Sentences with phrase «called tableaux»

From the 4th until the 12th of May there is an exhibition called tableaux.
[68] With initial assistance from her friend Larry Rivers, she created a series of kinetic reliefs or moving paintings, called Tableaux Éclatés («Shattered Paintings»), in homage to her late husband and colleague.
It was a moment when de Kooning turned to what he called the tableaux: «forcefully composed paintings with ideas of less frontal or variously posed figures in a well defined landscape space» (J. Cowart, «De Kooning Today,» de Kooning 1969 — 78, Gallery of Art, University of Northern Iowa, 1978, p. 15).

Not exact matches

It feels desperate to cover every imaginable base, nowhere more so than during a ridiculous curtain call that sees Frodo mouthing our heroes» names as they saunter half - time into a sun - kissed Serrault, the picture's romantic tableaux not nearly so affecting this time around as they have been in the past.
by Walter Chaw The title refers to a New York Museum of Natural History diorama called «Clash of the Titans» that proposes what a tussle between a sperm whale and a giant squid would look like — and it functions as the final, stirring tableaux of a 16 mm film self - consciously shot in the manner of early Jim Jarmusch or Spike Lee joints.
This year's pilgrimage to Marfa on the occasion of Chinati's 25th Anniversary Weekend was well worth the effort, not only for the main events, but for the many other surprises, some in unconventional venues like Tableaux Parisiens, an exhibition of art from and about Paris in an old church called The Do Right Hall, Patrick Keesey at the Marfa Country Clinic, Valerie Arber at the Thunderbird Lodge, and Charles Mary Kubricht at The Marfa Book Company.
Ahead of her first solo show at Brooklyn gallery Signal later this month, you'll find two of Kasey's voluptuous, Botero - like figures and dreamy, surrealist landscapes in Nicelle Beauchene's booth: a fleshy, reclining figure, Person Lying on a Salty Beach (2015; $ 10,000), that hangs in the booth's interior and fake plant at a restaurant (2015; $ 8,500), a mysterious tableaux where a bellybutton, a pierced ear, and the tips of fingers curiously peek between leaves, which calls fairgoers into her painted world.
In 2010 Emma Dexter noted the importance of Bustamante's titles: «Call - ing his photographs Tableaux and his paintings Panorama suggests that Bustamante encourages a playful ambiguity and elusiveness in his practice.»
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