A number of galleries and artists studios will be open until 6 pm on Saturday, including Charles Fazzino Art Studio at Museum Editions (32 Relyea Pl., NR; 914-654-9370; www.fazzino.com ); Barry L. Mason and Emlyn Taveras at Lifestorage Building (320 Washington Street, Mount Vernon, NY; 914 649-2399; www.barrymasonart.com ); and Acupuncture Unlimited/Amelia E. Jones (38 Lakeside Dr., NR; 914-356-2327), where visitors can enjoy an Artist Market with artists from Got Art?, Inc. plus a spoken word stage/open mic with stories and music from the African Diaspora by Therese Folkes Plair.
Organized by the non-profit New Rochelle Council on the Arts (NRCA) ArtsFest spotlights the diversity of arts and artists in our community, with open studios, live music and dance, film screenings, pop-up art exhibits, a classic car show focused on design, a spoken word event with the acclaimed READ650, and interactive activities for all ages. This year ArtsFest will feature 40 participating venues, representing the work of hundreds of artists. For a complete calendar of events visit www.newrochellearts.org.
Pop Art Studio 9 Patch
Download: https://tinourl.com/2vJyNU
A) a metapopulation structure for modelling the PopART community (inside patch) and a surrounding area (outside patch); B) within each patch the codebase is partitioned into several processes related to demographics, sexual partnerships, HIV transmission and disease progression, and interventions; C) the nature of the model being individual-based allows detailed output from the model including the complete HIV transmission network.
After turning 14, individuals may form new heterosexual partnerships throughout the remainder of their lives, at age- and sexual activity level-specific rates, up to their maximum number of concurrent partners at any given time. Key parameters related to partnership formation and dissolution are provided in Table 1. We assume independence between the effects of age and sexual activity level on the rate of partnership formation. Partnerships are formed according to an age-mixing matrix (see Tables I-L in S1 Appendix), while mixing between sexual activity levels is governed by an assortativity parameter, χ, allowing mixing to vary from proportionate (χ = 0) to fully assortative (χ = 1) (χ estimated within the calibration framework). When the model is run with multiple spatial patches, individuals have a lower probability of choosing a partner outside their own patch.
Partnerships last a finite random time, dissolving at a rate that depends on the sexual activity levels of the partners, and whether they reside in the same patch or not (distant relationships last less long). The sexual partnership process is parameterized based on answers to sexual behaviour surveys asked of participants in the community, including the age, residency and duration of recent partnerships, and life-time number of partners at different ages. This determines all parameters except the risk assortativity parameter, χ, which is currently estimated within the calibration framework. Key partnership-related parameters are presented in Table 1, and further details are discussed in S1 Appendix.
In line with our parsimony approach, PopART-IBM does not include many factors included in other models. The model does not include transmission outside of heterosexual partnerships, or in any other way allow for key populations. The model does not explicitly consider migration, as this would require a different approach to parameterizing cross-patch partnerships. The model does not include viral strain structure, such as required to model the spread of antiviral resistance or changing virulence. The model does not currently differentiate between ART regimens. Due to lack of historical data on the communities of interest, we do not model condom use, though we do allow the net transmission rate to be a free parameter (only relative rates are determined from the literature.) We do not model coinfections, including those such as HSV-2 that modify HIV transmission rates. The current model is well suited for generalised heterosexual epidemics with HIV prevalence >10%, as found in the study communities. It is less well suited for epidemics characterised by low overall prevalence and high prevalence among key populations. We plan to address these omissions in future work, where data are available, and where the structural changes are likely to affect predicted interventions. The modular approach in which the model is coded also allows for these components to be added by other researchers using the model.
Runtime (left) and memory usage (right) of PopART-IBM for a single randomly chosen calibrated parameter set run for 120 years. Population size and PLHIV were measured in one patch at the beginning of 2020. The model is writing a typical set of files to disk in this experiment, including a time series of HIV prevalence, incidence, ART usage, etc. Shorter runtimes can be enabled during calibration by only writing essential indicators used within the calibration process.
With beautiful navy blue nine patches, the GO! Curved Nine Patch Pop Throw Quilt Pattern sure does have a pop like the name suggests. The placement of the bright cyan and more subtle turquoise resembles dreamy ivy climbing lattice with sunshine on its shoulder. All you need to make this modern quilt is the GO! Glorified Nine Patch-9" Finished die!
Since its inception, the studio has invited over 100 emerging and established contemporary artists from around the world who have worked in a range of styles and media to produce more than 1,000 limited edition print and sculpture multiples. Impressions of Graphicstudio editions have been acquired by leading museums and corporate and private collections worldwide. In 1990, the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. established an archive of the editions that resulted in a major exhibition with an accompanying catalogue documenting the history of Graphicstudio. In 2014, the Tampa Museum of Art presented a major survey exhibition also accompanied by a significant publication that focused on works produced in the last two decades.
Graphicstudio practices traditional printmaking techniques including intaglio, lithography, silkscreen, and relief along with photogravure, cyanotype and pigment prints. Sculpture multiples are produced in a range of media including bronze, steel, aluminum, wood, rubber, and less traditional materials including lava (basalt) and pigmented resins.
Graphicstudio was founded in 1968 as an experiment in art and education at the University of South Florida, Tampa. At Graphicstudio, research into art-making techniques works in tandem with new aesthetic expressions by leading and emerging artists. The constant push by collaborating artists and studio staff to create new possibilities for artistic practice is the backbone of the atelier, and the impetus that has kept it at the forefront of international fine art publishing.
Graphicstudio was founded by Dr. Donald J. Saff as part of the renaissance in American printmaking in the 1960s, in the company of studios such as ULAE, Tamarind, and Gemini GEL. This renaissance brought artists involved in the Pop art movement, such as Robert Rauschenberg, James Rosenquist, and Jim Dine, together with a growing number of trained printmakers, and with an American public desiring to collect affordable art.
In-Studio and Online: Tiny Turtle. Canvas and Cocktails, 6862 S. University Blvd., Centennial. 10 a.m. $20 (online, plus cost of materials), $30 (children under 12, in-studio), $35 (adults, in-studio, includes one free drink).
In-Studio and Online: Starry Halloween. Canvas and Cocktails, 6862 S. University Blvd., Centennial. 2 p.m. $20 (online, plus cost of materials), $30 (children under 12, in-studio), $35 (adults, in-studio, includes one free drink).
In-Studio and Online: Paradise. Canvas and Cocktails, 6862 S. University Blvd., Centennial. 2 p.m. $20 (online, plus cost of materials), $30 (children under 12, in-studio), $35 (adults, in-studio, includes one free drink).
"It was the homeland, at ten pence a night, of all the street organ players, of all the monkey tamers, of all the acrobats and of all the chimney sweeps that swarm the streets of the town." Such was a contemporary description of the neighborhood of Petite Pologne, close to Edouard Manet's studio.Here Manet has painted characters from this area he called "a picturesque slum." Most are real individuals. The seated musician is Jean Lagrène, leader of a local gypsy band who earned his living as an organ grinder and artist's model. The man in the top hat is Colardet, a rag-picker and ironmonger. At the right a man named Guéroult is cast as the "wandering Jew," the prototypical outsider. In their poses and dress, several figures recall those of Velázquez or the peasants painted by French seventeenth-century artist Louis Le Nain, whose works Manet would also have seen during his studies in the Louvre.Impassive and silent, these people from the margins of Parisian life are restricted to the narrow plane of the foreground. Presented with neutral detachment, they do not interact, appearing equally unconnected to each other and the vague, undefined setting they inhabit. The urchin and rag picker look toward the seated musician, but he is unaware, focused instead on the viewer outside the picture. The emotional blankness of Manet's painting felt "modern" to contemporary viewers. 2ff7e9595c
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