Other glass artists included Charles Connick, William Willet and Nicolai D'Ascenzo.
Not exact matches
Browse and purchase paintings, sculpture, ceramics,
glass, jewelry, books and
other creations from the
artists, artisans, and authors who created them.
The party was a roaring success with celebrities including legendary VOGUE Editor - in - Chief and Roger's longtime friend, Anna Wintour, 30 Rockactress Katrina Bowden, actors Jeffrey Wright, Josh Lucas and Anthony Mackie, supermodel Carol Alt, former Real Housewife, Kelly Killoren Bensimon, Gossip Girl Kelly Rutherford, music
artist Fabolous, designer Christian Siriano, Kardashian pal Jonathan Cheban, and
others dancing the night away to the sounds of DJ Bob Sinclair and pop sensation Emeli Sandé, while raising a
glass of Moët Impérial Brut Champagne to Moët's 270 years.
We too use it for drying wine
glasses and
other tiny breakables in the kitchen, and I occasionally leave my
artist paintbrushes on it...
1 «All Eyez on Me» «Atomic Blonde» «Battle of the Sexes» «Before I Fall» «The Big Bad Fox &
Other Tales» «California Typewriter» «Casting JonBenet» «Daddy's Home 2» «The Disaster
Artist» «Downsizing» «The Emoji Movie» «Everything, Everything» «The Fate of the Furious» «The Florida Project» «A Ghost Story» «Gifted» «The
Glass Castle» «The House» «In the Fade» «Ingrid Goes West» «Kedi» «King Arthur: Legend of the Sword» «Kingsman: The Golden Circle» «Kong: Skull Island» «Last Flag Flying» «LBJ» «Leap!»
The Cat Cinderella The Little
Glass Slipper Aschenputtel The Baba Yaga The Little
Glass Slipper Katie Woodencloak Tattercoats Ashey PeltThe Sharp Grey Sheep Rashin - Coatie Cap O'Rushes The Hearth Cat The Princess and The Golden Shoes The Twelve Months Yeh - Shen Kongji and Patzzi Bawang Putih And Bawang Merah The Story of Tấm and Cám Fair, Brown, and Trembling And more... * Illustrated with original art from renowned
artists Harry Clarke, Elenore Abbott, Gustave Doré and
others.
When you visit the shop, you will find Hickory Flat Functional High Fired Pottery as well as creations by
other regional
artists, including porcelain, stoneware, stained
glass, copperwork, woodwork, fiber and jewelry.
Five years ago we transformed an older factory building into work / gallery space for
artists and now have have ceramic studios, hot and cold
glass, woodworking facilities and
other amenities.
Most galleries like to work with established and known
artists to be safe.How does an upcoming
artist break through this
glass wall created by galleries?Either I have to be terrific in my work for them to want me or I have to go gallery hopping to show them my works.What are the
other options?
Peter Layton is an English
glass artist who started one of the first hot -
glass studios in Europe, and today London Glassblowing is the premier studio where Peter and
other fine art
glass artists create their work.
The group show, which brings a whole slew of
artists — including Amalie Jakobsen (also functioning as curator with Oliver Hickmet), Kyungmin Sophia Son, Oskar Jakobsen, Daniel Szor and Alexander
Glass, along with about 16
others — takes the location as the starting point.
For Pace, Wilson will reconfigure Afro Kismet which includes two chandeliers, two monumental Iznik tile walls, four black
glass drip works, and a globe sculpture, as well as installations and vitrine pieces that gather cowrie shells, engravings, photographs, a Yoruba mask, and furniture, among
other objects that the
artist discovered in his frequent trips to Istanbul throughout 2016 and 2017.
Artists represented in the archive include Vito Acconci, Laurie Anderson, Karole Armitage, Dara Birnbaum, John Cage, Lucinda Childs, Merce Cunningham, Philip
Glass, Karen Finley, Simone Forti, Mike Kelley, Joan Jonas, Bill T. Jones, Sherrie Levine, Robert Mapplethorpe, Christian Marclay, Nam June Paik, Cindy Sherman, Bill Viola, and Robert Wilson among many
others.
Whether you're drawn here by painting, sculpture, ceramics, fiber,
glass, or pieces that defy easy description, you know you're seeing — and buying — work that isn't like anything else, perhaps not even
other works by the very same
artist.
Park Place Gallery was a center for musical performances by electronic composers Steve Reich, Philip
Glass, and
other notable performance
artists including Joan Jonas.
Glass Gallery Curated by Phong Bui and Rail Curatorial Projects A Rail Curatorial Project led by Phong Bui of the Brooklyn Rail, this exhibition focuses on
artists whose practice interrogates the contemporary social climate, including issues surrounding immigration, the environment, human rights and equality, foreign relations, among
others, ultimately drawing attention to art as it functions as a lens for better understanding the time in which we live.
On the
other side of the island, Scotland + Venice have taken over an elaborate Venetian palace where
artist Graham Fagan has developed a carefully choreographed display which leads visitors through opulent rooms of Murano
glass chandeliers and views over the Grand Canal, culminating in a multi-channel video installation entitled The Slaves Lament.
The artworks are made from materials as diverse as bamboo stalks, copper tubes,
glass shards and a shopping cart; the show's catalog also documents the
artist's designs for gates, fountains, stained -
glass windows and
other architectural elements, some of which have been destroyed.
The works on display are: 432Hz (2009 - 2014), a wooden shell that contains honeycombs; Vorkuta (2003), a refrigeration chamber where the temperature of -30 °C contrasts with a chair maintained at a constant +37 °C by an internal thermostat; Mindfall (2004 - 2007), a container which contains a chair and tables, on which 21 electric motors turn on intermittently, one after the
other, creating a sort of musical composition; Untitled (2003), a small iron room crossed by blasts of hot and cold air channelled into the space by powerful fans; and Sub (2014), a new work specially created for the exhibition at HangarBicocca, an assembly of aluminium and
glass display units which the
artist originally designed to exhibit her Inner Disorder (1999 - 2001) series of drawings.
on may 19 - 20, architects, painters, sculptors, photographers, stained -
glass artists, textile designers, woodworkers, jewelers, and
other makers and manufacturers based within the complex will open their doors to the public for a weekend - long open house.
For instance, in a small side room, US
artist Dario Robleto's Setlists for a Setting Sun (The Crystal Palace)(2014) and The Sky, Once Choked with Stars, Will Slowly Darken (2011) are comprised of, among
other minerals and objects, sea urchin teeth, homemade crystals,
glass domes, audio recordings and mica flakes (which can be found in the mountains of New Mexico).
Eventually, the drawings and their tentative
glass framing devices became works in their own right, with a status separate from the
artist's
other works.
Philip Johnson's
Glass House has often served as the subject and inspiration for
other artist's work.
Michael Lazarus» mixed media panels made of paint, wood,
glass, adhesive lettering, and, in some cases, plastic reflectors and
other found materials, share a vocabulary of pared down imagery, color, and response to materials culled from the
artist's everyday surroundings.
Katie Richardson is a Hadley
artist who works in
glass, steel and
other materials.
A sculptor, performance
artist, writer and filmmaker, McElheny is best known for his use of
glass in combination with
other materials.
In
other works of self - peril, the
artist was electrocuted, kidnapped, nailed, drowned, or lay immobile under a sheet of
glass.
The lure of Buddhism has brought her to a language that is shared by
other artists, from Brice Marden to Philip
Glass.
2010 3 minute wonder series, Broadcast commission, Channel 4 (27,28,29,30 Sept; 18, 19, 20, 21 Oct) 06.2010 Persistence of Vision, FACT, Liverpool, UK 05.2010 Steps into the arcane, Kunstmuseum Thurgau, Switzerland 05.2010 It has to be this way ², National Gallery of Denmark, Copenhagen [commissioned solo show] 03.2010 Hands on, (curated by John Hilliard) Galerie Raum Mit Licht, Vienna, Austria 02.2010 Depatterrn, Galleri Erik Steen, Oslo, Norway 10.2009 Performance, Film Weekend: The Jarman Award at KunstHalle, Zurich, Switzerland 09.2009 Performance, Whitechapel Gallery, London, UK06.2009 Mostravideo, Itau Cultural Institute, Sao Paulo, Brazil 02.2009 Altermodern, Fourth Tate Triennial, Tate Britain, UK 01.2009 It has to be this way, Matt's Gallery, London [commissiond solo show] 12.2008 Performance, Event Horizon, Royal Academy of Art [commissioned solo show] 06.2008 Performance, Happy Hand, British Film Institute, London, UK 10.2007 Cinemart, The Auditorium, Rome, Italy 09.2007 Foreign Bodies, White Box, New York, USA 07.2007 Swallowing Black Maria, Smart Project Space, Amsterdam [commissioned solo show] 02.2007 The Believers, Touring show to five cities in Norway, with performances in Stavanger, Forde and Bergen 09.2006 The truth was always there, The Collection, Lincoln [commissioned solo show] 07.2006 UBS Opening, Tate Modern (with Laurie Simmons, Guerilla Girls etc), UK 05.2006 Performance, Human Camera, Mali Salon, Rijeka, Croatia (solo show) 05.2006 I can't tell you, Grundy Gallery, Blackpool [commissioned solo show] 04.2006 Metropolis Rise, CQL Design Centre, Shanghai; DIAF 2006 @ 798 Space, Beijing, China 04.2006 Performance, Inside, Great Eastern Hotel, Masonic Temple, London, UK 03.2006 Performance, Don't Look Through Me, Y Theatre, Leicester, UK 03.2006 Don't look through me, City Gallery Leicester [commissioned solo show] 03.2006 Performance, Screening at Witte de With / Tent, Rotterdam, Holland 03.2006 John Skies or Sally Swims, UKS Gallery, Oslo, Norway 02.2006 Wandering Rocks, Gimpel Fils Gallery, London 11.2005 Image in Me, Market Gallery, Glasgow (solo show) 10.2005 Eyes of
Others, Gallery of Photography, Dublin [commissioned solo show] 10.2005 Wunderkammer, The Collection (curated by Edward Allington), Lincoln, UK 09.2005 I saw the light, Gasworks Gallery, London [commissioned solo show] 09.2004 Adam, Smart Projects, Amsterdam, Holland 11.2004 Mind the Gap, La Friche, Triangle, Marseille, France 08.2004 Shattered Love, Keith Talent Gallery, London 04.2004 Eating at Another's Table, Metropole Galleries, Folkestone (performance / exhibition) 04.2004 Tonight, Studio Voltaire, London (curated by Paul O'Neill) 03.2004 Performance, A Variety Night of Ventriloquism, FACT, Liverpool (with Ken Campbell, Aura Satz, Andrew Hubbard) 03.2004 Mesmer, Temporarycontemporary, London 02.2004 Haunted Media, Site Gallery, Sheffield (with Susan Hiller, Susan Collins, Scanner, Thompson / Craighead, S Mark Gubb) 09.2003 The Physical World, APT, London, (with Ian Dawson, Katie Pratt) 09.2003 Sphere, Presentation House Gallery, Vancouver, Canada (with Paul McCarthy, Bruce Nauman, Laurie Simmons and Allan McCollum) 09.2003 You said that without moving your lips, Limerick City Gallery, Ireland (solo show) 08.2003 Calidoscopio, Museo del Barro, Asuncion, Paraguay (solo show) 04.2003 A Taste for Sham, Studio 1.1, London (with Jo Bruton, Kirsten
Glass) 01.2003 The Lost Collection of an Invisible Man, The Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle (curated by Brian Griffiths) 09.2002 History Revision, Plymouth Arts Centre (including Terry Atkinson) 06.2002 Nausea: encounters with ugliness, London Print Studio 04.2002 Dramatic Events, Kent Institute of Art and Design 03.2002 Photoscoptocus, Camden Lock / Henley - on - Thames (Public commission) 03.2002 Nausea, Djangoly Art Centre (with Dave Burrows, Beagles and Ramsay, Margarita Gluzberg, Mark Hutchinson) 08.2001 Trinity College, Zwemmer Gallery, London 05.2001 Black Bag, Old Operating Theatre Museum (+ monograph BBC programme, «Lindsay Seers,
Artist's Eye», Rory Logsdail) 03.2001 For the dead travel fast, Worcester City Museum and Art Gallery [commissioned solo show] 02.2001 Molotov, Dilston Grove Gallery, London (with Kirsten
Glass, Diann Bauer, Annie Whiles, Helen Paterson, Lisa Fielding Smith) 09.2000 Tow, Camden Lock, Millennium Commission Project (with Tim Head, Diana Edmunds, Janice Howard, Zoe Brown) 10.2000 Assembly, Stepney City, London 07.2000 A Shot In The Head, Lisson Gallery, London 07.2000 Unfound, Chisenhale Gallery, London 06.2000 City Projects, Artomatic, London (with Jemima Brown, Marcel Price) 05.2000 The Double, The Lowry Centre, Salford (with Thomas Ruff, James Reilly and Alice Maher) 05.2000 On the rock, APT Gallery, London (with Annie Whiles, Diann Bauer, Kirsten
Glass, Helen Paterson) 09.1999 Nerve, ICA, London (with Jeremy Deller, Martin Creed, Dave Beech, John Isaacs, John Beagles, Dave Burrows, Clive Sall) 07.1999 Quotidian, Paper Bag Factory (curated by Julia Lancaster) 06.1999 Autocannibal, Laure Genillard Gallery, London (solo show) 04.1999 Cabin Fever, Gallery Herold Bremen, Germany, (with Caroline Macarthy and Mairead Maclean) 10.1998 Multiples, Temple Bar Gallery, Dublin 09.1998 Cannibal, Old Museum Art Centre, Belfast (solo show) 08.1997 Knock, Knock,
Artists Work Programme, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin 11.1996 Stick Your Hands Up, Acorn Storage, Hammersmith, London 10.1996 Ghost, ACAVA Open Studios, Denmark St, London 09.1996 Ad Hoc, London Artforms.
Our textile
artists use materials such as yarn, fabric, paper, thread, wire, metal, and
glass to create unique and original jewelry, wall hangings, clothing, sculpture, accessories, and many
other inventive works of art.
I have been true to myself and my eco-credentials by incorporating many recycled materials, including those representing me and my home town of Crieff, Perthshire (Crieff Pottery whisky jugs; remnants from a local fused
glass artist, Gordon's Gin plus
other «stuff».
The anchor of the show, it's an assemblage of a cork, a wedding cake topper (from the
artist's own wedding), an orange peel, and
other objects, all displayed on elevated squares of
glass, and it has a narrative in Anderson's mind.
Many
other artists of the time interpreted Art Nouveau as part of their own styles, including painter Gustav Klimt,
glass designer René Lalique and architect Antoni Gaudí.
Accompanying the photos in the small gallery are immaculate reconstructions of iconic Duchamp works by Los Angeles
artist Gregg Gibbs and
others, probably life - sized: Nude Descending a Staircase, The Large
Glass, Fresh Widow, Fountain, Rotary
Glass Plates, With Hidden Noise, Bicycle Wheel, L.H.O.O.Q., Bottle Rack, and so on.
In 2001 the Lermite Foundation and the museum jointly acquired more than 200 works of the
artist (large paintings, stained
glass projects, drawings, lithographs and
other graphic works).
Adventures in Interactive Art — From Falling Text to Projection Mapped
Glass Talk Description:
Artist Camille Utterback's interactive installations combine innovative technology, elegant design, and surprising situations to reconnect us to our physicality, to each
other, and to the world around us.
Regularly changing exhibitions feature painting, sculpture, photography,
glass, video and
other visual media from internationally acclaimed
artists as well as
artists of national and regional renown.
The show features 500 design pieces from the Amsterdam School and is devoted to the designers and
artists who made sculpture, stained
glass, furniture, clocks, fabrics and
other interior elements.
During this time, he made friends with
other New York - based
artists such as Sol LeWitt, Nancy Graves, Michael Snow, Bruce Nauman, Laurie Anderson, and Chuck Close (who created a now - famous portrait of
Glass).
Homeostasis features Benzant's mixed media sculptures made from
glass beads, clothes, coffee grinds, glitter and
other miscellaneous items, as well as works on paper completed during his recent residence at the Galveston
Artist Residency which serve as a visual diary.
Many participating
artists have never used
glass before, but all come to the workshop to work with master craftspeople like Berengo and
other Murano glassmaking colleagues.
Her large - scale Sea Paintings, grandly produced with the help of the sea itself, provide a backdrop for the galleries, which are filled with various
other sculptures, films and
glass works by the
artist.
Last year, the
artist made her way around an event called Greenpoint Open Studios in a black T - shirt and her distinctive round
glasses, speaking with people she knew from two plus years in New York and
others she didn't.
The cold shop, where
artists work on cooled
glass, features sanders, sinks, and
other heavy equipment.
The
artist's work is held in many public collections, including: The Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Philip Johnson's
Glass House, New Canaan, Connecticut; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Tate Britain, London; Victoria and Albert Museum, London, among many
others.
The
glass - topped Grand Palais, built for the 1900 World's Fair and currently hosting an exhibit by avant - garde Chinese
artist Huang Yong Ping, among several
others, opened again Sunday after closing Friday.
The iconic Retroactive II, a Rauschenberg silkscreen that features a prominent image of John F. Kennedy alongside an image of an astronaut, a weather gauge, a Polaroid of a
glass of water the
artist took, and several
other images, seems to be held in particular esteem by the Tate, since it was used on all of its advertising materials, including the catalogue cover.
With À la Lumière des Deux Mondes (At the Light of Both Worlds, 2005), a site - specific work created for the Louvre's
glass pyramid — the first time a contemporary
artist had exhibited in the institution — Tunga used one of the building's columns as a pivot on which various symbolically charged objects were balanced: gold and black skulls and a giant walking stick intertwined with braided hair on one side; a chain of skulls caught in a dark net falling towards a floor littered with golden and black reproductions of heads from the Louvre's classical sculptures on the
other.
She championed the presentation of many groundbreaking exhibitions and secured major collection gifts, including the Haub Family Collection of Western American art; 30 masterworks from the 1790s to the present by Charles Bird King, Thomas Moran, Frederic Remington, Georgia O'Keeffe and
others; and the Rebecca and Jack Benaroya Collection comprising 225 works including American studio
glass featuring Pilchuck Glass School artists such as Dale Chihuly, Ginny Ruffner and Therman Statom, as well as artworks by Northwest artists such as Morris Graves and Deborah Butterf
glass featuring Pilchuck
Glass School artists such as Dale Chihuly, Ginny Ruffner and Therman Statom, as well as artworks by Northwest artists such as Morris Graves and Deborah Butterf
Glass School
artists such as Dale Chihuly, Ginny Ruffner and Therman Statom, as well as artworks by Northwest
artists such as Morris Graves and Deborah Butterfield.
The sculptures, one a table made out of a large piece of
glass resting on top of two white sawhorses; the
other a stand - alone, black - framed shelving unit, are overlaid with vinyl text in the font of American
artist Barbara Kruger.