869 resultados para Painting.


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Dissertação de natureza científica para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Civil na Área de Especialização de Edificações

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Projeto de Intervenção apresentado à Escola Superior de Educação de Lisboa para obtenção de grau de Mestre em Didática da Língua Portuguesa no 1.º e 2.º Ciclos do Ensino Básico

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Trabalho Final de Mestrado para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Química e Biológica

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Relatório de Estágio para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Civil na Área de Especialização de Edificações

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Dissertação apresentada à Escola Superior de Comunicação Social como parte dos requisitos para obtenção de grau de mestre em Publicidade e Marketing.

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O presente estágio foi desenvolvido na Britafiel. Um dos projectos em que a Empresa se encontra envolvida é o STOCO, pretendendo implementar à escala industrial um processo de coloração de pedra granítica natural para fins decorativos. Foi neste projecto que se enquadrou o estágio. O tema do estágio centra-se no processo de coloração de granito tendo como principal foco a implementação de um processo industrial de produção de granito colorido. O projecto STOCO nasce da necessidade de complementar a actividade da empresa com produtos de maior valor acrescentado para valorização da matéria-prima de base, o granito. STOCO, resultante de Stone Color, é o nome dado ao projecto e ao novo produto que é granito colorido, sob a forma de brita. Pretende-se obter um produto amigo do ambiente e com boas características: manter a textura natural da pedra granítica e assegurar uma boa resistência a factores agressivos. Estudos prévios de qualidade e de toxicidade mostraram que o produto STOCO desenvolvido até então apresenta um bom comportamento face a agressões climatéricas e que não compromete a vida das espécies usadas nos testes (peixes). Em relação aos lixiviados e resíduos da pedra colorida STOCO, estes não apresentaram qualquer problema ambiental, sendo considerado um produto amigo do ambiente. À data de início do presente trabalho estava em funcionamento um equipamento protótipo de produção de granito colorido (100 kg/partida), sendo a instalação e o arranque da unidade industrial (3 ton/h) concretizados no início de 2014, já no decorrer deste trabalho. Os objectivos cumpridos no âmbito deste trabalho foram então a implementação de uma linha industrial de produção de brita colorida, avaliação técnica do processo e do custo industrial de produção associado às matérias-primas. Neste relatório é descrito o processo inicial adoptado e apresentam-se as alterações efectuadas para melhoria do processo produtivo. Resolveram-se problemas como: definição e instalação de equipamentos complementares para a entrada e a saída da brita no equipamento industrial; pó excessivo na brita; cheiro intenso a gás e elevado ruído; adequação do sistema de pintura; e secagem incompleta da brita. Alguns destes problemas não foram totalmente resolvidos, mas sim minimizados. O equipamento industrial necessita ainda de alterações em diversas áreas, que foram identificadas e para as quais são feitas sugestões de melhoria. Conseguiu-se ainda fazer alguns testes para uma possível substituição de alguns constituintes da tinta. Os componentes que entram na composição base da tinta aquosa, são de modo simplificado: ligante, pigmento, solvente e aditivos. Os constituintes que mais encarecem a tinta, e consequentemente o processo em causa, são o ligante e o pigmento. Os estudos efectuados precisam de ser aprofundados, na tentativa de melhorar o processo minimizando os custos de produção. Formalizaram-se os procedimentos escritos de produção STOCO tanto para o protótipo como para o processo industrial e elaborou-se uma ficha técnica de produto para a brita colorida STOCO.

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Esta tese procura defender a ideia de que foi a vinda para Portugal, nos anos 30 do século XIX, dos arquitectos, cenógrafos, e pintores decoradores de origem italiana, Cinatti e Rambois, que permitiu o retomar do fio perdido da pintura decorativa no País. Na década de 1830, dava-se, assim, início a uma nova etapa, na qual se concretizam uma série de encomendas de decoração de interiores que procuram satisfazer uma burguesia emergente, que assim sublinha o seu status social ao restaurar e transformar palácios antigos, ou ao mandar construir novos palácios e palacetes, que irão ser profusamente decorados por uma nova geração de pintores-decoradores. Era inaugurado o ressurgimento da pintura decorativa em Portugal. Esta dissertação tem também como um dos seus objectivos principais dar a conhecer e divulgar o património ímpar que constitui a pintura decorativa, para assim o poder depois proteger, num País em que o “fachadismo” faz escola, permitindo-se que os interiores sejam demolidos, e em que as artes decorativas são ainda tão esquecidas ou menosprezadas Este trabalho constitui – esperamos- uma primeira aproximação científica ao estudo de todo um conjunto de edifícios de valor patrimonial inestimável e à realidade que albergam no seu interior.

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Neste trabalho definimos e desenvolvemos algumas ideias centrais sobre a Galeria Nacional de Pintura da Academia de Belas Artes de Lisboa, da formação do seu acervo a partir de 1834, com a extinção das ordens religiosas, até à abertura do Museu Nacional de Belas Artes e Arqueologia, em 1884. Em análise estão 50 anos de esforços empreendidos por vários agentes, com destaque para o marquês de Sousa Holstein, vice-­‐inspetor da Academia, em prol da organização, conservação, exposição, estudo, promoção e divulgação do seu acervo, assim como do seu enriquecimento por meio de transferências, aquisições ou doações que estão na origem do mais relevante museu público de arte nacional.

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Guy Ducornet with the Primalphabet-Geographics paintings in 1976. The painting to the left is now situated in the Tower lobby.

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Marty Calder of Brock wrestles Anthony Merlo of Concordia. This photograph has been translated into a painting which can now be seen just outside the Ian D. Beddis Gymnasium.

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This-~-case study used ethnographic-methodo-logy. --The research project was an introductory study of one adult's present and past experiences with the visual arts, exploring, in particular, the causes and processes that were related to the individual's changes of mind in order to develop an understanding of why that individual had changed her mind about what was significant in the visual arts. The individual who provided the data was a solid supporter of art galleries: female, middle-aged, graduate of university and college, married with two children, and living in an urban community. The data were collected from two informal conversational interviews and from a written description of one change experience selected by the participant. The individual had positive experiences with art during early childhood, in elementary and secondary school, during university, in avocational drawing and painting studio courses, and in aesthetic experiences. All of these experiences have had individual effects and, together, they have had a cumulative effect on the development of the participant's opinions and ideas about the visual arts. The experiences which had the most effect on the development of the individual's perspectives on the visual arts were handson studio, educational, and aesthetic experiences. Further research is suggested to investigate why some adults change their minds about the visual arts.

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Margaret was an only child who grew up on a farm just east of Cayuga, Ontario. After high school, Margaret attended Hamilton Teacher’s College and took a position with Grantham Public School Board and taught at Power Glen school. Margaret was married in 1962 and had 2 children, a daughter and a son in 1963 and 1964, respectively. Margaret left her teaching job to raise her children. Margaret was very creative and artistic and during this time, focused on these talents, which included painting, graphic arts and sewing. Margaret was also an accomplished pianist. In her 40’s, Margaret enrolled at Brock University and in 1989 obtained a Honors Bachelor of Arts degree with First-Class Honors in Sociology. In partial fulfillment of her Honors B.A. she completed her thesis that is entitled ; The State and Liberal Feminism: The Ontario Government’s “Business Ownership For Women Program”. While living in St. Catharines, Margaret attended York University and graduated with a Master of Arts in Sociology in 1992 where her studies focused on women’s issues. Margaret received a scholarship from York University and was a teaching assistant. Margaret stayed on at York University and completed her academic requirements for a Doctorate degree in Sociology. Her dissertation was on self employed women in St. Catharines at the beginning of WWII -- not the” Rosie the Riveters” who took over jobs formerly held by men who had to go off to fight World War II, but women who ran their own businesses when that was still unusual. Margaret completed the research for her thesis but did not complete her written thesis as she made a difficult decision to put her academic work on hold in the mid-1990’s and she returned to her love for the arts, although she always remained a voracious reader and interested in women’s issues. In the last decade of her life, she took up quilting with a passion, which she referred to as fabric arts. Margaret loved colour and being non-traditional. Margaret had been a quilting instructor at the Flemington College for Fine Arts in Haliburton. In 1997, Margaret founded Project Smile in the St. Catharines region, a non-profit group who make quilts for children with cancer. Margaret was also the President of the Niagara Heritage Quilters’ Guild in 2006-2007 and was very involved with the Local Council of Women.

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Painting Memorial Hall brown, Chapman College, Orange, California, September, 1973. The previous color choice was pink.

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[from back of painting] "The old house faced the river, and the artist has sketched the trees and old fences as they might have been at the time. The remains of the old well were found, and so the path from the house is represented as it probably appeared, together with the old fashioned well cover, common at that period. The artist has suggested a sunset background, in harmony with the evening of life of the old home and the passing of the great General. The house faced the east, so the western glory of the setting sun is most appropriate." The painting was done on paper and the frame is wooden. The artist's signature is located at the lower right. "House where General Brock died, Queenston, Ont."

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The origins of the Welland County Fair date back to the founding of the County of Welland in 1852. A provincial charter was issued in 1853 to create the Welland County Agricultural Society that was to operate the Fair. In 1970, the Welland County Fair became the Niagara Regional Exhibition, and the Society became known as the Niagara Regional Agriculture Society. The Society seeks to “encourage interest, promote improvements in and advance the standards of agriculture, domestic industry and rural life”. The Welland Festival of Arts was developed in 1986 in order to revitalize the town’s economy. An “outdoor art gallery” was created by painting murals on buildings that depicted the town’s heritage, a concept successfully adopted by the town of Chemainus, B.C. The first mural was completed in the summer of 1988, and by 1991 there were a total of 28 murals around the city. The endeavour proved successful: in the years that followed the creation of the Festival, two new hotels were constructed, a third was expanded, and there was an addition to the Seaway Mall to accommodate the increased tourist traffic. Optimist International is a non-profit organization that strives to “bring out the best in kids” . The first Canadian club was formed in Toronto in 1924. The Welland branch of the Optimist Club was founded in 1937. The first Welland County General Hospital opened in 1908. As the population increased, it became necessary to expand the existing facilities. Additions were made to the original structure with an East wing in 1930 and a children’s ward in 1931. However, in the 1950’s, the hospital was operating beyond optimum capacity and the need for a larger facility was clear. It was decided that a new hospital would be built, which opened in April 1960. The new hospital had 259 beds and 51 bassinets. Further additions were made in 1967 and 1978. The County of Welland was formed in 1850 when it was officially separated from Lincoln County, however, the two counties continued to operate together until 1856 when a new County building and jail for Welland County were completed. That same year, the first meeting of the Council of the Corporation of Welland County took place. The final meeting of the Council took place on December 18, 1969. The following year, the County of Welland merged with Lincoln County to form the Regional Municipality of Niagara. The Welland Mills in Thorold, Ont., was built in 1846-1847 by Jacob Keefer and is thought to have been one of the largest flour mills in Upper Canada. Ownership of the mill changed several times over the years and previous owners include the Howland family, the Hedley Shaw Milling Company and the Maple Leaf Milling Company. In 1986, the building received a heritage plaque from the Ontario Heritage Foundation, an agency of the Ontario Ministry of Culture and Recreation. At this time, the mill was no longer in operation and was being used for storage by Fraser, Inc. By 2006, the dilapidated building had been redeveloped into18 apartments and 2 floors of commercial space, while maintaining many heritage features. The building is currently known as the Welland Mills Centre.