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The most beautifully realized room is the circle of Tiffany-style stained glass against which intricate dresses, freeing once-corseted bodies, and with hints of exoticism, showcase the beauties of the Brooklyn collection.
She also performed with Ms. Gruesser and Mr. Emelianoff in her piano trio, "Big Sky" (2000), a brief but emotionally hefty work in which intricate piano figuration is set against beautifully shaped string lines.
Her study of the Pointillists, particularly Georges Seurat, led her to experiment with colour juxtaposition and optical effects, and under the influence of Victor Vasarely and others, her work took on a geometric abstraction, in which intricate patterns of black and white and, later, alternating colours were calculated to produce illusions of movement and topography.
This allows the effective use of simplex tetrahedra for which intricate contact conditions as well as mesh generation over complex evolving geometries can be easily treated––without the volumetric locking typically associated with conventional low order displacement-based elements.
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She dubs the aesthetic couture-to-wear which means intricate embroidery and fabrics mixed with prints and T-shirt shapes.
But the Gaga appearance didn't carry over into her music, which is intricate, articulate and closer to concert halls than dance clubs.
Well suited to the dance of that era, which featured intricate footwork, this notation became so popular at court and among the educated classes that, for a while, books of collected dances were published annually.
The vistas, however, are probably best enjoyed from the residence's upper balcony, which has intricate wrought iron lacework that is an original feature of the house and was cast at the well-known Wagga Iron Foundry.
Since then, it has published high-end books like "Pantone: Color Puzzles," released this month, which uses intricate drawings and puzzle pieces to teach children the differences between colors like peacock blue and nighttime blue.
The puzzle is so named because the picture, originally attached to wood and later to paperboard, was cut into its pieces with a jigsaw, which cuts intricate lines and curves.
The Juilliard's playing was pristine, with the two inner voices -- the second violinist Ronald Copes and the violist Samuel Rhodes -- forming a single linchpin around which the intricate quartet machinery whirred.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com