Sentences with phrase «japanese artists»

And there was Alicia Penalba; Imai and Domoto, Japanese artists; Ellsworth Kelly, whom I didn't know; Jack Youngerman, a close friend of mine; Zuka Middleberg, who also had come very early and has continued to live in Paris; Hugh Weiss; Charlie Semser.
After returning to Japan, he became interested in form, which for him, comes before colour, and he began printing on silk panels and creating illustrated books, becoming one of the most popular contemporary Japanese artists.
Together with his wife, artist Rakuko Naito, he came to the United States in 1958, at a similar time as Japanese artists Yayoi Kusama and Yoko Ono.
Takashi Murakami's massive retrospective, The Octopus Eats Its Own Leg, moves from MCA Chicago to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancouver, BC, marking the Japanese artists first career retrospective in Canada.
Takashi Murakami's massive retrospective, «The Octopus Eats Its Own Leg,» moves from MCA Chicago to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancouver, BC, marking the Japanese artists first career retrospective
This museum - quality exhibition juxtaposes for the first time historical works by Japanese artists belonging to the original Mingei movement — whose techniques derive from traditional methods of craftsmanship, as seen in many of the Japanese artifacts on display — with the works of modern and contemporary artists, designers and architects, who keep alive the philosophy of Mingei today.
; important artworks by Japanese artists Yoshitomo Nara, Takashi Murakami and Yayoi Kusama; and pieces by renowned Italian Futurists Giacomo Balla and Gino Severini.
The Evening Sale includes paintings by Josef Albers, Frank Auerbach, Wade Guyton and Christopher Wool; important artworks by Japanese artists Yoshitomo Nara, Takashi Murakami and Yayoi Kusama; and pieces by renowned Italian Futurists Giacomo Balla and Gino Severini.
He emerged as an artist in Kyoto in the early 1960s and joined the legendary post-war Japanese artists collective Gutai Art Association in 1964.
There's breathing room here, elbowing into the picture many Japanese artists living in New York, and other formalists including Thomas Downing and Sidney Wolfson, in whom can be seen Op sensibilities transitioning the preoccupations of Frank Stella into the hard - edge of industrial - design 1970s patterns.
The Japanese artists were born between 1936 and 1944, Andre in 1935, Flavin in 1933.
provides a gateway into the views of Japanese artists as they navigated the city and their relationships with it.
Murakami runs his own company, Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd., which specializes in everything from art to design merchandise and also is a managing agency for seven other Japanese artists.
Exhibitions include Dos Mundos: Worlds of the Puerto Ricans 1973, Mira, Mira, Mira, Museum of the City of New York 1974, Ten Japanese Artists, 1975; Legacy of James Vanderzee, 1977; Sacred Artifacts: Objects of Devotion, 1982; Disinformation: The Manufacture of Consent, 1985; Repulsion: Aesthetics of the Grotesque, 1987; Foreign Affairs: Conflicts in the Global Village, 1988; Dia De Los Muertos, 1988; Prisoners of Image: Ethnic and Gender Stereotyping, 1989; Mon Reve: Haiti after the Duvaliers, 1989; Artists of Conscience, 1992; Peoples Choice: Komar & Melamid, 1994; Expansion Arts, I, II, III, 1995 - 1998; (Mickey) Mouse: An American Icon, 1998; The Artists as Patron, 1999; Honeymoon Series by Yoshio Itagaki, 2000; Between the Real and the Unreal: Recent works by Simen Johan, 2000, Genochoice an installation by Virgil Wong, 2000.
The gallery is also notable as one of the few to include artists of color in its roster, including Ed Clark, one of the first African Americans to show on East Tenth Street, as well as numerous Japanese artists.
The exhibition includes four works on paper by Frankenthaler, as well as 23 works on paper and ceramics by American and Japanese artists who were active during the 1950s to 1980s.
(Nagoya City Art Museum, 2013), «JAPANCONGO» (Centre National d'Art Contemporain, Grenoble, 2011), «Children's Art in Mie» (Mie Prefectural Art Museum, 2011), «Passion Fruits Picked from The Olbricht Collection» ( me Collectors Room Berlin, Berlin, 2010, and «FLOWERS AND LANDSCAPE, Claude Monet and Young Japanese Artists» (Contemporary Art Museum Kumamoto, 2009).
Takashi Murakami's irreverent, pop culture — infused art has made him one of the most recognized Japanese artists today.
Other highlights include Paul Kos's and William Leavitt's playful and irreverent forms of Conceptual art; diverse interpretations of Pop art by American painter Allan D'Arcangelo, British filmmaker and collage artist Jeff Keen, the Spanish photographer and object maker Darío Villalba; and new and iconoclastic forms of expression in the postwar period by Japanese artists Kazuyo Kinoshita, Atsuko Tanaka, Keiji Uematsu, and Eiji Uematsu.
Tom Wolf, Professor of Art History at Bard College, discusses a group of Japanese artists, including Yasuo Kuniyoshi, and their influence on Isamu Noguchi's early work.
Other influences he cites include Gerhard Richter and master Japanese artists from Katsushika Hokusai to Takashi Murakami.
This presentation of his work, the second at the gallery, seeks to draw attention to this critical yet underexposed period of intense experimentation with space, line, form and colour by one of the most important post-war Japanese artists.
Tomoo Gokita One of the most sought after Contemporary Japanese Artists, Tomoo Gokita's prints and originals continue to surge in desirability with outstanding auction results and sell - out shows.
Hanga Ten will be exhibiting at the 20/21 International Art Fair in South Kensington (15 - 18 May), showcasing a selection of original prints by contemporary Japanese artists.
Welcome to the fantastic world of Chiho Aoshima (who is part of the great group of Japanese artists under the Kaikai Kiki family).
The gallery host exhibitions that last around two months with an interim installation period of several months, during which SCAI The Bathhouse travels around the world and shows artworks by Japanese artists at international art fairs.
The art collection includes prints by European and Japanese artists from the 16th century to the present day and oil paintings by leading British artists.
Opening five years to the day of the natural disaster, the exhibition includes over 90 works by 17 Japanese artists, including Nobuyoshi Araki, Naoya Hatakeyama, Keizō Kitajima, Lieko Shiga, and Tomoko Yoneda.
Other figures influenced by Japanese art and Japanese artists in New York in the 1950s include Franz Kline, Sam Francis, John Cage and Merce Cunningham.
In addition to representing a number of acclaimed Japanese artists, including Toshimasa Kikuchi, Karin Kamijo and Mitsuru Takeya, Megumi Ogita Gallery also seeks to actively promote various foreign artists, including Holly Farrell, Julie Heffernan and Frank Trankina.
In the uncertain years since the recession of 2008, emerging Japanese artists have continued to emigrate to New York, reflecting today's globalized culture and securing an ongoing legacy of artistic exchange.
WhiteBox is excited to present «A Colossal World: Japanese Artists and New York, 1950s — Present,» a group exhibition curated by Kyoko Sato.
Throughout the exhibition, visitors will see the particular ways in which Japanese artists have contributed to the betterment of New York City's cultural landscape — from mid-century avant - gardes to emerging contemporary artists pushing new boundaries.
Spanning the entirety of WhiteBox's two - leveled exhibition space, the show features the video, sculpture, murals, installation, and two - dimensional media works by over 50 Japanese artists who emigrated to New York during the formative stages of their careers.
The effect of Japanese aesthetics on European artists like Whistler, Degas, and Van Gogh is well - known; but Japanese artists also borrowed many ideas from their contemporaries in the West.
«A Colossal World» investigates the reciprocal channels of influence established between multiple generations of Japanese artists and the city of New York.
The festival, on view until the 2 October, sees myriad Japanese artists, galleries, bookstores and publishers present a range of work both historical and contemporary.
The Habers were astute connoisseurs of fine craftsmanship, which led them to assemble an impressively diverse collection of prints, books, and ceramics by contemporary Japanese artists.
Dreaming of the expanded art world available through the New York art scene, many of these Japanese artists migrated to New York.
One of our favorite Japanese artists who tends to make work in what you would call the «erotic» world, Hajime Sorayama, just opened a new solo show at Aishonazuka in Hong Kong.
Cuchifritos Gallery and Residency Unlimited are pleased to present their seventh annual collaboration, On Illusions, featuring the recent work of Japanese artists Naomi Okubo and Kuniyasu Sakaizawa.
1976 Seven Italian Artists and Seven Japanese Artists, Italian Cultural Institute Hall, Tokyo, Japan
The unprecedented survey demonstrates how 29 Japanese artists and photographers enlisted the camera to make experimental and conceptual shifts in their artistic practices during a time of radical societal change.
It also brings together artists working in New York in the 1980's, such as Jean - Michel Basquiat, Felix Gonzaelz - Torres, Jeff Koons, and Cady Noland; «Young British Artists» like Tracey Emin and Damien Hirst; and Chinese and Japanese artists including Gu Wenda and Takashi Murakami, for a gathering of late - 20th - century art that is stellar in quality and distinctively international in perspective.
Nearby, on East Tenth Street, was another co-op space, the Brata Gallery (October 1957 — April 1962) where American artists, including Al Held, Ed Clark, and the painter / sculptor Sal Romano joined with a number of Japanese artists to show works that dealt experimentally with abstraction.
Zipping at speeds up to 200 miles per hour, a train named «Genbi Shinkansen» on the Jōetsu Shinkansen line now holds a group exhibition of contemporary works by six Japanese artists, the Japanese collective Paramodel, and New York - based artist Brian Alfred.
This exhibition features 65 examples of contemporary Japanese ceramic arts, created by 35 Japanese artists, from the celebrated collection of Robert and Lisa Kessler.
«Our game is a collection of tales that are meant to feel mysterious, unsettling and strange, which is a feeling Japanese artists seem to capture really well,» writes Giant Sparrow.
The union of Japanese artists alongside their Western friends shine through the album, sidestepping the language gap and communicating entirely through the universal understanding of music.
(Japanese artists) Beatles (UK), Vanessa Paradis (FR), I bought all of their albums!
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