of the brain. However, the primary effects of the drug that they observed as reported in their paper published Oct. 2, 2020, in Scientific Reports suggest that salvinorin A results in more random or disconnected signaling within the default mode network, which is the part of the brain most active when a person is sitting still, relaxing, daydreaming or otherwise not engaged in externally directed mental exercise.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.