Sentences with phrase «artist julio»

A 166 - page, coffee - table monograph, Julio Valdez, has been published by FTC Group, New York, with color plates, a foreword by Guillermo D. Clamens, introduction by gallery artist Julio Valdez and an essay by Federica Palomero.
The exhibition of new paintings by Gallery artist Julio Valdez is reviewed in the February issue of ARTNEWS.
Courtesy the artist Julio Le Parc © 2016 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris Photo: André Morin
Large - scale oil painting on canvas by contemporary Cuban artist Julio Larraz.
East Harlem Studios is an alternative and independent space created in East Harlem by artist Julio Valdez, with the goal of providing artists the workspace they need to make their pract...
ABOUT THE ARTIST Julio Grinblatt (b. 1960 in Buenos Aires, Argentina; lives Brooklyn, NY) has exhibited his work in solo and group exhibitions nationally and internationally for the past two decades, including in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Spain, Belgium, Finland, Belgium, Italy, and the United States.
Curated by artist Julio Felix, the selected works bring together important emerging artists who are united by their incisive and critical approach to mass media and consumer culture.
It is commonly believed that artist Julio González coined the term «drawing in space» in 1932, when he wrote about Pablo Picasso's iron sculptures of 1928, which Picasso had adapted from some of his earlier line drawings.
The Conversations event — spanning four days — will kick off with a talk between artist Julio Le Parc and curator Estrellita B. Brodsky on Le Parc's exhibition at the Pérez Art Museum Miami.
A pioneer of «Op» and kinetic art, artist Julio Le Parc's ongoing contribution to contemporary art is currently being celebrated at the Serpentine Galleries in London.
Uruguayan authorities censor artist's depiction of former president in the nude Uruguayan art dealer Diana Saravia has been summoned to a police station after exhibiting a work by artist Julio de Sosa depicting former president José «Pepe» Mujica and his wife naked.
The op art and kinetic art artist Julio le Parc was born in 1928 in Mendoza, Argentina.
MIAMI — June 20, 2016 — On November 18, 2016, Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) will present the first U.S. museum survey of Argentine artist Julio Le Parc.
With an ease and precision that comes only from a lifelong dedication to one's craft, it is no wonder why so many consider Cuban born artist Julio Larraz to be one of the most important Latin American artists working today.
In 1961, he founded the Groupe de Recherche d'Art Visuel (GRAV) with Stein and fellow artists Julio Le Parc, Jean - Pierre Yvaral, Francisco Sobrino, and Horacio Garcia Rossi.

Not exact matches

In addition to the meat - laden feast, the event includes animal theatre cooking, butcher demonstrations, the Breckenridge «Burro» featuring special cocktail pairings including Smoked Old Fashioned's, Vodka with Caviar, and a Special Punch with Sturgeon and pop - up demos featuring renowned tattoo artists Darren Brass and Jose Santiago of Miami Ink tattooing heritage breed hams, the Perfect Manhattan Experience presented by Groupon with Breckenridge Bourbon, Buffalo Trace, Eagle Rare, Hirsch, Luxardo and a specially cured garnish by Creminelli Fine Meats, the Petit Format Bar presented by Wilsonart, the Mezcal Chupito Bar with Mezcales de Leyenda, Fidencio, La Venenosa and Koch el Mezcal, the Official Chef's Pantry presented by Chef's Warehouse and Williams - Sonoma, the Rioja Tapas Bar featuring Rioja - style lamb, the delicacies of Agromar and the amazing wines from Rioja, Bacon Hall of Fame presented by Maggy Hawk Vineyards and tequila tastings and cocktails courtesy of Don Julio and the Tequila Truck.
Inside you will find an inspiring collection of medieval paintings and works by artists such as Dalí, Picasso, Gaudy, El Greco, Zurbarán, Velázquez, Fortuny, Casas, Torres - García and Julio González.
Julio Larraz, extraordinary draftsman, painter and sculptor, is the quintessential embodiment of the post-World War II Latin American artist.
Artists include Soledad Arias, Shinsuke Aso, Marcus Bering, Hartmut Böhm, Richard Bottwin, Sharon Brant, Michael Brennan, Henry Brown, Vicente Butron, Bibi Calderaro, Melanie Crader, Mark Dagley, Julian Dashper, Christopher Dean, Matthew Deleget, Lynne Eastaway, Gabriele Evertz, Daniel Feingold, Kevin Finklea, Linda Francis, Zipora Fried, Daniel Göttin, Julio Grinblatt, Billy Gruner, Terry Haggerty, Lynne Harlow, Gilbert Hsiao, Andrew Huston, Simon Ingram, Inverted Topology, Kyle Jenkins, Mick Johnson, Steve Karlik, Sarah Keighery, Andrew Leslie, Daniel Levine, Sylvan Lionni, Lotte Lyon, Gerhard Mantz, Rossana Martinez, Juan Matos Capote, Douglas Melini, Manfred Mohr, Salvatore Panatteri, Dirk Rathke, Karen Schifano, Analia Segal, Edward Shalala, Tilman, Li - Trincere, Jan van der Ploeg, Don Voisine, Douglas Witmer, and Michael Zahn.
Possessing a fascinating oeuvre that includes paintings, sculptors and caricatures, Julio Larraz is now recognised as one of the most important contemporary Latin American artists of our time.
Among the artists Sims has worked with are Elizabeth Catlett, Robert Colescott, Fred Brown, Benny Andrews, Judith Godwin, Joyce Scott, Young Soon Min, Hope Sandrow, Sonya Clark, Arnold Mesches, Kaylynn Sullivan Two Trees, Barbara Chase - Riboud, Chakaia Booker, Whitfield Lovell, Willie Cole, Fred Wilson, Wendy Maruyama, Margo Machida, Joe Lewis, Saya Woolfalk, Sebastian Errazuriz, Afruz Amighi, Jaune Quick - to - See Smith, Amalia Mesa - Bains, Jin Soo Kim, Julio Galán, Ida Applebroog, Melvin Edwards, Ursula von Rydingsvard, Beverly Buchanan, Edgar Heap of Birds, Tom Miller, Betye Saar, Alison Saar, Stephen Burks, Andy Diaz Hope, and Laurel Roth.
Curated by Gianni Jetzer, the show features work by artists such as Haegue Yang, Julio Le Parc, Sterling Ruby, John Bock, Carl Andre, Matias Faldbakken, Sam Falls, Laure Prouvost, Carsten Nicolai, Edith Dekyndt, Ann Veronica Janssens, Troika, Hanne Darboven, Pascale Marthine Tayou, and Giuseppe Penone.
«Carol John's art reflects her encounters with mainstream modern artists - showing the obvious influence of Guston and other individualists like Marsden Hartley and Alfred Julio Jensen - it also suggests an appreciation of certain «outsider» artists, as with her improvisational approach to composition.
Julio Le Parc © 2016 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.
He introduced David Smith, who originally identified himself as a painter, to the welded sculpture of Julio González — and also to artists like Stuart Davis, Arshile Gorky and Willem de Kooning.
Artists included in this exhibition: John Atherton, Herbert Bayer, William Baziotes, Eugene Berman, Federico Castellon, Joseph Cornell, Julio De Diego, Jimmy Ernst, Jared French, Adolph Gottlieb, Morris Graves, Louis Guglielmi, James Guy, Hananiah Harari, Gerome Kamrowski, Norman Lewis, Boris Margo, George Marinko, Gordon Onslow - Ford, Alfonso Ossorio, Jackson Pollock, Richard Pousette - Dart, Walter Quirt, Andre Racz, Charles Rain, Man Ray, Mark Rothko, Kay Sage, Charles Seliger, Kurt Seligmann, Theodoros Stamos, Dorothea Tanning, Pavel Tchelitchew, and Lawrence Vail
Artists include: Aaron Terry, Adam Parker Smith, Alex Braubach, Angie Crabtree, Austin McManus, Barry McGee, Ben Venom, Casey Gray, Charles Linder, Chris Blackstock, Chris Duncan, Chris Corrente, Chris Sollars, Christian Ebert, Christine Ancalmo, David Bayus, David Jones, David Marc Grant, Dean Dempsey, Dennis Kernohan, Don Ed Hardy, Emily Gorman, Emily Chaves, Erik Foss, Facundo Arganaraz, Ferris Plock, Francesco Deiana, Gina M. Contreras, Gregory Ito, Guy Overfelt, Heather Sparks, Henry Gunderson, Hilary Pecis, Jedd Hart, Jeremiah Jenkins, Jessica Flemming, Jessie Rose Vala, Jim Damron, Jocko Weyland, Joey Enos, Josh Short, John Held, Jr., Julio Cesar Morales, Kate Bonner, Keith Boadwee, Kelly Tunstall, Kent Long, Kent Roberts, Korakrit Arunanondchai, Leigh Cooper, Leigha Mason, Lisa K. Blatt, Lowell Darling, Lucien Shapiro, Lucy Kasofsky, Mario Ayala, Mark Benson, Mark Mulroney, Mark Van Proyen, Mary Joy Scott, Mary Ijichi, Mauricio Ancalmo, Meryl Pataky, Michelle Blade, Mike Paré, Mitsu Okubo, Molly Soda, Monica Canilao, Nina Dolores, Owen Takabayashi, Paul Kos, PEZ, Ray Potes, Rebecca Goldfarb, Robin Juan, Ryan Beavers, Ryan Coffey, Ryan De La Hoz, Ryan Malley, Sadie Barnette, Sandy Kim, Sarah Hotchkiss, Sean McFarland, Shalo P, Shelter Serra, Silver Warner, Tamra Seal, Steve MacDonald, Tara Lisa Foley, Tahitti Pehrson, Tim Sullivan, Tom Marioni, Tom Sachs, Tony Labat, Travis Collinson, Tyson Vogel, Wally Hedrick, Whitney Lynn, Yokonori Stone.
Of the stands presenting single artists, works of the 1960s and 70s by Anthony Caro (at Annely Juda) and Spanish sculptor Julio Gonzalez (at Elvira Gonzalez) are also exemplary displays.
Brâncuși's impact, with his vocabulary of reduction and abstraction, is seen throughout the 1930s and 1940s, and exemplified by artists such as Gaston Lachaise, Sir Jacob Epstein, Henry Moore, Alberto Giacometti, Joan Miró, Julio González, Pablo Serrano, Jacques Lipchitz [123] and by the 1940s abstract sculpture was impacted and expanded by Alexander Calder, Len Lye, Jean Tinguely, and Frederick Kiesler who were pioneers of Kinetic art.
Including a newly commissioned work by artist Nicolás Paris, as well as existing works by artists Bruce Nauman, Giovanni Anselmo, Giorgio Griffa, AI Taylor, and writer Julio Cortázar, the exhibition provides alternatives to the perception of efficient processes as heroic narratives.
Through the work of twenty contemporary artists — including Julio Le Parc, Danh Vo, Antoni Muntadas, Marcel Broodthaers — the visitor is invited along the way to create his own path between the opposite polarities of black and white, day and night, visible and invisible, realty and illusion.
And although Julio regards himself as a painter, and not an artist, many would beg to differ.
Standard Forms Artists: VALIE EXPORT, Felix Gonzalez - Torres, Francisco - Fernando Granados, Julio César Morales, Robert Morris, Ulrike Müller, and Martha Rosler Curated by Christian Camacho - Light
Today, that unlikely pair of comments encapsulates the finely tuned shock and awe of the artist's impressive retrospective, «Julio Le Parc: Form into Action» at Pérez Art Museum Miami.
Courtesy the artist, Julio Le Parc © 2016 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.
HOLIDAY SHOW, Associate Artists Exhibition and Guest Artists, The Project Space, Julio Valdez Studio, New York, NY
Earlier solo exhibitions include the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis and Nelson - Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City which co-organized and exhibited Joel Shapiro: Outdoors, the first major outdoor exhibition of the artist's bronzes (1995 - 96); Joel Shapiro organized by IVAM Centro Julio Gonzalez, Valencia, Spain that later traveled to the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark, Kunsthalle Zurich and Musee des Beaux - Arts, Calais, France (1990 - 91); Joel Shapiro, an exhibition of drawings and sculpture, was organized by the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam and later exhibited at the Kunsthaus Düsseldorf and Staatliche Kunsthalle, Baden - Baden, Germany (1985 - 86); a major mid-career survey organized by The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York with subsequent venues at the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto and San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art (1982 - 84); and Joel Shapiro: Sculpture and Drawing at The Whitechapel Art Gallery, London that later traveled to the Museum Haus Lange, Krefeld, Germany and Moderna Museet, Stockholm (1980).
The shortlisted artists include Adam Basanta, Adam Niklewicz, Alinka Echeverría, breadedEscalope, Dylan Martinez, Emmanuelle Moureaux, Jasmina Cibic, Judith Jones, Julio Bittencourt, Lesley Hilling, Maryam Tafakory, Sara Morawetz, Stanza, Stephen Johnston, Toby Dye and Webb - Ellis.
Two important highpoints are the reconstruction of spaces from the 1960s by artists such as Bridget Riley, Gianni Colombo, François Morellet, and Julio Le Parc, and a substantial program of films.
Working contemporaneously to such continental Op artists as Victor Vasarely and Julio Le Parc, Riley was included in the landmark exhibition «The Responsive Eye» at MoMA in 1965, which emphasised the active role of the viewer and the potential slipperiness of seemingly objective geometric forms.
The gift has allowed Wolverhampton Art Gallery to develop its collection of Pop Art by introducing works by Victor Vasarely, Julio Le Parc and Karel Appel and a new focus on the impact of European artists on the UK Pop movement.
Featuring key works by Victor Vasarely, Bridget Riley, François Morellet, Julio Le Parc and Gianni Colombo, among others, it offers a comprehensive outline of a complex art movement, with scholarly essays, historical precedents, a substantial plate section, biographies for each featured artist, selected bibliography and a detailed checklist.
Leon Tovar Gallery has been devoted to Constructivism, Minimalism and Op - art, exhibiting works of artists such as Carlos Cruz - Diez, Sergio Camargo, Julio Le Parc, Jesús Rafael Soto and Luis Tomasello, among others.
In late May, the architect Daniel Libeskind spoke at the New York Gallery Luxembourg & Dayan where he collaborated with Daniella Luxembourg to curate an exhibition of thirteen small sculptural works by some of the giants of early twentieth century sculpture: Alberto Giacometti, Julio González Henri Laurens, Jacques Lipchitz, Henri Matisse, Jean Tinguely, and the less well - known German artist Rudolf Belling.
Soto: Paris and Beyond is curated by Estrellita B. Brodsky, who received her doctorate at NYU's Institute of Fine Arts and wrote her dissertation on Soto and Julio Le Parc, another postwar Latin American artist living in Paris.
Including a newly commissioned work by artist Nicolás Paris, as well as existing works by artists Bruce Nauman, Giovanni Anselmo, Giorgio Griffa, Al Taylor, and writer Julio Cortázar, the exhibition provides alternatives to the perception of efficient processes as heroic narratives.
Don't blame anyone Artists: Bruce Nauman, Giovanni Anselmo, Giorgio Griffa, Al Taylor, Nicolás Paris, and Julio Cortázar Curated by Juana Berrío «Don't blame anyone is an exhibition that draws its inspiration and title from a short story by Julio Cortázar that narrates, in agonizing detail, a man's struggle to put on a blue sweater.
One Year Celebration Artist: Pierre Huyghe born 1962 Date: 2006 Classification: on paper, print Medium: Screenprints on paper Dimensions: each: 1182 x 832 mm Presented by the artist 2006 © Pierre Huyghe One Year Celebration (Detail) 15 of 48 posters The entire collection of posters (only 15 of which are depicted here) present the 48 proposals for a celebration by the personalities invited by Pierre Huyghe named below: Boris Achour, Doug Aitken, Julieta Aranda, John Baldessari, Olivier Bardin, Jerôme Bel, Tatiana Bilbao and Julio Amezcua, Pash Buzari, Claude Closky, Tacita Dean, Melissa Dubbin and Aaron S. Davidson, Olafur Eliasson, Paul Elliman, Hu Fang, Yona Friedman, Marc Ganzglass, Liam Gillick & Gabriel Kuri, Piero Golia, Robert Filliou, Dominique Gonzalez - Foerster, Dan Graham, Marine Hugonnier, Koo Jeong - A, Pierre Joseph, Agnieskaa Kurant, Matthieu Laurette, Emily Mast and Carly Busta, Enzo Mari, Jeremy Millar, Aleksandra Mir, Maurizio Nannucci, Melik Ohanian, Pratchaya Phinthong, François Roche, Anri Sala, Shimabuku, Catherine Temerson & Israel Rosenfield, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Frederic Tuten, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Anton Vidokle, Lawrence WArtist: Pierre Huyghe born 1962 Date: 2006 Classification: on paper, print Medium: Screenprints on paper Dimensions: each: 1182 x 832 mm Presented by the artist 2006 © Pierre Huyghe One Year Celebration (Detail) 15 of 48 posters The entire collection of posters (only 15 of which are depicted here) present the 48 proposals for a celebration by the personalities invited by Pierre Huyghe named below: Boris Achour, Doug Aitken, Julieta Aranda, John Baldessari, Olivier Bardin, Jerôme Bel, Tatiana Bilbao and Julio Amezcua, Pash Buzari, Claude Closky, Tacita Dean, Melissa Dubbin and Aaron S. Davidson, Olafur Eliasson, Paul Elliman, Hu Fang, Yona Friedman, Marc Ganzglass, Liam Gillick & Gabriel Kuri, Piero Golia, Robert Filliou, Dominique Gonzalez - Foerster, Dan Graham, Marine Hugonnier, Koo Jeong - A, Pierre Joseph, Agnieskaa Kurant, Matthieu Laurette, Emily Mast and Carly Busta, Enzo Mari, Jeremy Millar, Aleksandra Mir, Maurizio Nannucci, Melik Ohanian, Pratchaya Phinthong, François Roche, Anri Sala, Shimabuku, Catherine Temerson & Israel Rosenfield, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Frederic Tuten, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Anton Vidokle, Lawrence Wartist 2006 © Pierre Huyghe One Year Celebration (Detail) 15 of 48 posters The entire collection of posters (only 15 of which are depicted here) present the 48 proposals for a celebration by the personalities invited by Pierre Huyghe named below: Boris Achour, Doug Aitken, Julieta Aranda, John Baldessari, Olivier Bardin, Jerôme Bel, Tatiana Bilbao and Julio Amezcua, Pash Buzari, Claude Closky, Tacita Dean, Melissa Dubbin and Aaron S. Davidson, Olafur Eliasson, Paul Elliman, Hu Fang, Yona Friedman, Marc Ganzglass, Liam Gillick & Gabriel Kuri, Piero Golia, Robert Filliou, Dominique Gonzalez - Foerster, Dan Graham, Marine Hugonnier, Koo Jeong - A, Pierre Joseph, Agnieskaa Kurant, Matthieu Laurette, Emily Mast and Carly Busta, Enzo Mari, Jeremy Millar, Aleksandra Mir, Maurizio Nannucci, Melik Ohanian, Pratchaya Phinthong, François Roche, Anri Sala, Shimabuku, Catherine Temerson & Israel Rosenfield, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Frederic Tuten, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Anton Vidokle, Lawrence Weiner.
The exhibition's co-curators, Monica Ramirez - Montagut and Warren James, cleverly situate an intergenerational cross-section of artists — Elsa Maria Méléndez, Zilia Sánchez, Julio Suárez, Arnaldo Roche Rabell, and Pedro Vélez — within Puerto Rico's shifting sociopolitical landscape.
Participating artists include, Georgia based artists including — Jessica Caldas, Elyse Defoor, William Downs, Jessica Scott Felder, Angus Galloway, Benjamin Jones, Marie Mathews, Julio Mejia, Yanique Norman, Joe Peragine, Kellie Romany, Karl Kroeppler.
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