As Kirk Varnedoe, a curator at the Museum of Modern Art, has written, " The challenge from the outset was to recover richness from reduction, to rephrase simplicity with a reticent elegance that would render superfluous the conventional luxuriance they were eliminating ."
32.
Eighteenth-century literary critic and lexicographer Samuel Johnson had praise for Rowe and wrote in a " Miscellanies " review that the essayists in the collection " seem generally to have imitated, or tried to imitate, the copiousness and luxuriance of Mrs . Rowe.
33.
"Le Samourai " will make today's budget-bashed cops _ French or American _ weep at the luxuriance of its manhunt _ dozens of radio cars and a 70-man dragnet through which Delon slips thanks to his knowledge of the Paris Metro.
34.
"As you approach Achnacarry, which lies rather low, but is surrounded by very fine trees, the luxuriance of the tangled woods, surmounted by rugged hills, becomes finer and finer till you come to Loch Arkaig, a little over half a mile from the house.
35.
Polish director Wojciech Has, whose two major films, " The Saragossa Manuscript " ( 1965 ) and " The Hour-Glass Sanatorium " ( 1973 ), are examples of modernist fantasies, has been compared to Fellini for the sheer " luxuriance of his images ".
36.
It is the sometimes deadly, mostly male, Western addiction to Asia : its exoticism, its luxuriance, its silky feminine beauty, its life-and-death dealings with ideology and power, and, not least, the status it confers on white European men for simply being white, European and male.
37.
Matthew then quoted the opening three paragraphs from Part III of his book, " Miscellaneous Matter Connected with Naval Timber : Nurseries ", pages 106 to 108, on " the luxuriance and size of timber depending upon the particular variety of the species " and the need to select seed from the best individuals when growing trees.
38.
Lord Lindsay wrote in 1847 : " The soil of Palestine still enjoys her sabbaths, and only waits for the return of her banished children, and the application of industry, commensurate with her agricultural capabilities, to burst once more into universal luxuriance, and be all that she ever was in the days of Solomon ."
39.
Bell published a detailed account of the proceedings in " The Huntingdon Peerage ", 4to, London, 1820, pp . 413, and the narrative of his various adventures, which are given at length, displays a suspicious luxuriance of imagination not altogether in keeping with what professed to be a grave genealogical treatise.
40.
Writing in the January 1840 issue of " Knickerbocker ", he openly endorsed copyright legislation pending in the U . S . Congress . " We have a young literature ", he wrote, " springing up and daily unfolding itself with wonderful energy and luxuriance, which . . . deserves all its fostering care ".