Sentences with phrase «by the painter john»

Lengthy video of a Workshop and Lecture given by the painter John Leavey titled «The Perfect Squint: The Teaching Legacy of Edwin Dickinson» John Leavey studied with Edwin Dickinson at the Art Students League in 1955 - 1961.
There are some wonderful moments in these displays: engrossing works on paper galore; a quintet of wire sculptures by Lippold; the muscular wood and rope sculpture, «Totem for All Religions,» by Frederick Kiesler; and a 1943 rug of biomorphic design by the painter John Ferren.
A solo presentation by painter John Stark is the latest exhibition at Charlie Smith Gallery.
The grotesque, anatomical quality of the figures, often fully or partially nude, recalls depictions by painter John Currin, with features brought so sharply into focus by mannerist tendencies as to seem overly fleshy and slightly repulsive.
The solo show is «an exhibition of wrapped paintings» which re-interprets work by painter John Hoyland (1934 - 2011).

Not exact matches

1910 Panhard Levassor — Alvaro Casal Tatlock recounts the rescue and restoration of this Edvardian in Uruguay / Standard Flying Twenty and caravan — This elegant 1930s double - act is described and photographed by Paul Shinton / 1920s Essex — Kit Foster writes about the evolution of this inexpensive American four passenger «coach» / Jewel — made in Bradford — The story of John E Woods and the cars his company made during the wars / 1929 Delage DMS — The Editor drives in style on this month's «Excursion» / Hill - climb at Caerphilly — BryanDemaus continues his series of articles on pre-war hill - climb locations / Model Ts and Beaulieu Autojumble — Peter Brockes reports on this year's Beaulieu Autojumble and Dave Fitton photographed the Model Ts / 1935 Maserati sports - racer — The continuing history of the resurrection of this 4CS by owner Ken Painter.
One of the demonstrators, painter Kathryn Bowden, will try to catch the expression on the face of Farley, a 3 - year - old bearded collie mix owned by city purchasing manager John Rumble.
Named for the painter John Singleton Copley, the square is surrounded by three of the city's most architecturally beautiful buildings: Trinity Church, The Fairmont Copley Plaza, and the Boston Public Library.
John Seed writes about a new triptych by painter Kyle Staver on view as part of the exhibition Kyle Staver: A Survey of Paintings and Prints on view at the Pennsylvania College of Art & Design through January 20, 2012.
In a new video, produced by John Thornton, painter / curator Scott Noel discusses a lineage of observational painting that spans four generations from Edwin Dickinson to recent graduates of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts.
Gilbert writes: «There's a dead Christ with the Virgin Mary and St. John by the great Venetian painter Giovanni Bellini — emotional and simply yet subtly colored — and a mythological scene that some think is an early Titian.
The exhibition presents works by classic tonalist painters such as Kenyon Cox, Arthur Wesley Dow and John La Farge, as well as a host of rarely seen painters.
DHC / ART is delighted to present two concurrent solo exhibitions by acclaimed Belgian sculptor Berlinde De Bruyckere and American painter John Currin — two leading international figurative artists working in a virtuosic, old masterly tradition yet testing and expanding the parameters of their respective disciplines.
CHICAGO — Presented in the Sullivan Galleries of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and curated by John Corbett and Jim Dempsey, Touch and Go is the largest and most extensive gathering of works ever devoted to the influential painter and collage - maker, Ray Yoshida (American, 1930 — 2009).
She has held recent major solo exhibitions including Desdemona for Celia by Hilton at Gallery Met, New York (2015 - 16); Gwen John and Celia Paul: Painters in Parallel, Pallant House Gallery, Chichester (2012 - 13); The Grave's Art Gallery, Sheffield (2005) and Abbot Hall, Kendal (2004).
The European side begins with works by two artists not widely appreciated today: Puvis de Chavannes, the eccentric classicist then much admired by avant - gardists, and a big, strange, multifigured allegorical scene by the British painter Augustus John.
In 1973, the late John Marin Jr. and his wife, Norma, gave Colby a trove of oils and watercolors by John Marin Sr., one of Maine's most important painters of the 20th century.
In the 1960s, English painter John Hoyland's Color field paintings were characterised by simple rectangular shapes, high - key color and a flat picture surface.
He grew up in Kansas and earned his bachelor and master's degrees in fine arts at Cal Arts, where he was mentored by the conceptual painter, photographer, and image guru, John Baldessari.
She was also influenced by the ideas of the Russian - American Surrealist painter and mystic John Graham.
The strategy had been promoted by Ashcan painter Robert Henri, who had visited there in 1916 and 1917, and probably inspired his friend John Sloan to go there, too.
Featured alongside the works from the Museum's permanent collection is a large oil sketch by major American regionalist painter John Steuart Curry depicting the iconic Oklahoma Land Run.
Painters such as Noel Mahaffey, John Moore, Elizabeth Osborne and Warren Rohrer tackled traditional subjects such as the landscape, the figure or interiors with new expressive energy - stirred by Pop, and influences from an older generation of artists such as George Segal, Agnes Martin, Alice Neel and Alex Katz.
Walton Ford (American, b. 1960) is a painter who uses watercolors to create large - scale paintings influenced by the style of John James Audubon and other artists from the Naturalist Illustration Movement.
Profoundly influenced by Chinese painting traditions and techniques — especially the marks of the eighth - and ninth - century Yi - pin «ink - splashing» (or «flung ink») painters — mentorships from John Cage and Agnes Martin, and the harmony between man and nature espoused by Taoist philosophy, Steir considers elemental forces active participants in her work, intentionally removing herself from the action and allowing gravity, time, and the environment to determine the work's result.
Since John Yau's book on Nozkowski's work, the first in the Lund Humphries Contemporary Painters Series edited by Barry Schwabsky, has just appeared, this show serves to launch the handsomely designed volume.
His painting comes out of the literary Anti-Transcendentalist context of American romantic and symbolist art that has received illumination by painters as diverse as John Quidor, Albert Pinkham Ryder, Darrel Austin, Ivan Albright and interestingly, the Luminist George Caleb Bingham.
May Ten works by Scott were included in Painters» Progress, an exhibition organised by John Rothenstein which opened at the Whitechapel Art Gallery on 11 May (closed 15 July).
A Selection of American Art: Minimalism and After, Galerie Ronny Van de Velde, Antwerp, Belgium (catalogue) The Kitchen Art Benefit, Curt Marcus & Leo Castelli Galleries, New York Re-Framing Cartoons, Loughelton Gallery, New York Grids, Vrej Baghoonian Gallery, New York Modern Detour / Umweg Moderne: R.M. Fischer, Peter Halley, Laurie Simmons, Wiener Secession, Vienna (catalogue) The Last Decade: American Artists of the 80s, Tony Shafrazi Gallery, New York (curated by Collins & Milazzo, catalogue) Weitersehen 1980 — 1990, Krefelder Kunstmuseen, Museum Haus Lange and Museum Haus Esters, Krefeld, Germany (catalogue) Mel Bochner, Peter Halley, Robert Rauschenberg, Sonnabend Gallery, New York Classical Modernism: Six Generations, Sidney Janis Gallery, New York Peter Halley, Annette Lemieux, Meyer Vaisman, Galerie Antoine Candau, Paris Peter Halley, Jeff Koons, Meyer Vaisman, Galerie Carola Moesh, Berlin 1989 Nonrepresentation: The Show of the Essay, Anne Plumb Gallery, New York (catalogue); travelled to Security Pacific Corporation, Los Angeles (curated by Jeremy Gilbert - Rolfe, catalogue) Horn of Plenty, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (catalogue) Buena Vista, John Gibson Gallery, New York (curated by Collins & Milazzo, catalogue) Abstraction in Question, John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, Sarasota, FL (catalogue); travelled to Center for the Fine Arts, Miami Paula Cooper Gallery, New York A Climate of Site, Galerie Barbara Farber, Amsterdam (curated by Robert Nickas, catalogue) Science — Technology — Abstraction: Art at the End of the Decade, University Art Galleries, Wright State University, Dayton, OH (catalogue) Prospect 89, Frankfurter Kunstverein, Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt am Main (catalogue) Re-Presenting the 80s, Simon Watson Gallery, New York (catalogue) Ten + Ten: Contemporary Soviet and American Painters, Fort Worth Museum of Art, Fort Worth, TX; travelled to San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA; Albright - Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY; Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee, WI; Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC; Artists» Union Hall of the Tretyakov, Krymskaia Embankment, Moscow, USSR; State Picture Gallery of Georgia, Tbilisi, Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic; Central Exhibition Hall, Leningrad, USSR (catalogue) The Silent Baroque, Villa Arenberg, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Salzburg, Austria (catalogue) New Editions, Pace Prints, New York Psychological Abstraction, Deste Foundation for Contemporary Art, Athens (catalogue) Exposition Inaugurale, Fondation Daniel Templon, Musée Temporaire, Fréjus, France (catalogue) Wittgenstein: The Play of the Unsayable, Wiener Secession, Vienna, Austria; travelled to Palais des Beaux - Arts, Brussels (catalogue) Abstraction — Geometry — Painting, Albright - Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY; travelled to Center for the Fine Arts, Miami, FL; Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee, WI; Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT (catalogue) New Work by Gallery Artists: John Baldessari, Bernd and Hilla Becher, Ashley Bickerton, Mel Bochner, Carroll Dunham, Fischli + Weiss, Gilbert & George, Peter Halley, Barry Le Va, Haim Steinbach, Meyer Vaisman, Terry Winters, Robert Yarber, Sonnabend Gallery, New York Gober, Halley, Kessler, Wool: Four Artists from New York, Kunstverein, Munich (catalogue) Projects and Portfolios: The 25th National Print Exhibition, Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY (catalogue) Recent Acquisitions, Carl Solway Gallery, Cincinnati, OH Buena Vista, John Gibson Gallery, New York
In 1962 Jasper Johns, John Cage, Robert Rauschenberg, and other painters and sculptors came together to help Merce Cunningham and his dance company finance a proposed season on Broadway by arranging for a sale of their artworks.
Of the 49 painters included in the show I am particularly looking forward to seeing work by Tomma Abts; John M. Armleder, Daniel Buren, Mary Heilmann, Blinky Palermo, Bridget Riley, Robert Ryman, Sean Scully, Frank Stella, Myron Stout and Dan Walsh.
Former New York City dealer, and all around great guy, Jeff Bailey, has relocated to Hudson, NY, where, this month, he is presenting work by University of Iowa Professor and painters» painter, John Dilg.
By juxtaposing work across time the display will highlight unexpected affinities between works by artists as various as Lucian Freud and Victorian agricultural painter Thomas Weaver or contemporary artist film - maker Tacita Dean and Pre-Raphaelite painter John BretBy juxtaposing work across time the display will highlight unexpected affinities between works by artists as various as Lucian Freud and Victorian agricultural painter Thomas Weaver or contemporary artist film - maker Tacita Dean and Pre-Raphaelite painter John Bretby artists as various as Lucian Freud and Victorian agricultural painter Thomas Weaver or contemporary artist film - maker Tacita Dean and Pre-Raphaelite painter John Brett.
Other strengths of the twentieth - century collection include: sixty works by members of the Ash Can School; significant representation by early modernists such as Alfred Maurer, Marsden Hartley, John Marin, Georgia O'Keeffe, and Max Weber; important examples by the Precisionists Charles Demuth, Charles Sheeler, Preston Dickinson and Ralston Crawford; a good showing by the American Scene painters Charles Burchfield and Edward Hopper; a broad spectrum of work by the Social Realists Ben Shahn, Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence and Jack Levine; and ambitious examples of Regionalist painting by Grant Wood, John Steuart Curry and Thomas Hart Benton, notably the latter's celebrated five - panel mural, The Arts of Life in America (1932).
There are outstanding works by at least some of these artists in the Permanent Collection, including Albert Irvin's glorious «Caledonia,» David Nash's «Branch Cube» and «Family Tree,» James Turrell's suite of aquatints, and a watercolour by the brilliant figurative painter John Bellany.
2016 Passman, Melissa, Art in Focus, (interview), April Boucher, Brian, «11 Booths I could hardly tear myself away from at Nada New York», artnet.com, May 6 Sutton, Benjamin, «Nada New York Gets Nasty», hyperallergic.com, May 6 Shaw, Michael, The Conversation Podcast, episode # 135, theconversationartistpodcast.podomatic.com, April 15 2015 Griffin, Jonathan, «Reviews in Brief: Max Maslansky», Modern Painters, February, p. 77 Cherry, Henry, «Escaping Monotony with Max Maslansky», Reimagine (online), February Diehl, Travis, «Critics» Picks: Max Maslansky», artforum.com, May 5 Los Angeles Review of Books, lareviewofbooks.org, (image), June 21 Hotchkiss, Sarah, «Sexy Sculpture Fills CULT's Summer Group Show», kqed.com, July 27 CCF Fellowship for Visual Artists 2015, catalog, p9 Archer, Larissa, «Review: Sexxitecture / Cult, San Francisco,» Frieze, October, pp260 - 261 2014 Hutton, Jen, «Max Maslansky», Made in L.A. 2014, catalog, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles Miranda, Carolina A., «Datebook: Boxing painters, teen idols, and John Altoon's short career», The Los Angeles Times, June 5 Zimskind, Lyle, «Channing Hansen's Quantum Paintings are Really Knit», Los Angeles Magazine Blog.com, July 17 Finkel, Jori, «Painting on Radio Canvas», The New York Times, February 7 Khadivi, Jesi, «Curated in L.A», interview with Michael Ned Holte, Kaleidoscope, Summer, pp.110 - 115 Gill, Noor, «' Made in L.A 2014» at Hammer Museum displays work by artists like Max Maslansky», DailyBruin.com, August 4 Hernando, Gladys, «The White Album», catalog, Richard Telles Fine Art, Los Angeles, p. 28 Plagens, Peter, «Exhibit a Creation of Show, Not Tell», The Wall Street Journal, August 19 Berardini, Andrew, Art Review, September Dhiel, Travis, «The Face Collector», essay for Sniff The Space Flat on Your Face catalog, pp. 15 - 18 Griffin, Jonathan, «Highlights 2014», Frieze.com, December 19 New American Paintings, issue 115, Pacific Coast, December 2014 / January 2015, pp. 118-121 2013 Perry, Eve, «Not Taking the 1990s Very Seriously», Hyperallergic.com, (web), March 27 Griffin, Jonathan, «Made in Space», art agenda.com, (web), March 28 Smith, Roberta, «Art in Review: Made in Space», The New York Times, August 1 «Made in Space at Gavin Brown and Venus Over Manhattan», Contemporary Art Daily, August 6 «Group Show at Tif's Desk at Tom Solomon», Contemporary Art Daily, July 28 2011 MacDevitt, James, Object - Orientation, catalog, Cerritos College Art Gallery Dambrot, Shana Nys, «Web Diver: Turning Strangers» Online Photos into Paintings», LA Weekly, May 2010 Beautiful Decay, (www.beautifuldecay.com), July 22 2007 «Allegorical Statements», Los Angeles Times, May 17, p. E3 2006 Bellstrom, Kristen, «The Art of Buying», Smart Money Magazine, May 2006, pp. 111 - 13 Impression (Ism): Contemporary Impressions, catalog, City of Brea Art Gallery, Brea, CA, March 2005 The Armpit of the Mole, a drawing compilation, Fundació 30 km / s, ParisPainters, February, p. 77 Cherry, Henry, «Escaping Monotony with Max Maslansky», Reimagine (online), February Diehl, Travis, «Critics» Picks: Max Maslansky», artforum.com, May 5 Los Angeles Review of Books, lareviewofbooks.org, (image), June 21 Hotchkiss, Sarah, «Sexy Sculpture Fills CULT's Summer Group Show», kqed.com, July 27 CCF Fellowship for Visual Artists 2015, catalog, p9 Archer, Larissa, «Review: Sexxitecture / Cult, San Francisco,» Frieze, October, pp260 - 261 2014 Hutton, Jen, «Max Maslansky», Made in L.A. 2014, catalog, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles Miranda, Carolina A., «Datebook: Boxing painters, teen idols, and John Altoon's short career», The Los Angeles Times, June 5 Zimskind, Lyle, «Channing Hansen's Quantum Paintings are Really Knit», Los Angeles Magazine Blog.com, July 17 Finkel, Jori, «Painting on Radio Canvas», The New York Times, February 7 Khadivi, Jesi, «Curated in L.A», interview with Michael Ned Holte, Kaleidoscope, Summer, pp.110 - 115 Gill, Noor, «' Made in L.A 2014» at Hammer Museum displays work by artists like Max Maslansky», DailyBruin.com, August 4 Hernando, Gladys, «The White Album», catalog, Richard Telles Fine Art, Los Angeles, p. 28 Plagens, Peter, «Exhibit a Creation of Show, Not Tell», The Wall Street Journal, August 19 Berardini, Andrew, Art Review, September Dhiel, Travis, «The Face Collector», essay for Sniff The Space Flat on Your Face catalog, pp. 15 - 18 Griffin, Jonathan, «Highlights 2014», Frieze.com, December 19 New American Paintings, issue 115, Pacific Coast, December 2014 / January 2015, pp. 118-121 2013 Perry, Eve, «Not Taking the 1990s Very Seriously», Hyperallergic.com, (web), March 27 Griffin, Jonathan, «Made in Space», art agenda.com, (web), March 28 Smith, Roberta, «Art in Review: Made in Space», The New York Times, August 1 «Made in Space at Gavin Brown and Venus Over Manhattan», Contemporary Art Daily, August 6 «Group Show at Tif's Desk at Tom Solomon», Contemporary Art Daily, July 28 2011 MacDevitt, James, Object - Orientation, catalog, Cerritos College Art Gallery Dambrot, Shana Nys, «Web Diver: Turning Strangers» Online Photos into Paintings», LA Weekly, May 2010 Beautiful Decay, (www.beautifuldecay.com), July 22 2007 «Allegorical Statements», Los Angeles Times, May 17, p. E3 2006 Bellstrom, Kristen, «The Art of Buying», Smart Money Magazine, May 2006, pp. 111 - 13 Impression (Ism): Contemporary Impressions, catalog, City of Brea Art Gallery, Brea, CA, March 2005 The Armpit of the Mole, a drawing compilation, Fundació 30 km / s, Parispainters, teen idols, and John Altoon's short career», The Los Angeles Times, June 5 Zimskind, Lyle, «Channing Hansen's Quantum Paintings are Really Knit», Los Angeles Magazine Blog.com, July 17 Finkel, Jori, «Painting on Radio Canvas», The New York Times, February 7 Khadivi, Jesi, «Curated in L.A», interview with Michael Ned Holte, Kaleidoscope, Summer, pp.110 - 115 Gill, Noor, «' Made in L.A 2014» at Hammer Museum displays work by artists like Max Maslansky», DailyBruin.com, August 4 Hernando, Gladys, «The White Album», catalog, Richard Telles Fine Art, Los Angeles, p. 28 Plagens, Peter, «Exhibit a Creation of Show, Not Tell», The Wall Street Journal, August 19 Berardini, Andrew, Art Review, September Dhiel, Travis, «The Face Collector», essay for Sniff The Space Flat on Your Face catalog, pp. 15 - 18 Griffin, Jonathan, «Highlights 2014», Frieze.com, December 19 New American Paintings, issue 115, Pacific Coast, December 2014 / January 2015, pp. 118-121 2013 Perry, Eve, «Not Taking the 1990s Very Seriously», Hyperallergic.com, (web), March 27 Griffin, Jonathan, «Made in Space», art agenda.com, (web), March 28 Smith, Roberta, «Art in Review: Made in Space», The New York Times, August 1 «Made in Space at Gavin Brown and Venus Over Manhattan», Contemporary Art Daily, August 6 «Group Show at Tif's Desk at Tom Solomon», Contemporary Art Daily, July 28 2011 MacDevitt, James, Object - Orientation, catalog, Cerritos College Art Gallery Dambrot, Shana Nys, «Web Diver: Turning Strangers» Online Photos into Paintings», LA Weekly, May 2010 Beautiful Decay, (www.beautifuldecay.com), July 22 2007 «Allegorical Statements», Los Angeles Times, May 17, p. E3 2006 Bellstrom, Kristen, «The Art of Buying», Smart Money Magazine, May 2006, pp. 111 - 13 Impression (Ism): Contemporary Impressions, catalog, City of Brea Art Gallery, Brea, CA, March 2005 The Armpit of the Mole, a drawing compilation, Fundació 30 km / s, Paris, France
in Art News, vol.81, no. 1, January 1982 (review of John Moores Liverpool Exhibition), The Observer, 12 December 1982; «English Expressionism» (review of exhibition at Warwick Arts Trust) in The Observer, 13 May 1984; «Landscapes of the mind» in The Observer, 24 April 1995 Finch, Liz, «Painting is the head, hand and the heart», John Hoyland talks to Liz Finch, Ritz Newspaper Supplement: Inside Art, June 1984 Findlater, Richard, «A Briton's Contemporary Clusters Show a Touch of American Influence» in Detroit Free Press, 27 October 1974 Forge, Andrew, «Andrew Forge Looks at Paintings of Hoyland» in The Listener, July 1971 Fraser, Alison, «Solid areas of hot colour» in The Australian, 19 February 1980 Freke, David, «Massaging the Medium» in Arts Alive Merseyside, December 1982 Fuller, Peter, «Hoyland at the Serpentine» in Art Monthly, no. 31 Garras, Stephen, «Sketches for a Finished Work» in The Independent, 22 October 1986 Gosling, Nigel, «Visions off Bond Street» in The Observer, 17 May 1970 Graham - Dixon, Andrew, «Canvassing the abstract voters» in The Independent, 7 February 1987; «John Hoyland» in The Independent, 12 February 1987 Griffiths, John, «John Hoyland: Paintings 1967 - 1979» in The Tablet, 20 October 1979 Hall, Charles, «The Mastery of Living Colour» in The Times, 4 October 1995 Harrison, Charles, «Two by Two they Went into the Ark» in Art Monthly, November 1977 Hatton, Brian, «The John Moores at the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool» in Artscribe, no. 38, December 1982 Heywood, Irene, «John Hoyland» in Montreal Gazette, 7 February 1970 Hilton, Tim, «Hoyland's tale of Hofmann» in The Guardian, 5 March 1988 Hoyland, John, «Painting 1979: A Crisis of Function» in London Magazine, April / May 1979; «Framing Words» in Evening Standard, 7 December 1989; «The Famous Grouse» in Arts Review, October 1995 Januszcak, Waldemar, «Felt through the Eye» in The Guardian, 16 October 1979; «Last Chance» in The Guardian, 18 May 1983; «Painter nets # 25,000 art prize» in The Guardian, 11 February 1987; «The Circles of Celebration» in The Guardian, 19 February 1987 Kennedy, R.C., «London Letter» in Art International, Lugano, 20 October 1971 Kent, Sarah, «The Modernist Despot Refuses to Die» in Time Out, 19 - 25, October 1979 Key, Philip, «This Way Up and It's Art; Key Previews the John Moores Exhibition» in Post, 25 November 1982 Kramer, Hilton, «Art: Vitality in the Pictorial Structure» in New York Times, 10 October 1970 Lehmann, Harry, «Hoyland Abstractions Boldly Pleasing As Ever» in Montreal Star, 30 March 1978 Lucie - Smith, Edward, «John Hoyland» in Sunday Times, 7 May 1970; «Waiting for the click...» in Evening Standard, 3 October 1979 Lynton, Norbert, «Hoyland», in The Guardian, [month] 1967 MacKenzie, Andrew, «A Colourful Champion of the Abstract» in Morning Telegraph, Sheffield, 9 October 1979 Mackenzie, Andrew, «Let's recognise city artist» in Morning Telegraph, Sheffield, 18 September 1978 Makin, Jeffrey, «Colour... it's the European Flair» in The Sun, 30 April 1980 Maloon, Terence, «Nothing succeeds like excess» in Time Out, September 1978 Marle, Judy, «Histories Unfolding» in The Guardian, May 1971 Martin, Barry, «John Hoyland and John Edwards» in Studio International, May / June 1975 McCullach, Alan, «Seeing it in Context» in The Herald, 22 May 1980 McEwen, John, «Hoyland and Law» in The Spectator, 15 November 1975; «Momentum» in The Spectator, 23 October 1976; «John Hoyland in mid-career» in Arts Canada, April 1977; «Abstraction» in The Spectator, 23 September 1978; «4 British Artists» in Artforum, March 1979; «Undercurrents» in The Spectator, 24 October 1981; «Flying Colours» in The Spectator, 4 December 1982; «John Hoyland, new paintings» in The Spectator, 21 May 1983; «The golden age of junk art: John McEwen on Christmas Exhibitions» in Sunday Times, 18 December 1984; «Britain's Best and Brightest» in Art in America, July 1987; «Landscapes of the Mind» in The Independent Magazine, 16 June 1990; «The Master Manipulator of Paint» in Sunday Telegraph, 1 October 1995; «Cool dude struts with his holster full of colours» in The Sunday Telegraph, 10 October 1999 McGrath, Sandra, «Hangovers and Gunfighters» in The Australian, 19 February 1980 McManus, Irene, «John Moores Competition» in The Guardian, 8 December 1982 Morris, Ann, «The Experts» Expert.
John Hoyland: Stain Paintings 1964 — 1966 Sep 15, 2017 — Oct 21, 2017 Pace Gallery 32 E 57th St, New York, NY 10022 Pace Gallery is pleased to present the gallery's first solo exhibition of works by leading British abstract painter John Hoyland (1934 — 2011).
John Hoyland: Power Stations, the inaugural show chosen from «Murderme», his extensive collection of fellow YBAs and global contemporaries, is a retrospective of early work by a provocatively unfashionable English abstract painter.
Original artworks and commentary by Mark Tansey (b. 1949), whose large scale monochromatic allegories reference the art of photography, a pivotal technology in the reproduction and dissemination of popular images; John Currin (b. 1962), who has referenced the art of Norman Rockwell, and whose provocative figural paintings reflect upon domestic and social themes that were prevalent, though differently portrayed, in the mid-twentieth century; Vincent Desiderio (b. 1955), whose dark intellectual melodramas re-imagine scenes of crime and adventure from pulp fiction; Lucien Freud (1922 - 2011), the painter of deeply psychological works that examine the relationship of artist and model; and Jamie Wyeth (b. 1946), son of noted painter Andrew Wyeth and grandson of illustrator N.C. Wyeth, whose images convey stories real and imagined, among other artists, will be featured in the exhibition and its accompanying catalogue.
He is an immaculate painter, working carefully by hand with tape and a drywall blade to create seamless planes that seem at once solid and transparent, referential to the modernist architecture that dots the Southern California landscape and to the iconic «light and space» artists and West Coast hard edge abstractionists (Larry Bell, Frederic Hammersley, Robert Irwin, John McLaughlin) who have engaged with these peculiarities and particularities of atmosphere and surface in their work.
Several Lake George images were inspired by Diggory's research for an essay on the painting locations of the 19th century painter, John Frederick Kensett, which was published in the December 2014 Metropolitan Museum Journal.
Two major acquisitions for the San Diego Museum of Art this month: Lucas Cranach the Younger's Nymph of the Spring (c. 1537 — 1540), described by the museum as its «most important Northern Renaissance painting» and John Singer - Sargent's Portrait of John Alfred Parsons Millet (1892), the first work by the painter to enter its collection.
The artist has chosen extracts from three sources: The Arte of English Poesie by George Puttenham, The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman by Laurence Sterne, and Modern Painters by John Ruskin.
Chapter 1: Things Must be Pulverized: Abstract Expressionism Charts the move from figurative to abstract painting as the dominant style of painting (1940s & 50s) Key artists discussed: Willem de Kooning, Barnett Newman Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko Chapter 2: Wounded Painting: Informel in Europe and Beyond Meanwhile in Europe: abstract painters immediate responses to the horrors of World War II (1940s & 50s) Key artists discussed: Jean Dubuffet, Lucio Fontana, Viennese Aktionism, Wols Chapter 3: Post-War Figurative Painting Surveys those artists who defiantly continued to make figurative work as Abstraction was rising to dominance - including Social Realists (1940s & 50s) Key artists discussed: Francis Bacon, Lucien Freud, Alice Neel, Pablo Picasso Chapter 4: Against Gesture - Geometric Abstraction The development of a rational, universal language of art - the opposite of the highly emotional Informel or Abstract Expressionism (1950s and early 1960s) Key artists discussed: Lygia Clark, Ellsworth Kelly, Bridget Riley, Yves Klein Chapter 5: Post-Painting Part 1: After Pollock In the aftermath of Pollock's death: the early days of Pop, Minimalism and Conceptual painting in the USA (1950s and early 1960s) Key artists discussed: Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Frank Stella, Cy Twombly Chapter 5: Anti Tradition - Pop Painitng How painting survives against growth of mass visual culture: photography and television - if you can't beat them, join them (1960s and 70s) Key artists discussed: Alex Katz, Roy Lichtenstein, Gerhard Richter, Andy Warhol Chapter 6: A transcendental high art: Neo Expressionism and its Discontents The continuation of figuration and expressionism in the 1970s and 80s, including many artists who have only been appreciated in later years (1970s & 80s) Key artists discussed: Georg Baselitz, Jean - Michel Basquiat, Anselm Kiefer, Julian Schnabel, Chapter 7: Post-Painting Part II: After Pop A new era in which figurative and abstract exist side by side rather than polar opposites plus painting expands beyond the canvas (late 1980s to 2000s) Key artists discussed: Tomma Abts, Mark Grotjahn, Chris Ofili, Christopher Wool Chapter 8: New Figures, Pop Romantics Post-cold war, artists use paint to create a new kind of «pop art» - primarily figurative - tackling cultural, social and political issues (1990s to now) Key artists discussed: John Currin, Peter Doig, Marlene Dumas, Neo Rauch, Luc Tuymans
Throughout the show there are several stand out works by eminent painters of the 1700's, 1800's and 1900's, such as John Singleton Copley's stunning The Death of Major Pierson and John Minton's moving Death of Nelson.
Written by poet, art critic, and curator John Yau, Thomas Nozkowski is part of the publisher's new series Contemporary Painters, edited by art critic Barry Schwabsky.
Cocktails by Archibald Motley Jr., the iconic painter of Chicago's Bronzeville community, and Untitled (1930) by Aaron Douglas are in the John Axelrod Gallery (1920s and 1930s).
Painters: John Currin and Elizabeth Peyton, curated by Peter Schjeldahl, Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
It includes works by distinguished artists such as Robert Henri, William Merritt Chase, John Twachtman, and John Singer Sargent, along with those of painters admired in their own time but less well - known today — including George Hitchcock, Gari Melchers, George Boughton, Elizabeth Nourse, Anna Stanley, and Walter MacEwen.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z