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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a canvas at a" is not complete and lacks context, making it difficult to determine its correctness in written English.
It could be used in contexts related to art, design, or metaphorical expressions, but it needs additional information to convey a clear meaning.
Example: "She painted a beautiful landscape on a canvas at a local art studio."
Alternatives: "a painting on a" or "a piece of art at a".
Exact(1)
That is, we can see he used a lens... in a camera obscura to produce a sketch at one time, then used a lens in an epidiascope to transfer, and magnify, that image onto a canvas at a different time".
Similar(59)
Ms. Kogan's body too is used as a canvas; at one point a videotaped monologue she gives is beamed onto her, so she is conversing with (and on) herself.
I had a terrific time jumping around to the sounds of D.J.'s from the Oakland collective thePeople and watching the visual artist Mear One paint a surrealist urban landscape on a canvas at this month's Big Idea Night.
Imagine a canvas at the so-called Crossroads of the World: Artists are being invited to take over the giant screens of Times Square.
"I think about the body as a canvas, at least when I'm moving, and [I think about] where I allocate people's attention.
Create a new canvas at a random position.
Other finders are luckier – in 2012, Beth Feeback, an artist from North Carolina, picked up a large canvas at a charity shop for $9.99.
Using a magnifying glass and tiny brushes, he spent months meticulously transposing the postcard picture, square by square, onto canvas at a larger scale.
Fab 5 Freddy: Bedazzling Las Vegas, one canvas at a time.
Compounding the problem is the fact that many of the people and organizations who once authenticated such works on behalf of prospective buyers, hopeful sellers, or the lucky guy who found a long-lost canvas at a yard sale, have closed their doors.
But letters show that whatever his mental illness consisted of, it was not a matter of a madman raging at a canvas, or a lunatic expressing distorted, hallucinogenic visions in paint.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com