The project will include works
from artists of different generations and backgrounds, from visual art, theatre and digital culture, presenting film and video, painting, drawing, and sculpture.
Exile
presents artists of different generations, often setting these in dialogue with each other and understands art as a collaborative, inter-generatioal and overarching discourse embedded in a complex web of socio - political, gender and personal histories as much as in aesthetic theory and conceptual practice.
In the week that two great shows by
women artists of different generations make waves in London — Hannah Hoch at the Whitechapel and Silke Otto - Knappe at Camden — the first show I am going to recommend to you this week is another amazing woman artist, Agnes Denes, who is showing at firstsite in Colchester.
As well as showcasing a number of recent works by young artists, the exhibition looks at
how artists of different generations have handled performativity, proposing an «intergenerational topography of forms and themes».
But due to this great
prize artists of different generations have been given the opportunity to spend formative months exploring Italy; and the resources to create a major new commission that situates them on the world stage.
It features key examples of the technique by artists from various periods and regions, from historical figures like the Czech surrealists Jindřich Štýrský and Toyen, to post — World War II artists such as Alighiero Boetti and Roy Lichtenstein, to
contemporary artists of different generations, including Anna Barriball, Jennifer Bornstein, Morgan Fisher, Simryn Gill, Matt Mullican, Ruben Ochoa, Gabriel Orozco, and Jack Whitten.
Moderated by Performance Studies Professor Barbara Browning, Baring It: Self - Exposure In Feminist Performance brought together two
performance artists of different generations — outspoken stalwart Karen Finley and mannequin - masked Narcissister.
The exhibition — previously on show in a more performative, smaller version at Castrum Peregrini (18 — 26 Nov 2017)-- consists of a carefully selected combination of existing and new works by upcoming and internationally
renowned artists of different generations.
In addition to these projects, there are often proposals for research and experimentation with artists not well known to the Italian public yet and for an overview on the national scene, with single and collective exhibitions dedicated to
Italian artists of different generations.
Currently, Garth Greenan Gallery represents 15
artists of different generations including: Rosalyn Drexler, Paul Feeley, Victoria Gitman, Art Green, Mark Greenwold, Ralph Humphrey, Nicholas Krushenick, Al Loving, Roy McMakin, Gladys Nilsson, Howardena Pindell, Norbert Prangenberg, Alexis Smith, Patrick Strzelec, and Richard Van Buren.
Power, Sex and Race in the Representation of Couples illuminates ways in
which artists of different generations have explored the meaning of marriage, the nature of human relationships, sexuality, and public versus private expressions of love.
In this group show of tough little delicacies, differences among self - taught art, outsider art and well - schooled - insider art are pretty much indistinguishable, and
artists of different generations look like contemporaries.
EXILE
presents artists of different generations, often setting these in dialogue with each other and understands art as a collaborative, inter-generational and overarching discourse embedded in a complex web of socio - political, gender and personal histories as much as in aesthetic theory and conceptual practice.
When compared to Burghard, we see two
artists of different generations whose approaches, while different, seem to tackle similar ideas and subjects precisely because their concerns surround universal themes.
San Isidro's Still gathers works
from artists of different generations — from Fernando González Gortázar to Cristina Tufiño; from different geographies — Anouk Kruithof (Netherlands) to José Ignacio Solózano (Guadalajara, Mexico); and explores their relationships between one another and the broader universe.
Such an artistic upbringing instilled in Chiara a unique sensibility — reserved and determined, fragile and audacious — which she expresses in her documentary films about artists she admires: the painter Brice Marden; the architect Frank Gehry; and the group of
women artists of different generations — Nancy Spero, Marina Abramovic, Kiki Smith, Ghada Amer, and Swoon — whose lives she chronicled in Our City Dreams (2008), which won her international critical acclaim.
This exhibition juxtaposes videos and photographs of the early performances of Zhang Huan with those of recent performances by Li Binyuan to examine performance works by two
Chinese artists of different generations that address the relationship between the body and the land.
Popcorn, Pepsi, Petabytes brings
together artists of different generations and disparate socio - political backgrounds to present partial yet urgent approaches to and engagements with the new configuration of augmented reality altered by accelerated development of information technologies, where the rapid process of the world's digitization merges the «real» and the «virtual» as never before.
Featuring Harmony Hammond, Carrie Moyer, Amy Sillman, and Paula Wilson, this session brings together four
artists of different generations to discuss the political ramifications of applying pigment to surface.
It seems that by contrasting nine
artists of different generations, the gallery's intention is to emphasize a continuity of interest in formal aspects of the abstract artwork.
NO MAN»S LAND: Women Artists from the Rubell Family Collection focus on and celebrate work made by more than a hundred female
artists of different generations, cultures and disciplines.
The show reflects on a number of interesting notions: the ways in which postwar black artists have constructed their identity through their reliance on abstraction; the formal affinities between
artists of different generations; and the role of non-figurative art as both personal expression and political impetus.
The show features 260 works by 74
artists of different generations, among them Ai Weiwei, John Baldessari, Elmgreen & Dragset, Robert Gober, Jenny Holzer, Jonathan Horowitz, Jeff Koons, Adam McEwen, Andy Warhol, and Zhang Huan.