Sentences with phrase «commercial artist named»

In The Shape of Water, Jenkins plays a closeted commercial artist named Giles who is friends and next - door neighbors with the film's mute protagonist Elisa (Sally Hawkins).

Not exact matches

A television commercial he made in the early «70s, and paid to place on various stations, reeling off a list of great artists» names: Leonardo, Michelangelo, Rembrandt, Van Gogh, Picasso, and ending with his own name.
SiriusXM satellite radio service provides access to over 150 channels including commercial - free music with exclusive performances and artist dedicated channels; coverage of every major sport and dedicated talk channels for all major professional sports, college sports and fantasy; the biggest names in entertainment and talk cover everything from comedy to politics and religion; breaking news from the most trusted sources.
SiriusXM satellite radio service provides access to over 150 channels including commercial - free music with exclusive performances and artist dedicated channels; plus coverage of every major sport and dedicated talk channels for all major professional sports, college sports and fantasy; the biggest names in entertainment and talk covering everything from comedy to politics and religion; and breaking news from the most trusted sources.
Employment opportunities offered to our recent BFA grads include working as an artist's assistant, starting their own design / build firm, art handling and preparing, development assistant at the Rothko Chapel, web design, display design and installation, curating exhibitions, assisting with commercial photo and film shoots, interning at the Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, and teaching, just to name a few.
(The artist from whom they commission a work is a commercial photographer named Sam Hon. I have never heard of him.)
He has organized exhibitions and programs at commercial and nonprofit spaces around the globe featuring a roster of critically acclaimed artists including Firelei Baez, ruby amanze, Hugo McCloud, Brendan Fernandes, and Derek Fordjour to name a few.
He has organized exhibitions at commercial and nonprofit galleries throughout New York City featuring a roster of critically acclaimed emerging and mid-career artists including Firelei Baez, ruby amanze, Hugo McCloud, Brendan Fernandes, and Derek Fordjour to name a few.
He has organized exhibitions and programs at commercial and nonprofit spaces around the globe featuring a roster of critically acclaimed artists including Firelei Báez, ruby onyinyechi amanze, Hugo McCloud, Brendan Fernandes, and Allison Janae Hamilton to name a few.
Artist abandoned the conventions of brush and easel and played with new materials and methods of artistic gesture: commercial paints and housepainter's brushes, working on unstretched and unprimed canvases, moving the canvas to the floor, and applying paint with hands.This essential introduction spans the international breadth, conceptual depth, and seismic impact of Abstract art with a thorough survey not only of the big names such as Picasso, Klee, Kline, Rothko, and Pollock, but also lesser - known figures who made equally significant abstract contributions, including Antoni Tàs; pies, K.O. Götz, Ad Reinhardt, and Sophie Taeuber - Arp.
Mr. Servais was pointing to a label with the telltale combination of «Courtesy of the artist» and the name of a sponsoring commercial gallery.
The image came out as a surprise and the artist, who was trying to make the name for himself in the world of commercial photography, wasn't comfortable with its distortion, so he didn't show it to anyone for a year.
The exhibition is envisioned to be the evidence of how a contemporary gallery can enjoy a significant and prolonged commercial success by staying true to the same formula up - and - coming galleries turn to when trying to make a name for themselves — staying true to their extraordinary artists.
In any case, this is the first documented example of appropriation in art history even though the name wasn't in common use until the 80s, when it was referred to artists like Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg who appropriated images from commercial art and pop culture and, in the case of Sherrie Levine, even appropriated themselves into art.
Full - time access to the studio, where free art supplies are available, assists these artists in moving to a new level of creativity, expanding their marketable portfolios, and advancing their efforts to achieve broader name recognition and commercial success.
«Founded by curator Oliver Martínez Kandt in the town of Oaxaca in the South of Mexico, the small commercial gallery showcases a solid program of Mexican and international artists including names such as Jennifer Marman, Puppies Puppies, and Sergio Gutierrez.»
Some of our notable entertainment and media attorneys are: John Quinn, General Counsel of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, who has also represented entertainment and media clients in a number of high profile cases; Kathleen Sullivan, the former Dean of Stanford Law School, First Amendment scholar, and nationally renowned appellate advocate, who heads the firm's appellate practice group; Bob Raskopf, an expert in the sports, entertainment and media bars in New York, who is perhaps best known for his work on behalf of professional sports leagues and teams, newspapers and publishers; Claude Stern, who has represented a broad array of leading software developers, videogame manufacturers, online publishers and other media clients in all forms of intellectual property litigation, including copyright, patent, trade secret, trademark, and licensing disputes; Bruce Van Dalsem, who has tried and resolved disputes for studios, producers and performing artists in the film, television, music and finance businesses, securing a top five verdict in California based on the misappropriation of a film library; Gary Gans, an expert litigator in motion picture financing, production and distribution disputes, as well as copyright and idea theft cases, who has been named in 2012 by The Hollywood Reporter as one of America's «Top Entertainment Attorneys;» Jeff McFarland, who has litigated entertainment related cases for more than 20 years, including cases involving motion picture and television series profits, video game licenses, idea theft and the «seven year rule;» and Michael Williams, who represents a satellite exhibitor and other media clients in trademark, copyright, patent, antitrust and other commercial litigation.
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