Sentences with phrase «european paintings shows»

A new analysis of European paintings shows that meat and bread were among the most commonly depicted foods in paintings of meals from the 16th century.

Not exact matches

Presented at the April 2014 New York Auto Show and mirroring the European «Giallo» and «Limited Edition» yellow - painted special editions, Scion released 1500 units of the «Release Series 1.0» in similar Yuzu Yellow paint.
These spyshots snapped by our European spy photographers show the X5 M with less disguise on, and you can see that behind the big black wheels, the X5 M is showing off it's big M calipers which are painted blue on this car, paired with large brake discs which are now cross-drilled.
Both approaches have their roots in European painting, but a triumph of the show is its suggestion that these modes of working were distinctly American, too.
The launch marks Comas» first solo show in a European gallery, created during his stay in Berlin using industrial materials like cement and household paint in combination with photography and UV printing.
As «Ambassador to the New,» Ileana Sonnabend found room for both Andy Warhol and European painting, but Jasper Johns, whose solo show opened her Paris gallery in 1960, still sends his regrets.
His early 1950s works, painted in a European Modernist style, often show originally «American» subject matters such as scenes of western expansion.
Two of the Frick Collection's monumental Turner paintings — «The Harbor of Dieppe» and «Cologne, the Arrival of a Packet - Boat: Evening» — which were purchased by Henry Clay Frick in 1914 — will be shown for the first time in a Frick exhibition this fall with a third canvas from the Tate depicting Brest, another northern European port.
Diebenkorn often said how much he owed to European painting and the debt is acknowledged here, in the second room of the show, in big works depicting human figures framed in landscape — on a terrace, at a window — or secluded in shady interiors, in placid unanimity with their surroundings, sunken - eyed, reading, or lost in contemplation.
(At the time, paintings were still being wheeled into the half - installed temporary exhibitions gallery that will first show off the Kimbell's pre-1800 European collection, which will then return to the Kahn building after the Modern Masters show comes down.)
by Alan Feuer Boston Globe, Nov. 16, Intimacy of attention paid in close up by Sebastian Smee Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Nov. 16, «Visions of an American Dreamland:» New book and Brooklyn Museum exhibition highlight Coney Island by Peter Stamelman The New York Times, Nov. 15, Amusement for Everyone by Ken Johnson Boston Globe, Nov. 11, Andy Warhol and Robert Mapplethorpe Rocked the Boat by Mark Feeney Crave, Nov. 11, Exhibit Warhol & Mapplethorpe: Guise & Dolls by Miss Rosen Antiques and the Arts Weekly, Nov. 10, Q&A: Linda Roth WSFB / Better Connecticut, Nov. 9, Get Some Art History at this Local Stop by Kara Sundlun Take Magazine, November 2015, This MATRIX is Real by Janet Reynolds American Fine Art Magazine, November 2015, Radical Chick and Taylor Made by Jay Cantor Art New England, November 2015, Preview: Warhol & Mapplethorpe: Guise & Dolls by Susan Rand Brown The Hartford Courant, Oct. 16, Gender - Bending «Warhol & Mapplethorpe» Exhibit At Wadsworth by Susan Dunne The Wall Street Journal, Oct. 13, At the Wadsworth Atheneum, an Old Building Gets New Life by Lee Rosenbaum Hartford Courant, Oct. 2, Artist Pokes Fun At «Great Chain Of Being» With New Wadsworth Exhibit by Susan Dunne The Economist, Oct. 1, Temple of Delight by Miles Unger Hartford Courant, Oct. 1, Renewed Atheneum a Cultural Tourism Spark Op - Ed by William Hosley Art in America, October 2015, Coney Island Forever by Jonathan Weinberg The Boston Globe, Sept. 19, European marvels await in Hartford at refurbished Atheneum by Sebastian Smee The Hartford Courant, Sept. 19, Wadsworth Atheneum Reopens To Line Of Visitors Saturday by Kristin Stoller The Hartford Courant, Sept. 19, Editorial: Wadsworth Atheneum Makeover is a Triumph Hyperallergic, Sept. 18, A Worthy Renovation for the Wadsworth Atheneum's European Art Galleries by Benjamin Sutton The New York Times, Sept. 17, Review: Wadsworth Atheneum, a Masterpiece of Renovation by Roberta Smith WNPR, Sept. 17, Hartford's Wadsworth Atheneum Unveils Newly Renovated Galleries by Diane Orson The Art Newspaper, Sept. 16, Wadsworth relives Gilded Age glory days in grand reopening by Julia Halperin The Hartford Courant, Sept. 13, Wadsworth Atheneum Unveils Final Phase of Years - Long Renovation by Susan Dunne Fox CT, Sept. 11, The art of a reopening at the Wadsworth by Jim Altman Apollo Magazine, Sept. 5, J.P. Morgan: The Man Who Bought the World by Rachel Cohen The Art Newspaper, September 2015, Wadsworth relives Gilded Age glory days in grand reopening by Julia Halperin The New York Times, Aug. 31, The Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford Puts Final Touches on a Comeback by Ted Loos The Independent, Aug. 28, Warhol and Mapplethorpe capture each other by Charlotte Cripps The Hartford Courant, Aug. 18, Three «Aspects of Portraiture» at Wadsworth by Susan Dunne The Hartford Courant, July 16, Vibrant Paintings of Modernist Peter Blume at Wadsworth by Susan Dunne The Boston Globe, June 30, Hank Willis Thomas's slick image masks a closed door by Sebastian Smee The Boston Globe, June 25, Bradford enters MATRIX at Wadsworth Atheneum by Sebastian Smee Hartford Courant, June 25, Artist Creates Site - Specific «Pull Painting» at Atheneum by Susan Dunne Observer, June 16, A Peek Inside Hartford's Wadsworth Atheneum as It Preps for a Grand Reopening by Alanna Martinez The Wall Street Journal, June 5, Madrid's Thyssen Offers the Dark Religiosity of Zurbarán by J.S. Marcus Art New England, May / June 2015, Reviving the Grande Dame by Susan Rand Brown Humanities, May / June 2015, The Coney Island Exhibition That Captures Its Highs and Lows by Tom Christopher The Magazine Antiques, May / June 2015, Visions of Coney Island by Robin Jaffee Frank The New York Times, April 19, An American Dreamland, From the Beginning by Sylviane Gold Artes Magazine, April 16, At Hartford's Atheneum: «Coney Island: Visions of an American Dreamland, 1861 - 2008» by Richard Friswell Hartford Courant, April 9, Sideshow Mind Game at Atheneum by Susan Dunne Hyperallergic, March 4, Two Exhibitions Examine the Art of the American Side Show by Laura C. Mallonee Republican American, March 1, Coney Island R us by Tracey O'Shaughnessy Hyperallergic, Feb. 24, Mapplethorpe's Other Man by Larissa Archer WNPR, Feb. 24, Where We Live: The Lore and Lure of Coney Island by Betsy Kaplan and John Dankosky The Boston Globe, Feb. 24, Frame by Frame: Behind «Agbota,» an artist's irony and imagination by Sebastian Smee Real Simple, March 2015, A Life in Full Antiques and the Arts Weekly, Feb. 20, Step Right Up!
in Art News, vol.81, no. 1, January 1982 (review of John Moores Liverpool Exhibition), The Observer, 12 December 1982; «English Expressionism» (review of exhibition at Warwick Arts Trust) in The Observer, 13 May 1984; «Landscapes of the mind» in The Observer, 24 April 1995 Finch, Liz, «Painting is the head, hand and the heart», John Hoyland talks to Liz Finch, Ritz Newspaper Supplement: Inside Art, June 1984 Findlater, Richard, «A Briton's Contemporary Clusters Show a Touch of American Influence» in Detroit Free Press, 27 October 1974 Forge, Andrew, «Andrew Forge Looks at Paintings of Hoyland» in The Listener, July 1971 Fraser, Alison, «Solid areas of hot colour» in The Australian, 19 February 1980 Freke, David, «Massaging the Medium» in Arts Alive Merseyside, December 1982 Fuller, Peter, «Hoyland at the Serpentine» in Art Monthly, no. 31 Garras, Stephen, «Sketches for a Finished Work» in The Independent, 22 October 1986 Gosling, Nigel, «Visions off Bond Street» in The Observer, 17 May 1970 Graham - Dixon, Andrew, «Canvassing the abstract voters» in The Independent, 7 February 1987; «John Hoyland» in The Independent, 12 February 1987 Griffiths, John, «John Hoyland: Paintings 1967 - 1979» in The Tablet, 20 October 1979 Hall, Charles, «The Mastery of Living Colour» in The Times, 4 October 1995 Harrison, Charles, «Two by Two they Went into the Ark» in Art Monthly, November 1977 Hatton, Brian, «The John Moores at the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool» in Artscribe, no. 38, December 1982 Heywood, Irene, «John Hoyland» in Montreal Gazette, 7 February 1970 Hilton, Tim, «Hoyland's tale of Hofmann» in The Guardian, 5 March 1988 Hoyland, John, «Painting 1979: A Crisis of Function» in London Magazine, April / May 1979; «Framing Words» in Evening Standard, 7 December 1989; «The Famous Grouse» in Arts Review, October 1995 Januszcak, Waldemar, «Felt through the Eye» in The Guardian, 16 October 1979; «Last Chance» in The Guardian, 18 May 1983; «Painter nets # 25,000 art prize» in The Guardian, 11 February 1987; «The Circles of Celebration» in The Guardian, 19 February 1987 Kennedy, R.C., «London Letter» in Art International, Lugano, 20 October 1971 Kent, Sarah, «The Modernist Despot Refuses to Die» in Time Out, 19 - 25, October 1979 Key, Philip, «This Way Up and It's Art; Key Previews the John Moores Exhibition» in Post, 25 November 1982 Kramer, Hilton, «Art: Vitality in the Pictorial Structure» in New York Times, 10 October 1970 Lehmann, Harry, «Hoyland Abstractions Boldly Pleasing As Ever» in Montreal Star, 30 March 1978 Lucie - Smith, Edward, «John Hoyland» in Sunday Times, 7 May 1970; «Waiting for the click...» in Evening Standard, 3 October 1979 Lynton, Norbert, «Hoyland», in The Guardian, [month] 1967 MacKenzie, Andrew, «A Colourful Champion of the Abstract» in Morning Telegraph, Sheffield, 9 October 1979 Mackenzie, Andrew, «Let's recognise city artist» in Morning Telegraph, Sheffield, 18 September 1978 Makin, Jeffrey, «Colour... it's the European Flair» in The Sun, 30 April 1980 Maloon, Terence, «Nothing succeeds like excess» in Time Out, September 1978 Marle, Judy, «Histories Unfolding» in The Guardian, May 1971 Martin, Barry, «John Hoyland and John Edwards» in Studio International, May / June 1975 McCullach, Alan, «Seeing it in Context» in The Herald, 22 May 1980 McEwen, John, «Hoyland and Law» in The Spectator, 15 November 1975; «Momentum» in The Spectator, 23 October 1976; «John Hoyland in mid-career» in Arts Canada, April 1977; «Abstraction» in The Spectator, 23 September 1978; «4 British Artists» in Artforum, March 1979; «Undercurrents» in The Spectator, 24 October 1981; «Flying Colours» in The Spectator, 4 December 1982; «John Hoyland, new paintings» in The Spectator, 21 May 1983; «The golden age of junk art: John McEwen on Christmas Exhibitions» in Sunday Times, 18 December 1984; «Britain's Best and Brightest» in Art in America, July 1987; «Landscapes of the Mind» in The Independent Magazine, 16 June 1990; «The Master Manipulator of Paint» in Sunday Telegraph, 1 October 1995; «Cool dude struts with his holster full of colours» in The Sunday Telegraph, 10 October 1999 McGrath, Sandra, «Hangovers and Gunfighters» in The Australian, 19 February 1980 McManus, Irene, «John Moores Competition» in The Guardian, 8 December 1982 Morris, Ann, «The Experts»Paintings of Hoyland» in The Listener, July 1971 Fraser, Alison, «Solid areas of hot colour» in The Australian, 19 February 1980 Freke, David, «Massaging the Medium» in Arts Alive Merseyside, December 1982 Fuller, Peter, «Hoyland at the Serpentine» in Art Monthly, no. 31 Garras, Stephen, «Sketches for a Finished Work» in The Independent, 22 October 1986 Gosling, Nigel, «Visions off Bond Street» in The Observer, 17 May 1970 Graham - Dixon, Andrew, «Canvassing the abstract voters» in The Independent, 7 February 1987; «John Hoyland» in The Independent, 12 February 1987 Griffiths, John, «John Hoyland: Paintings 1967 - 1979» in The Tablet, 20 October 1979 Hall, Charles, «The Mastery of Living Colour» in The Times, 4 October 1995 Harrison, Charles, «Two by Two they Went into the Ark» in Art Monthly, November 1977 Hatton, Brian, «The John Moores at the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool» in Artscribe, no. 38, December 1982 Heywood, Irene, «John Hoyland» in Montreal Gazette, 7 February 1970 Hilton, Tim, «Hoyland's tale of Hofmann» in The Guardian, 5 March 1988 Hoyland, John, «Painting 1979: A Crisis of Function» in London Magazine, April / May 1979; «Framing Words» in Evening Standard, 7 December 1989; «The Famous Grouse» in Arts Review, October 1995 Januszcak, Waldemar, «Felt through the Eye» in The Guardian, 16 October 1979; «Last Chance» in The Guardian, 18 May 1983; «Painter nets # 25,000 art prize» in The Guardian, 11 February 1987; «The Circles of Celebration» in The Guardian, 19 February 1987 Kennedy, R.C., «London Letter» in Art International, Lugano, 20 October 1971 Kent, Sarah, «The Modernist Despot Refuses to Die» in Time Out, 19 - 25, October 1979 Key, Philip, «This Way Up and It's Art; Key Previews the John Moores Exhibition» in Post, 25 November 1982 Kramer, Hilton, «Art: Vitality in the Pictorial Structure» in New York Times, 10 October 1970 Lehmann, Harry, «Hoyland Abstractions Boldly Pleasing As Ever» in Montreal Star, 30 March 1978 Lucie - Smith, Edward, «John Hoyland» in Sunday Times, 7 May 1970; «Waiting for the click...» in Evening Standard, 3 October 1979 Lynton, Norbert, «Hoyland», in The Guardian, [month] 1967 MacKenzie, Andrew, «A Colourful Champion of the Abstract» in Morning Telegraph, Sheffield, 9 October 1979 Mackenzie, Andrew, «Let's recognise city artist» in Morning Telegraph, Sheffield, 18 September 1978 Makin, Jeffrey, «Colour... it's the European Flair» in The Sun, 30 April 1980 Maloon, Terence, «Nothing succeeds like excess» in Time Out, September 1978 Marle, Judy, «Histories Unfolding» in The Guardian, May 1971 Martin, Barry, «John Hoyland and John Edwards» in Studio International, May / June 1975 McCullach, Alan, «Seeing it in Context» in The Herald, 22 May 1980 McEwen, John, «Hoyland and Law» in The Spectator, 15 November 1975; «Momentum» in The Spectator, 23 October 1976; «John Hoyland in mid-career» in Arts Canada, April 1977; «Abstraction» in The Spectator, 23 September 1978; «4 British Artists» in Artforum, March 1979; «Undercurrents» in The Spectator, 24 October 1981; «Flying Colours» in The Spectator, 4 December 1982; «John Hoyland, new paintings» in The Spectator, 21 May 1983; «The golden age of junk art: John McEwen on Christmas Exhibitions» in Sunday Times, 18 December 1984; «Britain's Best and Brightest» in Art in America, July 1987; «Landscapes of the Mind» in The Independent Magazine, 16 June 1990; «The Master Manipulator of Paint» in Sunday Telegraph, 1 October 1995; «Cool dude struts with his holster full of colours» in The Sunday Telegraph, 10 October 1999 McGrath, Sandra, «Hangovers and Gunfighters» in The Australian, 19 February 1980 McManus, Irene, «John Moores Competition» in The Guardian, 8 December 1982 Morris, Ann, «The Experts»Paintings 1967 - 1979» in The Tablet, 20 October 1979 Hall, Charles, «The Mastery of Living Colour» in The Times, 4 October 1995 Harrison, Charles, «Two by Two they Went into the Ark» in Art Monthly, November 1977 Hatton, Brian, «The John Moores at the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool» in Artscribe, no. 38, December 1982 Heywood, Irene, «John Hoyland» in Montreal Gazette, 7 February 1970 Hilton, Tim, «Hoyland's tale of Hofmann» in The Guardian, 5 March 1988 Hoyland, John, «Painting 1979: A Crisis of Function» in London Magazine, April / May 1979; «Framing Words» in Evening Standard, 7 December 1989; «The Famous Grouse» in Arts Review, October 1995 Januszcak, Waldemar, «Felt through the Eye» in The Guardian, 16 October 1979; «Last Chance» in The Guardian, 18 May 1983; «Painter nets # 25,000 art prize» in The Guardian, 11 February 1987; «The Circles of Celebration» in The Guardian, 19 February 1987 Kennedy, R.C., «London Letter» in Art International, Lugano, 20 October 1971 Kent, Sarah, «The Modernist Despot Refuses to Die» in Time Out, 19 - 25, October 1979 Key, Philip, «This Way Up and It's Art; Key Previews the John Moores Exhibition» in Post, 25 November 1982 Kramer, Hilton, «Art: Vitality in the Pictorial Structure» in New York Times, 10 October 1970 Lehmann, Harry, «Hoyland Abstractions Boldly Pleasing As Ever» in Montreal Star, 30 March 1978 Lucie - Smith, Edward, «John Hoyland» in Sunday Times, 7 May 1970; «Waiting for the click...» in Evening Standard, 3 October 1979 Lynton, Norbert, «Hoyland», in The Guardian, [month] 1967 MacKenzie, Andrew, «A Colourful Champion of the Abstract» in Morning Telegraph, Sheffield, 9 October 1979 Mackenzie, Andrew, «Let's recognise city artist» in Morning Telegraph, Sheffield, 18 September 1978 Makin, Jeffrey, «Colour... it's the European Flair» in The Sun, 30 April 1980 Maloon, Terence, «Nothing succeeds like excess» in Time Out, September 1978 Marle, Judy, «Histories Unfolding» in The Guardian, May 1971 Martin, Barry, «John Hoyland and John Edwards» in Studio International, May / June 1975 McCullach, Alan, «Seeing it in Context» in The Herald, 22 May 1980 McEwen, John, «Hoyland and Law» in The Spectator, 15 November 1975; «Momentum» in The Spectator, 23 October 1976; «John Hoyland in mid-career» in Arts Canada, April 1977; «Abstraction» in The Spectator, 23 September 1978; «4 British Artists» in Artforum, March 1979; «Undercurrents» in The Spectator, 24 October 1981; «Flying Colours» in The Spectator, 4 December 1982; «John Hoyland, new paintings» in The Spectator, 21 May 1983; «The golden age of junk art: John McEwen on Christmas Exhibitions» in Sunday Times, 18 December 1984; «Britain's Best and Brightest» in Art in America, July 1987; «Landscapes of the Mind» in The Independent Magazine, 16 June 1990; «The Master Manipulator of Paint» in Sunday Telegraph, 1 October 1995; «Cool dude struts with his holster full of colours» in The Sunday Telegraph, 10 October 1999 McGrath, Sandra, «Hangovers and Gunfighters» in The Australian, 19 February 1980 McManus, Irene, «John Moores Competition» in The Guardian, 8 December 1982 Morris, Ann, «The Experts»paintings» in The Spectator, 21 May 1983; «The golden age of junk art: John McEwen on Christmas Exhibitions» in Sunday Times, 18 December 1984; «Britain's Best and Brightest» in Art in America, July 1987; «Landscapes of the Mind» in The Independent Magazine, 16 June 1990; «The Master Manipulator of Paint» in Sunday Telegraph, 1 October 1995; «Cool dude struts with his holster full of colours» in The Sunday Telegraph, 10 October 1999 McGrath, Sandra, «Hangovers and Gunfighters» in The Australian, 19 February 1980 McManus, Irene, «John Moores Competition» in The Guardian, 8 December 1982 Morris, Ann, «The Experts» Expert.
Hofmann's life is terrific to read about — a European arriving in America in the 1930s, the schools he set up in New York and Provincetown (many of the artists in the RA show were his students), his theory of painting, evolved from observing the world and analysing the Old Masters, and his sheer, galvanising, gutsy energy.
Weller, Allen S, «Chicago: French Classic and Three Americans», Arts Digest (New York), February, volume 29, no. 10, pp. 14 - 15 Morris, J.A, Two Hundred Years of American Painting, catalogue, Vancouver Art Gallery Williams, Hermann Warner, The 24th Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Painting, catalogue, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. Three Young Americans, catalogue, Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin College, Ohio Whiteside, Forbes, «Three Young Americans», Oberlin College Bulletin, volume 12, no. 3, pp.91 - 97 Preston, Stuart, «The Artist in Europe — And in America», New York Times, 8 May, section 6, pp.28 - 29 Devree, Howard, «About Art and Artists: Painting and Sculpture: American Show at Whitney, European at Modern Art», New York Times, 11 May, p. 29 Devree, Howard, «Modern Surveys» Development Since 1920 Seen in Three Shows», New York Times, 15 May, section 2, p. 9 Rosenblum, Robert, «The New Decade», Arts Digest (New York), 15 May, volume 29, no. 16, pp.20 - 33 Devree, Howard, «Response to Today: Museum Surveys Reveal Artists» Reactions», New York Times, 22 May, section 2, p. 11 Coates, Robert M, «The Art Galleries: The Grand Tour», New Yorker, 28 May, volume 31, no. 15, pp.90 - 92 Hess, Thomas B, «Mixed pickings from 10 fat years», Art News (New York), Summer, volume 54, no. 4, pp.36 - 39 & 77 - 78 Ashton, Dore, «Young Painters in Rome», Arts Digest (New York), 1 June, volume 29, no. 17, pp.6 - 7 Baur, John I.H, The New Decade: 35 American Painters and Sculptors, catalogue, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York Laverne, George, «Joseph Glasco», Arts (New York), November, volume 30, no. 2, pp.32 - 36 Hodgins, Eric and Lesley Parker, «The Great International Art Market», Fortune (New York), December, volume 3, no. 6, p. 118
The show includes paintings by the major Central European artists Johann Michael Rottmayr, Franz Anton Maulbertsch, and Anton Raphael Mengs.
And unlike Johannesburg, which dived headlong into abstract expressionism, the tradition of abstract painting here has always shown a strong European influence.
Related to her memorable installation presently at the New Museum, it shows an imaginary black dancer in a blue leotard in a bold pose reminiscent of Sargent's Madame X (1883 — 84), and equally boldly painted — few artists have more strongly claimed and reconfigured European painterly traditions than she.
Serpentine Sackler Gallery, London The American artist's first European solo show takes its name from a JMW Turner painting, which depicts the drowning of 133 slaves by a captain intent on claiming insurance money for goods lost at sea.
She featured in Artists of the New York School, Second Generation, at the Jewish Museum in 1957, and her work was shown in Japan, India, Brazil and, in 1958 - 59, as part of the major touring exhibition The New American Painting, which introduced Abstract Expressionism to European audiences.
The show presents her large - scale abstract paintings inspired by Brazilian and European Modernism, Baroque forms, popular culture, and the decorations of Carnival.
Painting in a style somewhere between Cubism and Futurism, Matulka was one of a handful of European artists who maintained into the 1920s the avant - garde energies unleashed in New York by the Armory Show of 1913.
It will also include Cole's landscape paintings, some showing ancient ruins inspired by his European travels, others with 19th - century grand houses.
Michael Craig - Martin, one of the leading representatives of an art in which American and European traditions intermingle, has used painting, drawing, space, and light to create an overall work of art for his first solo show in Austria.
Tracking Lovell's drawings, installations, and sculptures as he studied European painting and then broke away from that paradigm, the show will include such works as Rite (1997), an oil stick and charcoal work on paper in which a man's nude body appears to be consumed by foliage.
(Later, when pitching Delacroix's Still Life of Dahlias, Zinnias and Plums on a Table, Leah Lehmbeck, curator of European painting and sculpture, showed a photo of the artist's head on a «Mount Rushmore of Modern Art.»)
Wiley, who shows at Deitch Projects in New York, makes immaculate paintings, inserting black males in street wear into the canon of Western European portraiture and posing them as saints or prophets.
This exhibition reunites some of the prints, drawings, and paintings from the notorious Armory Show of 1913, which introduced a stunned America to avant - garde European art.
Featuring nearly 40 paintings from collections around the world, as well as a set of drawings that have never been shown in public, the showing marks his first solo exhibition at a European museum.
The second of these shows, entitled «American and French Paintings,» included among its American exhibitors Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Stuart Davis, and Walt Kuhn and among the Europeans Picasso, Matisse, Braque, Bonnard, and Modigliani.
The winter group show brings together the work of ten English and European artists with a broad mixture of drawing, painting, print making and photography:
As a complement to German Romanticism, which is well - represented in the Kunsthalle's collection, and the French art of the period, the Gainsborough show thus presents England as a further centre of European landscape painting.
Here, the London gallery shows two artists of different generations — Oliver Osborne and Julia Wachtel — who embed appropriated imagery (cartoons from European language textbooks, for instance) into their humorous, often probing paintings.
In this show, three celebrated African - American artists are giving the history of European genre painting a bold shake - up.
Despite Walther's studies at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf in the early 1960s, a hotbed of European artistic talent that bred classmates such as Gerhard Richter; despite his subsequent four - year immersion in New York City, similar to stays that propelled fellow Germans such as Hanne Darboven to statewide institutional recognition; and despite his participation in seminal shows, including the Museum of Modern Art's «Spaces» in 1969 and Harald Szeemann's Documenta 5 in 1972, North America has still been slow to recognize Walther's significance for the expansion of painting,
For its season opening, Chung King Project presents «Icons», an exhibition of paintings by six European artists, all showing in the United States for the first time: Guy Allott, Edward Kay, Victor Man, Gavin Nolan, Rigo Schmidt, Gavin Tremlett.
Whatever style from her early abstracts through to her figuration she handles paint fluently, her palette choices are selected with ease and confidence and show a debt to her Austrian heritage with more than a nod to Egon Schiele's expressionist compositions and Oskar Kokoschka's vivid colours and the European avant - garde.
That's the show that had the big impact on European art and everybody started painting New York abstract expressionism in Italy then, and in France.
German artist Gerhard Richter, one of the pioneers of New European Painting, has shown again and again that «pure» painting - oil colors unstintingly activated by gesture or merely by tools - can coax from our nervous systems embedded memories of other painters» mute triumphs at the levels of small detail or large Painting, has shown again and again that «pure» painting - oil colors unstintingly activated by gesture or merely by tools - can coax from our nervous systems embedded memories of other painters» mute triumphs at the levels of small detail or large painting - oil colors unstintingly activated by gesture or merely by tools - can coax from our nervous systems embedded memories of other painters» mute triumphs at the levels of small detail or large expanse.
[3] He also organised such shows as the first John Baldessari European Retrospective toured to the Serpentine Gallery, London and onwards onto a European tour; [3] a Bruce McLean film commission; [3] «Sublime: Manchester Music and Design»; Edward Allington; [3] Jochen Gerz; [3] Annette Messager: Telling Tales»; [3] Rita Donagh Retrospective; Paul Seawright: Sectarian Murders and «Unveiled: Possibilities in Abstract Painting» exhibitions.
In 1913 five of Henri's paintings were accepted for the famous Armory show, the exhibition that first introduced the American public to European modern art.
It's been close to 60 years since a show like this has been held on European soil («New American Painting» toured eight European cities including the Tate, London, in 1958).
The show opens with a concise overview of the master's paintings, peppered with paraphernalia like jewelry and Schiaparelli gowns, and continues on to the first European retrospective
European avant - garde painting was showcased for the first time in America at the Armory Show (1913) in New York.
Again, African - American artists are very much on the agenda: deceptively naive paintings by former slave Bill Traylor, who died in 1949, feature at Betty Cuningham ($ 50,000 - $ 140,000), while Donald Morris shows Bob Thompson, who was inspired by European Old Masters to produce boldly coloured figurative paintings (nine of 13 works sold on first day, $ 125,000 - $ 250,000).
At the same time, Alfred Stieglitz was showing both American and European modernist painting and sculpture at The Little Galleries of the Photo - Secession, at 291 Fifth Avenue, better known simply as «291.»
And I realized I had to do something 1983 Rammelzee vs K Rob «Beat Bop» 1984 First shows at Clarissa Dalrymple and Nicole Klagsbrun's Cable Gallery (artists of Wool's generation who begin showing same period include Philip Taaffe Jeff Koons Mike Kelley Cady Noland and James Nares 1984 produces first book photocopied edition of four: 93 Drawings of Beer on the Wall 1984 Warhol Rorschach paintings 1986 First pattern paintings 1987 Joins Luhring Augustine Gallery 1987 First word paintings 1988 Collaborative installation with Robert Gober one painting by Wool (Apocalypse Now) one sculpture by Gober (Three Urinals) one collaborative photograph (Untitled) and a mirror Gary Indiana contributes a short piece of fiction to the accompanying publication 1988 In Cologne sees show of Albert Oehlen's work meets Martin Kippenberger 1988 First European shows Cologne and Athens 1988 Collaborates with Richard Prince on two paintings: My Name and My Act 1989 Museum Group shows in Amsterdam Frankfurt am Main and Munich Whitney Biennial 1989 One year fellowship at the American Academy in Rome 1989 Starts taking photographs 1989 Publishes Black Book an oversized collection of 9 - letter images 1989 Fall of the Berlin Wall 1990 Meets Larry Clark 1991 First survey mounted at Boymans - Van Beuningen Museum Rotterdam publishes accompanying artist's book Cats in Bag Bags in River color photocopies of photographs of black and white paintings 1991 Creates edition of small paintings for ACT - UP New York Needle Exchange 1991 Participates in Carnegie International includes painting and billboard with truncated text announcing «THE SHOW IS OVER» 1991 Meets Jim Lewis 1991 Relocates studio to East 9th Street in New York 1992 LA riots 1992 DAAD residency in Berlin 1993 Publishes Absent Without Leave 160 black - and - white images from travel photographs taken over previous 4 years 1993 Begins silkscreened flower paintings 1993 Meets Michel Majerus 1994 Makes road - signs for Martin Kippenberger's Museum of Modern Art Syros 1994 New York Knicks lose to Houston Rockets in Game 7 NBA Finals 1995 Organizes retrospective of the New Cinema late 70's New York underground Super-8 films 1995 First spray - paintings 1995 Kids 1996 East Village studio severely damaged in building fire leaving Wool without a working space for 8 months artist's insurance photos become portfolio Incident on 9th Street 1997 Marries painter Charline von Heyl 1998 Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles mounts mid-career retrospective travels to Carnegie Museum of Art Pittsburgh and Kunsthalle Basel 1998 Begins silkscreen re-imaging of own work 2001 Solo exhibition at Secession Vienna 2002 «Grey» paintings 2003 East Broadway Breakdown photos of New York City 2005 First digital drawings 2006 Contributes art to Sonic Youth Rather Ripped 2007 Collaborates with Josh Smith on Can Your Monkey Do the Dog 2008 Collaborates with Richard Hell on Psychopts 2008 Christopher Wool lives and works in New York and Marfa Tshow of Albert Oehlen's work meets Martin Kippenberger 1988 First European shows Cologne and Athens 1988 Collaborates with Richard Prince on two paintings: My Name and My Act 1989 Museum Group shows in Amsterdam Frankfurt am Main and Munich Whitney Biennial 1989 One year fellowship at the American Academy in Rome 1989 Starts taking photographs 1989 Publishes Black Book an oversized collection of 9 - letter images 1989 Fall of the Berlin Wall 1990 Meets Larry Clark 1991 First survey mounted at Boymans - Van Beuningen Museum Rotterdam publishes accompanying artist's book Cats in Bag Bags in River color photocopies of photographs of black and white paintings 1991 Creates edition of small paintings for ACT - UP New York Needle Exchange 1991 Participates in Carnegie International includes painting and billboard with truncated text announcing «THE SHOW IS OVER» 1991 Meets Jim Lewis 1991 Relocates studio to East 9th Street in New York 1992 LA riots 1992 DAAD residency in Berlin 1993 Publishes Absent Without Leave 160 black - and - white images from travel photographs taken over previous 4 years 1993 Begins silkscreened flower paintings 1993 Meets Michel Majerus 1994 Makes road - signs for Martin Kippenberger's Museum of Modern Art Syros 1994 New York Knicks lose to Houston Rockets in Game 7 NBA Finals 1995 Organizes retrospective of the New Cinema late 70's New York underground Super-8 films 1995 First spray - paintings 1995 Kids 1996 East Village studio severely damaged in building fire leaving Wool without a working space for 8 months artist's insurance photos become portfolio Incident on 9th Street 1997 Marries painter Charline von Heyl 1998 Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles mounts mid-career retrospective travels to Carnegie Museum of Art Pittsburgh and Kunsthalle Basel 1998 Begins silkscreen re-imaging of own work 2001 Solo exhibition at Secession Vienna 2002 «Grey» paintings 2003 East Broadway Breakdown photos of New York City 2005 First digital drawings 2006 Contributes art to Sonic Youth Rather Ripped 2007 Collaborates with Josh Smith on Can Your Monkey Do the Dog 2008 Collaborates with Richard Hell on Psychopts 2008 Christopher Wool lives and works in New York and Marfa TSHOW IS OVER» 1991 Meets Jim Lewis 1991 Relocates studio to East 9th Street in New York 1992 LA riots 1992 DAAD residency in Berlin 1993 Publishes Absent Without Leave 160 black - and - white images from travel photographs taken over previous 4 years 1993 Begins silkscreened flower paintings 1993 Meets Michel Majerus 1994 Makes road - signs for Martin Kippenberger's Museum of Modern Art Syros 1994 New York Knicks lose to Houston Rockets in Game 7 NBA Finals 1995 Organizes retrospective of the New Cinema late 70's New York underground Super-8 films 1995 First spray - paintings 1995 Kids 1996 East Village studio severely damaged in building fire leaving Wool without a working space for 8 months artist's insurance photos become portfolio Incident on 9th Street 1997 Marries painter Charline von Heyl 1998 Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles mounts mid-career retrospective travels to Carnegie Museum of Art Pittsburgh and Kunsthalle Basel 1998 Begins silkscreen re-imaging of own work 2001 Solo exhibition at Secession Vienna 2002 «Grey» paintings 2003 East Broadway Breakdown photos of New York City 2005 First digital drawings 2006 Contributes art to Sonic Youth Rather Ripped 2007 Collaborates with Josh Smith on Can Your Monkey Do the Dog 2008 Collaborates with Richard Hell on Psychopts 2008 Christopher Wool lives and works in New York and Marfa Texas
It has been said that some American modern art got worse from the impact of the European paintings in the far - famed Armory show of 1913.
In February, the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings department mounted a solo show of a female painter for the first time in over four decades.
Instead Tuttle's exhibition will be on the floor where the museum shows works of pre-modern religious art, moving through European masters of the seventeenth century to Norwegian nineteenth - century painting.
Shown by the Belgian dealer Axel Vervoordt next to European postwar abstracts by Luciano Fontana and Zero group artists at the Venice Biennale beginning in 2007, his paintings were a revelation to American tastemakers like the Dallas collector and philanthropist Howard Rachofsky and Ms. Lévy, the New York gallerist.
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