Not exact matches
A
little bit about wall space's
exhibition... Carl Corey: Americaville Photographer and documentarian Carl Corey
explores -LSB-...]
Bring your
little ones to
explore the
exhibition American Legends: From Calder to O'Keeffe and learn how artists such as Charles Burchfield and Marsden Hartley create brooding skies, tangled trees, and landscapes of different kinds.
The portrait, titled Hold It in Your Mouth a
Little Longer,
explores notions of identity while challenging gender and racial stereotypes, themes the artist continues to
explore in her first solo museum
exhibition in New York, «To Wander Determined,» opening today at the Whitney.
The
exhibition explores Rauschenberg's
little - known series of cardboard - based works, some of which haven't been shown in decades.
Colony
Little explores Simone Leigh's first West Coast solo
exhibition at the Hammer in Los Angeles.
First U.S.
Exhibition to
Explore Impressionism's
Little - Known German Chapter with More Than 100 Paintings, Drawings, and Prints Max Liebermann, celebrated as «the German Manet,» was the leader of a generation of German painters who were inspired by the stylistic developments in France.
The press release reveals
little about the London - based artists» new project — who's work within flattened taxonomies, algorithms and systems was
explored in a thoughtful review of her The Hudson River
exhibition at London's Lima Zulu in 2014 — but typically includes an assortment of words that immerse us in what feels like a Google search.
Other artists in the
exhibition explore artmaking and its inextricably ties to daily life, as in Michelle Grabner's paper weavings, or Tony Lewis» site specific wall text — made specifically for this
exhibition — based on selections from the classic Life's
Little Instruction Book, a compendium of advice.
No matter how casual, her pictures almost always feature rock - solid axial structures... At a time of renewed interest in an era that was formative for Gross —
explored in books like Judith Stein's biography of dealer Richard Bellamy, Eye of the Sixties (2016), and the
exhibition «Inventing Downtown: Artist - Run Galleries in New York City, 1952 — 1965,» now at New York University's Grey Art Gallery — it's worth looking back at an artist who witnessed much and made vital work, but received very
little recognition, due in part to the all - too - common combination of art world trends and sexism.»
The new
exhibition features 10 large - scale canvases alongside 5 unique portraits in continuation of the themes first
explored in the Irish artist's 2012 solo
exhibition Dead Meat (2012) and A Whole Lot of Trouble for a
Little Bit of Win (2013).
Her many significant monographic and thematic
exhibitions have brought attention to under - recognized artists and
little -
explored themes and practices in the art world.
The
exhibition is devoted to a previously
little explored aspect of Paul Klee's work, namely abstraction.
The works in this
exhibition will
explore land as subject matter more than setting, will have
little to no evidence of human presence other than the artist's hand, and will be
explored in a variety of media including photography, painting, drawing, ceramic, video, collage, and prints.
I had been
exploring ties between American painter Philip Guston (FAAR» 49, RAAR» 71) and Italy for some time, but in late 2008 I found in his Roma series — painted in 1971 while he was a resident at the American Academy, a
little - studied, but crucial period in his career — a compelling subject for a focused
exhibition.
Small Treasures: Rembrandt, Vermeer, Hals, and Their Contemporaries is the first
exhibition to
explore this
little - known field of small - format 17th - century paintings from the Dutch and Flemish Golden Age.
Little Big Man Gallery is pleased to announce Doug Rickard's first solo
exhibition in Los Angeles and debut the artist's latest body of work titled N.A. Rickard's new photography and video work continues to
explore the darker side of urban America and highlights issues of economic disparity, ever - present surveillance and tendencies toward publicity via social media.