Sentences with phrase «as manning an exhibition»

Recently, at Party Conference up in Birmingham, we held an event (which is reported in full here) as well as manning an exhibition stall both of which were successful in terms of explaining our message to a wider audience and in gauging the mood towards organisations such as CFoP.

Not exact matches

Boeheim, who is in his 37th year as head coach at Syracuse, tinkered with various forms of zone and man - to - man defense for most of his career, but says that he fully committed to the 2 — 3 after a humiliating 82 — 79 exhibition loss to Division II Le Moyne, which is also located in Syracuse, in November 2009.
The exhibition explores how men and women found new ways to dress as the rationing of clothes took hold, revealing what life was really like on the home front in wartime Britain.
In other words, rather than presenting science as an unchanging edifice (which is the way it is often perceived in the public mind), the exhibitions will show that science is a changing, man - made, approach to the world that is characteristic of modern society.
Arcade icon Pac - Man will chomp his way into the game's all - star cast, as revealed by Nintendo after its «Super Smash Bros.» tournament exhibition at E3.
Shown in an upcoming exhibition at London's Autograph ABP gallery, the men portrayed in Hussain's portraits identify as Muslim, and expressed that they felt culturally ridiculed by the constant flow of derogatory media representation of their lives.
For many recent exhibitions, including Portrait of a Young Man at the Bass Museum of Art, Miami Beach, URANIBORG at the Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume, Paris, France and the Montreal Museum of Contemporary Art, Canada and, most recently, Disasters and Miracles at the Kunsthaus Baselland, Switzerland, Grasso has acted as a co-curator in conjunction with the museums, altering the architecture of the exhibition spaces and merging his works with pieces in the permanent collections of the institutions in order to create a unique and dynamic viewing experience.
La Deliciosa Show is presented as part of Mutations, a group exhibition that explores the relationship between man and nature, looking at how the boundaries between the natural world and culture are defined, crossed, and obliterated.
Looking at and questioning relationships and hierarchies between man and science, space, history and nature, the exhibition draws on the museum's past as artists dig into records and objects from its previous lives.
As the source of the Berlin - based Norwegian artist Øystein Aassan's second solo exhibition at PSM Gallery, a quote from Barnett Newman is cited: «The painting should give man a sense of place: that he knows he's there, because in that sense I was there.»
From June 28 - September 29, New York's Public Art Fund will launch an exhibition in City Hall Park inspired by the Walter Benjamin essay, «On language as Such and on the Language of Man
It is slowly changing, but you only have had to go the Abstract Expressionism exhibition at the Royal Academy, to see all the women who were left out — it was absolutely shocking, and of course it continues to portray this notion that it is only men that can make art that is to be lauded and seen as forging new ideas.
Poet Frank O'Hara may have claimed that «Abstract Expressionism is the art of serious men,» but, as is shown by this exhibition, it is time to think differently.
Starting in the mid-1950s, Giacomelli began to win photographic prizes and exhibit in group shows many of which focused on post-war humanistic photography, such as the exhibition entitled, «What is Man
A recurring motif is the boot, which also appears in other exhibitions as static object, a precursor for The man who rolled a stone up a hill.
At the end of these rigorously researched and happily exhausting exhibitions, what emerges is an account of a man who was driven as much by the prospects of wealth as he was by portraying his truth as a gay man, consequences be damned.
«The art market is such a financial force,» says Cooper, «that the decisions about who is awarded exhibitions is probably influenced by the idea that women aren't as bankable as the men — precisely because they're not as well known and they don't have as many major shows.
McCarthy's performative practice (both live and video — not included in this exhibition) encompasses violent and carnal outbursts, but here has gradually shifted to kinetic (Alpine Man, 1992) and static sculptures (White Snow, Flower Girl, 2012 — 13) as well as works on canvas (SC, ECK, 2014), works that have been previously exhibited at Hauser & Wirth London in 2014.
Although, Lucchini has always been a painter of the living, this exhibition places the landscape as an equal protagonist; in the war related paintings it is as an unwilling accomplice, but in many of the other pictures it is seen as an unattainable paradise, which is always strived for but never reached due to the incapacity of man to ever rise above his own limitations.
She began her work at the non-profit in 2015 as adjunct curator, organizing exhibitions such as «Nina Beier: Anti-Ageing,» (2015) «Nancy Lupo: Parent and Parroting,» (2016) «Alex Baczynski - Jenkins: Us Swerve,» (2016) and «Olga Balema: Early Man» (2016).
An open - air exhibition that takes inspiration from the High Line as an urban park cutting straight through the city, creating new vistas and vantage points onto the surrounding natural and man - made landscapes.
And yet, when we visited exhibitions together, the numbers remained overwhelmingly in favor of men like himself — what Robert Hughes described sarcastically as «the pale penis people.»
The exhibition moves on to explore practices that are close to Appropriation Art, such as Sturtevant's Duchamp Man Ray Portrait (1966), who reclaims a photographic portrait of Marcel Duchamp realized by Man Ray, substituting both the author and the subject of the photograph with herself.
This major exhibition looks at the ways in which artists have explored the intersection of rock and culture in tools, structures, myths, language, and systems of abstract thought as man has strived to understand and manage our world.
By his death in 1998, D'Arcangelo was the subject of many one - man shows at such influential institutions as the Albright - Knox Art Gallery (Buffalo), and the Institute of Contemporary Art (Chicago), as well as in several group shows at the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York), the Hirshhorn Museum (Washington D.C.), and the Museum of Modern Art (New York), where Pegasus was shown in their 1965 - 66 exhibition, Around the Automobile.
As the title suggests, the exhibition explores the relationship of man and dog throughout history and its most recent intepretations in art.
A press release of future solo exhibitions coming in the next year reveals Runa Islam as the sole woman among seven men.
Organized by the WHEREISANAMENDIETA movement, the protesters are decrying the exhibition of Andre's work — not to mention the failure to show Mendieta's work in the same space, even though the Tate has five works in storage — as a glorification of violent men within the art institution.
The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue, with essays on the interaction between Gutai and New York artists by guest curator Ming Tiampo, associate professor of art history at Carleton University in Ottawa, and on Jackson Pollock's relationship to the Gutai group by Tetsuya Oshima, curator of the Aichi Prefectural Museum of Art in Japan, as well as a new translation of the Gutai Manifesto by independent scholar Reiko Tomii and a reflection by David Kaplan, a director and Tennessee Williams scholar, on Gutai's influence on Williams» one - act play, The Day on Which a Man Dies.
Conceived by writer and curator David Campany, the exhibition takes as a starting point the 1920 photograph taken by American artist Man Ray of Marcel Duchamp's work in progress The Large Glass (1915 — 23) deliberately left to gather dust in his New York studio.
The Musée d'Art moderne de la Ville de Paris presents «MEDUSA, Jewellery and Taboos», an exhibition,, curated by Anne Dressen, bringing together over 400 pieces of jewellery created by artists the like of Anni Albers, Man Ray, Meret Oppenheim, Alexander Calder, Salvador Dali, Louise Bourgeois, Lucio Fontana, Niki de Saint Phalle, Fabrice Gygi, Thomas Hirschhorn, Danny McDonald, Sylvie Auvray, avant - garde jewellery makers and designers such as Betony Vernon, Elie Top, René Lalique, Suzanne Belperron, Line Vautrin, Art Smith, Tony Duquette, Bless, Nervous System, contemporary jewellery makers and also high end jewelers, as well as anonymous, more ancient or non-Western pieces.
To witness this, through an understanding of man - made objects, and as in this exhibition with a religious undertone, helps raise the idea of sameness, rather than difference.
The exhibition includes a number of commissioned works, including a major new braided sculpture by Diamond Stingily that snakes through gallery floors, trailing from the Fourth Floor all the way down to the Museum's Lobby, and alludes to the racial dimensions of beauty conventions as well as to Medusa, the mythological snake - haired woman whose gaze could turn men into stone.
Picasso and Britain will include key Cubist works such as Head of a Man with Moustache 1912 (Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris) which was seen in Britain before the First World War, when Cubism was first introduced to a British public through Roger Fry's two Post-Impressionist exhibitions.
Previously he was curator of international modern art at Tate Modern, London, where he worked on exhibitions such as Duchamp, Man Ray, Picabia (2008), Cy Twombly: Cycles and Seasons (2008), and Pop Life: Art in a Material World (2009).
She has had major exhibitions in Canada and France accompanied by books (Lost and Found, No Man's Land, Camouflage and Cover) as well as numerous one - person shows in the US, Germany, France, Spain, Cuba, Switzerland, Belgium and Austria.
by Alan Feuer Boston Globe, Nov. 16, Intimacy of attention paid in close up by Sebastian Smee Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Nov. 16, «Visions of an American Dreamland:» New book and Brooklyn Museum exhibition highlight Coney Island by Peter Stamelman The New York Times, Nov. 15, Amusement for Everyone by Ken Johnson Boston Globe, Nov. 11, Andy Warhol and Robert Mapplethorpe Rocked the Boat by Mark Feeney Crave, Nov. 11, Exhibit Warhol & Mapplethorpe: Guise & Dolls by Miss Rosen Antiques and the Arts Weekly, Nov. 10, Q&A: Linda Roth WSFB / Better Connecticut, Nov. 9, Get Some Art History at this Local Stop by Kara Sundlun Take Magazine, November 2015, This MATRIX is Real by Janet Reynolds American Fine Art Magazine, November 2015, Radical Chick and Taylor Made by Jay Cantor Art New England, November 2015, Preview: Warhol & Mapplethorpe: Guise & Dolls by Susan Rand Brown The Hartford Courant, Oct. 16, Gender - Bending «Warhol & Mapplethorpe» Exhibit At Wadsworth by Susan Dunne The Wall Street Journal, Oct. 13, At the Wadsworth Atheneum, an Old Building Gets New Life by Lee Rosenbaum Hartford Courant, Oct. 2, Artist Pokes Fun At «Great Chain Of Being» With New Wadsworth Exhibit by Susan Dunne The Economist, Oct. 1, Temple of Delight by Miles Unger Hartford Courant, Oct. 1, Renewed Atheneum a Cultural Tourism Spark Op - Ed by William Hosley Art in America, October 2015, Coney Island Forever by Jonathan Weinberg The Boston Globe, Sept. 19, European marvels await in Hartford at refurbished Atheneum by Sebastian Smee The Hartford Courant, Sept. 19, Wadsworth Atheneum Reopens To Line Of Visitors Saturday by Kristin Stoller The Hartford Courant, Sept. 19, Editorial: Wadsworth Atheneum Makeover is a Triumph Hyperallergic, Sept. 18, A Worthy Renovation for the Wadsworth Atheneum's European Art Galleries by Benjamin Sutton The New York Times, Sept. 17, Review: Wadsworth Atheneum, a Masterpiece of Renovation by Roberta Smith WNPR, Sept. 17, Hartford's Wadsworth Atheneum Unveils Newly Renovated Galleries by Diane Orson The Art Newspaper, Sept. 16, Wadsworth relives Gilded Age glory days in grand reopening by Julia Halperin The Hartford Courant, Sept. 13, Wadsworth Atheneum Unveils Final Phase of Years - Long Renovation by Susan Dunne Fox CT, Sept. 11, The art of a reopening at the Wadsworth by Jim Altman Apollo Magazine, Sept. 5, J.P. Morgan: The Man Who Bought the World by Rachel Cohen The Art Newspaper, September 2015, Wadsworth relives Gilded Age glory days in grand reopening by Julia Halperin The New York Times, Aug. 31, The Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford Puts Final Touches on a Comeback by Ted Loos The Independent, Aug. 28, Warhol and Mapplethorpe capture each other by Charlotte Cripps The Hartford Courant, Aug. 18, Three «Aspects of Portraiture» at Wadsworth by Susan Dunne The Hartford Courant, July 16, Vibrant Paintings of Modernist Peter Blume at Wadsworth by Susan Dunne The Boston Globe, June 30, Hank Willis Thomas's slick image masks a closed door by Sebastian Smee The Boston Globe, June 25, Bradford enters MATRIX at Wadsworth Atheneum by Sebastian Smee Hartford Courant, June 25, Artist Creates Site - Specific «Pull Painting» at Atheneum by Susan Dunne Observer, June 16, A Peek Inside Hartford's Wadsworth Atheneum as It Preps for a Grand Reopening by Alanna Martinez The Wall Street Journal, June 5, Madrid's Thyssen Offers the Dark Religiosity of Zurbarán by J.S. Marcus Art New England, May / June 2015, Reviving the Grande Dame by Susan Rand Brown Humanities, May / June 2015, The Coney Island Exhibition That Captures Its Highs and Lows by Tom Christopher The Magazine Antiques, May / June 2015, Visions of Coney Island by Robin Jaffee Frank The New York Times, April 19, An American Dreamland, From the Beginning by Sylviane Gold Artes Magazine, April 16, At Hartford's Atheneum: «Coney Island: Visions of an American Dreamland, 1861 - 2008» by Richard Friswell Hartford Courant, April 9, Sideshow Mind Game at Atheneum by Susan Dunne Hyperallergic, March 4, Two Exhibitions Examine the Art of the American Side Show by Laura C. Mallonee Republican American, March 1, Coney Island R us by Tracey O'Shaughnessy Hyperallergic, Feb. 24, Mapplethorpe's Other Man by Larissa Archer WNPR, Feb. 24, Where We Live: The Lore and Lure of Coney Island by Betsy Kaplan and John Dankosky The Boston Globe, Feb. 24, Frame by Frame: Behind «Agbota,» an artist's irony and imagination by Sebastian Smee Real Simple, March 2015, A Life in Full Antiques and the Arts Weekly, Feb. 20, Stepexhibition highlight Coney Island by Peter Stamelman The New York Times, Nov. 15, Amusement for Everyone by Ken Johnson Boston Globe, Nov. 11, Andy Warhol and Robert Mapplethorpe Rocked the Boat by Mark Feeney Crave, Nov. 11, Exhibit Warhol & Mapplethorpe: Guise & Dolls by Miss Rosen Antiques and the Arts Weekly, Nov. 10, Q&A: Linda Roth WSFB / Better Connecticut, Nov. 9, Get Some Art History at this Local Stop by Kara Sundlun Take Magazine, November 2015, This MATRIX is Real by Janet Reynolds American Fine Art Magazine, November 2015, Radical Chick and Taylor Made by Jay Cantor Art New England, November 2015, Preview: Warhol & Mapplethorpe: Guise & Dolls by Susan Rand Brown The Hartford Courant, Oct. 16, Gender - Bending «Warhol & Mapplethorpe» Exhibit At Wadsworth by Susan Dunne The Wall Street Journal, Oct. 13, At the Wadsworth Atheneum, an Old Building Gets New Life by Lee Rosenbaum Hartford Courant, Oct. 2, Artist Pokes Fun At «Great Chain Of Being» With New Wadsworth Exhibit by Susan Dunne The Economist, Oct. 1, Temple of Delight by Miles Unger Hartford Courant, Oct. 1, Renewed Atheneum a Cultural Tourism Spark Op - Ed by William Hosley Art in America, October 2015, Coney Island Forever by Jonathan Weinberg The Boston Globe, Sept. 19, European marvels await in Hartford at refurbished Atheneum by Sebastian Smee The Hartford Courant, Sept. 19, Wadsworth Atheneum Reopens To Line Of Visitors Saturday by Kristin Stoller The Hartford Courant, Sept. 19, Editorial: Wadsworth Atheneum Makeover is a Triumph Hyperallergic, Sept. 18, A Worthy Renovation for the Wadsworth Atheneum's European Art Galleries by Benjamin Sutton The New York Times, Sept. 17, Review: Wadsworth Atheneum, a Masterpiece of Renovation by Roberta Smith WNPR, Sept. 17, Hartford's Wadsworth Atheneum Unveils Newly Renovated Galleries by Diane Orson The Art Newspaper, Sept. 16, Wadsworth relives Gilded Age glory days in grand reopening by Julia Halperin The Hartford Courant, Sept. 13, Wadsworth Atheneum Unveils Final Phase of Years - Long Renovation by Susan Dunne Fox CT, Sept. 11, The art of a reopening at the Wadsworth by Jim Altman Apollo Magazine, Sept. 5, J.P. Morgan: The Man Who Bought the World by Rachel Cohen The Art Newspaper, September 2015, Wadsworth relives Gilded Age glory days in grand reopening by Julia Halperin The New York Times, Aug. 31, The Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford Puts Final Touches on a Comeback by Ted Loos The Independent, Aug. 28, Warhol and Mapplethorpe capture each other by Charlotte Cripps The Hartford Courant, Aug. 18, Three «Aspects of Portraiture» at Wadsworth by Susan Dunne The Hartford Courant, July 16, Vibrant Paintings of Modernist Peter Blume at Wadsworth by Susan Dunne The Boston Globe, June 30, Hank Willis Thomas's slick image masks a closed door by Sebastian Smee The Boston Globe, June 25, Bradford enters MATRIX at Wadsworth Atheneum by Sebastian Smee Hartford Courant, June 25, Artist Creates Site - Specific «Pull Painting» at Atheneum by Susan Dunne Observer, June 16, A Peek Inside Hartford's Wadsworth Atheneum as It Preps for a Grand Reopening by Alanna Martinez The Wall Street Journal, June 5, Madrid's Thyssen Offers the Dark Religiosity of Zurbarán by J.S. Marcus Art New England, May / June 2015, Reviving the Grande Dame by Susan Rand Brown Humanities, May / June 2015, The Coney Island Exhibition That Captures Its Highs and Lows by Tom Christopher The Magazine Antiques, May / June 2015, Visions of Coney Island by Robin Jaffee Frank The New York Times, April 19, An American Dreamland, From the Beginning by Sylviane Gold Artes Magazine, April 16, At Hartford's Atheneum: «Coney Island: Visions of an American Dreamland, 1861 - 2008» by Richard Friswell Hartford Courant, April 9, Sideshow Mind Game at Atheneum by Susan Dunne Hyperallergic, March 4, Two Exhibitions Examine the Art of the American Side Show by Laura C. Mallonee Republican American, March 1, Coney Island R us by Tracey O'Shaughnessy Hyperallergic, Feb. 24, Mapplethorpe's Other Man by Larissa Archer WNPR, Feb. 24, Where We Live: The Lore and Lure of Coney Island by Betsy Kaplan and John Dankosky The Boston Globe, Feb. 24, Frame by Frame: Behind «Agbota,» an artist's irony and imagination by Sebastian Smee Real Simple, March 2015, A Life in Full Antiques and the Arts Weekly, Feb. 20, StepExhibition That Captures Its Highs and Lows by Tom Christopher The Magazine Antiques, May / June 2015, Visions of Coney Island by Robin Jaffee Frank The New York Times, April 19, An American Dreamland, From the Beginning by Sylviane Gold Artes Magazine, April 16, At Hartford's Atheneum: «Coney Island: Visions of an American Dreamland, 1861 - 2008» by Richard Friswell Hartford Courant, April 9, Sideshow Mind Game at Atheneum by Susan Dunne Hyperallergic, March 4, Two Exhibitions Examine the Art of the American Side Show by Laura C. Mallonee Republican American, March 1, Coney Island R us by Tracey O'Shaughnessy Hyperallergic, Feb. 24, Mapplethorpe's Other Man by Larissa Archer WNPR, Feb. 24, Where We Live: The Lore and Lure of Coney Island by Betsy Kaplan and John Dankosky The Boston Globe, Feb. 24, Frame by Frame: Behind «Agbota,» an artist's irony and imagination by Sebastian Smee Real Simple, March 2015, A Life in Full Antiques and the Arts Weekly, Feb. 20, Step Right Up!
In 1982 Peter determined to pursue his interests in music and painting, however after a bad experience with a gallery which reinforced his desire to have as complete control over the sales of his work as possible, he held his first one - man exhibition at the Guildhall in Derby in February 1983.
According to Helander's website, as a curator, he has coordinated more than 80 exhibitions of of contemporary works and has organized one - man shows for Robert Rauschenberg, James Rosenquist, John Chamberlain, Duane Hanson, Larry Poons, Jules Olitski, Dale Chihuly and Kenneth Noland, among others.
Exhibitionism's 16 exhibitions in the Hessel Museum are (1) «Jonathan Borofsky,» featuring Borofsky's Green Space Painting with Chattering Man at 2,814,787; (2) «Andy Warhol and Matthew Higgs,» including Warhol's portrait of Marieluise Hessel and a work by Higgs; (3) «Art as Idea,» with works by W. Imi Knoebel, Joseph Kosuth, and Allan McCollum; (4) «Rupture,» with works by John Bock, Saul Fletcher, Isa Genzken, Thomas Hirschhorn, Martin Kippenberger, and Karlheinz Weinberger; (5) «Robert Mapplethorpe and Judy Linn,» including 11 of the 70 Mapplethorpe works in the Hessel Collection along with Linn's intimate portraits of Mapplethorpe; (6) «For Holly,» including works by Gary Burnley, Valerie Jaudon, Christopher Knowles, Robert Kushner, Thomas Lanigan - Schmidt, Kim MacConnel, Ned Smyth, and Joe Zucker — acquired by Hessel from legendary SoHo art dealer Holly Solomon; (7) «Inside — Outside,» juxtaposing works by Scott Burton and Günther Förg with the picture windows of the Hessel Museum; (8) «Lexicon,» exploring a recurring motif of the Collection through works by Martin Creed, Jenny Holzer, Barbara Kruger, Bruce Nauman, Sean Landers, Raymond Pettibon, Jack Pierson, Jason Rhoades, and Allen Ruppersberg; (9) «Real Life,» examines different forms of social systems in works by Robert Beck, Sophie Calle, Matt Mullican, Cady Noland, Pruitt & Early, and Lawrence Weiner; (10) «Image is a Burden,» presents a number of idiosyncratic positions in relation to the figure and figuration (and disfigurement) through works by Rita Ackerman, Jonathan Borofsky, John Currin, Carroll Dunham, Philip Guston, Rachel Harrison, Adrian Piper, Peter Saul, Rosemarie Trockel, and Nicola Tyson; (11) «Mirror Objects,» including works by Donald Judd, Blinky Palermo, and Jorge Pardo; (12) «1982,» including works by Carl Andre, Robert Longo, Robert Mangold, Robert Mapplethorpe, A. R. Penck, and Cindy Sherman, all of which were produced in close — chronological — proximity to one another; (13) «Monitor,» with works by Vito Acconci, Cheryl Donegan, Vlatka Horvat, Bruce Nauman, and Aïda Ruilova; (14) «Cindy Sherman,» includes 7 of the 25 works by Sherman in the Hessel Collection; (15) «Silence,» with works by Christian Marclay, Pieter Laurens Mol, and Lorna Simpson that demonstrate art's persistent interest in and engagement with the paradoxical idea of «silence»; and (16) «Dan Flavin and Felix Gonzalez - Torres.»
As always, he painted steadily and his work went to the great Salons and to one - man exhibitions in the leading Paris galleries.
In the exhibition catalogue, Tsai describes the artist's program of righting the absence of nonwhite faces in art - historical masterpieces as «using the power of images to remedy the historical invisibility of black men and women.»
His work has been featured in subsequent one - man museum shows at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art (1976), the Oakland Museum of California (1977), the Palm Springs Museum of Art (1978), and the National Academy of Science (1981), and in over two hundred solo and group exhibitions internationally, in venues such as the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; the Jewish Museum, New York; the Indianapolis Museum of Art; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, and the Museo Nacional Centro del Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid.
Organized by Scott Rothkopf, the museum's deputy director of programs and chief curator, and Jessica Man, a curatorial assistant, the show is accompanied by a catalog of more than 650 pages, which includes a memoir by the artist's mother, Carol Hendrickson, a public health nurse, who lives with her second husband next door to Owens and her family; testimonies about how wonderful Owens is as a person and a painter from a bevy of artists, curators, dealers, and studio assistants; price lists from early exhibitions; essays, including one about Elizabeth Murray by Francine Prose; statements by influential people who were among the first wave to recognize her importance.
And for her exhibition «Forever,» opening in Berlin this weekend, Kruger plucked a quotation from Woolf's extended essay «A Room of One's Own,» filling an entire gallery wall with: «You know that women have served all these centuries as looking glasses possessing the magic and delicious power of reflecting the figure of man at twice its natural size.»
He had paintings in group exhibitions in Angers, Rennes, Paris and Bordeaux; there were one - man shows of his work in Paris; his work appeared in the important Salons; he became a member of the Salon d'Automne; in the International Exposition of 1900 he received the Diploma Hors Concours — Jury Member; he painted in Brittany and Switzerland, as well as, in Paris; he evolved and progressed constantly through steady work, his vision refined and strengthened by his daily confrontation with nature.
Scott Alario in conversation with Matthew Leifheit in Vice http://www.vice.com/read/tonight-in-new-york-scott-alarios-what-we-conjure Goldschmied & Chiari in «Portrait of the Artist as a Young (Wo) Man» curated by Marcella Beccaria at the Castello di Rivoli, Turin, June 10 - September 21, 2014 Gallery featured in Gallerist NY http://galleristny.com/2014/03/next-up-on-the-lower-east-side-kristen-lorello-gallery/ Scott Alario in «Americana: Contemporary American Photography by Graduates of Leading U.S. Academies,» International Photography Festival Israel # 3, hosted by Artlink, Carmel Winery, Rishon LeZion, Israel, April 5 - 9, 2014 Goldschmied & Chiari solo exhibition «La démocratie est illusion» at Passerelle Centre d'art contemporaine, Brest, France, through May 3, http://www.cac-passerelle.com/exposition/goldschmied-chiari
As the current exhibition «Men in Pants» at the De Morgan centre shows, this was also true of students at London's Slade School of Fine Art in the 19th century.
His solo exhibition «Fantasmagoria» features UK premieres for three new film works, «fantasmagoria» (2017) and «fishstory» (2017) are related works based on a family story about Sawa's grandfather, who suffered a stroke as a young man.
In his solo exhibition Portrait of An American Ice Cream Man, Gregory Siff reveals an intimate portrait of his journey as an artist defining and refining his voice in Los Angeles.
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