Sentences with phrase «catalogue cover»

The phrase "catalogue cover" refers to the front page or image on the cover of a catalogue, which displays and represents the products or items inside the catalogue. Full definition
The latter has a 5,000 - book catalogue covering 70 publishers and will have to maintain a niche in order to survive.
Featuring new scholarship by art historian Robin Clark, it includes reproductions of fascinating archival and documentary material that was discovered during the curatorial process, from the artist's sketches to gallery invitation cards, early catalogue covers, historic photographs, as well as installation views of the exhibition.
The VISTA catalogue covers both familiar objects and new discoveries.
«Vehicles of Fascination,» AICA - USA board member Barry Schwabsky's essay on Los Angeles artist Mark Grotjahn, is featured in a 2013 Aspen Art Museum catalogue covering the first survey of the artist's work from the 1990s to the present.
For instance, there are two catalogue cover inkjet prints, as well as a large painting.
Wayne Thiebaud catalogue cover from Acquavella Gallery, Simon Frost, Untitled, Gouache on paper, 2006
Thumbnails of all previous catalogue covers are also included, positioning each Biennial as a snapshot of artistic practice at a particular moment.
Her exhibitions and accompanying catalogues cover a wide range of interests including Rembrandt's prints, botanical illustrations, Indian and Buddhist art, and contemporary German drawings.
Arabic exhibition catalogue cover, Art et Liberté: Rupture, War, and Surrealism in Egypt (1938 — 1948) ART ET LIBERTÉ — SYMPOSIUM in connection with...
This systematic catalogue covers the collection of American naive paintings at the National Gallery of Art, a collection of more than 300 works primarily originating in the northeastern United States during the 19th century.
Entitled «Interrogation of Reality — Picture Worlds Today,» it brought together works by Marcel Broodthaers, Christian Boltanski, Arnulf Rainer, Claes Oldenburg, Gerhard Richter and Ed Ruscha (who designed the famous orange, ant - ridden catalogue cover), and inaugurated the art exhibition as spectacle.
Featuring an interview with the artist by Anne Reeve and new scholarship by art historian Robin Clark, it also includes reproductions of archival and documentary material discovered during the curatorial process, from sketches by the artist to gallery invitation cards, early catalogue covers, and historic photographs, as well as installation views of the show.
Image and scripture intertwine beautifully in one of the exhibit's gems, the Botticelli «Madonna of the Book» featured on the catalogue cover and the posters.
Their catalogue covers a wide range of subjects from personal finance, small business and economics, through to stock market investing, trading...
It was a visual manifesto for the European - born movement, and Duchamp chose for its catalogue cover an image... Read More
London, Skarstedt Gallery, George Condo: Ink Drawings, 2014, pp. 36 and 59 (detail illustrated in colour on the catalogue cover; illustrated in colour, p. 37; detail illustrated in colour, pp. 38 - 39).
The walls are covered with «faux auction pages, catalogue covers, and ephemera items».
The exhibition, organised by the sculptor David MacIlwaine and consisting of 31 works, was described on the catalogue cover as «A Major Retrospective».
Arguably Prince's best - known work, the image of a cowboy galloping under a bright blue sky had been the catalogue cover for the artist's 1992 survey at the Whitney Museum of American Art, and it became the most expensive photograph ever to sell at auction when New York dealer Stellan Holm bought it at Christie's in November 2005 for $ 1,248,000.
The catalogue cover for the 1989 New Contemporaries exhibition, which featured Damien Hirst's fifth and sixth «Medicine Cabinets»
Encapsulating the exhibition's diverse range of works within the space of a printed object, the catalogue cover and interior pages interleave full - bleed imagery of the mythical Hyperborean red cloud, in reference to the ethereal dreamscape of Ginzburg's otherworldly exploration.
Born Armand Pierre Fernandez in Nice, France (he changed to his pseudonym when the last letter of his name was accidentally omitted on a catalogue cover in 1958, although he had stopped using his surname in 1947), he learned painting from his father and received formal training at the Ecole Nationale des Arts Decoratifs in Nice (1946 - 1949).
Basel, Kunsthalle, Joan Miró, March - April 1956, no. 32 (illustrated on the catalogue cover).
The iconic Retroactive II, a Rauschenberg silkscreen that features a prominent image of John F. Kennedy alongside an image of an astronaut, a weather gauge, a Polaroid of a glass of water the artist took, and several other images, seems to be held in particular esteem by the Tate, since it was used on all of its advertising materials, including the catalogue cover.
The catalogue cover for «Robert Smithson,» at the Whitney Museum of American Art, shows some graph paper on which Smithson scribbled a diagram of his various ideas and plans.
Her painting, Receive, was featured on the catalogue cover for the group show curated by artist Eric Fischl and David Kratz, president of the New York Academy of Art.
A 1997 painting, which MOCA used as its catalogue cover, is one of several diagrammatic works from 1995 - 97 that depict the interior spaces of galleries and museums.
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