Sentences with phrase «about earlier artists»

Not exact matches

Disregard for realism was possible for the early medieval artists because the Renaissance concern for a faithful rendering of reality had not yet come about.
If I'm wrong about this, Rauch should be able to produce earlier statements in which hundreds of self - identified «lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender and allied activists, scholars, educators, writers, artists, lawyers, journalists, and community organizers,» including notable scholars at top academic institutions and leaders of respected organizations, endorsed sexual arrangements involving three or more conjugal partners.
In my early career, I worked as an opera singer, actress, model, and voiceover artist in New York City, which certainly taught me a thing or two about the importance of self - care and maintaining a positive self - image, regardless of what life throws my way.
We had an early alert about her arrival to the city after her makeup artist, Evelyne Noraz, arrived a few days prior.
Gus Van Sant's Don't Worry, He Won't Get Far on Foot was one such film, earning warm early reviews; the biopic about artist John Callahan stars Joaquin Phoenix, Jonah Hill, and Rooney Mara, a triple axel of awards - bait talent.
Van Gogh Rated R for sexuality and nudity Rotten Tomatoes Score: 63 % Available on DVD and Blu - ray French with English Subtitles This early 90's biopic about the famed impressionist by iconic French director Maurice Pialat follows the artist in his last 60 days before his tragic death at the age of 37.
After a long wait and a premiere at SXSW earlier this year, James Franco's film - about - a-film The Disaster Artist got its first teaser trailer today.
But what about dancer and performance artist Loie Fuller, the innovator of modern dance who helped propel Duncan to superstardom in the early 20th century?
The portrait artist talks about an early career spent under the titanic influence of Picasso, and the return of the narrative self - portrait.
The editor tells the story of Mrs Jo Jo, recently resurrected and now competing again / Dexter Brown also known as de Bruyne — Tony Clark traces the career of this renowned artist and evaluates his distinctive style, illustrated with examples of his work / de Bruyne Painting — One of the earlier, large De Bryune paintings depicting a scene from the 1908 French Grand Prix / Granville Bradshaw — Michael Worthington - Williams considers a new biography of this prolific and talented, but flawed, designer / The Genius of Fangio — Simon Moore talks to Michel Poberejsky about Juan Manuel Fangio and the 1957 Monaco Grand Prix
What I found so strange about this was that young artists today are getting paid the same page rate as I was when I started working in the early 1980s.
In two long, lyrical sentences, MacLachlan speculates about the great artist's early experiences and how they shaped his genius.
I've talked to some artists about pitching that, but it's very much in the early stages.
Artist and writer David Mack has revealed more details about this forthcoming volume at the Singapore Toy, Game, and Comic Convention (STGCC) earlier this month.
It took another five months to get my ass in gear, set up the infrastructure to do so (find a cover artist, create a website, interview editors, create a Facebook and Twitter presence, decide what to even write about as my preferred genre), and then produce the first book, which I released in early June — Fatal Exchange, which still reads well, I think, if a bit grittier than my later work.
Earlier this year on Nextdoor.com, someone created a subject for discussion about Venice and the artists that set up every day on Ocean Front Walk.
Wanting to find out more about the passionate, young, overeaching past of the game designers that struggled during that time, this report manga was created: «Passion of Game Designers ~ in their «early» days» Following his recent works, «Utsunke» and «Pen and Chopsticks» manga artist Keiichi Tanaka, who himself had a career in the game industry, will be handling his third report manga.
Here's a fascinating post about a relatively early Christopher Williams work, with a reference to Gay Morris's 1981 ARTnews article «When Artists Use Photographs: Is it fair use, legitimate transformation, or rip - off?»
These black - and - white life - size photographs of naked women in their 90s posed against a pure white ground, as if they were already in another world, were shocking when they were first shown, about 12 years ago, when the artist was in his early 40s.
The thing that many artists miss in their early career is that showing your work is not necessarily about selling your work.
Since the early 1970s, the artist has explored what mass - media images and public spaces reveal about power and persuasion in late capitalist society.
I have a large collection of paintings about 300 I want to sell of listed 19th and early 20th century artists
In his review, New Yorker critic Peter Schjeldahl pointed to the artist's early doubts about Abstract Expressionism, quoting him in Working Space: «I sensed a hesitancy, a doubt of some vague dimension which made their work touching, but to me too vulnerable.»
Multimedia artist Tina Keane talks about her early work, the influences that have developed her prac...
Spiced by gossip about the artist's fecklessness, which, on an earlier visit to the city, had caused her to be ousted from a series of hotels, starting at the Waldorf and ending in a youth hostel, the show is legendary; Laura Hoptman, a curator of the moma show, told me that art - world types who didn't see it (including me) are tempted to pretend, or may even believe, that they did.
Yet its heart lies with the artist's early claim, for the show is all about pairs and trios of paintings, each with its own spontaneous life.
The artists» varied responses each used this specific instance from the past to engage with and stimulate further conversations about the conditions of the present, with the same physical space hosting the exploration of similar issues as those addressed more than forty years earlier.
And yet, what says the most about Loving as an artist is that he walked away from his early signature work because he felt «stuck inside that box» of his own making.
I thought it was a great image to represent a catalog and a show that's about these early African American artists.
The paintings depict the wilderness and fantasies about great adventures with references to memories from the artist's early life in Kiruna, films he has seen, places he has visited or the smallness of humanity in the face of nature.
Another artist that I mentioned earlier, Nancy Prophet, there are only about a dozen known works of hers so it's very exciting to find a piece of hers in a private collection and bring it to auction.
He spoke with me by phone about Swann's influence on the market, sought - after artists and scarce works, and highlights from the forthcoming Feb. 13 sale of 19th and early 20th century art.
About Skarstedt: Skarstedt (20 E. 79th Street, New York, NY) was founded in 1994 by Per Skarstedt to mount historical exhibitions by Contemporary European and American artists that had become the core of his specialty in Sweden and New York in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Rome Prize, American Academy in Rome Location: Rome, Italy Each year, the Rome Prize is awarded to about thirty emerging artists and scholars who represent the highest standard of excellence and who are in the early or middle stages of their working lives.
The archive contains a collection of paperworks, catalogues and images by and about black artists from exhibitions held internationally during the 1980s and early 1990s, including Chris Ofili, Sonia Boyce, Lubaina Himid, Claudette Johnson, Ingrid Pollard, to name but a few.
SoHo was home to about 2,000 artists by the early»70s, many of whom had to go as far as Chelsea to get basic groceries and faced police shakedowns as part of failed efforts to clear them out.
For this project, the artist has selected about 20 paintings of the early sixties out of his personal collection.
Los Angeles - based artist and writer Maya Gurantz talks about: Getting out of the staid confines of where she grew up, and what it was (and is) like being an angry feminist from an early age; her «accountability group,» a group of women artists...
Sharon B: I want to go back to on of Ed's earlier comments about having a gallery's artist refer you: you NEED to work with the community around you.
Topics include his early childhood; his nomadic adventures to places such as Cuba, California, New York, and Florida; his involvement in various galleries with other artists; his work lobbying for artist rights in Washington, D.C.; and details about some of his most best - known works.
In the recent spate of articles about Bushwick's innovative DIY arts projects and spaces, artists almost invariably cite Austin Thomas as a key early influence.
The 1985 film, Every Picture Tells A Story - about the artist's early life - was made by his son, James Scott, for Channel 4 Television.
From a group of early, never - before seen notebook drawings by Carl Andre, dated 1959 - 1960, to Lawrence Weiner's All About Eve, 1992, this exhibition reflects the richness of thought and experimentation undertaken by more than thirty artists whose work reflects the fundamental tenets of Minimalism.
The most remarkable thing about his career is how clearly it divides into three distinct phases: he started as an abstract artist in the late 1940s and early «50s, was enormously celebrated even in his twenties, and at the height of his success he then moved into figuration in 1955 following a move to Berkeley, California.
The «horror» was Sensation, a show of about 40 young British artists from Saatchi's collection who'd emerged in the early 1990s, most of whom were already fading, making the show seem, to those in the art world, something of a non-event.
Suh's landlord, who was initially hesitant to rent to a young artist, became a close friend and supported him in making earlier fabric works about the apartment.
«Godfried Donkor is a mid-career Ghanaian artist whose residency at Gallery 1957 in Accra resulted in a visual dialogue about the early 19th - century English explorer of the Ivory Coast, Thomas Edward Bowdich.
We're giving the artists open space to talk about it, because one of the interesting things with every commissioned project is that the artists that went earlier are thinking about those who went later, and maybe they've already evolved that earlier work into something else.
The exhibition looks at the international exchange of ideas opened up by early twentieth - century Russian artists, suggesting how we might re-conceive spheres of public and private life to bring about social change.
After the news of his death went viral, Sir Nicholas Serota, the director of the Tate gallery, stated the following in an attempt to dull the pain of the loss: Angus Fairhurst was always deprecating about his own talent, but he made some of the most engaging, witty and perceptive works of his generation and was an enormously influential friend of other British artists who came to prominence in the early nineties.
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