Installation view of «Julian Schnabel:
Symbols of Actual Life,» at the Legion of Honor, San Francisco, 2018.
«Julian Schnabel:
Symbols of Actual Life» dominates most of the museum's entry courtyard, as well as the walls of three huge galleries.
«Julian Schnabel:
Symbols of Actual Life» seen near the Rodin's The Thinker statue at the Legion of Honor in San Francisco, Calif., Monday, April 16, 2018.
«Julian Schnabel:
Symbols of Actual Life»: 9:30 a.m. - 5: 15 p.m., Tuesdays - Sundays.
A rendering of the artist installation proposal of «Julian Schnabel —
Symbols of Actual Life» at the Legion of Honor in San Francisco.
Installation proposel of Julian Schnabel —
Symbols of Actual Life, Legion of Honor, San Francisco
The exhibition Julian Schnabel:
Symbols of Actual Life will feature a new body of work created for the Legion's Court of Honor.
Julian Schnabel:
Symbols of Actual Life: April 19 - Aug.
Julian Schnabel's exhibition, «Julian Schnabel:
Symbols of Actual Life,» seen in the courtyard of the Legion of Honor In San Francisco, Calif., Monday, April 16, 2018.
1/4 - Installation proposal of «Julian Schnabel -
Symbols of Actual Life» at the Legion of Honor.
«Julian Schnabel:
Symbols of Actual Life.»
Julian Schnabel's
Symbols of Actual Life shows at San Francisco's Legion of Honor through August 5, 2018
Not exact matches
The cross became the central
symbol of the church's faith only because it had first been the
actual center around which the whole remembered meaning
of the
life of Jesus had been gathered.
However, what if all our
symbols and myths, our ceremonies and dogmas were unexpectedly and suddenly exploded, and to our awful surprise, we could see beyond these human inventions to discover not the Abyss but the real,
actual presence
of the
living God?
First vilified as killers in
life and fable, then romanticized as
symbols of freedom and environmental purity, wolves stir up love - hate relationships that may have little or nothing to do with their
actual character and value to the precarious balance
of nature.
Harkness» show - her fourth solo exhibition — builds upon themes and the key
symbols in her previous work, but adds, for the first time, the
actual lived experience
of historical actors.
According to the gallery: «Cyril Le Van composes plastic art work by using photography to reproduce in
actual size and three dimensions objects
of daily
life,
symbols of belonging to a group, a social or cultural identity, or characteristics
of our age.