The gallery presents the work of these artists and hosts juried shows, as well as solo and group
exhibitions by other artists.
Berwick Watchtower is a new art space being opened by writer and critic William Feaver on Saturday 8 September and will house a permanent display of works by the mighty Ian Stephenson as well as showing temporary
exhibitions by other artists.
Byrne draws on art history,
exhibitions by other artists, men's magazines, advertising, and pop culture to create visually appealing and intellectually complex conceptual investigations.
Not exact matches
Other exhibitions included tennis
by Fred Perry, Frank Parker, Doris Hart and Jinx Falkenburg; golf
by Cary Middlecoff and trick - shot
artist Paul Hahn; diving
by Pat McCormick; archery
by Ann Marston; basketball
by George Mikan; physical fitness
by Bonnie Prudden.
The current
exhibition in London
by the British
artist Damien Hirst has stirred the debate about the extent to which art and science inform each
other.
Signature
exhibitions and major place - based art installations
by leading
artists, photographers, conservationists, scientists, and
other innovators;
Seasonally changing
exhibitions feature the latest creations
by our many regional
artists and
other gallery favorites from around the country.
The thrust of this part of the
exhibition is to demonstrate how
artists absorbed and responded to the mechanical age, illustrated more literally
by some (Charles Sheeler, Rolling Power (1939)-RRB- than
by others (Patrick Henry Bruce, Stuart Davis).
Beginning today, an online
exhibition of 18 artworks
by African - American
artists in the BMA's collection can be viewed
by people around the world thanks to a new partnership between the Google Cultural Institute and more than 40
other organizations with African - American artworks and historical artifacts.
During this unique five - year project IMMA will present a series of different and exclusive Lucian Freud related
exhibitions, with a new programme of events and openings each year, including works and new commissions
by other modern and contemporary
artists in response to Freud, and will reveal exciting new perspectives on this major
artist today.
Other features include a lengthy, amazing conversation between Marshall and Los Angeles
artist Charles Gaines; an essay
by Greg Tate on the
artist's figures, which he calls «Marvellously Black Familiars»; and a chronology illustrated
by the catalogs and brochures that have documented Marshall's
exhibitions over the years.
Newport Street Gallery is pleased to announce an
exhibition displaying a selection of works taken from the Murderme collection, Damien Hirst's collection of over 3,000 works
by other artists, from 29th March to 17th April.
Work
by Williams and
other AfriCOBRA
artists is featured in «Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power,» the group
exhibition organized
by the Tate Modern in London, which is scheduled to debut in the United States at the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art on Feb. 3, 2018, before traveling to the Brooklyn Museum.
Owned
by 13
artists and collaborations, Regina Rex strives to present
exhibitions that capture their engagement with
other artists.
SCAD Atlanta presents «one becomes the
other,» the first Southeast solo
exhibition by artist... Read More
They might easily have rubbed shoulders with each
other at
exhibitions and in the bars and cafes favoured
by artists at a time when the art world was much smaller.
For Freedoms, the
artist - run super PAC co-founded
by Hank Willis Thomas and Eric Gottesman debuted in New York and has migrated to Chicago where works from the initiative
by Rashid Johnson, Nari Ward, and Carrie Mae Weems, among
others, will be displayed in Monique Meloche Gallery's «off the wall»
exhibition, a series of installations on public bus benches throughout Wicker Park Bucktown (Sept. 1 - Nov.
Included in the
exhibition are works
by artists such as Johan Christian Dahl (1788 - 1857), Jean - Michel Cels (1819 - 1894), Carl Gustav Carus (1789 - 1869), Jean Charles Joseph Rémond (1795 - 1875), Johan Thomas Lundbye (1818 - 1848), Eugène Lous Boudin (1824 - 1898), and Eugène Isabey (1803 - 1886), among
others.
At the center of the space is a cube, its outer walls lined with what she calls «Tête - à - Tête,» a constantly changing group
exhibition of pieces
by artists — Derrick Adams, Malick Sidibé, Carrie Mae Weems, among
others — whose work has influenced Thomas's.
Edited
by the
exhibitions's co-curators Frances Morris and Tiffany Bell, and with essays
by leading scholars that give a context for Martin's work — her life, relationship with
other artists, the influence of South - Asian philosophy — alongside focused shorter pieces on particular paintings, this beautifully designed volume is the definitive publication on her oeuvre.
The
exhibition begins with works
by early Minimalist
artists such as Sol LeWitt and Carl Andre; drawings
by conceptual
artists Lawrence Weiner, William Wegman, and Mark di Suvero, among
others; and continues with recently celebrated
artists Fiona Banner, Teresita Fernandez, Jutta Koether, and Tracey Emin.
One is a solo
exhibition by Lesley Dill, a New York
artist, and the
other is...
The
exhibition will provide a platform for
exhibition of new commissions and major projects
by artists including Marissa Lee Benedict, the duo Revital Cohen & Tuur Van Balen, Nina Canell, Cecile B. Evans, Florian Germann, Peter Fend, and Xaviera Simmons, among
others.
After opening with an
exhibition of an
artist at the height of his fame, Georges Mathieu, subsequent
exhibitions were devoted to work
by Frank Auerbach, R.B. Kitaj and Joe Tilson, as well as Kenneth Armitage, Lynn Chadwick, Ben Nicholson, Victor Pasmore, John Piper, Georges Vantogerloo and
others.
Other recent group
exhibitions include Revolution in the Making: Abstract Sculpture
by Women, 1947 - 2016, Hauser & Wirth, Los Angeles (2016); Making Space: Women
Artists and Postwar Abstraction, The Museum of Modern Art, New York (2017); and Where We Are: Selections from the Whitney's Collection, 1900 - 1960, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2017).
The
exhibition is the culmination of a multiyear collaboration between Smith and Los Angeles — based conceptual
artist Glenn Kaino and will feature sculptural installations and
other works
by Kaino, objects from the Tommie Smith archives and an animation of Smith's winning race created from contributed drawings.
Exhibitions at West 19th Street, New York, and 24 Grafton Street, London, balance the program's historical component with presentations of recent painting, photography, sculpture, and video, among
other mediums,
by boundary - pushing contemporary
artists like Kerry James Marshall, Oscar Murillo, Diana Thater, Wolfgang Tillmans, and Jordan Wolfson.
All
other artist juried into the
exhibition will receive an Award of Merit
by email after
exhibition closes.
Situating itself within current art historical and political debates, the
exhibition considers work
by self - taught, spiritually inspired and incarcerated
artists, alongside
other projects based in performance, socially engaged practice and the archive, as well as painting, drawing, sculpture and assemblage, that make insistent reference to place.
Showcasing works that have transformed the public space of the city and also altered public expectations and the role of art outside the museums and galleries, the
exhibition will include renderings, models, photographs and video footage of work
by artists such as Red Grooms, Christo and Jeanne - Claude, and Kara Walker, among
others.
The show includes a piece
by faculty member Thom Faulders and two large - scale installations that were commissioned and fabricated especially for the
exhibition, one
by the world - renowned architect / conceptual
artist Alex Schweder, and the
other by CCA Architecture faculty member Andrew Kudless and his firm Matsys.
Nielsen Gallery was also recognized for notable survey
exhibitions of work
by such
artists Albert York, Martin Ramirez, Gregory Gillespie and numerous
others.
Mind and Matter and these
other exhibition and incidental installations of individual works are part of an ongoing initiative among women curators at MoMA to delve deeply into the permanent collection in order to find out what works
by women
artists they already own and then see how gaps in the collection can be filled through acquisitions, with assistance from the Modern Women's Fund.
Collaborations include an
exhibition with the Picker Art Gallery, Colgate University, followed
by collaborations with the Reading Public Museum, Demuth Museum, Stetson University and New Art Centre in UK, among
others have extended the ability to show
artists of international scope.
One is a solo
exhibition by Lesley Dill, a New York
artist, and the
other is an international group show of works on paper.
In the wake of the 2016 presidential election, where news media was deemed the «the enemy of the people,» and The New York Times directly attacked and labeled as «fake news,» FLAG began developing an
exhibition examining how seminal
artists, such as Robert Gober, Ellsworth Kelly, Lorraine O'Grady, Fred Tomaselli, and
others, who have used and been inspired
by this newspaper in their practice.
Featuring nearly 100 works
by Carla Accardi, Pierre Alechinsky, Karel Appel, Martin Barré, Harry Bertoia, Louise Bourgeois, Alberto Burri, Sam Francis, Grace Hartigan, Asger Jorn, Yves Klein, Franz Kline, Willem de Kooning, Conrad Marca - Relli, Kenzo Okada, Jorge Oteiza, Jackson Pollock, Ad Reinhardt, Pierre Soulages, Clyfford Still, Antoni Tàpies, Jean Tinguely, Cy Twombly, Takeo Yamaguchi and Zao Wou - Ki, among
others, this collection - based
exhibition and publication explore the affinities and differences between
artists working continents apart, in a period of great transition and rapid creative development.
Many
exhibitions are accompanied
by receptions,
artist talks, readings or
other programming.
Other highlights include a performative
exhibition by Yamini Nayar, photo collages
by Zoe Croggon, an outdoor video projection and solo
exhibition by Taisuke Koyama presented
by Seen Fifteen, an installation
by artist Jo Dennis, and a collaborative
exhibition inspired
by The Peckham Experiment
by Rhiannon Adam, Natasha Caruana and Laura Pannack transforming a derelict terrace house.
As the title suggests, the
exhibition casts a wide net, capturing everything from cultural artifacts (feminist literature, earthenware) to graphic design (
exhibition posters, bakery business cards), to unique
artists» works influenced
by graphic novels, Girl Scout badges, stock photography, and
other bric - a-brac.
With work
by both post-war
artists and emerging practitioners — including Pablo Picasso, Roy Lichtenstein, Bruce Nauman, Carolee Schneemann, Jason Rhoades, Martin Kippenberger, Elaine Sturtevant, Anna Oppermann, Tetsumi Kudo, and Andrea Zittel, among
others — the
exhibition reflects the museum's expanded curatorial purview in its new home, which creates intergenerational dialogues between post-war and contemporary
artists, and champions new narratives that provide insight into the most innovative
artists working today.
Complementing the National Portrait Gallery's
exhibition, «Elaine de Kooning Portraits,» in Washington, DC, this
exhibition comprises self - portraits, likenesses, and reflections on Elaine de Kooning
by other artists, including Arshile Gorky, Fairfield Porter, Hedda Sterne, Alex Katz, Robert De Niro, Sr., Ray Johnson, Joop Sanders, Paul Harris, Edvins Strautmanis and her husband Willem de Kooning.
In the first
exhibition at Observatory, Brooklyn, on view through November 15th, James Walsh presents photos and prints in conjunction with an evening program of projections, performances, poetry, and
other events
by various
artists throughout the run of the show.
Our
exhibition programming features a full range of visual arts, including painting, drawing, photography, sculpture, printmaking, ceramics, and
other media
by local, regional, national, and international
artists ranging from emerging to professional status.
The
exhibition offers a unique, hands - on experience which encourages viewers to browse or peruse an eclectic selection of contemporary works
by an international group of
artists including John Baldessari, Nan Goldin, Jenny Holzer, Sol LeWitt, Rosemarie Trockel, and William Wegman among many
others.
Spanning the two floors of the museum's older buildings, as well as
other areas of its new annex, the
exhibition embraces new works
by Ai Weiwei, inspired
by the museum's collection of ancient artifacts and the
artist's visit to the Greek island of Lesvos.
The
exhibition also includes works
by other artists who have been influenced
by and collaborated with the Groupe.
Grabner's
exhibition posits that, unlike work
by artists from
other regions, artwork
by midwestern
artists deploy appropriation to convey self - deprecating and comical qualities.
Featuring renowned pieces
by, among many
others, Diane Arbus, Robert Gober, Jeff Koons, Sherrie Levine, Richard Prince, and Christopher Wool, the
exhibition will also include recent work
by artists such as Liz Deschenes, Sam Lewitt, Laura Owens, Frances Stark, and Bernadette Corporation.
Organized
by Dena M. Woodall, associate curator of prints and drawings, and curatorial assistant Lauren Rosenblum, the
exhibition features 20th - century prints from the permanent collection selected
by artists known for their work in
other disciplines — specifically sculpture, photography, painting, installation, and dance.