Sentences with phrase «as tanagers»

Squirrelfish, goggle - eyed and bright as tanagers, hover under the overhangs.
Established the same year as the Tanager, the Hansa Gallery (1952 — 1959) shifted its location from East Twelfth Street to Central Park South before it closed in June of 1959.

Not exact matches

Supplement sees 6 genera and 11 species, many of which are found only in the Caribbean, moved from the Thraupidae into a temporary category of their own as a result of genetic analysis showing they're not closely related to tanagers after all.
Canada geese — as opposed to geese from Canada — the noble black - and - white warbler, the elusive scarlet tanager...
As some of you know and followed along in my insta stories Bella and took a trip to Chicago to shoot Holly & Tanager's campaign with none less than Andrea Pion from A Slice O'Pi.
Native birds such as bald eagles, great horned owls, hooded mergansers, wood ducks, and neotropical migrants such as common yellowthroats (contrary to their name, their numbers are few and they are rarely seen), Wilson's warblers, and western tanagers all live in the Black River Riparian Forest.
We will explore this beautiful reserve and walk into flower and coffee plantations which will give us the opportunity to see lots of birds, such as Long - tailed Manakin, Pacific Parakeet, Blue - tailed Hummingbird, Orange - fronted Parakeet, Orange - chinned Parakeet, Rufous Sabrewing, and Azure - rumped Tanager and several other species.
Join the resident bird guide each morning on the deck for complimentary coffee and tea and you will see such exotic birds as: mot - mots, toucans, trogons, tanagers, parrots and many more.
Other animals of the reserve include a diversity of beautiful birds, such as different brightly colored macaw parrots, toucans, tanagers and kingfishers.
Head out with professional guides to spot of the reserve's wildlife, such as several different monkeys, macaw parrots, toucans, colorful tanagers, caiman crocodiles, and a seemingly limitless variety of others.
Enjoy many colourful birds, such as toucans, parrots, macaws, cotingas, tanagers, and trogons.
Partially in response to an exhibition at the Jewish Museum, Artists of the New York School: Second Generation (1957), organized by Meyer Schapiro, which included twenty - three artists, not one of them affiliated with the Tanager, gallery members at the Tanager spent five years developing what they envisioned as their own New York project, a series of five two - week exhibitions organized around five themes: Old Masters, nature departed, natured observed, paint, and personal mythology.
The critic and curator Irving Sandler was a key figure as a critic and friend to many artists as well as an employee of the influential Tanager gallery.
The collection documents Cajori's activities as a painter, educator, and co-founder of the Tanager Gallery that was located on the Lower East Side in New York through correspondence; writings and notes; interviews, talks, and panel discussions on art and artists; and printed materials.
On view in the Grey gallery are several works from the Tanager's landmark exhibit, The Private Myth (October 1961), organized by Sidney Geist and Philip Pearlstein, which focused on the role of the artist as a mythmaker.
Of interest, are letters from the founders of the Tanager Gallery, such as Lois Dodd, Angelo Ippolito, and William King.
INVENTING DOWNTOWN: ARTIST - RUN GALLERIES IN NEW YORK CITY, 1952 - 1965 Fourteen artist - run and experimental spaces, including Judson Church and the Tanager and Reuben Galleries, serve as test cases for examining the development of Happenings, video, performance and other new art forms.
She exhibited in prominent galleries of the day — including Stable, Tanager, and Betty Parsons — and was represented in all five of the New York Paintings and Sculpture Annuals (held in a temporary gallery on New York's 9th Street) as well as the seminal 9th Street Show of 1951.
The influence of this success is evident in the work of some of the artists in the exhibition, most notably in the work of Angelo Ippolito at the Tanager Gallery and Hale Woodruff of the Spiral Group, as well as several others.
Galleries like Hansa, Tanager (shown at top), James and Brata were established as co-operatives, and artists lived and worked around them.
She also participated in important group shows during these years, such as one in late 1952 at Tanager Gallery, another of the most active artists» cooperatives, and in three annual exhibitions from 1953 to 1955 at the Stable Gallery on West 58th Street.
The artists were among a circle of friends who began their careers at Tanager Gallery on 10th Street, an artists» cooperative that as Frank O'Hara wrote in Kulchur 6 in the summer of 1962 was able to «confer on a first show by an unknown artist a distinction pretty much unavailable to the younger artist elsewhere.»
He was part of the second generation of Abstract Expressionists and, like so many other of his peers, he began his exhibiting career in New York as part of the 10th Street scene of cooperative galleries that grew up around Irving Sandler's pioneering Tanager Gallery.
Preferred habitat: along streams, edges of woods + + + + Foliage / winter appearance: deciduous + + + + Soil conditions: loam, clay + + + + Light conditions: dappled shade to partial sun + + + + Plant spacing: 5 to 6 feet + + + + Wildlife value: the fruit is a favorite of many birds; in summer its thick foliage provides good escape and shelter cover, as well as nesting sites, hark often used in nest building; fruit attracts the following birds: Mourning Dove; Red - bellied and Red - headed Woodpeckers, Eastern Kingbird; Blue Jay, Great Crested Flycatcher, Tufted Titmouse, Mockingbird, Gray Catbird, Brown Thrasher, American Robin, Wood, Hermit, Gray - cheeked, and Swanson's Thrushes, Eastern Bluebird, Red - eyed Virea, Yellow - breasted Chat, House and Fox Sparrows, Orchard and Northern Orioles, Scarlet and Summer Tanagers, Cardinal, Purple Finch, American Goldfinch, Rufous - sided Towhee
Previously, Stacie worked at Tanager Place for 9 years in the Tanager Place Clinic as a Clinician Supervisor.
Stacie works as a training consultant at Tanager Place providing training to internal and external human service professionals in the areas of Trauma and Loss, Play Therapy, Collaborative Problem Solving and Child Abuse Reporter Training.
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