A returning artist - in - residence, Marion Wilson is
an environmental artist whose work often incorporates collaboration and education.
Not exact matches
Comer writes that in making his selections for the show he was «compelled by
artists whose work is as hybrid as the significant global,
environmental, and technological shifts reshaping the United States.»
This «augmented reality» is part of a major survey (more than 70 works) of the career of Mr. Chin, a conceptual
artist whose work comments on
environmental issues and social justice.
Like a conductor looking for the perfect blend of instruments for her orchestra, Siff chose diverse
artists whose works would bring diversity to her new distribution system and address political and
environmental injustices.
David Ireland (1930 - 2009) was an
artist and architect
whose best - known work is his own house at 500 Capp Street in San Francisco — at once an
environmental artwork, social sculpture, and his residence for 30 years.
Following an exploration of the course content, teachers will choose an
environmental topic and
artist of interest
whose work they will research in depth.
«Seismic Shifts» will showcase
artists and architects
whose work challenges disciplinary boundaries and raises critical social,
environmental and political...
Dawn Scarfe is an
artist whose work investigates resonance, perception and
environmental atmospheres.
Opening Friday, September 5, 5 - 8 pm Amy Balkin Adriane Colburn Blane De St. Croix Mark Dion Julie Heffernan Gideon Mendel This exhibition brings together recent work by six
artists whose creative practices are propelled by keen attention to the insidious effects of human impact on the planet, in light of escalating
environmental disaster.
Greg Lindquist is an
artist and
environmental advocate,
whose paintings bring light to corporate (coal ash spills) and natural (oil seeping) pollution of rivers and lakes.
«Seismic Shifts» will showcase
artists and architects
whose work challenges disciplinary boundaries and raises critical social,
environmental and political issues and will include painting, drawing, sculpture, photography, mixed media, video, and architectural models created between 2005 and 2012, with a number of new works featured.
Furthering their notion of «sculptural theaters» — installations built as containers for specific movies,
whose architectural, audiovisual, and sculptural elements expand onscreen content into
environmental panoramas — the
artists have transformed Andrea Rosen Gallery into a network of halls and chambers that plot a path for visitors through a sequence of new movies and ambient spaces.
Wu is a Taiwanese conceptual
artist and associate professor at the National Kaohsiung Normal University,
whose practice focuses on
environmental issues and the effects of urbanization in Taiwan.
Elena Soterakis is a Brooklyn - based
artist whose work explores the conflict between economic progress and
environmental preservation, and raises the question of whether this conflict can ever be resolved.
Collapse of Vision combines the perspectives of four
artists whose work each uniquely addresses
environmental, social and behavioral issues.
Notable galleries for 2014 include: Kevin Kavanagh (Dublin), presenting a storytelling series by Sonia Shiel, current ISCP NY
artist - in - residence and recipient of Ireland's 2014 Arts Council Project Award; Laura Bulian Gallery (Milan), highlighting career Conceptualist Vyacheslav Akhunov,
whose cultural investigations were featured in dOCUMENTA (13) and the 2013 Venice Biennale's Central Asian Pavilion; contemporary Bahamanian art hub Popopstudios (Nassau), spotlighting «everyday» assemblages and mixed - media works by founder John Cox; Frederieke Taylor Gallery (New York), revealing
environmental concerns of downtown stalwart Christy Rupp,
whose seminal public art projects factored into the 2012 exhibition Come Closer: Art Around the Bowery, 1969 - 1989 at the New Museum; Galerie Heike Strelow (Frankfurt am Main), combining sociopolitical commentary and black humor via Florian Heinke, who curated System of Diplomatic Chaos at Kunstverein Wiesbaden last year; and CONNERSMITH.
Amie Potsic is a photographer and
environmental artist based in the Philadelphia area
whose work addresses cultural, personal, and natural phenomena through the lens of social responsibility.
Other
artists are more specifically metaphorical: Frank Moore, let's say,
whose fantastical paintings of Yosemite National Park and Niagara Falls refer to
environmental erosion and physical illness, including AIDS.
Mrs. Nevelson,
whose pioneering
environmental sculptures made her one of the best - known
artists of the 20th century, died on April 17, 1988.
Torkwase Dyson, born in Chicago, is an
artist based in New York
whose practice draws on her interest in abstraction, social architecture, and
environmental justice.
Los Angeles - based Bowers is a self - declared activist and feminine
artist whose multidisciplinary practice is political, addressing immigration, gay rights, rape, and
environmental issues, among other topics.
As an American who has spent much of the last thirteen years in the United Kingdom, I have been compelled by
artists whose work is as hybrid as the significant global,
environmental, and technological shifts reshaping the United States.
Gordon Cheung is a contemporary
artist whose work captures the mood of the global collapse of civilization — or a dystopian, prophetic vision of it — where moral, economic and
environmental crises have spun out of control.
Crafting Resistance Opening Reception: January 26th, 2017 5 - 8 pm Exhibition continues through March 28th, 2017 Visual Arts Center — Gallery One (Liberal Arts Building) The Visual Arts Center gallery at Boise State University has organized the exhibition Crafting Resistance featuring the work of twenty
artists from around the United States as well as Canada and Mexico
whose work creates awareness of political issues, examines issues of racial and social justice, or calls for change in
environmental issues and human and equal rights.
LaToya Ruby Frazier is an
artist whose work in photography, video, and performance builds visual archives that address industrialism, Rust - Belt revitalization,
environmental justice, healthcare inequity, and family and communal history.
The exhibition features a curated exhibition of
artists whose work challenges us to reflect on our ecological footprint, as well as virtual tours from leading
environmental organizations.
Its tentacles snake through the streets of Ljubljana, paralleling the river as it runs past the city's charming Baroque buildings, growing with every careless action of local residents,
whose discards have created the creature within their midst: The Plastic Bag Monster.Working with the
environmental group Ekologi Brez Meja (Ecologists Without Borders), which had previously organized clean - up days in the area, Slovenian
artist The Miha Artnak collected 40,000 used plastic bags and 7,500 used plastic cups from three dozen schools, a handful of city offices, and more than 500 individuals.