Sentences with phrase «artistic breakthrough»

What has remained are Louis» first «veils» and «florals» and Noland's «proto — circles,» living proof of unprecedented artistic breakthroughs in the late 1950s.
Although never really able to spawn a discernible art movement, the Impasse nevertheless became a breeding ground for some of the most influential artistic breakthroughs of early 20th century art, no doubt fuelled by an insouciant atmosphere of invigorating rivalries, sexual relationship merry - go - rounds, creative inspiration, and artistic collaboration — all amid a carefree environment of Bohemian squalor.
[16] As he explained in a 2009 interview with Cleveland, Ohio's The Plain Dealer newspaper, he made a choice in 1967 to make art hard for himself and force a personal artistic breakthrough by abandoning the paintbrush.
Güney's artistic breakthrough came with Umut (Hope) in 1970, generally acknowledged as his first masterpiece.
Dreams have sparked countless artistic breakthroughs, but to the author who sits at the keyboard struggling to squeeze a drop of creativity out of his or her parched brain, dreams can be one of nature's cruelest taunts.
Meret Oppenheim had a first retrospective at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm (1967), which heralds her first artistic breakthrough, bringing increasing international recognition.
Despite this period of important artistic breakthroughs, she left New York in 1967 — first to wander around the Pacific Northwest, then to settle in New Mexico.
Widely regarded as the artist's first, triumphant artistic breakthrough, the majority of the Garden Project paintings are held in the collections of such museums as the Denver Art Museum, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, amongst others.
For Louis, the Veil paintings represented a complete artistic breakthrough; fluid waves of pigment wash over the canvas surface, as Greenberg describes how, «Louis spills his paint on unsized and unprimed cotton duck canvas, leaving the pigment almost everywhere thin enough, no matter how many different veils of it are superimposed, for the eye to sense the threadedness and wovenness of the fabric underneath.
For this Virgil among filmmakers, our personable guide to bio - and cyberhell, this movie about how technology alters its users was not only prophetic but a personal artistic breakthrough.
Lichtenstein's artistic breakthrough came unusually late in his life.
Brilliant creativity requires the necessary knowledge, versatility and skill in order to have a scholarly academic or artistic breakthrough.
An artistic breakthrough happens along the way.
In 1994, he made his artistic breakthrough with Cold Water, a portrait of the unruliness of youth that draws inspiration from his own life.
She has an artistic breakthrough painting women who look like Lili and seeks solace with a handsome art dealer (Matthias Schoenaerts), a childhood friend of Einar's.
It was seen as an artistic breakthrough for independent cinema in Scotland but sadly it didn't really catch on.
It was there, free of any other obligation, that he made an artistic breakthrough.
«Every artistic breakthrough has been when artists take things into their own hands and be autonomous and react directly to the situation of their time through art,» Leeson said.
After Newman had an artistic breakthrough in 1948, he and his wife decided that he should devote all his energy to his art.
Each author has also profiled a single year as a key point in the trajectory of this period, tracing the shifts in the creative climate and examining the artistic breakthroughs that serve as the seeds of more conventional histories.
Kos, with his ephemeral outdoor installation at di Rosa, Lot's Wife (1968 — 1969), experienced an artistic breakthrough on the property that would signal a major shift toward working with materials in relation to a site.
Baumeister achieved his artistic breakthrough in the early 1920s with the development of his constructivist «wall pictures.»
While painting in Maine in the summer of 1948, Brooks had an artistic breakthrough.
He began in early adulthood to visit exhibitions, meet artists, exchange ideas with dealers and other collectors, and ultimately established a network of lifelong relationships that sustained an intimate, ever - growing understanding of artistic breakthroughs, revealed in a cache of hundreds of artworks in his holdings.
She achieved her artistic breakthrough with her participation in the exhibition The Responsive Eye in the Museum of Modern Art (New York 1965).
Jackson Pollock's mythic reputation rests largely on the artistic breakthrough of his large paintings made from 1947 to 1951, as well as on his dramatic life and death.
His artistic breakthrough occurred in 1948 with Onement I to which, in his 1970 interview with Emile de Antonio, he referred as «my first painting — that is, where I felt that I had moved into an area for myself that was completely me.»
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z