Not exact matches
This attitude enabled original programming such as «Behind the Music» and «The Real World» to eventually blossom and gave
artists like Michael Jackson, Madonna and Prince a national
stage at early points
in their
careers.
Not only is the fair designed to support
artists by providing them with a platform to exhibit their work to an international audience
at an
early stage in their
career, but it gives art buyers and the general public the opportunity to meet the...
Structured chronologically, the exhibition consists of works on paper from various
stages of the
artist's
career, beginning with summary pencil scrawls of the
early 1950s, when Twombly was a student
at Black Mountain College
in North Carolina, and ending with three works from 2008 filled almost to bursting with blood - red spirals of acrylic paint.
To mark the 25th anniversary of Socrates Sculpture Park, we are highlighting Socrates» founding commitment to supporting
artists at an
early and seminal
stages in their
careers by completing a phased expansion of the EAF program to reach twenty fellowships as an annual number.
It seeks to nurture and support
artists at the
early stages of their
career, and is committed to showing emerging
artists alongside established names
in group and solo exhibitions.
The fair aims to support the young, emerging and most exciting
artists and the galleries who are nurturing them
at the
early stages in their
careers.
The Guggenheim Museum
in New York, which is organized a touring Richard Prince retrospective, also dates the artist's career from 1980 on its Web site: «Since his first solo exhibition, at Artists Space in New York in 1980...» In this, the Guggenheim is following the lead of the Whitney Museum of American Art, which staged the last retrospective of Prince in 1992 and did not include a single early work by the artist, although a few mid-1970s pieces were mentioned in the catalogu
in New York, which is organized a touring Richard Prince retrospective, also dates the
artist's
career from 1980 on its Web site: «Since his first solo exhibition,
at Artists Space
in New York in 1980...» In this, the Guggenheim is following the lead of the Whitney Museum of American Art, which staged the last retrospective of Prince in 1992 and did not include a single early work by the artist, although a few mid-1970s pieces were mentioned in the catalogu
in New York
in 1980...» In this, the Guggenheim is following the lead of the Whitney Museum of American Art, which staged the last retrospective of Prince in 1992 and did not include a single early work by the artist, although a few mid-1970s pieces were mentioned in the catalogu
in 1980...»
In this, the Guggenheim is following the lead of the Whitney Museum of American Art, which staged the last retrospective of Prince in 1992 and did not include a single early work by the artist, although a few mid-1970s pieces were mentioned in the catalogu
In this, the Guggenheim is following the lead of the Whitney Museum of American Art, which
staged the last retrospective of Prince
in 1992 and did not include a single early work by the artist, although a few mid-1970s pieces were mentioned in the catalogu
in 1992 and did not include a single
early work by the
artist, although a few mid-1970s pieces were mentioned
in the catalogu
in the catalogue.
This exhibition highlights
in particular a new generation of collectors of color whose mission,
in part, is to support
artists already
at the
early stages of their
career, often ahead of the mainstream.
Discoveries gives a powerful platform to emerging contemporary
artists, showcasing work by the next generation of talent
at an
early stage in their
career.
When Kerry Inman founded her gallery back
in 1990, she sought to foster Houston - based
artists, particularly those
at the
early stages of their
careers.
With spaces like the Brockman Gallery, which showed
artists like Betye Saar, David Hammons, and John Outterbridge
in the
early days of their
careers and the heady days of the Black Arts Movement, and the jazz and poetry crucible The World
Stage, Leimert Park has been
at the heart of Black Arts and culture
in LA since the «70s.
The collection is known predominantly for acquiring emerging
artists —
artists at an
early stage of their
career — to give you a sense of the size of the collection there are over 3000 artworks by over 500
artists; it's a very international collection and there are three main territories that we focus on, North America, the UK, and Europe — and
in particular Germany — as
artists based
in Germany feature a lot, including Isa Genzken, and Sigmar Polke, that's the international element of the collection.
The Arts Council Collection supports and promotes British art and
artists by buying their work
at an
early or critical
stage in their
career.