Sentences with phrase «cultural commentary through»

Showcasing works from the 1960s through 2013, the exhibition surveys political satire and cultural commentary through art movements ranging from capitalist realism to contemporary pop art.

Not exact matches

A grisly critique of representations of violence, the original version shot a hole right through the fourth wall, but Haneke's echo — which re-uses the same locations and stresses its own pointlessness at every turn — transforms his cultural commentary into an endless hall of mirrors, completing the project by repeating it.
His is a material satire; a cutting commentary which transforms our cultural imaginary through visual turns of phrase.
Kimberly interviews contemporary artists (most recently Liat Yossifer and Kirsten Hassenfeld) and through her own commentary draws connections with current social, political or cultural issues.
Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art has distinguished itself with intrepid commentary on the shared cultural and political predicament through its curated exhibitions, which form the core of its program.
Working in painting, sculpture, photography, film and installation, Shonibare's work examines race, class and the construction of cultural identity through a sharp political commentary of the tangled interrelationship between Africa and Europe and their respective economic and political histories.
Anne Pasternak, Brooklyn Museum's new director; Mia Locks and Christopher Y. Lew, named curators of the 2017 Whitney Biennial; Thomas J. Lax's contribution as the youngest curator of «Greater New York» at P.S. 1 (the others were Douglas Crimp, Peter Eleey and Ms. Locks; through March 7); savvy art writing by Johanna Fateman and Mostafa Heddaya and Felix Bernstein's blistering cultural commentary.
The rug images are researched through auction catalogues and, while the press release does not say this, I would like to think that there is a commentary on the commodity of cultural objects, and the buying and selling of them without the research or interest in the object's cultural significance by privileged classes.
Through his work he explores the human condition, offering a critical perspective on social, cultural, and political issues and visually eloquent commentary on memory, loss, and the difficulty of memorializing the past.
Balkin notes that the most popular law prof blogs drive readership through political punditry, gossip, entertainment, blog scraping and cultural commentary, basically everything short of actual legal scholarship.
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