
Cindy Huang
Articles
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Oct 6, 2024 |
artreview.com | Cindy Huang
In See, See, Sea at Tate Britain, Huang questions the processes of production, trade and consumption underlying the industries of both art and foodJam jars, soft drink bottles, aluminium cans – food containers that are often discarded after being emptied – punctuate sculptures by London-based artist Steph Huang. Between found materials, handcrafted elements and a film, Huang questions the processes of production, trade and consumption underlying the industries of both art and food.
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Jul 15, 2024 |
artreview.com | Cindy Huang
Portals to the Past at Lychee One, London pairs meticulously-organised laboratory equipment and nebulous oil paintings An unidentifiable animal skull nestles in peat-moss on the top of a pedestal. From its cavernous eye sockets, incense smoke slowly spirals up. Oblivious of the gallery visitors who watch them with unease, fungus gnats hatched from the moss are busy crawling around the forbidding sculpture installation.
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Mar 20, 2024 |
law360.com | Gregory Brown |Cindy Huang
ADVERTISEMENT Don't want ads? Subscribe or login now. By Gregory Brown and Cindy Huang (March 20, 2024, 3:20 PM EDT) -- Artificial intelligence tools are fundamentally changing how people work. Tasks that used to be painstaking and time-consuming can be completed in real time with the assistance of AI....
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Feb 26, 2024 |
lexblog.com | Cindy Huang
Artificial intelligence tools are fundamentally changing how people work. Tasks that used to be painstaking and time-consuming are now able to be completed in real-time with the assistance of AI. Many organizations have sought to leverage the benefits of AI in various ways. An organization, for instance, can use AI to screen resumes and identify which candidates are likely to be the most qualified.
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Feb 21, 2024 |
sapiens.org | Cindy Huang |Bridget Alex |Mariana Cabral |Whitney Duncan
In 1888, a few decades after the first scientifically named Homo neanderthalensis fossil surfaced, anthropologist and anatomist Hermann Schaaffhausen made a portrait of what that Neanderthal might have looked like in life. Found in Germany’s Neander Valley, the actual fossil was just the top of a skull—a teardrop-shaped dome fronted by big brows—without the facial bones below.
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