Sentences with phrase «artist named david»

The movie then gives way to the fictional world of the film proper as Levy, playing an artist named David, meets and falls in love with a young Hungarian woman named Enci, enacted by Bordán.

Not exact matches

Of course, he was named after the iconic English music artist David Bowie.
David DeAngelo (born December 5, 1971), whos real name is Eben Pagan, is a dating advice coach, author of the popular dating ebook Double your Dating (2001) and a prominent member of the Pick Up Artist (PUA) or Seduction community.
With its title taken from the David Hockney painting of same name, A Bigger Splash represents the famed artist's process and all that it conveys.
Australian Theatrical Releases: A Ghost Story (David Lowery, 2017) Blade Runner 2049 (Denis Villeneuve, 2017) Call Me By Your Name (Luca Guadagnino, 2017) Colossal (Nacho Vigalondo, 2016) The Disaster Artist (James Franco, 2017) The Florida Project (Sean Baker, 2017) Get Out (Jordan Peele, 2017) Good Time (Joshua & Ben Safdie, 2017) Grave (Raw, Julia Ducournau, 2016) I Am Not Your Negro (Raoul Peck, 2016) Jackie (Pablo Larraín, 2016) The Killing of a Sacred Deer (Yorgos Lanthimos, 2017) Lady Macbeth (William Oldroyd, 2016) The Lost City of Z (James Gray, 2016) Lucky (John Carroll Lynch, 2017) Moonlight (Barry Jenkins, 2016) Mother!
David Duchovny makes his feature - length hyphenate debut with the appropriately - named House of D, a slog through Duchovny's Freudian undercarriage as he casts himself as a goateed Parisian flipbook artist and wife Téa Leoni as his character's mother in flashback — with pre-Duchovny played by a game Anton Yelchin, riding around on a meat wagon in 1973 Greenwich Village, the bitch to Robin Williams's retard bull.
The movie is based on the David Ebershoff book of the same name and covers what happens when married landscape painter Einar Wegener (Eddie Redmayne) puts on a dress and poses for his wife Gerda (Alicia Vikander), who's also an artist, and comes to the realization that Lili, not Einar, is her truest self.
In Second Quest, a graphic novel out today from writer Tevis Thompson and Braid artist David Hellman, the familiar motifs of the Zelda games get turned upside down in an original story that reexamines the legendary Nintendo games and video game culture itself — and recasts the green - capped hero as a fiercely curious young girl named Azalea.
Her paintings are influenced by European and American art traditions and tensions, and she reconciles them with her own pictorial voice, albeit one that gives a shout out to artists including Henri Matisse, David Hockney, Albert Oehlen, and Dana Schutz, to name a few.
Over the years the name has come to designate the paintings and sculptures of artists as different as Jackson Pollock and Barnett Newman, Willem de Kooning and Mark Rothko, Lee Krasner and David Smith.
Artists: Jose Alvarez Lisa Anne Auerbach Dario Beatovic Andrew Brischler Rob Davis Florence Derive Phillip Estlund Orly Genger Greg Goldberg Aramis Gutierrez David Haxton Christine Heindl Cindy Hinant Sheree Hovsepian Lisa Kirk Elizabeth Kley Sinisa Kukec Bovey Lee Simone Leigh Liz Markus Keith Mayerson Jen Mazza Maynard Monrow David Mramor Paul P. Scott Reeder Walter Robinson Diego Singh Christina Sucgang Alexis Teplin Josh Tonsfeldt Scott Treleaven Wendy White Rob Wynne Gavlak Gallery is pleased to present our summer blockbuster of over 30 artists, «All Fucking Summer», which takes it's name from a painting by New York based artist RobArtists: Jose Alvarez Lisa Anne Auerbach Dario Beatovic Andrew Brischler Rob Davis Florence Derive Phillip Estlund Orly Genger Greg Goldberg Aramis Gutierrez David Haxton Christine Heindl Cindy Hinant Sheree Hovsepian Lisa Kirk Elizabeth Kley Sinisa Kukec Bovey Lee Simone Leigh Liz Markus Keith Mayerson Jen Mazza Maynard Monrow David Mramor Paul P. Scott Reeder Walter Robinson Diego Singh Christina Sucgang Alexis Teplin Josh Tonsfeldt Scott Treleaven Wendy White Rob Wynne Gavlak Gallery is pleased to present our summer blockbuster of over 30 artists, «All Fucking Summer», which takes it's name from a painting by New York based artist Robartists, «All Fucking Summer», which takes it's name from a painting by New York based artist Rob Davis.
It was the first time an artist took the top spot, but familiar names like David Zwirner, Massimiliano Gioni, and Leon Black filled out the ranks Read more
One could try to measure her impact with the artists that have passed through her world, names like David Wojnarowicz, Ursula von Rydingsvard, Sue de Beer, Julie Mehretu, Shirin Neshat, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Roxy Paine — and still counting.
The Swiss artist David Weiss (1946 - 2012) is best known for the sly, jokey photographs, sculptures and videos he made with Peter Fischli under the name Fischli / Weiss.
-- NYTimes The Larry Gagosian Effect — Wall Street Journal World's Biggest Museum Opens in China — Studio 360 Top Exhibitions of 2010 — The Art Newspaper Recent Art News - Texas Week of 03/27/11 Ed Ruscha at the Modern Museum of Fort Worth — CBS New: Sunday Morning (Video) Simpsons Takes Shots at Dallas Football, Arts District — FrontRow A work in progress: The Dallas Arts District gathers trophy buildings, but still searches for urban vitality — Chicago Tribune James Turrell mound at Rice University - Glasstire Richard Serra, Pushing the Boundaries of Drawing — ARTnews Recent Art News - National - International Week of 03/27/11 Ed Ruscha Street Photography — LATimes Stephen Colbert Exposes Himself to Art (the Appropriate Way)-- NYTimes (Video) Jerry Saltz on Andy Warhol's Portraits of Liz Taylor — NYMag Eduardo Souto de Moura, Architect from Portugal, Wins Pritzker — NYTimes Recent Art News - Texas Week of 03/20/11 Neiman Marcus to feature artwork in Windows — FrontRow MAC director resigns — Glasstire Recent Art News - National - International Week of 03/20/11 Jerry Saltz: How a Joyride in Gavin Brown's Volvo Became Art — NYMag Walker Art Center to Acquire Merce Cunningham's collection — Art in America Cultural Complex in Santiago di Campostela is expensive mistake - The Art Newspaper Toshiko Takaezu, Ceramic Artist, Dies at 88 — NYTimes Recent Art News - Texas Week of 03/13/11 Artpace San Antonio — YouTube Crow Collection To Expand, Add Asian Sculpture Garden — FrontRow Donor's Son Sues Dallas Museum Over Art Collection, 25 Years Later — NYTimes Recent Art News - National - International Week of 03/13/11 Abramovic wins two - year copyright battle — The Art Newspaper Scents and Sensibility, Artists use scent to create new experience in museums — ARTnews Spark: How Creativity Works, by Julie Burstein, Kurt Andersen — Amazon.com (Book) Michelangelo's David «could collapse due to high - speed train building» — Telegraph Recent Art News - National - International Week of 03/06/11 Norman Foster to Design Huge Hong Kong Cultural District — NYTimes Recent Art News - Texas Week of 02/27/11 AMOA leaving downtown, focusing on Laguna Gloria — Austin 360 Recent Art News - Texas Week of 02/13/11 Amon Carter's Director of Education Named National Educator of the Year — Amon Carter Museum Blanton curator heads to National Gallery of Art — Austin 360 Director Dana Friis - Hansen departs from the Austin Museum of Art — The Austin Chronicle Dallas Architecture Forum wins AIA National Collaborative Achievment Award — Dallas Archicture Forum Recent Art News - National - International Week of 02/13/11 Egyptian Archeological Sites Were Looted, Says Antiquities Minister — NYTimes Tracey Emin, the visionary, emerges as Margate's answer to William Blake — Guardian What's The Matter With Kansas... This Time?
The High Museum of Art has named Lyle Ashton Harris as the recipient of its tenth annual David C. Driskell Prize, given to an African American artist or art historian.
That doesn't mean there won't be big names, however, and we're happy to report that the following Artspace artists have been selected for the show: George Condo, Trisha Donnelly, Peter Fischli & David Weiss, Ragnar Kjartansson, Bruce Nauman, John Outterbridge, Richard Serra, Cindy Sherman, and Laurie Simmons.
While there are many artists featured in the East Hampton, NY gallery show — including Pipi Deer, Bert Stern, David Demers, Adam Handler, Ron Agam, Haim Mizrahi, Colin Christian, Christopher Deeton, and Shimon Okshteyn (to name a few)-- the exhibition is more than the sum of its parts.
Baldessari's roster of former students reads like a who's who of important artists from the past forty years: Barbara Bloom, Liz Craft, Meg Cranston, Jack Goldstein, Karl Haendel, Skylar Haskard, Elliott Hundley, Mike Kelley, Tony Oursler, Liz Larner, Matt Mullican, Analia Saban, David Salle, and James Welling, to name a few.
Barkley Hendricks Birth of the Cool CAMH invites you to a lecture by MIT professor David A. Mindell Perspectives 168 Anna Krachey, Jessica Malls, and Adam Schreiber Steel Lounge Underground OCT 2009 Steel Lounge Underground SEPT 2009 Matthew Day Jackson The Immeasurable Distance Museum District Day 2009 Perspectives 167 Jason Villegas Perspectives 167 Jason Villegas (Spanish) NOZONE Houston's Mayoral Forum on Land Use The Art Guys Marry a Plant Steel Lounge Underground MAY 2009 Champagne & Ribs Perspectives 166 Torsten Slama Steel Lounge Underground APRIL 2009 No Zoning: Artists Engage Houston Steel Lounge Underground MAR 2009 Perspectives 165 Contents Under Pressure Steel Lounge Underground Feb 2009 CAMH names Bill Arning as new Director CAMH Curators recognized for excellence Perspectives 164 Stephanie Syjuco
Born in Ontario in 1882, David Milne studied in New York and served in Europe as a war artist during the Second World War, before returning to his native country and making his name with unique modernist paintings that capture the wintery, inhospitable beauty of the Canadian landscape.
Situated in Bangkok's Siam Square and established in 2006 by American architect David Mayer, owner of the renowned architecture and interior design company of the same name, and Thailand artist and curator Maitree Siriboon, Whitespace Gallery is one of best known independent art galleries from Thailand.
David Hockney: British Pop pioneer David Hockney is regarded by many as the most influential British artist of the 20th century — and his legacy has continued into the 21st (last year, on the heels of his exhibition at San Francisco's de Young Museum, he was named one of the most important artists of 2013).
The names of these Post War Italian artists have become as synonymous as their concurrent British counterparts such as Bridget Riley and David Hockney among the British art - vocabulary.
The alumni of New Contemporaries, the annual emerging graduate - artist prize, are an esteemed group — Tacita Dean, Damien Hirst, David Hockney, Ed Atkins, and Laure Prouvost to name a handful — and it's almost certain that a number of 2014's vintage of 55 selected graduates will go on to great things.
Previous speakers include successful New York artists: David Kassan, Daniel Maidman, Kristy Gordon, Janet Cook and art writer David Masello from the New York Times, Fine Art Connoisseur and American Arts Quarterly to name a few.
Plus: Global fund to protect cultural heritage launched Artists and critics demand removal of painting from Whitney Biennial Katharine Stout named deputy director at ICA Trisha Brown (1936 — 2017) David Rockefeller (1915 — 2017)
When we asked these artists about their influences, we heard some of the same names over and over: Robert Colescott, Renée Green, David Hammons, Barkley Hendricks, Kerry James Marshall, Gary Simmons, Lorna Simpson, Kara Walker, and Carrie Mae Weems.
They share Texas artists like James Surls, Dan Rizzie and David Bates plus internationally recognized names like Alexander Calder and Robert Rauschenberg.
The Heritage Gallery represents African American artists such as Charles White, Margaret Burroughs, James McMillan, Ernie Barnes, and William Pajaud; Social Realist artists such as William Gropper; Latin American, Hispanic, and Mexican American artists such as Carlos Almaraz and David Alfaro Siqueiros; Californian artists such as Michael Shankman, and additional Modern and Contemporary artists from around the world, to name just a few.
Artists Represented (Alphabetically by Last Name) Carlos Almaraz Raúl Anguiano Ernie Barnes Romare Bearden Fletcher Benton Erwin Binder Cameron Booth Hans Burkhardt Margaret Burroughs Ricardo Carbajal - Moss Alfredo Castaneda Elizabeth Catlett Marc Chagall George Chann Jose Luis Cuevas Honore Daumier Willis «Bing» Davis Raoul Dufy Lorser Feitelson Guerro Galvan Michael Graham Robert Graham William Gropper Shaunte Johnson Emil Kosa Kathe Kollowitz Rico Lebrun Fernand Leger Leo Limon James C. McMillan Stanton MacDonald - Wright Joan Miro Joseph Mugnaini José Clemente Orozco William Pajaud Pablo Picasso Georges Rouault Ben Shahn Michael Shankman Z. Charlotte Sherman David Alfaro Siqueiros Isaac Soyer Moses Soyer Raphael Soyer Rufino Tamayo Charles White Francisco Zuniga
David Shrigley to guest direct 2018 Brighton Festival Turner Prize nominated artist David Shrigley has been named as the guest director of next year's Brighton Festival.
One was dedicated to his twin brother David, who had died of polio, initiating a theme for naming pieces after artists and friends who inspired him.
It was an impressive turn out, with floods of people crowding in to see never before exhibited works from big names like Jasper Johns, David Hockney, Andy Warhol, Picasso, and Google Glass artist David Datuna.
Featuring works from the second half of the twentieth century, the showcase visits the later careers of artists, including familiar names such as Louise Bourgeois, Philip Guston, Jasper Johns, Georgia O'Keeffe, Andy Warhol, Lee Bontecou, Melvin Edwards, Gego, David Hammons, Joan Jonas, Helen Levitt, Elizabeth Murray, Gerhard Richter, Frank Stella, and many others.
Serving as a platform for both emerging and established artists to explore new ideas, the gallery has produced projects by artists from Iceland and abroad including David Askevold, John Bock, Jason Rhoades, Paul McCarthy and Gelitin to name a few.
Friedrich began his formal study of art in 1790 as a private student of artist Johann Gottfried Quistorp at the University of Greifswald in his home city, at which the art department is now named Caspar - David - Friedrich - Institut [15] in his honour.
The first show of the G2 Artspace presents 50 artworks from the Hildebrand Collection by emerging as well as renowned and internationally successfull artists from the so - called New Leipzig School, including important names like Tilo Baumgärtel, Uwe Kowski, Rosa Loy, Neo Rauch, David Schnell and Matthias Weischer.
Senga Nengudi is a sculptor and performance artist who hasn't received significant attention until now, despite having made provocative work since the «60s, sometimes in collaboration with big - name artists like David Hammons (whom she actually shared a studio with at some point).
Baldessari's roster of former students reads like a who's who of important artists from the past 40 years: Barbara Bloom, Liz Craft, Meg Cranston, Jack Goldstein, Karl Haendel, Skylar Haskard, Elliott Hundley, Mike Kelley, Tony Oursler, Liz Larner, Matt Mullican, Analia Saban, David Salle, and James Welling, to name a few.
She was also recently named winner of the High Museum of Art's $ 25,000 David C. Driskell Prize, which recognizes contributions to the conversation about black artists, according to ArtNews.
Aside from his solo exhibition at the São Paulo Nara Roesler Gallery and his figurehead status at the SP - Arte fair, the artist is the theme of a MAM - SP seminar, with the mediation of Lisette Lagnado and the participation of names such as Catherine David, curator of the Centre Pompidou, Pablo León de la Barra from Guggenheim NY and Anna Ferrari from Fundação Augusto e León Ferrari and León Ferrari Arte e Acervo — FALFAA, among others.
All the names we bandy about today were young artists making their reputation at the time — David Hockney, Patrick Caulfield, Peter Blake, Michael Andrews, Frank Auerbach, Howard Hodgkin — not to mention Lucien Freud and Francis Bacon.
Today, the David Zwirner Gallery represents over 50 artists and estates, including bold - face names like Jeff Koons, Yayoi Kusama, Donald Judd, Dan Flavin, William Eggleston, Richard Serra, Neo Rauch, Wolfgang Tillmans, and Marlene Dumas.
Artists are Vito Acconci, Franz Ackermann, Doug Aitken, Vanessa Beecroft, Dawoud Bey, Nayland Blake, Douglas Blau, Henry Bond, Chris Burden, Larry Clark, John Currin, Sam Durant, Nicole Eisenman, Tamara Fites, Coco Fusco, Nan Goldin, Felix Gonzalez - Torres, Renee Green, Simon Grennan & Christopher Sperandio, Lyle Ashton Harris, Noritoshi Hirakawa, Damien Hirst, Dana Hoey, General Idea, Alex Katz, Mike Kelley, Karen Kilimnik, Martin Kippenberger, Jutta Koether, Jeff Koons, Inez van Lamsweerde, Sean Landers, Glenn Ligon, John Lindell, Sharon Lockhart, Charles Long, Robert Longo, Ken Lum, Piero Manzoni, Daniel J. Martinez, Paul McCarthy, John Miller, Mariko Mori, Mark Morrisroe, Billy Name, Bruce Nauman, Cady Noland, Daniel Oates, Claes Oldenburg, Catherine Opie, Steven Parrino, Hirsch Perlman, Raymond Pettibon, Elizabeth Peyton, Jack Pierson, Adrian Piper, Lari Pittman, Sigmar Polke, Stephen Prina, Richard Prince, Jason Rhoades, David Robbins, Gerwald Rockenschaub, Thomas Ruff, Sam Samore, Collier Schorr, Cindy Sherman, Stephen Shore, Jennifer Silitch, Gary Simmons, Laurie Simmons, Georgina Starr, Beat Streuli, Wolfgang Tillmans, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Lincoln Tobier, Meyer Vaisman, Jeff Wall, Andy Warhol, Gillian Wearing, Sue Williams; also including artists invited by Elein Fleiss and Olivier Zahm of Purple Prose magazine (Paris): Miltos Manetas, Mark Borthwick, Serge Comte, Bernard Joisten, Maurizio Cattelan, Laetitia Benat, Vidya & Jean Michel, and Anders EArtists are Vito Acconci, Franz Ackermann, Doug Aitken, Vanessa Beecroft, Dawoud Bey, Nayland Blake, Douglas Blau, Henry Bond, Chris Burden, Larry Clark, John Currin, Sam Durant, Nicole Eisenman, Tamara Fites, Coco Fusco, Nan Goldin, Felix Gonzalez - Torres, Renee Green, Simon Grennan & Christopher Sperandio, Lyle Ashton Harris, Noritoshi Hirakawa, Damien Hirst, Dana Hoey, General Idea, Alex Katz, Mike Kelley, Karen Kilimnik, Martin Kippenberger, Jutta Koether, Jeff Koons, Inez van Lamsweerde, Sean Landers, Glenn Ligon, John Lindell, Sharon Lockhart, Charles Long, Robert Longo, Ken Lum, Piero Manzoni, Daniel J. Martinez, Paul McCarthy, John Miller, Mariko Mori, Mark Morrisroe, Billy Name, Bruce Nauman, Cady Noland, Daniel Oates, Claes Oldenburg, Catherine Opie, Steven Parrino, Hirsch Perlman, Raymond Pettibon, Elizabeth Peyton, Jack Pierson, Adrian Piper, Lari Pittman, Sigmar Polke, Stephen Prina, Richard Prince, Jason Rhoades, David Robbins, Gerwald Rockenschaub, Thomas Ruff, Sam Samore, Collier Schorr, Cindy Sherman, Stephen Shore, Jennifer Silitch, Gary Simmons, Laurie Simmons, Georgina Starr, Beat Streuli, Wolfgang Tillmans, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Lincoln Tobier, Meyer Vaisman, Jeff Wall, Andy Warhol, Gillian Wearing, Sue Williams; also including artists invited by Elein Fleiss and Olivier Zahm of Purple Prose magazine (Paris): Miltos Manetas, Mark Borthwick, Serge Comte, Bernard Joisten, Maurizio Cattelan, Laetitia Benat, Vidya & Jean Michel, and Anders Eartists invited by Elein Fleiss and Olivier Zahm of Purple Prose magazine (Paris): Miltos Manetas, Mark Borthwick, Serge Comte, Bernard Joisten, Maurizio Cattelan, Laetitia Benat, Vidya & Jean Michel, and Anders Edström.
Recently, the artist was added to the board of her hometown's Baltimore Museum of Art, and was named the winner of the High Museum of Art's $ 25,000 David C. Driskell Prize, which recognizes a person who has made a contribution to the conversation about black artists.
In 2011, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta presented Cassel Oliver with The David C. Driskell Prize, named for the renowned African American artist and art scholar.
Initiated in 2015, the large - scale group exhibition organized by artists Jonas Burgert, John Isaacs, Christian Achenbach, Zhivago Duncan, Andrej Golder, Andreas Mühe and David Nicholson under the name of Artist Weekend, is taking place for the second time over this year's Gallery Weekend.
Transdisciplinary artists Cory Metcalf and David Stout, who collaborate under the name NoiseFold, are known for combining visual art, music and interactive cinema into artworks that manipulate the senses and stretch the imagination.
These initial promised gifts to the campaign encompass major works by artists including Diane Arbus, Francis Bacon, Eva Hesse, Jasper Johns, Ellsworth Kelly, Bruce Nauman, Jackson Pollock, Robert Rauschenberg, Gerhard Richter, Ed Ruscha, Cindy Sherman, and David Smith, to name a few.
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