Due to your profile
A new long term opportunity is available!
Employment Form: Full & Part Time
Position Title: Procurement Buyer
Base Pay: $63,300.00 - $85,900.00 per year. Salary depends on qualifications.
Benefits package available : We provide an outstanding total compensation package, including eligible employee medical, dental, vision, life insurance and 401(k) plans
Relocation Offered: No Relocation required
The position will perform standards and practices to deliver the most inexpensive movement of materials through the supply chain. The ideal candidate will have experience to study data and market facilities for the present and future pricing, and capacity of merchandise and facilities.
General Responsibilities:
- Identify and recommend new products or business opportunities
- Negotiations with vendors on availability, product specs, distribution, delivery deadlines and price
- Ensure effective market research and supplier management rules are used with best performance
- Establish and implement best purchasing practices. Communicate closely with finance to administrate items list costs
- Administrate new goods and product stock
- Supervise purchasing processes to support consumer
- Communicate very quickly with team to provide information regarding the competition, potential goals, pricing changes and service issues
Attributes & Skills:
- Ability to display, resolve a wide range of technical and none-technical errors
- Ability to optimize a supply chain logistics network
- Ability to work well with others, communicate internally
- Advanced Word, Excel, Outlook proficiency for regular reporting
- Ability to rise up to 15 pounds and from time to time lift or move up to 37 pounds
- Valid driver�s license is necessary
- 21+ years old; U.S. citizenship
- No relocation is essential
Know in advance we conduct background checks and pre-employment screening.
All applicants applying for this job opening must be authorized to work in the United States, must be a US Lawful Permanent Resident.
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- Send the Employment Application via Email back
- Send your Resume with your Credit Score for Salary consideration
6.30.2014
6.26.2014
Paintings Of Georges Braque
By Darren Hartley
Georges Braque paintings were at the forefront of the revolutionary art movement of Cubism. They focused on still lives and on means of viewing objects from various perspectives through color, line and texture. Georges is best known for Cubist works done in collaboration with Pablo Picasso. However, Georges himself has a long painting career that continued beyond Cubism.
The technique used in the early Georges Braque paintings leaned towards creative painting. Georges was actually guided towards the technique at a young age. It is construed that his interest in texture and tactility were products of his working with his father as a decorator in his father's decorative painting business.
The earliest Georges Braque paintings pursued Fauvist ideas, in coordination with Henri Matisse. In 1906, Georges contributed his colourful Fauvist paintings in his first exhibition held at the Salon de Independants. It was in 1907 that he became extremely affected by a visit to Pablo Picasso's studio.
Understanding Pablo Picasso's goals, Georges aimed to strengthen the constructive elements in his Georges Braque paintings while foregoing of the expressive excesses of Fauvism. It was from his landscape paintings of scenes distilled into basic shapes and colors, that French art critic, Louis Vauxcelles, drew inspiration from, to coin the term Cubism, to describe Georges' work as bizarreries cubiques.
Georges Braque paintings returned to focus on still life, by 1918, when Georges felt he had sufficiently explored the possibilities offered by the papier colles technique. A more limited palette was noticeable in Georges' first post war solo show in 1919. Regardless of this, Georges steadfastly adhered to Cubist rules in his depiction of objects from multi-faceted perspectives in geometrically patterned ways.
In the latter half of the 1930s, Georges Braque paintings consisted of Georges' Vanitas series, where he existentially considered death and suffering. Georges explored ways in which his brushstrokes and paint qualities could enhance his subject matter, as he grew increasingly obsessed with the physicality of his paintings. The objects Georges used in his still life paintings were highly personal, which is perhaps why he left their meanings unrevealed and unexplained.
The technique used in the early Georges Braque paintings leaned towards creative painting. Georges was actually guided towards the technique at a young age. It is construed that his interest in texture and tactility were products of his working with his father as a decorator in his father's decorative painting business.
The earliest Georges Braque paintings pursued Fauvist ideas, in coordination with Henri Matisse. In 1906, Georges contributed his colourful Fauvist paintings in his first exhibition held at the Salon de Independants. It was in 1907 that he became extremely affected by a visit to Pablo Picasso's studio.
Understanding Pablo Picasso's goals, Georges aimed to strengthen the constructive elements in his Georges Braque paintings while foregoing of the expressive excesses of Fauvism. It was from his landscape paintings of scenes distilled into basic shapes and colors, that French art critic, Louis Vauxcelles, drew inspiration from, to coin the term Cubism, to describe Georges' work as bizarreries cubiques.
Georges Braque paintings returned to focus on still life, by 1918, when Georges felt he had sufficiently explored the possibilities offered by the papier colles technique. A more limited palette was noticeable in Georges' first post war solo show in 1919. Regardless of this, Georges steadfastly adhered to Cubist rules in his depiction of objects from multi-faceted perspectives in geometrically patterned ways.
In the latter half of the 1930s, Georges Braque paintings consisted of Georges' Vanitas series, where he existentially considered death and suffering. Georges explored ways in which his brushstrokes and paint qualities could enhance his subject matter, as he grew increasingly obsessed with the physicality of his paintings. The objects Georges used in his still life paintings were highly personal, which is perhaps why he left their meanings unrevealed and unexplained.
About the Author:
Learn more about Georges Braque paintings. Stop by Darren Hartley's site where you can find out all about photosofpaintings.net and what it can do for you.
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