Sentences with phrase «artist explores the city»

Artists explore a city in flux, where populations, economies, and architecture are constantly being re-made at the intersection between public and private, the historical and the imaginary.
The curator Bob Nickas recounts how, long before her Zwirner solo shows and MoMA retrospective, the German artist explored the city with a photographer's eye and an outsider's gaze.

Not exact matches

If you'd both like to explore and perhaps learn something new, The Glasgow School of Art hosts walking tours showing how artists, designers and architects have contributed to the city's cultural regeneration.
His latest documentary, Dawson City: Frozen Time, is the perfect pairing of subject and artist, giving him the chance to explore the ghostlike qualities of cinema through the story of a small town in Canada's Yukon Territory, where five hundred lost reels of nitrate film were buried in permafrost in a swimming pool.
Media coverage includes «Minneapolis Artist Sews New Somali History that Crosses Generations» by the Star Tribune, «Ifrah Mansour Explores War from a Child's Perspective» by City Pages, «Performance and Prevention» by Minnesota Daily and «Ten Somali Artists & Entertainers to Watch in 2015» by Okayafrica.
You can spend days exploring the life works of Antoni Gaudi — the city's most famous architect and artist — including the spellbinding Sagrada Familia, Casa Batlló and Parque Guell.
Delegates will also explore the city of Dakar, shop at crafts markets and artists quarters, and visit the new African Renaissance monument.
Sideway: New York puts players in the role of Nox, a graffiti artist sucked into a twisted graffiti world, where you to explore the backstreets of New York City and navigate through a 2D adventure platformer set in a 3D world.
In this new body of work, Lebanese artist and designer Pascal Hachem explores his experiences of his home city of Beirut by transforming everyday domestic objects into unexpected works of art.
Explorations in the City of Light: African - American Artists in Paris 1945 - 1965 explores the relationship of African - American artists to Paris as a modernist cultural center in the mid-twentieth cArtists in Paris 1945 - 1965 explores the relationship of African - American artists to Paris as a modernist cultural center in the mid-twentieth cartists to Paris as a modernist cultural center in the mid-twentieth century.
A group exhibition of contemporary artists exploring 2 and 3 - dimensional sculpture curated by Indira Cesarine to take place at The Untitled Space gallery in New York City July 2018 and online on Artsy.
The Mexico - City - based conceptual artist Minerva Cuevas explores the ways in which seemingly banal items like fruit, chocolate, and water reflect the practices and ideology of global capitalism.
For a few vigorous decades in the mid-20th century, artists in the rapidly - growing cosmopolitan cities of Montevideo, Caracas, Buenos Aires, São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro were exploring concrete art.
SLA307 - founded in 2014 is a non-profit art space that provides local and international contemporary artists a forum to explore critical issues within art and culture in New York City.
For Monumenta's sixth edition, running from May 10 through June 22, 2014, Russian - born artists Ilya and Emilia Kabakov will invite viewers to explore the maze of an imaginary town: The Strange City.
A group exhibition of contemporary artists exploring 2 and 3 - dimensional sculpture curated by Indira Cesarine to take place July 2018 at The Untitled Space gallery in New York City as well as online on Artsy.
«The exhibition John Graham: Maverick Modernist at the Parrish Art Museum in Water Mill, Long Island, is a unique opportunity to explore the work of an artist who has hovered on the margins of the Modernist narrative for more than a half - century, when he isn't forgotten altogether... Maverick Modernist takes a deep dive into Graham's background as an artist, a career he began in earnest when, at the age of 35, he enrolled in the class of the Ashcan School painter John Sloan at the Art Students League in New York City
EXPO CHICAGO's VIPs receive insider access to the fair as well as a tailored itinerary exploring Chicago's contemporary and modern art scene including special visits to the city's top private collections, artist studios, curator led tours of the nation's top institutions as well as invitation only receptions with fellow art aficionados.
2016 — Bohrer, Ashley, The Commodified Built Environment, Red Wedge, August 2015 — Derrick, Andy, Friday Feature, Matthew Woodward, ArtSquare, December Hartigan, Phillip, Seeing the Art For the Trees, Hyperallergic, August Daignault, Kristina, With Matthew Woodward, Inside the Artists» Kitchen, May 2014 — Hartigan, Phillip A, Expo Chicago Fails to Inspire, Hyperallergic, October, Obaro, Tomi, What I'm Doing This Weekend, Matthew Woodward, Chicago Magazine, October Juarez, Frank Art365, Matthew Woodward, May Hildwine, Jeriah, Matthew Woodward, Review, ArtPulse Magazine, April 2013 — Hall, Sarah Elise, Art - Rated, Matthew Woodward, Interview, November Klein, Paul, Art Letter, The Huffington Post, October Sherman, Whitney, Playing With Sketches, Rockport Publishing, October 2012 — Meuller, Rachel, Meticulous Chaos, Be Nice Art Friends, July Taskaporan, Erol, Matthew Woodward, Interview, Neo Collective, July Gumbs, Melissa, View From the Birth Day at the Chicago Cultural Center, Examiner, July Amir, Matthew Woodward's Decaying Drawings, Beautiful / Decay, May Dluzen, Robin, Catalogs of Anonymous Forms, Chicago Art Magazine, April Debat, Don, Unveiling the Unique, Chicago Sun Times, March Mutts, Lost at E Minor, New Art, January 2011 — Vora, Manish, Iconomancy: The Magic of Art, Art Log, November Pocaro, Alan, Keeping Your Balance in the Windy City, Art Critical, October Hausslein, Allison, Fanmail, Dailyserving, November Marszalek, Norbert, One Question, Neotericart, October New American Paintings, Number 95, Midwest Edition, June Cook, Greg, Contained at BCA, The New England Journal of Aesthetic Research, April James, Damian, More Than a Whisper in the Ear, Bad at Sports, January 2010 — Blau, Lilly, Love and Real Estate, The Huffington Post, November Himebauch, Adam, Matthew Woodward, Veoba Magazine, November Pitts, Johnathan, Look What They Found, Baltimore Sun, July Duquette, Laura, Featured Artist, Artery Magazine, May Duquette, Laura, How WNY Has Influenced His Work, Buffalo Rising Magazine, May Pocaro, Alan, Selections From the INDA 5, Aeqai, April Franz, Jason, International Drawing Annual 5, Manifest Gallery, March Solamo Tony, Barrington Hills Courier - Review, January Barber, John, Medium Magazine, Outside Infinity, February Avedesian, Alexi, Vellum Magazine, Spirits, January 2009 — Reed, Marliana, Invisible City Magazine, Issue 6, November Lacy, Rebecca, MuseMemo Magazine, Hauntingly Beautiful, October Abram, A, Spillspace Magazine, All the Wild Horses, September Kohn, Iliana, Lost At E Minor Magazine, Issue 244, 245, August Tremblay, Brenda, Finger - Lakes Explores Connections, Mysteries, WXXI, P.R, August Low, Stuart, Drawing Together Man and Nature, Democrat and Chronicle, August Wheeler, Dan, Upstate Artists Exhibit in Exclusive MAG Show, MPN Now, July Rafferty, Rebecca, The Elephant in the Room, City Newspaper, July 2008 — O'Sullivan, Michael, Modern or Retro?
MetLiveArts invites artists, performers, curators, and thought leaders to explore and collaborate within The Met, leading with new commissions, world premieres, and site - specific durational performances that have been named some of the most «memorable» and «best of» performances in New York City by the New York Times, New Yorker, and Broadway World.
''... the exhibition underlines a part of Neel's practice rarely explored and tells a story of how to be an artist in a big city...»
It's a mutually beneficial endeavor that draws crowds to the museum, puts some focus on the artist, and hopefully fosters appreciation of the arts among visitors and inspires them to further explore their city's art scene.
«Brand New: Art and Commodity in the 1980s» explores how a group of downtown New York City artists like Barbara Kruger, Louise Lawler, Richard Prince, Peter Halley and Jenny Holzer blurred the lines between art, entertainment, and commerce.
«Florine Demosthene is a Haitian - born artist currently based in New York City whose work explores stereotypes and representation of the black female body.
Much of the work was developed during a two - year research period, in which the artist explored Preston's social and political history and met various community and faith groups in the city.
While the two artists represent divergent photographic practices, both have explored the interconnection between the social and the physical landscapes of their native cities.
Rather than following the development of Rackliffe's oeuvre chronologically, the exhibition will explore various bodies of work that define the artist's output, including: Early Works; New York City; Maine Landscapes, Still Lifes, and Self Portraits.
Interested in exploring the studios of famous New York City artists?
Culture Type - For Your Summer Agenda, 49 U.S. Exhibitions Featuring Works by Black Artists The International Review of African American Art Plus - A Look Inside: Eliza's Cabinet of Curiosities Art City Asks: Fo Wilson Wisconsin Gazette - A cabinet of curiosities in a cabin Art City: Using objects to explore, reimagine a slave's world Arts Without Borders: A «peculiar curiosity» lurks in the Lynden Scupture Garden's back woods
The layers of ideas the artist explored in his early performance art, conceived of as existential explorations and social commentaries, have carried through to the more traditional studio practice he embraced upon moving to Shanghai in 2005, after living and working for eight years in New York City.
Delano Dunn is an award winning New York City based visual artist who utilizes painting, mixed media, and collage to explore the previously overlooked simultaneity of the 1960s American space race and the Civil Rights Movement.
Born in Taiwan in 1964 and currently living in New York City and Paris, Lee Mingwei creates participatory installations, where strangers can explore issues of trust, intimacy, and self - awareness, and one - on - one events, where visitors contemplate these issues with the artist through eating, sleeping, walking and conversation.
Founded in 1979 New York City - based artist collaborative Group Material created over fifty exhibitions and public projects in the U.S. and Europe exploring the interrelations of aesthetics, culture and politics.
< a href =» http://www.whitechapelgallery.org/exhibitions/barjeel-art-foundation-collection-imperfect-chronology-mapping-the-contemporary-ii/» > Mapping the Contemporary II explores how artists using various media artistically engage with the cities where they either live or work.
The viewer is drawn in to the works through a familiarity of images from daily life and also by the spatial quality of the drawing employed, to document the artist's daily walks through a city, to map, to explore.
Barjeel Art Foundation collection: Part 4 23 August 2016 — 8 January 2017 The fourth and final display explores how artists using various media artistically engage with the cities where they either live or work.
This book explores parallels in thought and strategies between Italian Conceptualist Giulio Paolini's (born 1940) work, especially of the 1960s and the «70s, and the work of a younger generation of artists based in New York City today: Sebastian Black, Kerstin Brätsch (with Boško Blagojevic), Seth Price and Antek Walczak.
Howard, Katie, «Keith Mayerson in My American Dream @ Marlborough Chelsea», Art Blog Dog Blog, December 19 (link) Indrisek, Scott, «7 Must - See Gallery Shows in New York», Blouin Artinfo, December 16 (link) Wolin, Joseph R., «Critic's pick — Keith Mayerson: My American Dream», Time Out New York, December 5 (link) Pollack, Maika, «Keith Mayerson», Interview, November 10 (link) Lehrer, Adam, «Artist Keith Mayerson's Meta - Narrative of Appropriated Americana Explored in «My American Dream» at Marlborough Chelsea in New York», Autre, November 5 (link) Brown, Jeffrey, «Whitney Museum opens more space for risk - taking artists», PBS News Hour, April 30 (link) Johnson, Paddy, «At the Whitney: Industry, Advertising, and Death Makes America Hard to See», Art F City, April 27 (link) Russeth, Andrew, «The Whitney Opens With a Winner», ARTnews, April 23 (link) Indrisek, Scott, «The Whitney, Chapter by Chapter: How to See 100 - Plus Years of Art in One Day», Blouin Artinfo, April 23 (link) Mogilevskaya, Regina, «Prewiew: America is Hard to See at the Whitney», Blouin Artinfo, April 23 (link) Bilsborough, Michael, «Course of Empire», SVA Continuing Education Blog, April 23 (link) Shaw, Dash, «Go Burn Brightly», American Book Review, Volume 36, Number 2, January / February 2015, p. 4 Shelton, David, «David Shelton Reports from the Dallas Arts Fair», PaperCity, April 17 (link) Lin, Allie, «Iconoscapes at Freddy, Flowers at Franklin Street», Post Office Arts Journal, January 25 (link)
St. Louis Public Radio covers a selection of new African American art exhibitions on view in the city, including «Hands Up, Don't Shoot,» a direct response to the Michael Brown killing organized by the Alliance of Black Gallery owners and on view at 14 venues; «Other Ways» at Philip Slein Gallery featuring than 60 works from local private collections by artists such as Radcliffe Bailey, Dawoud Bey, Mark Bradford, Ellen Gallagher, Kara Walker and Kehinde Wiley; «Living Like Kings» at the World Chess Hall of Fame explores the intersection of chess and hip hop; and a presentation of Nick Cave «s Sound Suits at the St. Louis Art Museum opening Oct. 31.
> Sydney Biennale 21Mar - 9Jun + George Brandis, Arts Minister, urges penalty for arts organisations rejecting corporate sponsorship smh + Biennale of Sydney future in doubt as chairman Luca Belgiorno - Nettis resigns over disputed links to detention centres dailytelegraph + Biennale of Sydney facing uncertain future after severing ties with its founding partner Transfield smh + Artists» detention protest hits Biennale theaustralian + Five artists have withdrawn from the Sydney Biennale artshub + Libia Castro en colaboración con el artista Ólafur Ólafsson biennaleofsydney + video > Sydney Biennale: exploring a city filled with art gArtists» detention protest hits Biennale theaustralian + Five artists have withdrawn from the Sydney Biennale artshub + Libia Castro en colaboración con el artista Ólafur Ólafsson biennaleofsydney + video > Sydney Biennale: exploring a city filled with art gartists have withdrawn from the Sydney Biennale artshub + Libia Castro en colaboración con el artista Ólafur Ólafsson biennaleofsydney + video > Sydney Biennale: exploring a city filled with art guardian
To explore the historic influence of artists such as David Hammons, John Outterbridge, Betye Saar and Charles White on the city's art scene, check out «Now Dig This!
On 30 July our first ever REcreative tour explored two of south - east London's best known art spaces - Bold Tendencies, the annual sculpture exhibition held on the top floors of the Peckham multiplex carpark - and White Cube Bermondsey, to see an exhibition by UK artist Sarah Morris, called «Bye Bye Brazil» that featured her amazing film about the city of Rio.
Opening on 23 August, Mapping the Contemporary II explores how a generation of multi-media artists has artistically engaged with the cities where they either live or work.
The title of the show, A Little Louder, Love, comes from the 1950s New York City singer - songwriter Connie Converse, who often explored similar subjects in her songs, and whose work was like a window into the artist's life.
The exhibition, curated by Jesús Fuenmayor, is an investigation that explores the architectural fictions that can be traced in the industrial and decorative arts of cities world - wide and in particular the artist's home base of Los Angeles and the exhbiition's context in Buenos Aires, including Faena Art Center's previous life, as an old flour mill.
Featuring photographs by such artist as Alfred Stieglitz, Paul Strand, Lisette Model, Walker Evans, Helen Levitt, Robert Frank, Garry Winogrand, and Dawoud Bey, this exhibition explores the myriad ways artists have approached the subject of bustling city scenes over time.
explores how a sense of place exists in the work of artists from six particular regions — Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Phoenix, Raleigh - Durham, Detroit and Kansas City.
I rigorously explore the backgrounds of subjects as varied as the the Polish artist Edward Krasinski, the MGM lion, urban development in the city of Bangalore, India, and the Viennese philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein.
The fourth and final display explores how artists using various media artistically engage with the cities where they either live or work.
The gallery showcases outstanding individuals who have not received due attention in New York City, and is also well known for exploring neglected aspects of well - known artists, for instance works on paper.
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