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The use of the word "generative" in the discussion of art has developed over time. The use of "Artificial DNA" defines a generative approach to art focused on the construction of a system able to generate unpredictable events, all with a recognizable common character.
Google Arts & Culture (formerly Google Art Project) is an online platform of high-resolution images and videos of artworks and cultural artifacts from partner cultural organizations throughout the world, operated by Google.
Narciso Ibáñez Menta action figure. A Light in the Window (1942) Historia de crímenes (1942) Cuando en el cielo pasen lista (1945) El que recibe las bofetadas (1947) Corazón (1947) Vidalita (1949) Almafuerte (1949) La muerte está mintiendo (1950) Derecho viejo (1951) La calle junto a la luna (1951) La bestia debe morir (1952) End of the ...
"Un lugar en el caribe" by Juan Carlo Fanconi (2017) "La condesa", by Mario Ramos (2021) Honduran cinema has had a boom in the last decade, the growth of filmmakers and the support by institutions and private companies to contests has motivated young students of careers related to communications to create their own short films, documentary ...
The Casa del Arte José Clemente Orozco (more commonly known simply as the Casa del Arte, "House of Art" or Pinacoteco, "Art Gallery") is a Chilean art museum on the campus of the University of Concepción, in Concepción. It is situated on the corner of Chacabuco and Larenas, [1] facing the Plaza Perú.
Gladiator II might seem too wild to be believed — Colosseum rhinos and baboons and sharks, oh my! — but it’s based on real-life Roman history and people. Just as Joaquin Phoenix played ...
The single exception was in Two Bridges at the end of the historic Lower East Side, on a block that once served as home to Soviet spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, and has been a landing spot for ...
La Calavera Catrina. La Calavera Catrina ("The Dapper [female] Skull") had its origin as a zinc etching created by the Mexican printmaker and lithographer José Guadalupe Posada (1852–1913). The image is usually dated c. 1910 –12. Its first certain publication date is 1913, when it appeared in a satiric broadside (a newspaper-sized sheet of ...