The immeasurable joy generated by the most quotidian of family functions reinforces this commitment on a daily basis. |
|
The ordinariness of their lives interested me most of all, as if in the quotidian of genius my own humdrum days might find their apotheosis. |
|
The lens in this collection is focused very carefully upon the quotidian, with all of its utterly familiar vexations. |
|
It puts an end to the cyclic character of the six strophes and opens the door back into quotidian time. |
|
The conjugal relation portrayed between husband and wife differs in both its commensal and sexual aspects from a quotidian union. |
|
As a thorough break from London's quotidian chaos, whilst retaining all the trappings of urban civilisation, I can recommend it thoroughly. |
|
Robert Elms' excellent phone-in show on BBC London often features such mundane yet satisfying acts of gaming in quotidian urban life. |
|
She loved them for their mortality, for their casual acceptance of the dark, and for their quotidian lives, so unlike her own. |
|
The orderly operation of the federal government depends upon this continuous and quotidian cooperation. |
|
Models sat cross-legged on the floor, smoking and poring over The Daily, Fashion Week's quotidian rag. |
|
What if they declare that it's time for the public to be told some of the hard truths about the intelligence community's quotidian operations? |
|
As recorded severally elsewhere in these quotidian chronicles, a frequent bringer of singular annoyances is Dr. Crow. |
|
Far from being quotidian these glamorous fancies push fashion to the limit in their testing fusion of ego-soothing props and dreamy confection. |
|
But these scenes, despite their snapshot appearance and quotidian subject matter, are scarcely authentic. |
|
Sponges, rolls of tape, a paper cup, rotating disks and coloured paper are the players in this quotidian drama. |
|
In the opening set piece a husband and wife breakfast together, a setting so quotidian its very normality is suspicious. |
|
These letters are familiar, occasionally intimate, but on the whole quotidian, recurring to her real estate woes and his ne'er-do-well relations. |
|
How does one visually compare the inconceivable with the sensible, seeable, quotidian world? |
|
Patrick, the festival was a moment in which my poetic project was able to unentangle itself from quotidian demands. |
|
At the same time, I also felt some sympathy for an 18-year old who sounds a bit freaked out by the Blogosphere's focused attention on her quotidian activities. |
|
|
We Think Alone feels at first somehow too quotidian and mundane, wholly un-artlike. |
|
Can you say a little more about how these ideas play out in design and the more quotidian worlds of publishing, packaging, branding and promotion? |
|
And given the legacy, long before then, of bonuses worthy of Croesus in a world of quotidian pay raises for the 99 percent? |
|
Her photos evoke states of mind, atmospheres, or quotidian scenes of imaginary women. |
|
Reasoning for the ordinary and quotidian experiences of observation, Diderot demanded not only the artist but also the art critic to be liberated from the studio model. |
|
How could I leave a moment early only to return to my quotidian life? |
|
The neighbours' cars came and went, but with Garda door-to-door inquiries and the chronology of the previous hours slowly coming to light, it was anything but quotidian. |
|
They lived or died by the quotidian fluctuations of form and luck, the natural run of good days and bad. |
|
Using the most direct video methods, Auder captures such quotidian rituals as shaving, applying makeup, dressing and undressing, nursing, bathing, etc. |
|
Here is an enchanted world, a sanctuary for humans as much as for animals, in which the niggling concerns of our quotidian existence seem thousands of miles away. |
|
This view is opposed to the commonsense view of dialogue as casual, quotidian, even secondary to the real workings of power and wealth. |
|
She has united communities to develop and implement innovative solutions to quotidian health problems. |
|
Other more concrete tests will continue to challenge quotidian policy-making in areas such as immigration, research and trade policy. |
|
Creator Matthew Weiner wants to ensure that even the most quotidian of details about the plot remain concealed. |
|
It also made Montreal's prominent quotidian La Presse's list of top 10 jazz albums of the year. |
|
And it divides an audience's attention from the quotidian, workaday world, whether at the Globe or the Delacorte. |
|
To read their letters is a similar exercise, even when the correspondence regards only quotidian matters. |
|
Freeman has imagined an elaborate narrative set in a fantastic world, but he creates it from the easily overlooked sections of our quotidian existence. |
|
Videos uploaded by some mothers and fathers are less of a reach out than a simple continuation of their quotidian Internet habits. |
|
The radical stakes of Pauline Bastard's work are articulated around the material constraints of the quotidian. |
|
|
The cover sports a photograph of Dove's grandparents, giving a sense of the ordinary people whose quotidian lives will be fleetingly sketched within. |
|
Railway and bus stations are not significant sites for homeless persons seeking to perform their quotidian functions, due in part to the very limited number of stations and their small scale. |
|
Vonnegut and Auster, however, keep on their fantastic plane undeviatingly, as if there were no other, whereas DeLillo gives signs of wanting to drop us down into the quotidian mundane, where we can be wounded. |
|
If I could meet that fancy-monger, I would give him some good counsel, for he seems to have the quotidian of love upon him. |
|
Kalighat painting originated in 19th century Kolkata as a local style that reflected a variety of themes including mythology and quotidian life. |
|
I regret that the effect of these statements is a denial of the observation of initial quotidian paroxysms following artificial inoculation. |
|
They are finding the remains of ovens for smelting copper and preparing food as well as quotidian objects such as mats and storage pots. |
|
Grids are used for such quotidian items as stationery, business cards, mailing labels, hang tags, instruction manuals, etc. |
|
Tragedy demanded verse, not the quotidian prose of comedy, and verse usually supplied some form of end rhyme. |
|
He does tend to chop and change his beliefs pretty quickly in his search for that elusive truth that lies beyond his quotidian existence. |
|
Parker's most recent show marked a return to the less sensationalistic, more quotidian concerns of her early practice. |
|
His music, devoted to the cult, pupils, family, friends, clients of the Café Zimmermann etc. is a quotidian work, at the antipode of the artist's role as we can imagine today. |
|
They weren't political, as such — they were writers who spoke not about how the quotidian could be radicalized but about their own personal radicalization. |
|
But this deliberate minimalism expresses a greater complexity, like those attitudes, postures and gestures that we learn and which become part of quotidian banality and its determinisms. |
|
But behind Brčko's quotidian façade lies a novel political experiment. |
|
L'½il dans L'Front, an initiative by two local emerging artists, gently introduces art into the moments and spaces of quotidian life in a vibrant and active manner. |
|
It examines with a wealth of sources the crowd's quotidian and proto-nationalist, sectarian presence, as well as its more frequently explored radicalism. |
|
Lack of water is a problem that profoundly affects the quotidian of the villages located in these Anti-Atlas mountains, and more particularly the lives of women and young women who are entrusted with the water-chore. |
|
His response is to see the many as amenable to the one and numerousness as the upper limit of quotidian thought and speech. |
|
The artist's research has led her to explore the individual's direct relationship with organizational structures, quotidian functions and public spaces in a specific urban social setting. |
|
|
The continual capacity of this terrorist outfit to wreak havoc in Nigeria and destabilise it has gone beyond alarming proportions and entered the realm of a quotidian curse. |
|
Through short stories infiltrating quotidian life, Pawar employs dexterous language to investigate social injustices, familial relationships, and the realm of morality. |
|