Sentences with phrase «artists ebony»

Stop me when Lucy Ribchester's debut catches your attention, because it had me from the opening scene, in which trapeze artist Ebony Diamond crashes the Royal Albert Hall in London with a banner that reads, «Votes for Women» — but whose daring act is overshadowed in the newspapers by the sinking of the Titanic.
In her work, the Jamaica - born mixed - media artist Ebony G. Patterson recontextualizes gender norms and explores Jamaican dancehall culture.
The artists, who represent a wide range of styles and ideals, include visual and performance artist Nick Cave, contemporary artist Rob Pruitt, artist collective Studio Job, mixed media artist Ebony G. Patterson, and Trey Parker and Matt Stone of Comedy Central's South Park.
The Museum of Art and Design presents «Dead Treez,» the first New York museum show for textile artist Ebony G. Patterson.
Also at Newcomb are Jamaican artist Ebony G Patterson and her dazzling, vividly coloured, metamorphic, mixed media floral works on paper that suggest beaded textiles, nonagenarian Monir Farmanfarmaian, whose faceted, mirrored sculptures shape modernist geometric forms out of Persian designs, melding her Iranian heritage with that of her adopted city, New York and Andrea Fraser, with her tall mound of discarded costumes collected from Rio's Carnevale, remnants of their wearers» dreams.
Last spring, the department hosted mixed - media artist Ebony Patterson, whose work pulls the viewer in and forces them to bear witness to the violence and social injustices imposed upon those deemed invisible.
The work of mixed - media artist Ebony G. Patterson investigates identity in contemporary society, particularly ideas concerning visibility and invisibility of those who are deemed disenfranchised.
The work of mixed - media artist Ebony G. Patterson investigates the complex relationships between gender, politics, beauty, race, and ritual in contemporary Jamaican culture.
In addition to Farmanfarmaian's mirrored sculptures, visitors will encounter Montana artist Andrea Fraser's poignant pyramid of cast off Brazilian Carnival costumes, British artist Hew Locke's symbol - laden parade mural made from black Mardi Gras beads and Jamaican artist Ebony G. Patterson's glitter - coated collages inspired by Caribbean dance clubs.
Jamaican artist Ebony G. Patterson explores visibility in terms of class, gender, race, and the media in her exhibition at the Museum of Arts and Design.
In a nearby gallery, Jamaican artist Ebony G. Patterson's paintings suggest ethereal androgynous figures in vortices of glitter and paint in what a wall text calls her «exploration of Jamaican dancehall culture as a space for... masquerading and gender fluidity» in the «laissez - faire spirit of Carnival.»
Among the latest fall designer fashions, the new Barney's New York The Window store catalog (Issue 4) includes a feature spread (print only) on Jamaican - born artist Ebony G. Patterson.
Panel discussions will feature internationally renowned speakers, including collector and founder of the NEON Foundation Dimitris Daskalopoulos in conversation with Madeleine Grynsztejn; «Piece by Piece: Building a Collection,» featuring collector and patron of the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art Bill Gautreaux in conversation with curator Erin Dziedzic and artist Ebony G. Patterson; and Chad Alligood and Don Bacigalupi on the «State of the Art: Discovering American Art Now» at the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, among others.
Artist Ebony G. Patterson joins exhibition curator Karen Patterson for an evening discussion exploring the recently opened exhibition Ebony G. Patterson:...
Dead Treez is the first solo New York museum show by artist Ebony G. Patterson, who splits her time between Kingston, Jamaica and Lexington, KY..
Jamaican - born artist Ebony G. Patterson is getting international acclaim for her work, much of which she creates at the University of Kentucky.

Not exact matches

A dinner at which my family were received by the Maha Modliar de Sarem, the Chief of highest rank in the maritime provinces, was one of the most refined entertainments at which it was our good fortune to be present in Ceylon; the furniture of his reception - rooms was of ebony richly carved, and his plate, chiefly made by native artists, was a model of superior chasing on silver.
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Celebrities such as Lauren Bacall and Margaret Thatcher have stayed in this gem of a hotel and dined in its decadent Leopard Lounge & Restaurant, an ebony and gold masterpiece of Gilded Age style and colonial grandeur with a ceiling hand - painted by artist Lino Mario.
Under the artistic direction of Franklin Sirmans, the three - month citywide exhibition features 58 artists, including Terry Adkins, Jean Michel - Basquiat, Lonnie Holley, Hew Locke, Kerry James Marshall, Tamkea Norris, Ebony G. Patterson, Gary Simmons, Tavares Strachan (who created the neon work above), Alma Thomas and Carrie Mae Weems, on view at 18 venues.
MUSIC > Artist Lorna Simpson designs cover art, featuring one of her portraits inspired by vintage images from Ebony magazine, for Common's new album «Black America Again.»
As the artistic director of large - scale public performances since 2008, Tancons has featured works by artists including Los Carpinteros, Ebony G. Patterson, Marlon Griffith, Marinella Senatore, Nicoline Van Harskamp, and Mohamed Bourouissa as well as collaborated with architect Gia Wolff and musicians Christophe Chassol and Arto Lindsay.
The project is meant to counter «the world's current climate of chaos and divisiveness» and bring people together with displays created by artists including Nick Cave and Ebony G. Patterson.
BOOKSHELF Published to coincide with the exhibition, «Speaking of People: Ebony, Jet and Contemporary Art» features full - color images and contributions from Studio Museum in Harlem Director Thelma Golden, curator Lauren Haynes, and artist Hank Willis Thomas, among others.
He has already assembled a seven - member advisory council, including artists William Cordova, Wangechi Mutu, Ebony G. Patterson, and curator Zoe Whitley and indicated the geography and history of New Orleans are central to the themes artists will explore during Prospect.4.
AWARD / HONOR Ebony magazine's Power 100 list celebrating the world's most inspiring African Americans in 2016, includes Lonnie Bunch, founding director of the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture, and Chicago artists Kerry James Marshall and Hebru Brantley.
Repurposing old copies of Ebony magazine, a seminal publication of African American life and culture, the artist constructs a towering library.
To mark its 20th anniversary the museum is presenting a group exhibition featuring works by 20 black female artists from Africa, the Caribbean and the United States, including Amy Sherald, Aya V. Jackson, Toyin Ojih Odutola, Ebony G. Patterson, and Brenna Youngblood.
At the Studio Museum, sixteen top - flight contemporary artists take Ebony and Jet «as a resource and as inspiration.»
A fully illustrated catalogue, published by DelMonico Prestel books and Prospect New Orleans, will feature documentation on participating artists and include essays by the Artistic Director Trevor Schoonmaker, with contributions by William Cordova, Miranda Lash, Omar López - Chahoud, Wangechi Mutu, Filipa Oliveira, Ebony G. Patterson, Ylva Rouse, Ned Sublette and Zoé Whitley along with more than 20 other contributors including Russell Lord, NOMA's Freeman Family Curator of Photographs and Katie Pfohl, NOMA's Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art.
The artists in «Speaking of People» find inspiration in Ebony and Jet magazines, but Eric Wesley is not so sure about making progress.
This exhibition mixes historical work by artists such as Jacob Lawrence, Victor Patricio Landaluze, Camille Pissarro, Wifredo Lam, Amelia Pélaez, and Armando Reverón, with works by contemporary artists, including Allora and Calzadilla, Janine Antoni, Renée Cox, and Ebony Patterson, among many others.
ABOUT EBONY G. PATTERSON Ebony G. Patterson is a Jamaican - born artist that creates highly entrancing, colorful paintings and installations that analyze larger societal isEBONY G. PATTERSON Ebony G. Patterson is a Jamaican - born artist that creates highly entrancing, colorful paintings and installations that analyze larger societal isEbony G. Patterson is a Jamaican - born artist that creates highly entrancing, colorful paintings and installations that analyze larger societal issues.
Artists On Artists / Mickalene Thomas By Kara Walker Interspersed within my few remaining early issues of Ebony magazine from the 70s are faded liquor and cigarette advertisements, rich with period visions of black urban cool.
This exhibition mixes historical work by artists such as Jacob Lawrence, Victor Patricio Landaluze, Camille Pissarro, Wifredo Lam, Amelia Peláez, and Armando Reverón, with works by contemporary artists, including Allora and Calzadilla, Janine Antoni, Renée Cox, and Ebony G. Patterson, among many others.
Martha Tuttle is a New York - based artist whose solo debut, Martha Tuttle: Metaxu, at Tilton Gallery in New York, brought her most recent body of work critical attention, with David Ebony describing it as «understated and graceful» in his «Top 10 New York Gallery Shows This Winter.»
Featured artists in Breaking the Mold include Ghada Amer, John Ashley, Paul Cadmus, Robert Colescott, Sharon Hayes, John Kacere, Barbara Kruger, Louise Nevelson, Gladys Nilsson, Ebony G. Patterson, Philip Pearlstein, Kiki Smith, Tavares Strachan, John Valerio, R. Michael Walker, June Wayne, John Wesley, and Kehinde Wiley.
The group exhibition SOUL RECORDINGS took place at Luis De Jesus LosAngeles with the participation of artists Lex Brown, Caitlin Cherry, Ebony G. Patterson, Deborah Roberts, Paul Anthony Smith, Edra Soto, Lisa C. Soto, and Peter Williams
Some noted artists include: Alice Baber, Jasper Johns, Robert Lazzarini, Thomas Morimura, Claus Oldenberg, Ebony G. Patterson, Lorna Simpson and Kara Walker.
The museum has presented exhibitions by artists including Jane Alexander, Radcliffe Bailey, Carlos Cruz - Diez, Subodh Gupta, Alfredo Jaar, Sigalit Landau, Liza Lou, Ebony G. Patterson, Robin Rhode, Bill Viola, Carrie Mae Weems, Kehinde Wiley and Fred Wilson, as well as site - specific installations by Daniel Arsham, Kendall Buster, Jose Davila, Michael Joo, Odili Donald Odita and others.
Artists selected are Kathy Butterly and Tomas Vu - Daniel (New York); Niv Acosta, Raque Ford, Julianna Huxtable and Jessica Sanders (Brooklyn); Cameron Rowland (Queens, NY); Peter Pincus (Penfield, NY); Kazumi Tanaka (Beacon, NY); Matthew Solomon (Lake Huntington, NY); Titus Kaphar (New Haven, CT); Nina Chanel Abney (Jersey City, NJ); Abigail DeVille (Fort Lee, NJ); Sondra Perry (Perth Amboy, NJ); Tiona Nekkia McClodden (Philadelphia); Studio, and the Prout's Neck Community (Maine); Regina Scully (New Orleans, LA); Ebony G. Patterson (Lexington, KY); Beatriz Santiago Muñoz (San Juan, PR); Zachary Meisner and Beverly Penn (Austin); Kaneem Smith (Houston); Kahlil Joseph, Sean Raspet, Jesse Stecklow and Martine Syms (Los Angeles); Rafa Esparza (Pasadena, CA); Karon Davis (Ojai, CA); Candice Lin (Atladena, CA) and Ellen Lesperance and Wendy Red Star (Portland, OR).
The museum has presented exhibitions by artists including Jane Alexander, Radcliffe Bailey, Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller, Carlos Cruz - Diez, Subodh Gupta, Alfredo Jaar, Sigalit Landau, Liza Lou, Ebony G. Patterson, Robin Rhode, Bill Viola, Carrie Mae Weems, Kehinde Wiley and Fred Wilson, as well as site - specific installations by Daniel Arsham, Kendall Buster, Jose Dávila, Michael Joo, Odili Donald Odita and others.
For example, work by black artists was on view at concurrent fairs such as Untitled Miami fair, where Chicago gallery Monique Meloche presented work by Sanford Biggers and Ebony G. Patterson.
«It's incredibly exciting to see how so many artists have been so widely influenced by Ebony and Jet,» said Lauren Hayes, curator of the exhibition.
Cassils — Multidisciplinary & Performance Artist — Los Angeles, CA Abigail DeVille — Installation Artist — Bronx, NY Vanessa German — Sculptor & Citizen Artist — Pittsburgh, PA Pepón Osorio — Installation Artist — Philadelphia, PA Ebony G. Patterson — Painter & Mixed - Media Artist — Lexington, KY Dread Scott — Multidisciplinary Artist — Brooklyn, NY Cauleen Smith — Multidisciplinary Artist — Los Angeles, CA
There will be hyperpigmented canvases by British - Nigerian Yinka Shonibare MBE, of the Young British Artists generation; animal - skin sculptures of the female form by the Swazi artist Nandipha Mntambo; portraits by the queer South African photographer Zanele Muholi; the 2013 Venice Biennale's Angola Pavilion installation by photographer Edson Chagas (winner of that year's Golden Lion award); an ebony bust by Soweto - born Mohau Modisakeng; a huge dragon sculpture in rubber and ribbon by the Cape Town — born Nicholas Hlobo; and sheets made of 1,150 tiny glass beads by American artist Liza Lou, who has a studio in Durban, a South African city around 800 miles from Cape Town.
Ebony wrote about architects and artists, the share cropper who sent his nine kids to college, real African Americans at a time when everyone else only covered them as entertainers and athletes.»
Ebony G. Patterson says, «Being an artist is not a sprint, it's a marathon» while Marilyn Minter encourages young women artists to «Go with your gut, even if it goes against all rational thinking.»
Artists included Hurvin Anderson, Nick Cave, Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Christian Boltanski, William Cordova, Noah Davis, Rineke Dijkstra, Marlene Dumas, Dario Escobar, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Hassan Hajjaj, Barkley L. Hendricks, Thomas Hirschhorn, Rashid Johnson, Kerry James Marshall, Beverly McIver, Steve McQueen, Zanele Muholi, Wangechi Mutu, Ebony G. Patterson, Fahamu Pecou, Robert Pruitt, Dario Robleto, Xaviera Simmons, Lorna Simpson, Paul Anthony Smith, Jeff Sonhouse, Hank Willis Thomas, Mickalene Thomas, Barthélémy Toguo, Nari Ward, Carrie Mae Weems, Kehinde Wiley and Lynette Yiadom - Boakye.
Her recent curatorial projects include Ebony G. Patterson: Dead Treez, Ray Yoshida's Museum of Extraordinary Values, and This Must Be The Place, an exhibition series exploring the relationship between artists and their formative places.
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