Example sentences of "[v-ing] at [art] " in BNC.
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31 | Opening at the Brixton Academy , the tour visited the most gigantic venues in the south before moving slowly northwards and back again to climax at the ultra-prestigious Royal Albert Hall . |
32 | ‘ Nursery Rhymes : Etchings by Paula Rego ’ is a new South Bank Centre touring exhibition , opening at the School of Art & Design in Falmouth , and continuing until 10 February . |
33 | The exhibition opening at the Hayward Gallery towards the end of this month ( 21 May-2 August ) is the most significant presentation of the art of Magritte since the survey mounted for the Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brussels and the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris in 1978–79 . |
34 | The Bund will therefore bear the responsibility for the DM1 million ( £357,000 ; $714,000 ) insurance premium for the exhibition opening at the Bonn Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle on 16 October , ‘ Great Collections I : The Museum of Modern Art , New York , From Cézanne to Pollock ’ ( until 10 January 1993 ) . |
35 | For perhaps only the second time since the Turner Prize was inaugurated in 1984 , the jury , comprising Nicholas Serota , Director of the Tate Gallery , Marie-Claude Beaud , Director of the Cartier Foundation , Robert Hopper , Director of the Henry Moore Sculpture Trust , Time Out 's art critic , Sarah Kent , and collector and director of CNN 's European operations , Howard Karshan , has compiled a genuinely balanced short-list of artists whose work will be shown in an exhibition opening at the Tate Gallery at the beginning of this month ( 4–29 November ) and from whom a winner will be announced at a formal dinner taking place at the museum on 24 November . |
36 | Long considered one of the leading exponents of British Pop Art , and a major figure painter of his generation , Patrick Caulfield is the subject of a survey covering his thirty-year career and opening at the Serpentine Gallery towards the end of this month ( 24 November-17 January 1993 ) . |
37 | Then she did get me an appointment with this new clinic that was opening at the hospital , but it was too late . |
38 | There would be a two-week run at the Theatre Royal , Norwich , before opening at the Prince of Wales Theatre on 23 September 1976 . |
39 | Now everyone hopes the curtain is opening at the Roses Theatre on a successful and prosperous future . |
40 | This will be followed by a share opening at the bank 's Redcar branch on March 12 . |
41 | So this year I 'm doing just one new production and I 'm really glad we 're opening at the Tramway . |
42 | A loud banging at the front door stopped both of them in their tracks . |
43 | She paused to sip her tea , and Ella , fuming at the delay , began to wonder if that were all Dotty would say . |
44 | Still fuming at the insensitive arrogance of the man she turned and left the office . |
45 | ‘ Wenner ’ , recalls Marcuson , ‘ was fuming at the bit . |
46 | It may well appear to be somewhat deserted at first , but please do n't forget that these fish will grow quite large , and fast , so the lack of crowding at the start will help towards the fish 's comfort , a point which we must never fail to overlook . |
47 | Without a word the South African began to scoop up the other twenty-four piles and tip them one by one into a stout canvas bag with drawstring at the top . |
48 | In view of the terms in which he was later to express his enthusiasm for Wagner , it is interesting to note what it was that first seriously attracted him : nor the morbid metaphysical-flavoured world of romance , the hypnotic emotional intensity and musical " modernity " of Tristan , representing at the time , the high point of Wagner 's most distinctive line of development ; nor indeed the available parts of the similarly " modern " , but emotionally more robust , Ring ; rather , the musically " reactionary " Meistersinger that deferred to traditional expectations of harmony , tonality and musical organization and depicted through the medium of " healthy " comic opera the successful struggle of artistic genius against stifling Hanslickian convention . |
49 | During the summer we had serious problems , we had a report on children homes which erm which y'know which pointed out a few things y'know that had n't been doing well , mainly , mainly in defence of erm because they did put in a lot of effort into fostering y'know and the children homes y'know need , as Councillor would y'know will , they did a very good job actually representing at the time . |
50 | But few critics are laughing at a time when ex-Klansman David Duke is able seriously to contend the governorship of Louisiana . |
51 | ‘ Lady Agnes told me , laughing at a virgin pretending to be pregnant ! ’ |
52 | THE Princess of Wales arrived smiling and laughing at a Christmas concert last night . |
53 | ‘ And I could n't see , so we could n't do any more the things we used to — just little things , like watching the sunset , or laughing at a holopic when we turned out the lights in bed , or me reading a poem to her . |
54 | ‘ You 'll fall by the wayside , ’ said Hugh , laughing at a vehemence he could well understand . |
55 | A faint smile crossed Lancaster 's face , as though he was laughing at a cruel joke in dubious taste . |
56 | ‘ Fancy laughing at a woman in that condition ! ’ |
57 | MPs may be worked up over tonight 's vote , but Merseyside 's comedians in gyms , golf courses and top hotels whiled away the day laughing at a brave new Europe full of German humour , Italian efficiency and French bathing habits . |
58 | They sat on the sofa and watched The Two Ronnies , laughing at the same jokes . |
59 | The sky clears in the childbirth sequence because of Shatov 's sublime murmurings about the arrival of a new human being , but also because the midwife has her sleeves rolled up , because she is attacking a difficult and strenuous professional job , organizing essentials , masterminding the whole exercise , scolding Marie Shatov who allowed Shatov to get between her and the family in which she was a governess ‘ with the egotistical object of marrying you , laughing at the distraught husband on his knees unable either to bear the sound or block his ears before the birth ; and when all is tidied up , ‘ after some pleasant–es about ‘ the happy couple' ’ which were not without a touch of contempt and superciliousness , she went away as well satisfied as before . ’ |
60 | When he shows a film or summat his room 's like a little cinema — you know , people sitting round watching the telly in the dark , and smoking and laughing at the funny bits and that . |