Sentences with phrase «exhibition focuses on issues»

This conversation - starting and sometimes provocative exhibition focuses on issues of race, gender, and historical identity in contemporary culture, while exploring the powerful influence of artistic legacy and community across generations.
The exhibition focuses on issues of object and image systems; as each artist explores the dynamic of multiple objects and grids as a means of revealing the corporeal and metaphysical through a process of ordering or breaking down the body.
The exhibition focuses on issues of object and image systems; as each artist explores the dynamic of multiple objects and -LSB-...]
This provocative exhibition focuses on issues of racial, sexual, and historical identity in contemporary culture while exploring the powerful influence of artistic legacy and community across generations.
Meg also maintains a curatorial practice, formerly as Exhibitions and Programming Director at Weinberg / Newton Gallery (Chicago, IL) where she curated exhibitions focused on issues of social justice in partnership with organizations.
Through her work as the Exhibitions and Programming Director at Weinberg / Newton Gallery (Chicago, IL), Meg curates exhibitions focused on issues of social justice in partnership with nonprofit organizations.

Not exact matches

Organized by Tumelo Mosaka (Curator of Contemporary Art at the Krannert Art Museum), University of Illinois, this exhibition focuses on the various ways artists from around the world respond to issues about identity particularly those defined by race and ethnicity.
The exhibition focuses on artists who examine issues related to the boundaries of Israel and Palestine.
Exhibitions include: a group exhibition curated by artist Nayland Blake that investigates queer identification through new communications technologies; the first comprehensive career survey and solo museum exhibition dedicated to Cary Leibowitz, whose bold text - based works address issues of identity, sexuality, and queer politics; and a focused exhibition on broadcast and video work, organized in partnership with Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI), that focuses on how artists have engaged with the legacy of broadcast media.
A Rail Curatorial Project lead by Phong Bui of the Brooklyn Rail, this exhibition focuses on artists whose practice interrogates the contemporary social climate, including issues surrounding immigration, the environment, human rights and equality, foreign relations, among others, ultimately drawing attention to art as it functions as a lens for better understanding the time in which we live.
Glass Gallery Curated by Phong Bui and Rail Curatorial Projects A Rail Curatorial Project led by Phong Bui of the Brooklyn Rail, this exhibition focuses on artists whose practice interrogates the contemporary social climate, including issues surrounding immigration, the environment, human rights and equality, foreign relations, among others, ultimately drawing attention to art as it functions as a lens for better understanding the time in which we live.
The exhibition focuses on artists who explore similar themes and subject matter in their work, primarily issues of race, gender, identity, history, and popular culture.
If this sounds goofy, consider Peter Schjeldahl's article on de Kooning's late paintings, currently the focus of an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, in the January 1997 issue of Artforum.
Pratt Manhattan Gallery will present «Design S: Swedish Design Award,» an exhibition that features 19 shortlisted entries to Sweden's biggest design award competition, with a focus on design for sustainability issues including climate, the environment,...
Mississippi University for Women is hosting Intersections of Gender and Place, an art exhibition that focuses on women artists in the South whose work relates to gender issues and southern culture.
For its photography focussed issue, The Hong Kong Gallery Guide caught up with Burtynsky ahead of his exhibition at Sundaram Tagore Gallery, to hear his views on photography as an art form, collecting art, and his creative vision.»
Wangechi Mutu is the subject of a write - up in the current issue of New York Magazine, which focuses on the artist's upcoming exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum.
We are excited to announce our September, 2016 issue, with a special focus on our upcoming «Juxtapoz x Superflat» exhibition.
Rowland's work, which focuses on economic and social issues, stimulates a critical debate about the relationship between exhibition spaces and public spaces.
Louise Bourgeois (1911 - 2010) is one of the most respected artists of our time, and this retrospective exhibition focuses thematically on birth, growing up, family and motherhood — issues that Bourgeois explored for decades.
By addressing certain issues that have both united and polarized the neighborhood over the last 30 + years, the exhibition will encourage artists and community members to become an active part of the conversation by focusing on the particular insights and experimental processes that artists bring to imagining new urban spaces.
The exhibition, which traces the trajectory of 2015 AIA Gold Medal Recipient Moshe Safdie's life and work over the course of his more than 50 - year career, has been specifically updated for the National Academy presentation and features a new focus on projects devoted to issues of dense urbanism, together with an expanded section exploring the firm's recent and ongoing work across Asia.
Edwards» 5 - week internship followed his participation in Hampshire College's Institute for Curatorial Practice, an intensive summer program focused on curatorial issues and the development of digital exhibitions.
In response to the debate surrounding conservative attacks on the National Endowment for the Arts in 1990, [6] Kosuth organized an exhibition entitled «A Play of the Unmentionable» focusing on issues of censorship and using works from the permanent collection of the Brooklyn Museum of Art.
This year's program for La BF15 focuses on issues, devices and mechanisms inherent to the various aspects of exhibitions: works, space, display, surveillance, public reception, media, cultural...
Prior to moving to the UK, she curated as part of the collective M.U.L.E. exhibitions throughout the Los Angeles area focused on cultural and community based issues.
Over the length of this one week exhibition, evening events focused on the issues of curatorial work and exhibitions, as well as artists» video projections and performances have been programmed through the 700m ² space.
Focusing in on the work of eight artists who are observing the ways in which people interact with their environments, this summer group exhibition retreats from surface - level issues to dive deeper into the human psyche.
Opening: Lorraine O'Grady at Alexander Gray Associates This exhibition focuses on two early projects: the performance art piece Rivers, First Draft and her first collage series Cutting Out The New York Times, showcasing «the artist's nuanced perspectives on art history — specifically Dada and Surrealism — and the topical issues of the late - 1970s and early 1980s, when Multiculturalism and Feminism were articulated and tested in the art world,» according to a press release.
The exhibition press release states «From the beginning, Cruz - Diez focused his research and experiments on one critical issue: the investigation of color as a living organism that is in a constant state of transformation.»
Exhibitions feature an international roster of emerging and mid-career artists working in a range of media, including painting, photography, sculpture, installation, and performance, who are connected by their focus on political, social, and environmental issues of national and global concern.
Leaving to one side ideas of nationality and regionalism, this exhibition focuses on London as a place of freedom and experimentation that enabled artists to produce radical works that engaged with issues of participation and collaboration, established new relationships with the public space and fostered art as an effective political tool.
Nicholas Cohn Art Projects is pleased to present Art and Social Activism, a group exhibition featuring an international roster of artists working in a range of media, from painting and sculpture to video and performance, connected by their focus on social issues of national and global concern.
Supplementing the exhibitions Africa: The Art of a Continent and In / sight: African Photographers, 1940 to the Present, the series focused on contemporary African issues and their treatment in the medium of film.
The exhibition will also include other works of the 1990s from the IMMA Collection by artists such as Kiki Smith, whose presence references a central focus of the period on issues of identity, gender and the politics of the body and Ilya and Emilia Kabakov, whose works imply stories which must be imagined by their audience.
The exhibition focuses on over four decades of cartoons created during presidential election years, from past races to 2016, through multiple perspectives, examining the art form as a conduit for awareness about political and social issues.
From its inception, The Alternative Museum presented ground - breaking thematic exhibitions focusing on the pressing issues of American society, creating an ongoing dialogue which examined the definitions and boundaries of art and contemporary society.
Exhibitions focused artistic interpretation and critical attention on such issues as homelessness (DIA DE LOS MUERTOS: THE HOMELESS); media manipulation (DISINFORMATION: THE MANUFACTURE OF CONSENT); and racial, ethnic and gender stereotypes (PRISONERS OF IMAGE).
Focusing on poignant and pressing issues — in the sector and in the wider world — exhibitions such as Sex Work: Feminist Art & Radical Politics are refreshing, vital and all - encompassing.
Gunn - Salie's graduate exhibition titled Witness presented a site - specific body of work focusing on still unresolved issues of forced removals under apartheid, working with veteran residents of District Six, an area in central Cape Town where widespread forced removals occurred.
Perhaps, as a growing number of museums focus their acquisitions and exhibition programming on contemporary art, the competing issues of curators seeking to examine the work of living artists from an historical vantage point and the career and market concerns of those very artists will result in other stand - offs.
The first gallery survey of five decades of pioneering work produced by this husband - and - wife artist partnership known as «The Harrisons», this exhibition focuses on works that address ecological issues within the artists» home state of California.
The exhibition will expand on Martha Rosler's 1989 three - show cycle entitled If You Lived Here..., but will focus on the issues of today: displacement, cost of living, income inequality.
The fact that the attention to this is focused, above all, on exhibitions that are considered important is evident, although there are exceptions in this issue of Stedelijk Studies, which in particular concern exhibitions that are in the shadow of others considered to belong to the canon (Visual Aspects of Science, Stedelijk Museum), or exhibitions which are even considered to be less interesting (documenta 6).
Through such exhibitions, the Museum continues its policy of focusing on issues prompted by different and often opposing points of view.»
This exhibition focuses on a group of artists who address the issues we face in this new technology - defined post-sci-fi era.
10 Nov 1997 Exhibition addressing issues of violence against women at the Irish Museum of Modern Art An exhibition of works focusing on the issues underlying violence against women opens to the public at the Irish Museum of Modern Art on Friday 28Exhibition addressing issues of violence against women at the Irish Museum of Modern Art An exhibition of works focusing on the issues underlying violence against women opens to the public at the Irish Museum of Modern Art on Friday 28exhibition of works focusing on the issues underlying violence against women opens to the public at the Irish Museum of Modern Art on Friday 28 November.
TNT will also serve as the debut for a new selection of works in the «white cube» space within the exhibition that explores activist art focused on border issues, including works by David Avalos, Louis Hock, Victor Payan, Marcos Ramírez ERRE, Elizabeth Sisco, Perry Vasquez, and others.
(Might not a sharply focused exhibition of works by Remington, Thomas Nozkowski and Chuck Webster — painters from three different generations — cast a very different light on the issue of figure / ground?)
In September, an interdisciplinary conference focusing on the issues of delegated performance explored through the exhibition will be held at the ICA.
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