Sentences with phrase «follow calle»

Follow Calle 2 all the way through town until it becomes route 130 to Itiquis and Fraijanes.
Once you're out, at your left on the square's corner follow Calle Duque de Alba for about 100m, take the first left to Plaza de Cascorro and then left again to Calle de Juanelo, we're there on number 24.

Not exact matches

This explain why so many calle «Christians» are complety ignorant of the religion they follow and how the Evangelicals use it to their advantage.
«First the Great White Herons would arrive, followed by the other birds,» says Calle.
A friend in Cartagena told us we could get free lodging at the Hostal Sunshine on Calle 9 if we worked the reception desk so we followed the tip...
Once you're out, at your left on the square's corner follow follow Calle Duque de Alba for about 100m, take the first left to Plaza de Cascorro and then left again to Calle de Juanelo, we're there on number 24.
Take the exit San Millan and behind you there's Calle de las Maldonadas, follow it to Plaza del Cascorro.
Insider tip: follow hotel staffers to the street - food stands on Calle Burdeos, off the hotel entrance, where you'll find some of the area's tastiest tacos.
La Latina: A foolproof plan for exploring La Latina includes a visit to the Sunday Rastro flea market followed by a tapas crawl along Calle Cava Baja.
We encourage you to start your walking tour on the following place to visit, Paseo de la Princesa and continue walking along Calle del Cristo, where you'll find various attractions, unique shops and excellent restaurants.
I must also add the very first artist I interviewed, in 1980, Ian Breakwell and his The Walking Man Diary, which predated Sophie Calle's Please Follow Me in so many ways.
The following artists will be exhibiting their work in Prospect.2: Sophie Calle (b. France); Nick Cave (b. USA); Jonas Dahlberg (b. Sweden); Bruce Davenport Jr. (b. USA); Dawn DeDeaux (b. USA); R. Luke DuBois (b. USA); George Dunbar (b. USA); William Eggleston (b. USA); Nicole Eisenman (b. France); Karl Haendel (b. USA); Ragnar Kjartansson (b. Iceland); William Pope.L (b. USA); An - My Lê (b. Vietnam); Ivan Navarro (b. Chile); Lorraine O'Grady (b. USA); Tsuyoshi Ozawa (b. Japan); Gina Phillips (b. USA); Ashton T. Ramsey (b. USA); Alexis Rockman (b. USA); Joyce J. Scott (b. USA); Jennifer Steinkamp (b. USA); Dan Tague (b. USA); Robert Tannen (b. USA); Grazia Toderi (b. Italy); Francesco Vezzoli (b. Italy); and Pawel Wojtasik (b. Poland).
From following a stranger to Venice to burying her mother's jewellery at the north pole, Sophie Calle is France's foremost artist of the unexpected.
-- For art, the photographer and conceptual artist Sophie Calle, whose earliest work, the Suite Venitienne (1979), in which she followed — and photographed — a man throughout the streets of Venice after meeting him at a party in Paris, sets the tone for her unique approach to documenting her personal experiences.
Over the course of almost two weeks in Venice, Calle notates, in time - stamped entries, her surveillance of Henri B., as well as her own emotions as she seeks, finds and follows him through the labyrinthine streets of Venice.
In 1980, French conceptual artist Sophie Calle followed a man she met at a party in Paris to Venice where she disguised herself and continued to follow and photograph him.
Following on the heels of Calle's highly acclaimed «Did You See Me?»
In Calle's quintessential style, the pieces follow a formula: here, a portrait of a blind person, their printed answer to the question of what beauty means to them, and then Calle's photographic interpretation of their answers.
The following year, Hanley opened seminal solo exhibitions for Christian Marclay, Zoe Leonard, Erwin Wurm and Thomas Locher as well as comprehensive group shows of recent works by Richard Prince, Christopher Wool, Robert Gober, Sherrie Levine, Sophie Calle, Sigmar Polke and Stephen Prina.
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