Sentences with phrase «artists of all ages whose»

We will be on the lookout for new artists of all ages whose devotion to their studio practice is undeniable.

Not exact matches

That being said, I think any good children's library must contain some of the works of Howard Pyle, a truly great writer and artist whose versions of Robin Hood and King Arthur are superiorly crafted and can be enjoyed by all ages.
As Brown's aged, long - estranged mama, Davis — with the aid of terrific star Chadwick Boseman and some pretty expert makeup artists whose numbers Clint Eastwood should find immediately — manages to reinvigorate a set - up familiar from any number of tortured artist - biopics (i.e. absentee parent comes groveling years later to abandoned child - turned - superstar at the peak of his fame) with the same smart, electrifying clarity of character and tender yet tough - minded emotionalism that should be long - recognizable by now to anyone who has seen Doubt or Antwone Fisher or Solaris or Won't Back Down, or else Fences, King Hedley II, or Seven Guitars on Broadway, or, more likely, witnessed Davis» extraordinary, one - woman rescue job on Taylor's The Help.
A mixed bag, then, Whisper of the Heart is another nice coming - of - age story for a young girl by an important artist (Miyazaki) whose great warmth seems to flow from a desire to mentor, whether the subject be his daughter or the promising young artists he hopes to mold into successors.
We seek to celebrate the independent ethos of artists in music and film whose creations push against the grain of corporate - subsidized popular culture, even though interaction with the corporate world of art has grown more and more inevitable in this day and age.
KW: Harriet Pakula Teweles asks: Since our country does not have the kind of state system we see in «Mao's Last Dancer,» a bio-pic set in China where children are recruited at an early age and trained at state expense, how can we find our talented young artists, especially among the youth whose parents can't afford private lessons?
Cheyenne, winner of NBC's America's Most Talented Kid at age 12, recording artist, and star of her own MTV show, is just one of many high - profile Americans whose educational choice is home schooling.
He is, of course, a white middle - aged man, but he's also one working hard to champion (and financially support) African artists, and practitioners based outside Africa whose roots lie in the continent.
«As such, Saturn Paintings extends the artist's concern with expressing the psychological and existential maladies of a modern age set adrift in seemingly boundless space and endless time, an age collectively grappling with questions about its significance in a universe whose secrets continue to elude us.»
The latest iteration of Bloom Projects, which will go on view the same day, debuts a newly commissioned site - specific installation by Brooklyn - based artist Michael DeLucia, whose work addresses the condition of sculpture and spatial relationships in the technological age.
Of those I visited, Art Miami reprised its welcome survey of Latin American artists; Untitled lit its beach tent with wide, carefully curated booths showing refreshingly unfamiliar material from all over the world; Pulse drew the young to accomplished work by mid-career artists who remain affordable; and the Design Fair played curated interiors of mid-century masters against the technological marvels of space - age lighting and the the largest - ever 3D printed work from sustainable materials — SHoP architects» outdoor pavilion digitised out of recycled bamboo whose combined airiness and tensile strength stand to revolutionise buildinOf those I visited, Art Miami reprised its welcome survey of Latin American artists; Untitled lit its beach tent with wide, carefully curated booths showing refreshingly unfamiliar material from all over the world; Pulse drew the young to accomplished work by mid-career artists who remain affordable; and the Design Fair played curated interiors of mid-century masters against the technological marvels of space - age lighting and the the largest - ever 3D printed work from sustainable materials — SHoP architects» outdoor pavilion digitised out of recycled bamboo whose combined airiness and tensile strength stand to revolutionise buildinof Latin American artists; Untitled lit its beach tent with wide, carefully curated booths showing refreshingly unfamiliar material from all over the world; Pulse drew the young to accomplished work by mid-career artists who remain affordable; and the Design Fair played curated interiors of mid-century masters against the technological marvels of space - age lighting and the the largest - ever 3D printed work from sustainable materials — SHoP architects» outdoor pavilion digitised out of recycled bamboo whose combined airiness and tensile strength stand to revolutionise buildinof mid-century masters against the technological marvels of space - age lighting and the the largest - ever 3D printed work from sustainable materials — SHoP architects» outdoor pavilion digitised out of recycled bamboo whose combined airiness and tensile strength stand to revolutionise buildinof space - age lighting and the the largest - ever 3D printed work from sustainable materials — SHoP architects» outdoor pavilion digitised out of recycled bamboo whose combined airiness and tensile strength stand to revolutionise buildinof recycled bamboo whose combined airiness and tensile strength stand to revolutionise building.
Description and features This program is aimed at national and international young artists (between 24 - 37 years of age), whose work is maturing and who have the skills, abilities and knowledge that enable them to develop their projects with clarity and consistency.
«Soul of A Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power» (12 July — 22 October) introduces UK audiences to a number of crucial artists — among them, Romare Bearden, Lorraine O'Grady and Betye Saar — whose works have been little shown in this country.
Michelangelo Pistoletto is an Italian painter, sculptor, and Conceptual artist whose artistic training began in the studio of his father, a painter and restorer, where he went to work at the age of fourteen.
Such an eccentric move suits a modern artist whose work can resemble the relics of some bygone age: Dove's evocations of natural forces — particularly his omnipotent, pulsating suns — are primordial and unhewn.
Alan Davie, who died on Saturday aged 93, was one of the great 20th - century British artists, a life - long maverick whose explosive canvases cut a swathe through the provincial aridity of the postwar art scene.
Another notable highpoint of the exhibition, Lewison points out, is Neel's self - portrait, painted at the age of 80: «Curiously, for an artist whose career focused on painting people, this is the only self - portrait she painted; and, she depicts herself naked.
New Eyes For New Spaces, an exhibition curated by recent CCS Bard alumnae Jess Wilcox and Francesca Sonara, is a timely dialogue between five artists whose works investigate abstract and fragmented representations of place in the age of digital technologies.
R. H. QUAYTMAN, MORNING: CHAPTER 30 The first major museum survey of an artist whose silkscreen - on - panel paintings, organized like chapters in a book, have contributed to the current conversation around painting in a post-internet age.
Coming of age during the 1968 student protests, which swept across Yugoslav cities, Iveković belongs to the New Art Practice (NAP), a generation of artists whose conceptual practices gravitated toward the use of public space, breaking away from institutional infrastructures.
The curatorial premise brings artists together whose work concerns «automated empathy, new age philosophy, digital death and the rise of artificial intelligence in contemporary society.»
Revealing one of the South's best - kept secrets, this exhibition was the first retrospective dedicated to Lockett, whose career was cut short when the artist died of AIDS - related pneumonia at the age of thirty - two.
And though gentrification has caused some artists to leave the city, for others whose work addresses issues of the digital age San Francisco is an increasingly compelling place to live.
Sir Howard Hodgkin, who has died aged 84, was literally a broad - brush artist, the width of whose lush, pigment - loaded strokes was accentuated in all but the later paintings by the smallness of the surface.
The exhibition offers a long overdue presentation of an artist whose questioning of authorship and authenticity maintains its relevance in the digital age.
Those pieces — respectively by Alison Jackson, who's British, and Touba Alipour, who was born in Iran in lives in New York — are just a couple of the 80 works by contemporary artists ages 18 to 80 from around the world whose creative juices were inspired by such hot - button issues as racism, sexism and discrimination.
He had begun going to the Whitechapel at the age of 18 in 1964, and still remembers the galvanising effect on him of Robertson's exhibitions of Robert Rauschenberg and, the following year, of Franz Kline, both deeply influential American artists of the time, whose reputations outlived their century.
What emerges from the Whitney's exhibition is a community of artists who appear compelled to limit themselves to ephemeral, transitory media, and whose work seems self - consciously designed to evanesce in a cynical age best forgotten.
Her bland, short instructions were accompanied by paintings by American artist Peter Nadin, whose portraits of men and women attached to metal posts further articulated the emptiness of both life and message in the information age.
Madani's figurative paintings often feature a riotous cast of middle - aged men, balding and stocky, whose libidinal mayhem wreaks havoc on any situation the artist thrusts them into.
For this residency, the Museum is looking to award one visual artist whose artistic practice will resonate with children ages 3 to 8 and their families, and reflect a relationship to the demographics, location or history of Sugar Hill.
Taking the intimacy and irreproducible nature of Martin's work as a starting point, Signal Failure brings together a younger generation of artists whose work attempts to reclaim space resistant to the speed of communication age and the ever - expanding flood of digital images.
Alan Reynolds, who has died aged 88, was a singular post-war British artist whose early landscapes of Suffolk and Kent — works peppered with teasels, oast houses, hop gardens, orchards, copses and cornfields — mutated into formally abstract compositions.
Sheila Girling, who has died aged 90, was an artist whose vibrant oils, watercolours, papercuts and collages were infused with a Modernist spirit and the vivid style of the American «colour field» abstract painters.
The award sets no restrictions in terms of age, gender, nationality, or medium, and the nominations may include emerging artists as well as more established individuals whose public recognition may be long overdue.
Allan Stone, a vital and respected New York art collector and dealer who ignored art world fashion and embraced artists whose work stirred him personally — among them such masters as Willem de Kooning, Barnett Newman, Joseph Cornell and Wayne Thiebaud — has died of heart failure at age 74.
Among the exhibitors are influential nonagenarian Indian artist Krishna Reddy, who shows drawings from the 1950s articulating various experiments with form, and (at the other end of the age scale) Dhaka - based Ayesha Sultana, whose hypnotic watercolours follow her interest in material, movement and distance (and, fundamentally, form).
Uncertain States offers an expanded look at a series of major installations by an emerging generation of artists whose source material derives from a media - saturated world and a canny knowledge of new art - historical references (from Richard Prince and Christopher Wool, among others) in an age of political dissonance and free - form use of material innovations and juxtapositions.
Japanese avant - garde artist Yayoi Kusama, whose work commands some of the highest prices of any living female artist, said on Tuesday that at age 88, she still fills her days painting and has no intention of slowing down.
Speakers include graphic artist and illustration mastermind Jean Jullien, whose iconic» Peace for Paris» symbol became an instant global meme; children's book author and illustrator You Jung Byun, known for her detailed narrative and commissioned work inhabited by strange beasts and lost children; everyone's favourite gif - wunderkind Julian Glander, creator of bubblegum - coloured digital illustration, indie games and interactive artwork, all subsumed under the catchword «digital toys»; animator, writer, and producer Ben Bocquelet, creator of the famed animation series «The Amazing World of Gumball `; Martina Paukova, illustrator with an incredibly fast - paced career, whose jam - packed images in a trademark palette and Memphis - inspired patterns mirror our mundane lives in the digital age; and Jaime Álvarez, renowned for his 3D rendered Mr. Kat (PE) universe, fusing pre-Columbian with contemporary kawaii aesthetics.
Curated by gallery artist Clark Goolsby, Mysterious Muck focuses on artists whose work combines seemingly unrelated imagery, materials, environments (virtual or physical), and abstract forms to illuminate the loss of context in the internet - age.
We are offering an 11 - month residency for one visual artist whose artistic practice will resonate with children ages 3 to 8 and their families, and reflect a relationship to the demographics, location or history of Sugar Hill.
Other notable junk artists included the Indiana - born sculptor John Chamberlain (b. 1927), whose works included Untitled (1964, painted steel with chrome, Nice Museum of Modern Art), Untitled (1968, sheet metal, National Gallery of Modern Art, Rome) and Koko - Nor II (1967, Tate Collection London); the English photographer and sculptor Joseph Goto (1916 - 94); the American Richard Stankiewicz (1923 - 83), noted for his witty Middle Aged Couple (1954, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago); and the sculptor and film - maker Bruce Conner (1933 - 2008), noted for his spooky constructions made from broken dolls and old stockings.
Current Exhibition: Coming of Age features seven artists whose meditative practices torque scale, technology, and location in search of sustainable agency and repair.
A personal favorite is Simone Subal Gallery's presentation of works by the late Pop artist Kiki Kogelnik, whose playful and bold paintings and sculptures do not seem to have aged a day.
For the show, curators Andrianna Campbell and Daniel S. Palmer have chosen artists whose work tackles perception in the digital age and «who closely parallel the Cubist vernacular of fragmentation, nonlinearity, simultaneity, and decenteredness.»
Heidi Norton is an artist whose 1970's upbringing as a child of New Age homesteaders in West Virginia resulted in a strong connection to the land, plant life, and nature.
An intimate portrait of self - taught artist Jack Vettriano, whose nostalgic paintings of a lost age of glamour are instantly recognisable
At a moment when questions of race, equity and representation are paramount, this streak marks an interesting moment for Los Angeles — one that has allowed for the city to take in a broad range of works by black artists: from the intricate assemblages of Purifoy (who passed away in 2004 at the age of 86) to the video work of Joseph, who is just 33, and whose art is inspired by everything from Russian avant - garde cinema to African American films of the 1970s.
Mennour juxtaposes Morellet, a pioneering minimalist who passed away in 2016 at the age of 90, with Mohamed Bourouissa, a young Algerian - born Parisian artist whose multimedia practice explores contemporary social tensions and cultural idiosyncrasies, especially in urban environments.
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