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In class we talked about how Paula Scher's Swatch add was during the Postmodernism movement and how it is very similar to Herbert Metters Swiss Add, and I was actually looking at this picture as Bess was talking about it. And it fascinated me how every medium of art are interpreted or copied per-say. Also most artists struggle to articulate the definition of "postmodernism" and during this struggle to find a definition I explored to find a clear meaning and running into this made it quite clear that it isn't something in particular or exactly defined, its a lose term of a new take at things. This is kind of what postmodernism is about, reinventing, reinterpreting, or just re-thinking. Even though they are very similar it is still different, but with a "postmodernism" style as the movement was about "re-thinking" I thought this was a perfect example, and in class I was searching other examples of this happening, and I stumbled upon many websites that actually post hundreds of famous pieces of art that were copied (for the lack of a better term)
Basic #Communication_Skills
#Dubai - From 03 August 07 August 2014
Introduction:
This course designed to develop Basic communication techniques and strategies. Communication goes far beyond the actual words that you say. More importantly it's how you say it and the way that you act while you're saying it
Link: www.itc.edu.sa/coursedetail.php?itemid=637&cat=24
Tel: +966 920007772
Fax: +966 920007775
E-mail: info@itc.edu.sa
Website: www.itc.edu.sa
Boston University is one of four universities I attended for various lengths of time back in the Sixties. At one point I was even enrolled here, in what used to be called BU's School of Public Relations and Communications, or SPRC.
One day they changed the name to the School of Public Communication (SPC), and now they've changed it again, to the College of Communication (COM). Maybe there were other names along the way. Must be a fun time when they have a reunion or something and people who went to the same school walk around with names tags variously labeled COM, SPC, and SPRC -- especially these days when "SPRC" stands for BU's Suicide Prevention Resource Center.
Forestry communication and digital media - learn, practice, grow workshop
Photograph by Pilar Valbuena/FAO
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know.
Sacred Heart University’s School of Communication, Media & the Arts held the annual graduate commencement ceremony on August 17, 2019, at the Martire Center for the Liberal Arts. Photo by Mark F. Conrad
Beth Bergstrom in the Communication Disorders and Sciences clinic on the campus of Eastern Illinois University in Charleston, Illinois on December 3, 2019. (Jay Grabiec)
In December 2016, London College of Communication celebrated the work of postgraduate students from the Design School with an exhibition as part of LCC Postgraduate Shows 2016.
Courses featured were: MA Animation, MA Design Management & Cultures, MA Games Design, MA Graphic Branding & Identity, MA Graphic Media Design, MA Illustration & Visual Media, MA Interaction Design Communication and MDes Service Design Innovation.
Image © Errin Yesilkaya
We take it for granted. Turn on the TV and there is Anderson Cooper. Keep an eye on the computer and chat with your son, half a world away in the wilds of Afghanistan. Click "publish" and an image flies through the air and lands on a website hosted god knows where.
These are things I only dreamed about as a kid. My kids think it's normal.
As we move into 2009, we can look back on 20 years of communication development. Back then we were so pleased that the telefax had been invented and even happier when an automatic telephone/fax switch became available. Then we started using the computer for receiving telefax, and we needed a modem for that. But suddenly people demanded documents by e-mail! What was that? We found out what it was and joined up, but the 33.6 kb/sec 'fax' modem could not cope so we bought a 56 kb/sec modem Wow! What a speed! - or so we thought then. As the years went by, DSL came - initially with 512 kbit/sec in 2004 and two years later we upgraded to a 1024 kbit/sec connection. Another two years went by and with yet another new modem we were at 2048 kbit/s, and last year we upgraded to 4 Mbit/sec. Yesterday we changed ISP and installed a new modem again - 8 Mbit/sec, which is apparently all our 50 year-old "tied-together-with-knots" telephone lines can support.
From the rear: c. 1990 - Tel/fax switch; 1991 - 33.6 Kbit/s fax modem; 1995 - 56 kbit/s; 2004 - 512 kbit/s to 2 Mbit/s DSL; 2007 - 4 Mbit/s DSL modem - all going for recycling.
Statue by Terry Allen, 1995 entitled "Modern Communication".
Located in Kansas City, Missouri (near city hall)
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