«This is a powerful show that reveals the vastly different ways
artist respond to the world around them.
Not exact matches
Organized by Tumelo Mosaka (Curator of Contemporary Art at the Krannert Art Museum), University of Illinois, this exhibition focuses on the various ways
artists from
around the
world respond to issues about identity particularly those defined by race and ethnicity.
Between 1950 and 1980,
artists responded to social and political unrest
around the
world by incorporating absurdity, disorder, nonsense, and repetition into their work.
A fundamental part of the
artist's practice is influenced by the collaborative building process undertaken by dwellers of improvised urban settlements
around the
world — favelas, barrios, slums, or shanti towns — who rely on recycled and scavenged materials
to ingeniously, but often precariously,
respond to their rapidly changing living situations.
Throughout the vast interior of the United States, contemporary
artists are
responding to the
world around them and reshaping it in unexpected ways.
This Hestercombe Gallery exhibition attempts
to unearth the unique perspectives and pathways that eight
artists have taken in
responding to the
world around us.
Looking at the potential for new dynamic forms of exhibition - making and cultural exchange, Silva will present her research into
artists, as well as
respond to questions posed on the subjects of the expansion of curatorial networks and emerging collaborative institutional models
around the
world.
Skarstedt, London, 27 June — 8 August Skarstedt brings together from Friday artworks by Francis Bacon, George Condo, Martin Kippenberger, Sigmar Polke, Richard Prince and Andy Warhol that, respectively, pay homage
to the past masters of Velázquez, Picasso, Baselitz, Goya, De Koonig and De Chirico — we are reminded that, as always,
artists respond as much
to their peers and predecessors as the
world around them.
Constantly evolving, changing, and
responding to the
world around him, Frank Stella is one of the most innovative and exciting living
artists.
Yet the
artist is vigilant in his desire
to respond to the
world around him, and refuses
to retreat into a formal
world of mark, splatter, and structure (as so many painters of his generation did) in order
to address the ever - present weight of the political.
Visual
artists from
around the
world have
responded in a myriad of ways
to this nuclear legacy — and the Nevada Museum of Art houses a number of artworks in its permanent collection related
to this subject matter.
Artist and Empire is a major exhibition of art associated with the British Empire from the 16th century
to the present day, bringing together extraordinary and unexpected works
to explore how
artists from Britain and
around the
world have
responded to the dramas, tragedies and experiences of the Empire.
Artists from
around the
world have gone to Greenland to respond to climate change and now another group is going to eight different UNESCO World Heritage sites around the globe to record their respo
world have gone
to Greenland
to respond to climate change and now another group is going
to eight different UNESCO
World Heritage sites around the globe to record their respo
World Heritage sites
around the globe
to record their responses.