The collection is noted for its encyclopedic range as well as counting most of the greatest cabinet-makers of the ancien regime.
Bloom, a critic of encyclopedic range, best known for his notion of literature as a struggle between stronger and weaker poets, is a daring and almost careless one.
He had an encyclopedic range of knowledge and enthusiasms, ranging from the central composers of the Classical tradition to marginalized figures of the 19th and 20th centuries who were then deeply unfashionable.
Only at the Met in terms of the ability to have 'Thomas Eakins' going at the same time as a number of other extraordinary things, and the encyclopedic range to be able to mount it.
In addition, the installation is thick with a seemingly encyclopedic range of trees painted on inverted bottles; thick blocks, beams and rectangles of wood, and cardboard tubes both small and enormous.
One rapidly tires of the encyclopedic range of reference and dizzying chains of figuration.
In "Crowds and Power" (1960), Canetti pursued the implications of this insight across an encyclopedic range of scholarly sources.
The poems weave together snippets of text from an encyclopedic range of sources and traffic intimidatingly in half-forgotten moments in diplomatic, economic and military history.
The images have an encyclopedic range.
An encyclopedic range of architectural styles includes Victorian, Queen Anne, shingle style, colonial revival, neo-Tudor, Spanish Mission and Georgian.