Sentences with phrase «explores key artists»

From Robert Henri's 1917 painting Gregorita with the Santa Clara Bowl to Zhang Huan's photo - documentation of his 2000 performance Family Tree, from the expressive strokes of Robert Motherwell's 1976 Les Caves No. 2 to the digital animation of Jeremy Blake's 2001 video Mod Lang, the collection exhibition explores key artists, styles and episodes in recent artmaking.

Not exact matches

A key artist of his generation, Parreno explores the borders between reality and fiction and is known for investigating and redefining the gallery - going experience.
The item highlights several of the key themes and works in the exhibition and considers how the BxMA will delve into areas of Matta - Clark's practice that have only been briefly explored in previous surveys of the artist's work.
New Exhibition explores the blur zone between fine art and Jewelry making A new exhibition exploring the relationship between key artists and jewelry is currently being mounted at the Museum of Arts and Design in New York.
Explore key concepts that guided the work of landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx in this class taught by artist Mark Joshua Epstein.
This exhibition of works from the 1960s and beyond features American Pop and Minimal artists, as well as the work of key figures exploring the human form as subject.
Since November 2014, MK Gallery commissioned Associate Artists Teresa Paiva and Alicja Rogalska have been working with Key Stage 3 pupils from each school to explore how artists have used the visual arts to depict and interpret military coArtists Teresa Paiva and Alicja Rogalska have been working with Key Stage 3 pupils from each school to explore how artists have used the visual arts to depict and interpret military coartists have used the visual arts to depict and interpret military conflict.
Instrumental in making the work of Latin American artists accessible to a wider public, Carnival of Perception includes seminal essays on key Latin American practitioners, as well as texts that explore the cross-cultural and experimental diversity of the London art scene since the 1960s.
The tour group will work with the artist to construct a simple visual trail across the gallery spaces that maps their physical journey through the building and explores the key themes in the exhibition including ideas relating to time, dimensionality, trace, surface, materiality and process.
In this brief essay from Phaidon's Art in Time, we explore the diversity of the 20th - century movement's key artists to celebrate the opening of Marisa Merz's first major US retrospective, «The Sky is a Great Space» at the Met Breuer.
«We're excited to explore O'Keeffe as a key figure in 20th century American art and introduce visitors to artists they may be less familiar with, who are tackling similar themes in new and innovative ways,» said Lauren Haynes, Curator, Contemporary Art.
This exhibition of works from the 1960s and beyond features Pop and Minimal artists, as well as the work of key figures exploring the human form as subject.
On the occasion of Frank Stella: A Retrospective, this roundtable discussion with artists Walead Beshty, Keltie Ferris, Jordan Kantor, and Sarah Morris explores key aspects of Stella's heterogeneous approach to painting and its significance for younger generations of artists working today.
Explore highlights from the Art Fund Collection of Middle Eastern Photography with our map of the region and listen to the curator introduce key artists.
The most comprehensive exhibition to date of work by American artist Keith Edmier, the exhibition explores the artist's distinctive fusion of autobiography, popular culture, and collective consciousness in more than 40 works selected from key periods in Edmier's oeuvre.
Taking its cue from the upcoming general election, the Hayward Gallery asks six artists to curate individual displays exploring key moments in national history since 1945.
The exhibition explores work by key artists and collectives whose «critical provocations aim to forge reality free from ideology, to establish the individual apart from the collective, and to define contemporary Chinese experience in universal terms.»
In this film we visit the artist in his studio to explore three key works across his career: Looking for Langston (1969) is a lyrical exploration, and recreation, of the private world of poet, novelist and playwright, Langston Hughes (1902 - 1967) and his fellow black artists from the Harlem Renaissance.
A key component of the artist's practice is exploring symbolism in marketing, advertising, branding and sloganeering and «Hank Willis Thomas: Benchmarks» expands upon the effort.
Opens March 3, 2011 Making Histories: Changing Views of the Collection explores how a museum collection constructs and embodies histories to be reconsidered over time, offering various views into the museum's own history and its collections right up to the present day, through monographic installations of individual works or bodies of work by key artists and designers, thematic surveys, archival research projects, special projects and recent acquisitions.
The exhibition closes by exploring Paolozzi's work in the late 1980s to 90s with key sculptures that demonstrate the artist's returning interest in figuration, as well as his subversive approach to conventional notions of the multiple art object.
Presenting a survey of Cho Yong - Ik's works from the 70s, 80s and 90s, the exhibition explores how he both championed the movement's key tenets — repetition, meditation and tranquility through placing the «act of making» at the heart of creation — yet differentiated himself from other Dansaekhwa artists by placing a further emphasis on energetic materiality.
Taking their contributions to the 2012 Biennial as a point of departure, six Biennial artists explore key aspects of their practice to create distinctive evenings of performance, discussion, demonstration, and engagement.
Copresented with KQED SPARK, this workshop offers educators an opportunity to explore key themes of Bradford's work, methods of curriculum integration, and a special art activity from Open Studio, a collection of art - making ideas by artists.
This special event brings together artists and curators to explore some of the key themes and ideas emerging from the exhibition and catalogue Body & Void: Echoes of Moore in Contemporary Art.
Elderfield will explore the key questions of stylistic development, change, and continuity in the artist's work posed by the exhibition.
Sprüth Magers (Berlin, main) will bring together key figures of post war art with contemporary European and American artists whom they have influenced; and Franklin Parrasch (New York, main) will explore the history of art within America, showing work from the 1960s through the 1980s by Californian pioneers Peter Alexander, Billy Al Bengston, John McCracken, Ken Price, Deborah Remington and Ed Ruscha.
March 16 — May 17, 2012 For Whitney Biennial 2012, six Biennial artists explore key aspects of their practice to create distinctive evenings of performance, discussion, demonstration, and engagement.
Taking their contributions to 2010 as a point of departure, six Biennial artists explore key aspects of their practice to create distinctive evenings of performance, discussion, demonstration, and engagement.
She explores the landscape through five key exhibitions: «Electronic Refractions II» (1968) at the Studio Museum in Harlem; «Harlem on My Mind» (1969) at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; «Contemporary Black Artists in America» (1971) at the Whitney Museum of American Art»; and «Romare Bearden: The Prevalence of Ritual» (1971) and «The Sculpture of Richard Hunt» (1971) at the Museum of Modern Art.
Taking place within the galleries and focusing on specific works on display, the tour offers an insight into the curator's approach and provides an introduction to the conceptual artist's work and the key themes explored in the show.
This interest in identity — particularly in relation to gender — is key to Maclean's work, and the way that she uses her body as a medium through which to explore this brings to mind the art of feminist artists such as Cindy Sherman and Lynne Hershman Leeson.
Featuring work by Josef Albers, Anni Albers, Ruth Asawa, and Ray Johnson — all of whom were at Black Mountain College in North Carolina in the late 1940s — this exhibition will explore both the aesthetic and personal dialogue between these artists during their Black Mountain years and beyond; and will include a number of works exchanged amongst the group, in addition to a selection of key compositions influenced by their time there.
Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors is the first exhibition to explore the evolution of the celebrated Japanese artist's immersive, kaleidoscopic Infinity Mirror Rooms, alongside a selection of her other key works, some never before seen in the U.S..
Organized in groupings that explore varied themes — such as «Women, Men, and Other Beasts,» «Primal Landscapes,» «An Art of Memory,» and «Vicissitudes of the Grid» — the show features key works by artists such as Louise Bourgeois, Helen Frankenthaler, Adolph Gottlieb, Philip Guston, Willem and Elaine de Kooning, Louise Nevelson, Philip Pearlstein, and Robert Rauschenberg.
Curated by Daniela Ferrari, art historian and curator at the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art of Trento and Rovereto (MART), Italy, the exhibition will explore the use of text and the written word in the practice of major Post-War Italian artists including, Vincenzo Agnetti (1926 - 1981), Alighiero Boetti (1940 - 1994), Dadamaino (1930 - 2004), Lucio Fontana (1899 - 1968), Emilio Isgrò (b. 1937), Piero Manzoni (1933 - 1963), Mimmo Rotella (1918 - 2006), Salvo (1947 - 2015) and Mario Schifano (1934 - 1998), alongside key international artists including Cy Twombly (1928 - 2011), Joseph Kosuth (b. 1945), Jannis Kounellis (1936 - 2017), Mel Bochner (b. 1940), John Baldessari (b. 1931) and Tracey Emin (b. 1963).
Although it builds upon key resources, such as Ann Eden Gibson's Abstract Expressionism: Other Politics and Marter's 1997 Women and Abstract Expressionism exhibition at the Sidney Mishkin Gallery at Baruch College, Women of Abstract Expressionism is the first exhibition at a major museum with the singular purpose of exploring the contributions women artists made to Abstract Expressionism in America.
... For the moment, this publication is set to be the key text of recent times that attempts to explore and present something of the work of black British artists in the late 20th Century, but herein lies its biggest difficulty.
In his webinar, Designed Interdependence: DIY Residencies on November 13, he will explore the idea of conceiving and proposing your own, personalized artist residency that stresses the key values that artists specifically bring to the table as creative individuals.
Featuring over 90 extraordinary drawings and prints, this exhibition explores how six key post-war artists redefined art in Germany on both sides of the Iron Curtain.
Organized in conjunction with Alibis: Sigmar Polke 1963 — 2010, this panel discussion explores key aspects of Sigmar Polke's cross-disciplinary approach and its significance for artists working today.
Taking «world making» as a starting point also allows the exhibition to highlight the fundamental importance of certain key artists for the creativity of successive generations, just as much as exploring new spaces for art to unfold outside the institutional context and beyond the expectations of the art market.»
Terror and Beauty will explore the two artists» shared fascination with the human form in relation to the violence of the Second World War and other key events from the 20th century.
The exhibition also explores some of the key figures in the artist's life who were vital to his work including his wife Annette Giacometti, his brother Diego and his late mistress Caroline.
Key works include Andrew Erdos's Texture of a Ghost (2011), a 6 x 8 foot room featuring hand - blown glass sculptures and a video installation; Josiah McElheny's Landscape Model for Total Reflective Abstraction (I)(2004); Luke Jerram's E. coli (2010), which explores the tension between scientific objectivity and cultural perceptions of viruses, diseases, and bacteria; twelve snow globes by Walter Martin and Paloma Muñoz from the Travelers series; three stained glass light boxes by Judith Schaechter; and a recent body of work by Czech Republic - based artist Karen LaMonte that highlights the role of the kimono in Japanese culture.
These might be thought of as unanswerable questions, but by looking at key historical figures and exploring the private world of abstract artists today, Collings shows that there are, in fact, answers.
Taking their work on view as a point of departure, six Biennial artists, including Martin Kersels, Ari Marcopoulos, and Aki Sasamoto, among others, will explore a key aspect of their practice to create distinctive evenings of performance, discussion, demonstration, and engagement.
The gallery is happy to entrust the keys of its new space to this accomplished artist who pushes the boundaries of the arts, and explores all disciplines of knowledge and creation.
Taking place within the galleries and focusing on specific works on display, the tour offers an insight into the curator's approach and provides an introduction to the conceptual artist's work and the key themes explored the show.
For artists in NO MAN»S LAND, the physical process of making is key to developing meaning, exploring intellectual conundrums, and conjuring psychological experiences.
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