Sentences with phrase «brazilian artists»

-- a major exhibition featuring a range of 38 contemporary Brazilian artists and artists» groups working on issues currently facing their country.
«Brazil: Art / Music» gathers works by Brazilian artists in Zacheta Project Room.
(Madrid, Spain) Integrating the VIP parallel program of ARCOMadrid this year, the exhibition features works by nine Brazilian artists.
Mendes Wood DM was founded in 2010 by partners Felipe Dmab, Matthew Wood and Pedro Mendes with the intent to exhibit international and Brazilian artists in a context conducive to critical dialogue and cross-pollination.
As at Christie's, work by Brazilian artists was highly sought after, with strong prices including Sergio Camargo's painted wood construction, Hommage à Fontana (Relief no. 129), 1967, selling for $ 1.5 million, far above the $ 600,000 / 800,000 estimate.
She and Selmo, a private investor, recently invited other Brazilian artists, including Pedro Varela and Carolina Ponte, to propose works inspired by the unruly natural setting.
Code — the first gallery show in Russia of Brazilian artists Albano Afonso, Carla Chaim, Carlos Nuñez, Ding Musa, and Sandra Cinto at Osnova...
Featuring Wlademir Dias - Pino; Anthea Hamilton; Birdhead; Jiří Černický; Body and the City — Silas Martí on three Brazilian artists whose works focuse within and around their own bodies; reviews from around the world, views from our columnists and more
This year the gallery is featuring a selection of Brazilian artists as well as a new blurred image by Jeff Elrod, which sold the first day.
Cildo Meireles was one of the first Brazilian artists to take part in an exhibition at MoMA in New York (1990) and the first ever to have a solo exhibition at Tate Modern in London (2008).
Featuring fifteen emerging Brazilian artists based across the US and Brazil, LAND+BODY = Escape subverts traditional representations of Brazilian landscapes and bodies.
The collaboration between renowned Brazilian artists Hélio Oitica and Nevielle D'Almeida from the late 1960s -LSB-...]
This exhibition is a singular opportunity for American audiences to experience an in - depth look at the practice of Brazilian artists now recognised as the pioneers of their generation.
From there, his almost flat, almost abstract works, with their contrasting planes of colour and reminiscences of doorways and cheerful bunting, provided Brazilian artists with a bridge between the bright, figurative paintings of Brazilian modernists such as Emiliano di Cavalcanti and Tarsila do Amaral and the geometric abstraction of the 1950s Neo-Concrete movement and Grupo Ruptura.
The work alludes to centuries of cultural and social traditions, and it summarizes not only the history of the country but also the socio - cultural engagement of contemporary Brazilian artists.
Body and the City — Silas Martí on three Brazilian artists who respond to crisis and transformation in their country through works focused within and around their own bodies.
«There is definitely a big excitement about the return of the economy, and in relation to Brazilian artists there is an amazing energy — both from senior artists being finally recognised and from a great emerging generation.
We contacted Brazilian artists and curators whom we already knew and asked them to introduce us to the Brazilian art world, and then we met critics, independent curators, museum curators, journalists, editors of magazines, residency programme managers, academics, art lovers, gallerists and collectors, always asking the same questions on our quest to find the best of the new generation of young artists who are emerging in the Brazilian art world.
A veritable feast of exhibitions showcasing Brazilian artists has materialized in major museums around the world in recent months, most prominently the important retrospective of Mira Schendel at Tate Modern (running through January), where over 250 artworks spanning the arc of her career are on view, many for the first time.
A common international contemporary art practice, the artist's book has a long history within Brazilian art and maintains a central position for young Brazilian artists.
This relationship between contemporary and modern Brazilian artists is the subject of «Imagine Brazil,» an exhibition currently at the Astrup Fearnley Museet in Oslo.
Together with the Brazilian artists, the exhibition also showcase works by artists from Qatar.
Within the work of contemporary Brazilian artists, one can find the history of the country, spanning from 20th century modernity back to the colonial period.
The exhibition evolved from «Mythologies» at Cité Internationale des Arts Paris in 2011 where curators selected 22 Brazilian artists whose works explore the various mythologies and clichés associated with Brazilian culture.
A wall of his small steel sculptures features pieces reminiscent of those by Brazilian artists like Lygia Clark or Lygia Pape, whose fantastic retrospective is now on view at the Met Breuer.
The exhibition presents a mapping of the entire collection — developed in collaboration with Paris - based Brazilian artists Angela Detanico and Rafael Lain — in an attempt to open up, to an interested audience, variable ways of entering it.
Renata Lucas works on an institutional scale and with unmistakable institutional ambition, but like that of certain other Brazilian artists whose work has gained both critical traction and market currency in the US over the past decade — Cildo Meireles...
The exhibition presents a mapping of the entire collection — developed in collaboration with Paris - based Brazilian artists Angela Detanico and Rafael Lain — in an attempt to open up, to an interested audience, the idea of the collection as a system with variable entrances.
Today she's an independent curator, writer and Phd candidate at NYU, with a research focus on bringing work by black Brazilian artists to a wider audience.
As for affinities with Brazilian artists, Neto mentions Tunga and Cildo Meireles.
About as rich and varied as her artistic output was her background: born in the small town of Madingley, Cambridge, Wakely later moved to Kenya and continued to build global relationships throughout her life, later collaborating with Brazilian artists Lucia Nogueira and Tunga.
Artist Gê Orthof is one of five Brazilian artists showcasing new work at our group exhibition, Behind The Sun.
One of the most well known Brazilian artists outside the country, Ernesto Neto (based in Rio de Janeiro), for example, works with installations that invite participation from the public.
Cited as the first truly Modernist building of the Americas, this large complex features contributions by a variety of Brazilian artists, architects, and designers (including the influential landscape architect Roberto Brule Marx, currently the subject of a solo show at the Jewish Museum in New York) all organized by the famed, controversial godfather of 20th - century architecture himself, Le Corbusier.
Caldas is widely considered to be one of the most important Brazilian artists working today.
Gallery artist Mario Cravo Neto, critically considered among the most influential Brazilian artists of his time, died August 10, 2009 in Salvador, Bahia, after an extended illness.
Concrete Parallels / Concretos Paralelos will feature British artists Robert ADAMS, Bill CULBERT, Norman DILWORTH, Stephen GILBERT, Anthony HILL, Peter LOWE, Kenneth MARTIN, Mary MARTIN, Victor PASMORE, Jean SPENCER, Jeffrey STEELE, Brian WALL and Gillian WISE; Brazilian artists Geraldo DE BARROS, Hércules BARSOTTI, Sérgio CAMARGO, Willys DE CASTRO, Lothar CHAROUX, Lygia CLARK, Waldemar CORDEIRO, Hermelindo FIAMINGHI, Ferreira GULLAR, Antonio MALUF, Almir MAVIGNIER, Maurício NOGUEIRA LIMA, Hélio OITICICA, Lygia PAPE, Luiz SACILOTTO, Ivan SERPA, Alfredo VOLPI, Franz WEISSMANN and Alexandre WOLLNER.
One of the greatest Brazilian artists of the 20th century, Tarsila do Amaral created a body of work that remains a compelling testimony of a pivotal chapter in Latin American modernism.
Featuring fifteen emerging Brazilian artists based across the US and Brazil, LAND+BODY = Escapesubverts traditional representations of Brazilian landscapes and bodies.
Highlights include a focus on «experimental» drawing with individual displays by artists such as Eduardo Basualdo, from Argentina; Mateo López and Nicolás Paris from Colombia; deconstructed painting and sculpture with largescale displays by Brazilian artists Leda Catunda, Adriano Costa, Maria Nepomuceno, Erika Verzutti and Cuban artists Los Carpinteros, among others; and a strong emphasis on street art and urban culture, with largescale participative installations by Os Gêmeos and Paulo Nazareth from Brazil, and individual displays by Mexican artists Pedro Reyes, Moris, and Edgardo Aragón.
Such was the case of an extraordinary group of Brazilian artists who sent their paintings to a group show in London as a sign of a support.
Tunga (b. 1952, Jose de Barros Carvahlo e Mello, Brazil) belongs to a generation of Brazilian artists who rose to prominence after the pioneering work of Hélio Oiticia and Lygia Clark.
Presenting works by seminal Brazilian artists such as Hélio Oiticica, Sérgio Camargo, Lygia Clark, and Tunga, the exhibition also showcases works by key international artists who similarly experiment with space and perception, including Daniel Buren.
In that spirit, this exhibition explores the work of 35 dynamic Brazilian artists — many of whom have never been widely exhibited in the US — whose practices and influences are as varied as the social, racial, and geographical composition of the country itself.
Most of the furniture and paintings are from awarded brazilian artists.
Embodying the carefree spirit of the region so cherished by the local «Cariocas», Hotel Santa Teresa's 44 rooms and suites are exotically designed with features sourced from local Brazilian artists.
Lululemon No big sale but check out their newest Black Friday release, the Featherlight Collection featuring a custom, digitally engineered print by Brazilian artist Janaina Milheiro.
/ Film reader and Brazilian artist Mario Graciotti has created a few series of posters I wanted to showcase on the site.
Brazilian artist Henrique Alvim Corrêa illustrated a number of drawings for the Belgian edition of H.G Wells classic, War of the Worlds.
The appealing use of clean lines, negative space and tropical colours in Camila Pinheiro's distinctive illustrations hint at the Brazilian artist's South American roots and high fashion background.
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