33 resultados para Art 84 Decreto Ley 356 de 1994
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A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Management from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
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Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Energia e Bioenergia
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Trabalho de Projecto realizado para cumprimento dos requisitos necessários à obtenção do grau de Mestre em Ciências da Comunicação – Cinema e Televisão
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Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Engenharia do Ambiente, perfil Gestão e Sistemas Ambientais
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In, O Direito, ano 132º, Lisboa, (Julho-Dezembro)de 2000, III-IV
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Contém artigos apresentados na International Conference “Uncertain Spaces: Virtual Configurations in Contemporary Art and Museums”, na Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian (Lisboa), 31 Outubro - 1 de Novembro de 2014) de: Helena Barranha e Susana S. Martins - Introduction: Art, Museums and Uncertainty (pp.1-12); Alexandra Bounia e Eleni Myrivili - Beyond the ‘Virtual’: Intangible Museographies and Collaborative Museum Experiences (pp.15-32); Annet Dekker - Curating in Progress. Moving Between Objects and Processes (pp.33-54); Giselle Beiguelman - Corrupted Memories. The aesthetics of Digital Ruins and the Museum of the Unfinished (pp.55-82); Andrew Vaas Brooks - The Planetary Datalinks (pp.85-110); Sören Meschede - Curators’ Network: Creating a Promotional Database for Contemporary Visual Arts (pp.11-130); Stefanie Kogler - Divergent Histories and Digital Archives of Latin American and Latino Art in the United States – Old Problems in New Digital Formats (pp.131-156); Luise Reitstätter e Florian Bettel - Right to the City! Right to the Museum!(pp.159-182); Roberto Terracciano - On Geo-poetic systems: virtual interventions inside and outside the museum space (pp.183-210); e, Catarina Carneiro de Sousa e Luís Eustáquio - Art Practice in Collaborative Virtual Environments (pp.211-240).
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Contém artigos de: Helena Barranha - Introdução: manifestos por um museu sem lugar (pp.3-8); Natalie Bookchin e Alexei Shulgin - Introdução à net.art (1994-1999) [1999] (pp.11-18); Andreas Broegger - Net Art, web art, online art, net.art? [2000] (pp.19-24); Josephine Berry - Humano, demasiado Pós-Humano? A Net Art e os seus críticos [2000] (pp.25-33); Jon Ippolito - Dez mitos sobre a Internet Art [2002] (pp.34-44); Manuel Castells - Os museus na era da informação: conectores culturais de tempo e espaço [2001] (pp.47-62); Yehuda Kalay e John Marx - Arquitectura e Internet: projectar lugares no ciberespaço [2005] (pp.63-87); Erkki Huhtamo - Nas (ou para além das) pontas dos dedos: arte contemporânea, práticas expositivas e tactilidade [2008] (pp.88-102); Domenico Quaranta - Perdido na tradução. Ou trazer a Net Art para outro lugar – desculpem, contexto [2008] (pp.103-120); Marisa Olson - Pós-Internet: A Arte depois da Internet [2011] (pp.123-136); Fred Forest - A arte cosa mentale. Do visível ao invisível e da realidade a uma realidade... diferente. [2012] (pp.137-141); Hito Steyerl - Demasiado mundo: a Internet morreu? [2012] (pp.142-158); Excertos das entrevistas realizadas, no âmbito do projecto unplace, a artistas, curadores e investigadores (pp.159-196).
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Disponível para consulta índice e introdução.
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Disponível para consulta - índice e introdução.
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The Portuguese Intelligence Services have their operational skills limited due to the grievances caused by the Dictatorship and, in particular, by its political police. With the help of historical elements, and by analyzing current legislation, we demonstrate that such grievances are today unjustified and misplaced, mainly taking into account the Risk Society’s multifaceted threats. Also part of our analysis is the impugnment of the Constitutional Court’s decision nº 413/2015, which pronounced unconstitutional the norm contained in Decree nº 426/XII, of the Republic’s Assembly, article nº 78, nº2, which intended to allow Intelligence Services access to the so-called “metadata”, as well as to tax and banking information. It is our understanding, and we demonstrate it in our dissertation, that should be allowed the access of, not only the above mentioned information, but also the means known as communications interception and undercover operations to the Intelligence Services, as long as properly supervised and inspected.
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In museum studies and history of art, what happens behind the scenes of museums stays relatively unseen and unspoken about. In the arts, generally speaking, what is dismissed as irrelevant (e.g. the realm of practices) is deliberately detached from what is thought to really matter; theory, discourse, content and meaning. Up till recently, backstage activities such as conservation practices are merely discussed among specialists and museum professionals. Only the outcomes of these discussions are sometimes – if at all – explicitly communicated to a larger public. Studies into the practices of contemporary art conservation however show that practices behind the scenes play an important role in the perpetuation of these artworks. What happens behind the scenes in terms of conservation has, in several ways, important effects on the ongoing life of these artworks in a museum context. Conservation practices, I argue, should therefore become a necessary part of museum studies and history of art. How can the working practices of conservators become more visible and transparent to a diversity of audiences, including researchers? And what does this mean in terms of research methodology?
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Recensão de: Peter Goldie e Elisabeth Schellekens, Who’s Afraid of Conceptual Art?, Londres e Nova Iorque: Routledge, 2010
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Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT), Fundação Millennium bcp
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This paper aims to explore the ways in which standard art history terminology shapes the practice of art history by conditioning the interpretation of specific works of art and, in certain cases, the definition of a research subject (especially where questions of genre and periodization are concerned). Taking as a case study a painting by Georges de La Tour, the Peasant Couple Eating, I will argue that terms such as realism, realistic, naturalistic etc. used for its description and/or interpretation, far from constituting objective stylistic characterizations, shape our perception of the work in question. Bringing the question of social class to the center of the discourse on realism, I propose to show how the social divide between the painter and his subject matter (in this case, the peasants) is internalized in the painting’s style and meaning, and how it is fundamental for the understanding of its intentionality and function.