Market Price
How to prove
An object
Has value
We always need to establish a relative worth, utility, or importance.
“On assessment: measure what you value instead of valuing only what you can measure.” – Andy Hargreaves
How to prove
An object
Has value
We always need to establish a relative worth, utility, or importance.
“On assessment: measure what you value instead of valuing only what you can measure.” – Andy Hargreaves
Light interacts
Material of the door
Eyes and brains process
Our experience of the world is what shapes our understanding of it.
“It is only the left (brain) hemisphere that thinks there is certainty to be found anywhere.” – Iain McGilchrist
Limestone skin
Dramatic enclosed
Two-story atrium
The Chrysler Museum exists to enrich and transform lives through experiences.
“The new atrium, Huber Court, would quickly become the Chrysler’s grand community living room, hosting countless Museum functions and other events.” – Ashley Grove Mars
Ready to run
Cast aluminum
Musculature
The motion and movement of the men and horse is visible from all sides.
“That was my one idea and that has always been my one idea in doing anything — to try to get the animal itself without thinking about how it was done or any definite style, you see.” – Anna Hyatt-Huntington
Embodied nature
Sense of enclosure
Illumination perspective
As part of a lived experience, our understanding of the world is fundamentally shaped by our interaction with it.
“Nothing is more difficult than to know precisely what we see.” – Maurice Merleau-Ponty
Brussels sprout slaw
Black bean puree
Micro cilantro
Service with a smile.
“When it comes to food truck branding, consistency across all platforms is crucial.” – Emil Gawkowski
Optical aberrations
Unbridled possibilities
Employ abstraction
The Helios 44 lens has the ability to produce swirly bokeh in certain situations when the subject and background distances are just right.
“The combination of mechanical vignetting, astigmatism, and field curvature creates the swirl.” – Dusty-Lens
Representational
Blue-sky brown-wall
Abstraction
Although visual experience is based on observable phenomena, emotion and personal bias manifest influence.
“Never underestimate the power of dreams and the influence of the human spirit.” – Wilma Rudolph
Energy waves
Waiting position
Feeding station
Sometimes energy-field surface-areas become more apparent.
“The longer you stare at them, the wider the energy field expands until more colors begin to show themselves.” – Christina Westover
Vibrant current
Randomness pulsates
Incessant becoming
The intellect seeks to impose order, carving up sensation into discrete units for practical purposes.
“The element of chance…is precisely what allows for the appearance of the new.” – Henri Bergson