Not exact matches
Whimsical drawings
by Malcolm Wells (world - renowned architect,
artist, and author of several books,
including The Earth - Sheltered Home, Classic Architectural Birdhouses, Recovering America, InfraStructures, and How to Build an Underground House) throughout the book make this a must for every bathroom library, a
great gift for gardeners (and anyone who urinates), and an enlightening problem - solver for environmental planners dealing with the nutrient pollution of water.
The evil Lord Shen (voiced
by Gary Oldman) has just introduced gunpowder to China and plans to aim it at the country's
greatest martial
artists, a group that implausibly
includes a pudgy panda bear named Po (Jack Black).
Artists features on the game's «mixtape»
include the following rap
greats, who, we're told, are providing original songs inspired
by MvsC2 and other fighting games and fighting game themes:
On this list I would
include Gary Oldman in Darkest Hour, Richard Gere in one of the best roles of his career as Norman, Diane Kruger magnificent in In the Fade, Annette Bening and Jamie Bell equally
great in for Film Stars Don't Die In Liverpool, as are both Michelle Williams and Christopher Plummer (in a last - minute miracle of a save) in All The Money In The World, Timothee Chalamet in Call Me
By Your Name, James Franco directing himself to a career best in The Disaster
Artist, Margot Robbie and Allison Janney in I, Tonya, and Daniel Day - Lewis in what he says is his farewell in The Phantom Thread (say it ain't so).
Our goal has been to focus on
great writers and
artists and provide what we call «deluxe digital graphic novels» that
include audio commentaries
by the
artists, interviews, production sketches and loads more.
• Image Comics unveiled a slate of new projects,
including: The Bounce,
by Joe Casey and David Messina; Satellite Sam,
by Matt Fraction and Howard Chaykin; Lazarus,
by Greg Rucka and Michael Lark; The Saviors, James Robinson and J. Bone; Oliver,
by Gary Whitta and Darick Robertson; Pretty Deadly,
by Kelly Sue Deconnick and Emma Rios; Sex,
by Casey and Piotr Kowalski; Non-Humans,
by Glen Brunswick and Whilce Portacio; Reign,
by Chris Roberson and
artist Paul Mayberry; Nowhere Men,
by Eric Stephenson, Nate Bellegarde and Jordie Bellaire; Multiple Warheads,
by Brandon Graham; Point of Impact,
by Jay Faerber; and
Great Pacific,
by Joe Harris and Martin Morazzo.
Conceived
by Scottish
artist Katie Paterson, the project has captured the attention of
great authors across the world,
including Margaret Atwood, who was the first writer to pledge her story to the future collection.
In the
great room you'll find superb paintings
by artists represented in the National Museum of Wildlife Art,
including Nancy Glazier, Ken Carlson, Scott Christensen, and Lanford Monroe.
Spearheaded
by Mrs. Pamela Ewing, Regional Marketing Executive for the Tourist Board (New York Office) and Mr. Oehleo Higgs, Senior Public Relations Officer (Providenciales Office), the stunning series of in - flight videos shot last week, will
include in - depth interviews about the destination with several local tourism ambassadors,
including the native - born, international
artist Bradley Theodore Harvey and will bring
great exposure to the sister islands, with
great emphasis placed on the activities and offerings of North Caicos, Middle Caicos, Grand Turk and Gibbs Cay, in addition to the award - winning features, new developments, and vibrant scenes of Providenciales.
But the excitement in this small show is in discovering
great works
by artists who are obscure compared to those titans,»
including Moretto da Brescia, Giovanni Battista Moroni, Bergognone, Vincenzo Foppa, Giovanni Cariani, Bartolomeo Montagna, and Andrea Previtali.
The fairy tale of the Boy Wonder, discovered
by an older
artist or discerning patron, usually in the guise of a lowly shepherd boy, has been a stock - in - trade of artistic mythology ever since Vasari immortalized the young Giotto, discovered
by the
great Cimabue while the lad was guarding his flocks, drawing sheep on a stone; Cimabue, overcome with admiration
by the realism of the drawing, immediately invited the humble youth to be his pupil.7 Through some mysterious coincidence, later
artists including Beccafumi, Andrea Sansovino, Andrea del Castagno, Mantegna, Zurbaran and Goya were all discovered in similar pastoral circumstances.
While Johnson's works are grounded in a dialogue with modern and contemporary art history, specifically abstraction and appropriation, they also give voice to an Afro - futurist narrative in which the
artist commingles references to experimental musician Sun Ra, jazz
great Miles Davis, and rap group Public Enemy, to name just a few, with various symbols
including that of Sigma Pi Phi (also known as the Boulé), the first African American Greek - letter organization, and writings
by civil rights activist W. E. B. Du Bois, among others.
By the forties, Black Mountain's faculty
included some of the
greatest artists and thinkers of its time: Walter Gropius, Jacob Lawrence, Willem de Kooning, Robert Motherwell, John Cage, Alfred Kazin, Merce Cunningham, and Paul Goodman.
The
great Dionysian mainstream of Twentieth - Century Art, inspired
by Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso runs hot through the works of the
artists included in this exhibition.
The Hewitt Collection of African - American Art consists of works
by renowned
artists including Romare Bearden, regarded as one of the
greatest American
artists of his generation; Henry Ossawa Tanner, one of the first African - American
artists to achieve acclaim in both America and Europe; Elizabeth Catlett; Jonathan Green; Jacob Lawrence; Ann Tanksley; and Hale Woodruff.
The January 1971 issue of the magazine was dedicated to «Women's Liberation, Woman
Artists, and Art History» and
included an iconoclastic essay
by Linda Nochlin titled «Why Have There Been No
Great Women
Artists?»
Her writings have been
included in many publications, among them Patti Smith: 9.11 Babelogue, published in conjunction with her exhibition at Hunter College; Cai Guo - Qiang: I Want To Believe, published
by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; entries in the Benezit Dictionary of Asian
Artists and The Grove Dictionary of Art, Oxford University Press;
Greater New York, the 2003 exhibition organized
by PS1 and The Museum of Modern Art; and Artforum International.
Tucked away in the back galleries are some of the exhibition's
greatest showstoppers,
including a mesmerizing painting
by Ukraine - born Shimon Okshteyn; two red - drip paintings
by Israeli - born, East Hampton - based poet, musician and painter Haim Mizrahi; and an abstract painting
by another East End musician and
artist, David Demers.
It is at once radical, original and very beautiful, with works
by some of the
greatest artists, from Albrecht Dürer and Leonardo da Vinci to Hans Holbein and Rembrandt; present - day exponents of the medium
include Bruce Nauman and Jasper Johns.
-LSB-...] Some of the
greatest artists through the ages have amassed extraordinary holdings, among the most brilliant being Rubens's collection — featuring a remarkable selection of Venetian paintings and drawings
by Florentine and Roman masters,
including Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael — and that of Degas, who left 500 paintings, and 5,000 prints and drawings, at his death,
including masterpieces
by Ingres, Delacroix, Gauguin and El Greco.
«Journeys with The Waste Land»
includes work
by more than 60
artists who have been inspired
by T.S. Eliot's
great modern lament, or whose art resonates in the context of the poem.
Auerbach's tabletop piece
included in this
Artists Space portfolio is made of 3D - printed matte gold steel and stands alone as an incredible deal for the $ 1,000 — which also comes with an absolutely first - rate photo of the
great Andre Cadere walking through 1970s SoHo (walking stick in tow), a sexy K8 Hardy, and other strong works
by Sam Pulitzer and Peter Saville.
The collection
includes works
by some of the world's
greatest artists: Alexander Calder, Anthony Caro, Sonia Delaunay, David Hockney, Henry Moore, Sol Lewitt, Paul Nash, Pablo Picasso and Bridget Riley.
The museum's holdings
include important works
by great artists active in Naples
including Luca Giordano, Paolo de Matteis, Francesco Solimena, Salvator Rosa, and Artemisia Gentileschi.
Since its opening the Gagosian Hong Kong gallery has been showcasing substantial solo exhibitions
by some of the
greatest names of the contemporary art scene
including artists such as Damien Hirst, Richard Prince, Roy Lichtenstein, Zheng Fanzhi, John Chamberlain and Cy Twombly, showing a growing confidence and sophistication.
The collection
includes watercolors and oil paintings
by some of America's
greatest artists of the 20th century,
including Jacob Lawrence, Romare Bearden, Joseph Delaney, Lois Mailou Jones and Horace Pippin.
Her exhibition at PS1 offers a
great overview of her still young career and it seems like pretty much every museum group show I've seen recently
includes at least one psychedelic alien rendering
by the
artist.
Her work has been
included in group exhibitions such as «SoundSpill,» Zabludowicz Collection, New York (2013), «With the Tip of a Hat,» the
Artist's Institute, New York (2012), «Novel,» a screening for Time Again hosted
by the Sculpture Center, New York (2011), «Outrageous Fortune:
artists remake the Tarot,» Hayward Touring / Focal Point Gallery, Southend (2011), and «The
Great White Way Goes Black,» Vilma Gold, London (2011).
This iteration, the first in nine years, expanded to
include the
greater South, with works
by 32
artists and collectives.
The Cynthia Corbett Gallery celebrates 10 years with an exhibition in Cork Street and for this significant milestone, she has selected works
by her gallery
artists including Deborah Azzopardi (her work The
Great Escape appears above courtesy of The Cynthia Corbett Gallery).
It has been a
great honour to have been able to select with the family, museum quality works
by the
artist, to show London and,
by doing so, to have the opportunity to expose his work to a new generation of collectors, further strengthening awareness of Chillida's work around the world» Chillida considered his relentless search for the unknown in art to be an adventure in learning, and his sculptural study of temporal and spatial relationships have transformed the field of sculpture; he is hugely respected
by many
artists working today
including Sir Anthony Caro, David Hockney, Ellsworth Kelly and Richard Serra.
Included in the sale will also be two works
by the leading Austrian
artists, Friedensreich Hundertwasser and Maria Lassnig, which reflect the Essl Museum's reputation as the home of the
greatest collection of Austrian Contemporary Art in the world.
The exhibition
includes works
by the
great contemporary
artists who conducted the Villa Iris Visual Arts Workshops in Santander in the past twenty years, plus works
by a number of other key
artists who have been awarded the Visual Arts Scholarship since it was first established in 1993.
Selected exhibitions
include: Atomic Sunshine at The Okinawa Prefectural Art Museum, Japan (2009); Wall Rockets: Contemporary
Artists and Ed Ruscha, curated
by Lisa Dennison at The Albright - Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY (2009); Making a Home at The Japan Society, New York (2008); Second Lives at The Museum of Arts & Design, New York (2008); Wall Rockets, Curated
by Lisa Dennison at The FLAG Art Foundation, New York (2008); Free Fish at the Asia Society, New York (2007); Thermocline of Art - New Asian Waves at ZKM, Karlsruhe, Germany (2007); Attention to Detail at The FLAG Art Foundation, New York (2007); The Shapes of Space at the Guggenheim Museum, New York (2007);
Greater New York at P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center, Queens, NY (2005); Yokohama International Triennial, Yokohama, Japan (2005); and Fuchu Biennale at the Fuchu Art Museum, Tokyo, Japan (2004).
Alongside works
by the first generation of
great American Hyperrrealists,
including Richard Estes, John Baeder, Tom Blackwell, Don Eddy, Ralph Goings and Chuck Close, are European paintings and works from contemporary
artists influenced
by the movement.
Titled «I Cried Because I Love You,» Emin's debut in
greater China promises to be a sprawling two - venue, confessional journey — inspired
by a marriage ceremony in the South of France in which she wedded a rock — envisioned
by the
artist as a panoramic view of her varied practice,
including paintings, embroidery, and her beloved neons.
The
artist has also participated in several group exhibitions,
including Engender at Kohn Gallery, Los Angeles, 30th Anniversary Exhibition, Part Deaux, at Jack Hanley Gallery, The Edge of Doom at H I L D E, Los Angeles, Human Condition at John Wolf, Los Angeles, American Optimism at Able Baker Contemporary, Portland, Fathoms at Radical Abacus, Sante Fe, On Painting at Kent Fine Art, New York, Friend of the Devil at Jack Hanley Gallery, Immediate Female at Judith Charles Gallery, A Thing of Beauty at Geoffrey Young Gallery in
Great Barrington and New Paintings
By at Jack Hanley Gallery.
Co-curated
by Teresa A. Carbone, the museum's curator of American art and Kellie Jones, associate professor of art history at Columbia University, «Witness» assembles a refreshing mix of African American
artists (Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Elizabeth Catlett, Sam Gilliam, David Hammons, Barkley Hendricks, Jae Jarrell, Jacob Lawrence, John T. Riddle Jr., Charles White, William T. Williams) and
artists of other racial and ethnic backgrounds,
including several prominent white
artists (Phillip Guston, Robert Indiana, Norman Rockwell, Ed Ruscha) inspired
by the volatile climate of the era that would come to define a
great part of America's character.
Linking the
artist's childhood home to the history of the
Great Migration, the deftly constructed canvas accumulations of McArthur Binion are
included in group presentation
by Kavi Gupta (C15), which examines how this kind of expansive, socially engaged content manifests within the seemingly minimalist work of Clare Rojas, Beverly Fishman, Manish Nai, and Patrick Chamberlain.
By 1945, the faculty
included some of the
greatest artists and thinkers of the time,
including Walter Gropius, Jacob Lawrence, Elaine and Willem de Kooning, Robert Motherwell, John Cage, Alfred Kazin and Paul Goodman.
The gallery in London made many distinguished exhibitions
by some of the
greatest artists of our time
including Willem de Kooning, Carl Andre, Maurizio Cattelan, Lawrence Weiner, Jasper Johns, Ellsworth Kelly, Agnes Martin, Jeff Koons, Roy Lichtenstein, Gerhard Richter, Jannis Kounellis, Anselm Kiefer, Richard Long, Bruce Nauman, Gilbert & George, Richard Hamilton, Brice Marden, James Turrell, Rachel Whiteread, Sigmar Polke, Cy Twombly, Ron Mueck and Andy Warhol, who he commissioned to make the celebrated «Fright Wig» Self Portraits.
The adjacent Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden features work
by 61
artists,
including several of the 20th century's
great master sculptors.
Out of Line highlights nearly thirty historical works —
including painting, drawing, works on paper, and sculpture —
by thirteen
artists, primarily South American, who spent the
greater part of their lives investigating the language of reductive abstraction during one of its most fertile periods, from the late 1940s through the early 1980s.
Select past exhibitions
include Person of the Crowd: The Contemporary Art of Flânerie (2017), a city - wide exhibition featuring works
by more than 50
artists in the Roberts Gallery, in street interventions throughout Philadelphia, and on the web; Nari Ward: Sun Splashed (2016), a mid-career survey of the
artist's found - object assemblage art; Picasso: The
Great War, Experimentation and Change (2016), which examined the
artist's stylistic development during the First World War; and Mark Dion, Judy Pfaff, Fred Wilson: The Order of Things (2015), for which the Barnes commissioned three large - scale
artist installations in response to the unconventional way Dr. Barnes displayed his collection.
The sumptuous touring exhibition from the National Gallery of Art, which continues through Jan. 4, captured one of art history's
greatest moments in 68 paintings — landscapes, still lifes and portraits —
by 21
artists,
including Monet, Bonnard, Cézanne, Corot, Degas, Gauguin, Pissarro, Renoir, Seurat and van Gogh.
The exhibition will feature works
by great French and foreign ceramics such as Ernest Chaplet, Emile Decoeur, Théodore Deck, Daniel de Montmollin, Philippe Lambercy, and Jean Girel and Edmund de Waal in dialogue with influential contributions
by fine
artists and designers regarded as color masters of the 20th century
including Josef Albers, Sonia Delaunay, Gérard Fromanger, Yves Klein, Jean - Philippe Lenclos, and Andrée Lemonnier.
The fully illustrated catalogue does them more justice, featuring essays
by seven writers,
including Philippe Cézanne, the painter's
great - grandson, which discuss in full detail Fiquet's relationship with her husband, the procedures used
by her husband to make these pictures, and the influence of these paintings on Juan Gris, Henri Matisse, and a host of other later
artists.
The festival is always
great at innovative crossover projects, this time
including speculative works overseen
by uber - curator Hans - Ulrich Obrist; a new seven - part film project called River of Fundament
by American
artist Matthew Barney, with composer Jonathan Bepler; the return of Turner prize - nominated Tino Sehgal; and a new collaboration between Robert Del Naja of Massive Attack and the undefinably brilliant film - maker Adam Curtis.
Works from the permanent collection, along with continuously changing temporary exhibitions, are on view in the museum's 46 galleries Fridays from 10 am to 9 p.m. and Tuesdays to Sundays from 10 am to 5 pm The adjacent Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden features work
by over 60
artists,
including several of the 20th century's
great master sculptors.
With works
by over 50
artists spanning five continents —
including Alisa Baremboym, Pamela Rosenkranz, Marlie Mul, and Timur Si - Qin — The
Great Acceleration explores the properties of materials «informed»
by human activity, seen through the videos of participating
artists Ian Cheng, Rachel Rose and Camille Henrot, or through the transposition of lightness of pixels onto monumental objects
by Neil Beloufa and David Douard.