Also, let’s mention the “widely used phrases” feature of Bing’s one more time here. It’s a really cool helper, and it has no counterpart offered in Google Translate. Meaning, if you want to find some popular expressions in any given language, Bing is probably your tool for that. ...
Xu Bing's own work,Monkeys Grasp for the Moon, presents a chain of monkeys formed wholly out of word shapes. Each link in the chain is the word for "monkey" in a different international language, including Hindi, Japanese, French, Spanish, Hebrew and English. These words are stylized to...
In an investigation of the cultural function and meaning of language, this installation combines 300 volumes of books each previously fabricated by Xu Bing. Dubbed ''problem books'' by the artist, these encompass the works Post Testament, bound in classical Western style, and Book From the Sky...
And here I was, seeing something so profound, something that was developed by the folks at OpenAI in the West Coast of the United States a few months earlier, used by a developer locally to have an impact on a rural farmer. That, to me, is what gives me meaning, and ...
XPrivacy was a lot of work, so please support this project. If you want to donate, seeherefor all options. Use XPrivacy entirely at your own risk. Features Simple to use No need to patch anything (no source, nosmalior anything else) ...
The work is mainly comprised of over 400 calligraphic variants of the Chinese character “niao”, meaning bird, carved in colored acrylic and laid out in a shimmering track that rises from the floor into the air. On the gallery floor Chinese characters in the “simplified style” script popula...
The work is mainly comprised of over 400 calligraphic variants of the Chinese character “niao”, meaning bird, carved in colored acrylic and laid out in a shimmering track that rises from the floor into the air. On the gallery floor Chinese characters in the “simplified style” script popula...
Installation view of Living Word Work in progress 2001 Materials: Cut and painted acrylic Location: Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C., U.S.A. The work is mainly comprised of over 400 calligraphic variants of the Chinese character “niao”, meaning bird, carved...