Sentences with phrase «distinctive artistic language»

Catherine Petitgas, a London - based collector on Tate's Latin American art acquisition committee, believes the new wave of interest is based on a reassessment of geometrical abstraction in the 1950s when Brazilian artists such as Lygia Clark and Hélio Oiticica created a distinctive artistic language as part of the Neo-Concrete Group.

Not exact matches

Opie's distinctive formal language is instantly recognisable and reflects his artistic preoccupation with the idea of representation, and the means by which images are perceived and understood.
Artworks exemplifying each and every artist's unique artistic language and methodology will be displayed in individual galleries, a curatorial approach further highlighting the distinctive creative pursuit of each individual participant.
With public commissions from New York to Seoul, London to Zurich, and an uninterrupted flow of international museum exhibitions, Opie's distinctive formal language is instantly recognisable and reflects his artistic preoccupation with the idea of representation and the means by which images are perceived and understood.
Later he established Taller Torres García, a progressive educational art community that could be considered in the tradition of Bauhaus, its fundamental aim was to develop a distinctive Latin American artistic language based on constructivist theories.
CIMA's installation focuses on the artist's rarely seen works from the 1930s — the decade when Morandi reached full artistic maturity and developed his distinctive pictorial language.
This year's panel of experts commended each winning artist for their progressive artistic practice and distinctive visual language.
Through numerous exhibitions and public commissions from Seoul to New York, Luxembourg to Zurich, Opie's distinctive formal language is instantly recognisable and reflects his artistic preoccupation with the idea of representation, and the means by which images are perceived and understood.
The work of Marcel Dzama (° 1974, Winnipeg; lives and works in New York) is immediately recognised by his own distinctive visual language, layered with artistic influences like Dada and Marcel Duchamp.
The exhibition focuses on the artist's rarely seen works from the 1930s — the decade when Morandi reached full artistic maturity and developed his distinctive pictorial language.
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