Sentences with phrase «sone cavazos»

My most embarrassing hosting story was shortly after my first sone was born.
My sone is the same if I change anything.
I am looking for a new book for the summer, just got sone with one and read it in 3 days too, cause i couldn't put it down... Thanks for the giveaway!
You are sone of the truly kindest and sincere people that I have ever met and I am SOOO dang lucky to have you as one of my BFF's!
My all time favorite sone is byIsrael «IZ» Kamakawiwo`ole».
He comes to house to take our sone to Judo and to watch him while i am work at nights.
Their press conference live stream is sure to include some games we already know about and hopefully sone huge announcements.
Sone of my colleagues were of similar mind.
(Well, sone people do care!)
Kalenderian graduated in painting from UCLA, California, where he studied under Laura Owens and Yutaka Sone among others.
Sone planned first to install the dice in the museum as if they were Pop sculptures and then toss them down the half - pipe on Buttermilk Mountain in Aspen.
«I wanted to visualize communication between people,» says Sone, recalling that he and his assistant could ride forever like «two crazy professors,» but that it became increasingly difficult as the number of riders increased.
Sone is as adept at cobbling together the motorized ski lift, made of wood, cardboard, bicycle wheels, ropes, and chains, that moved through the Santa Monica Museum of Art earlier this year, as he is at carving panoramic models of entire cities out of marble.
«We were watching the same landscape and started painting together what we saw,» says Sone, who works side by side with Weissman on the same canvas as they try to crystallize their experience at the end of a day of skiing.
Serendipitously, Sone and Weissman spotted each other on the chairlift wearing their identical skis at Mammoth Mountain in California.
«The jungle is very beautiful — no left, no right, no front, no back,» says Sone, who has re-created many immersive natural environments, including Jungle Island (2003), installed at the 2004 Whitney Biennial, and It Seems Like Snow Leopard Island (2002 — 2006), first shown at the Kunsthalle Bern in Switzerland in 2006.
Sone told the students.
The spirit of the project reflects Sone's penchant for collaboration and performance, and his love of extremes in nature.
Sone himself skied down the halfpipe holding a strip of P - Tex behind him like a superhero's cape.
Sone starts by making a plaster 3 - D model by hand, based on photos, Google Maps, helicopter rides, and his experience walking through the cities.
Weissman feels the same trust in painting with Sone that he does in skiing with him.
«They adopted me,» says Sone, who continues to collaborate on stonework with 15 artisans there committed now only to his projects.
While hiking on Mount Everest, Sone glimpsed the elusive snow leopard, an animal he admires for its mystery and independence.
The following day, Jacobson skied with Sone and the artist Peter Doig, who commented, «Yutaka skis like his art; he gets down the mountain faster than anyone else, and he looks different than anyone else doing it, too.»
Sone hand - carved Little Manhattan (detail), 2007 — 9, out of marble.
Later, Sone enrolled at Tokyo Geijutsu University, where he received what he describes as a very Western education in architecture.
While Sone renders the streetscapes as faithfully as he can on the upper plane, he takes liberties with the bases — making Manhattan, for instance, rise out of vertiginous cliffs.
Magic Stick, a 1998 video shot by Sone's wife when they were camping on Borneo Island, documents the artist clutching a glistening staff and moving with trepidation through the immense landscape that he equates with creation.
Yutaka Sone's Little Manhattan, presented by David Zwirner is amazingly well - crafted.
MOT Collection, New Acquisitions Anish Kapoor, Yutaka Sone, Yoshimoto Nara, Nobuya Hitsuda, Mami Kosemura
The snow leopard is one of the most elusive motifs to pervade Yutaka Sone's works; like his own peripatetic artistic practice, snow leopards (a protected species) seem to be everywhere, yet leave no trace of their movements.
Artists such as Yutaka Sone, Peter Doig, Karen Kilimnik, Jim Hodges, Carla Klein, Mamma Andersson and Mark Wallinger created works and discuss their projects in this catalogue.
The show at the Kunsthalle Bern is the first institutional solo - exhibition of Yutaka Sone in Europe and takes part in a series of three highly different exhibitions the artist developed over the last six months.
On different blocks of marble Sone shows us a Los Angeles highway, a roller coaster, the city of Hong Kong or a ski elevator over the Swiss mountains tops.
Sone, who now lives and works mainly in Los Angeles and Xiamen, has travelled extensively.
The Stedelijk Museum presents a substantial selection of works in four gallery spaces, revealing the diversity of the gift, which includes work by artists such as Atelier Van Lieshout, Yutaka Sone and Eric Wesley.
However, through Sone's almost absurd attempt at something that «can never be realized», viewers find themselves drawn into an unknown landscape — a place of deviance.
A selection of works by Yutaka Sone will also be on view.
Most of Sone's work is produced in his studio in Xiamen, where he works together with a team of Chinese craftsmen in a family - run a stone factory.
Sone's work has been widely exhibited internationally.
Opening events: Friday, 09th June, 2006, 10.30 am Press conference Friday, 09th June, 2006, 2 pm Artist talk for art students Saturday 10th June, 2006, 1 pm Opening Sunday 11th June, 2006, 12 am Excursion to Zürich, visit of the marble sculpture «Giant Snow Leopard «of Yutaka Sone at the storage room of Möbel Transport AG (advance reservation required) Guided tours: Sunday 11th June, 2006, 2 pm Public guided tour Monday 12th June 2006, 5.30 pm Special guided tour for teachers Wednesday 14th June, 2006, 2 pm Guided tour for senior visitors Thursday 15th June 2006, 8 pm Public guided tour Tuesday 20th June, 2006, 12.30 am Sanwichclub Saturday 24th June, 2006, 1.30 pm Tour of the galleries Sunday 25th June, 2006, 2 pm Public guided tour
Sone's love of snow and ski - ing, has brought him to his latest works, a series of snowflakes carved out of single pieces of natural crystal or marble.
Together with the two other institutions involved in this series of exhibitions, i.e. the Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago and the Aspen Art Museum, the Kunsthalle Bern will publish a book on Sone's work with texts Philippe Pirotte, Hanna Schouwink, Hamza Walker, Benjamin Weissman and Heidi Zuckermann Jacobson.
15 novembre — 20 decembre 2017 œuvres de Josef Albers, Roger Ballen, Louise Bourgeois, John Chamberlain, Lovis Corinth, Lynn Davis, Gotthard Graubner, Shen Fan, Raúl Illarramendi, Catherine Lee, Manish Nai, Gideon Rubin, Georgia Russell, Joel Shapiro, Qui Shihua, David Smith, Yutaka Sone, Cy Twombly
Yutaka Sone & Benjamin Weissman: What Every Snowflake Knows in Its Heart is organized by Elsa Longhauser, Executive Director of the Santa Monica Museum of Art.
Yutaka Sone was born in 1965 in Shizuoka, Japan and lives and works in Los Angeles.
The Santa Monica Museum of Art presents Yutaka Sone and Benjamin Weissman: What Every Snowflake Knows in Its Heart, an exhibition on view from November 21, 2013 to April 5, 2014.
Yutaka Sone's work was shown in a number of group exhibitions in the United States and abroad, including Glasstress 2011 in Venice, BadLands at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporar Art, the Whitney Biennial 2004, the Sao Paulo Biennial 2003, and the Istanbul Biennial 2001.
Yutaka Sone used photographic reproductions, imagery from Google Earth, and several helicopter rides to render Manhattan with its Central Park, skyscrapers, streets, avenues, and the bridges to the east and west to scale.
It's Yutaka Sone's fifth solo show since his first exhibition at the gallery in 1999.
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