Sentences with phrase «european sculpture installation»

Not exact matches

The intergenerational and primarily European group of thirteen artists and artist teams approach documentary work through a variety of media that include sculpture, painting, film, and installation.
Among her groundbreaking exhibitions and publications over the past forty years are The Russian Avant - Garde, 1910 - 1930: New Perspectives; German Expressionist Sculpture; Degenerate Art: The Fate of the Avant - Garde in Nazi Germany; Exiles + Émigrés: The Flight of European Artists from Hitler, Made in California: Art, Image, and Identity, 1900 — 2000, and exhibitions of David Hockney, Ed Kienholz, Ken Price, Maria Nordman, Sharon Lockhart, and Alexander Calder, several of which featured installations designed by Frank Gehry.
Featuring scholarship by museum director and curator Helen Hirsch, this modest, concise publication includes intimate details and color reproductions of Dzama's meticulously composed imaginings, which take the form of drawings, sculptures, collages, installations, and a film — Une danse des bouffons (or A jester's dance)-- which made its European debut as part of the exhibition.
Selected by Victoria Miro, who has a long association with the academy, the exhibition showcases a cross section of work including painting, photography, sculpture and video installation by former members of this prestigious European institution.
A few years ago, «Kerry James Marshall: Painting and Other Stuff» (2013 - 14) a European tour of Marshall's work that could be described as a mid-career retrospective featured a variety of mediums — photography, drawing, sculpture, installation and animated film.
The Astrup Fearnley Museum's collection comprises paintings, sculptures and installations by some of the most important international contemporary artists; established in the 1960s with a particular focus on American art, the collection's focus has been widened in the last years to include also works by renowned European, Brazilian, Japanese, Chinese, and Indian artists.
Currently, the semi-permanent exhibition features 173 works — paintings, sculptures, installations, and photographs — by 20th and 21st century artists such as Georges Braque, Pablo Picasso, George Grosz, Fernand Léger, Piet Mondrian, Marcel Duchamp, Marc Rothko, Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, Cy Twombly, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Joseph Beuys, Cindy Sherman, Thomas Schütte, Louise Bourgeois, and Glenn Ligon, among many others, thus spanning over one hundred years of European and American art.
Over a thirty year career, Kudo, who worked in France and Japan, developed an extremely complex body of sculpture, installation, and performance - based work in reaction both to World War II and Japan's subsequent transformation into an industrial society and to European Humanism which, he believed, abetted environmental degradation and social malaise.
Now one of the finest university collections in the United States, the Museum contains strong holdings of 19th -, 20th -, and 21st - century European and American paintings, sculptures, prints, installations, and photographs.
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.
Over the past two decades, the British artist Yinka Shonibare has used film, dance, installation, painting, photography, and most notably sculpture to mine the historical and political identities of his African and European roots.
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh Founded in 1895 by the Pittsburgh - based industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, the museum has a permanent collection of roughly 35,000 works, featuring European and American paintings, drawings, prints (notably Japanese prints), sculpture, decorative art, architecture, photography (notably the archive of African - American photographer Charles «Teenie» Harris) and installations.
Shonibare's artwork explores contemporary African identity and its relationship to European colonialism through painting, sculpture, installation, and moving image.
In his first European solo show, Kishio Suga, best known as one of the leading figures of the Japanese art movement Mono - ha, will be celebrated in his own right with a retrospective of twenty - three installations and sculptures from 1969 through the present.
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 Texas
Carnegie Museum of Art (Pittsburgh) Established in 1895 by Andrew Carnegie, the museum owns a collection of some 35,000 works, including European and American paintings, drawings, prints (notably Japanese prints), sculpture, decorative art, architecture, photography (notably the archive of African - American photographer Charles «Teenie» Harris) and installations.
The move also culminated in the creation of his last great sculpture and installation, the Merz Barn, a continuation of the Hanover Merzbau; an architectural construction considered to be one of the key lost works of European modernism.
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