This SOW has been written to get year 9 students excited about art by
exploring urban artists and techniques.
Not exact matches
Presented through all of MUMA's recently designed galleries, the inaugural exhibition sees
artists explore performative, media and event cultures, and the post-industrial architecture of the
urban fringe, whilst others work with sound, light, sculpture, film, and painting in its diverse and expanded forms, offering a multi-sensory register of art and everyday life, from complex cultural perspectives.
It
explores the role of vernacular forms in some 40 works by more than two dozen contemporary
artists, which run the aesthetic gamut: the hand - crafted work of Aaron Spangler juxtaposes with Lari Pittman's carnivalesque day - glo paintings; Marc Swanson's glittering trophy heads with Rachel Harrison's
urban relics.
Submitted artwork should reflect the
artist's effort to
explore, through a combination of independent research and collaboration with scientific experts, the basic biology of their selected animal or animals, its
urban ecology, and the ways it interacts with humans.
Yes, Rowan University is a hike from the usual
urban art enclaves, but Dialogic, an engrossing and thoroughly entertaining show of 17
artists who
explore language and its hidden, implicit, and contradictory meanings, is well worth your time and the bridge toll.
His referential and detritus - like objects derive their meaning from a discourse based on everyday objects and the
urban environment and the meanings they acquire inside a number of socio - cultural contexts that the
artist explores.
SPRAWL Co-curated by former Houston Center for Contemporary Craft curatorial fellow Susie J. Silbert and former HCCC curator Anna Walker, SPRAWL
explores the
urban landscape with works by 16
artists presented in three thematic sections loosely based on the three phases of
urban growth.
Frances Lightbound is an interdisciplinary
artist from the UK, whose work
explores ideologies and power systems embedded in the
urban environment.
First launched in 1996, the biennale has always taken Shanghai as its primary focus, gathering the most talented international curators and
artists to
explore the connection between
urban life, contemporary...
In 1959, Mallary took a teaching position at Pratt and moved to New York, where he would combine the brooding weight and density of the New Mexico abstractions with ephemeral
urban detritus, creating works that established him among the core
artists exploring junk art, such as John Chamberlain, Richard Stankiewicz, Claes Oldenburg and Lee Bontecou.
International Deadline: June 1, 2018 — We invite
artists to collaborate with scientists to create art for this traveling exhibition that
explores the lives of wild animals in
urban areas and human responses.
Inspired by the High Line as an ambulatory space experienced most naturally in motion, Wanderlust extends the tradition of Conceptual art wherein the act of walking served as an inspiration for many
artists who
explored life both in the
urban context and in an ambivalent confrontation with nature.
With images that were made between the mid 1950's through the late 1970's, the exhibition
explores both
artist's affinity for using natural light to make grainy, blurred and out of focus photographs, trademarks of their work, while showing their own distinct stripped down version of the street and
urban life.
Francis Alÿs: A Story of Deception, a two - part exhibition on view at MoMA PS1 and The Museum of Modern Art, presents a range of work from the mid-1990s to today by the
artist Francis Alÿs (Belgian, b. 1959), who uses allegorical methods to
explore the cyclical nature of change in modernizing societies, the
urban landscape, and patterns of economic progress.
Female but maybe not Feminist, Biscayne Times, Victor Barrenechea, October 2008 Susan Lee - Chun
Artist Profile, Theme Magazine, May / June 2008 Miami Contemporary
Artists, Clear Magazine, April / May 2008 Voices, NY Arts, February / March 2008 Asian
Artists on Display in BMOCA Exhibits, Boulder Daily Camera, Jenny Bergen, February 22, 2008
Urban Art Access: Art Basel Miami Beach, December 2007 Art Basel Miami Beach Notebook: A Party for the Arty, Economist, Jessica Gallucci, December 2007 Miami Contemporary
Artists Book, Julie Davidow & Paul Clemence, November 2007 Susan Lee - Chun, H Magazine (Spain), Pedro Paricio, November 2007 Hurricane Project I, El Nuevo Herald, Adriana Herrera, Sept. 30, 2007 Los grabados de Goya inician una interesante temporada, El Nuevo Herald, Adriana Herrera, Sept. 16, 2007 Eight make the cut, Miami Herald, Daniel Chang, September 15, 2007 To the Brink and Back, Miami New Times, Carlos Suarez de Jesus, September 13, 2007 Body Double: Through a lens starkly, LA Times, Holly Myers, September 12, 2007 Ever more galleries in Wynwood, Miami Herald, Brett Sokol, September 7, 2007 Optic Nerve IX: MOCA Review, Miami Art Guide, Michelle Weinberg, September / October issue No. 10 Visual Power, Miami Herald, Tom Austin, August 5, 2007 Snitzer show brings 59 Homegrown
Artists together, Miami Herald, Elisa Turner, July 22, 2007 Wynwood Gallery Installations show the District «Artistic Heart, Miami Herald, Brett Sokol, July 13, 2007 Stop at X, Broward & Palm Beach New Times, Michael MIlls, April 26, 2007 Asian Style and Taste, LA Times, Scarlet Cheng, January 11, 2007 Banquet Art Exhibition at Pacific Asia Museum, The Epoch Times, Dan Sanchez, Dec. 10, 2006 Critic's Pick, Miami Herald, Elisa Turner, December 8, 2006 Almost Famous, Ocean Drive Magazine, October 2006 Young at Art, Miami Herald, Elisa Turner, September 10, 2006 Galleries & Museums, Chicago Reader, September 8, 2006 Home Groan, Miami New Times, Carlos Suarez De Jesus, August 16, 2006 Cuatro Artistas en Casa, El Nuevo Herald, Jose Antonio Evora, August 8, 2006
Urban Sprawl, Sun - Sentinel, Emma Trelles, July 30, 2006
Exploring Urban Life With Art «WLRN ArtStreet with Meredith Porte, July 2006 Around Town, Coral Gables Living Magazine, June / July 2006 Five Years and Going Strong, Design Miami Magazine (vol.1, No. 2), Tiffany Chestler, May 2006 Metro - Pictures, Miami Herald, Elisa Turner, May 14, 2006.
I rigorously
explore the backgrounds of subjects as varied as the the Polish
artist Edward Krasinski, the MGM lion,
urban development in the city of Bangalore, India, and the Viennese philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein.
Through a series of conversations with the city's leading
artists and intellectuals, Maltzan
explores such issues as real - estate speculation and future
urban development, infrastructure, resources, site density,
urban experience, political structure, commerce and community, attempting to transform our understanding of how each affects present - day Los Angeles.
James McNabb is a talented Philadelphia - based
artist who
explores the
urban landscape with his highly - detailed wooden cityscapes.
Recent feminist authors and visual
artists explore the «trending» parallels between vernacular architectures in virtual and (sub)
urban spaces.
Mark Bradford is the first museum survey of the work of the Los Angeles - based
artist whose work
explores the structures of
urban society, often defined by race, gender, and class.
Liu Wei (born 1972, Beijing) is one of the most talented Chinese visual
artists, widely known for his paintings, sculptures and installation works which
explore contradictions of modern societies and the transformation of the
urban landscape in developing cities in the post-Mao era of China's rapid urbanization.
Street Seens is the third book in the
Urban Poetry series of artist books that explore various types of street graphics found in our urban environ
Urban Poetry series of
artist books that
explore various types of street graphics found in our
urban environ
urban environment.
Our Visual Arts, Performing Arts and
Urban Studies programs provide enriching opportunities for students to make connections to working
artists and
explore their own creativity.
the Berlin - based
artist collective Club Real aims to
explore these questions and some of the city's projects in order to widen the perspective on the possibilities and limitations of participation in art and art interventions in public
urban spaces, using the concept of «disturbances of every day life» and presentations as a form of intervention.
In a city that is becoming more and more dense and utilized, the Berlin - based
artist collective Club Real aims to
explore the above questions and some of the city's projects in order to widen the perspective on the possibilities and limitations of participation in art and art interventions in public
urban spaces, using the concept of «disturbances of every day life» and presentations as a form of intervention.
Buhe will
explore the ways
artists and their communities have interacted with the
urban environment during the early and mid-twentieth century.
Kim Abeles is an
artist who crosses disciplines and media to
explore and map the
urban environment and chronicle broad social issues.
Through a repurposing of
urban detritus, this New York — based
artist explores the semiotics of politics, economics, labor, and migration in his sculptural installations.
Artist Statement: Liene Bosquê's installations, sculptures and social engaged work
explores sensorial experience within architectural,
urban and personal spaces; emphasizing context, memory, and history.
In this exhibition, the
artist explores the idea of the
urban environment.
, an exhibition featuring the video work of sixteen international
artists who
explore aspects of Shanghai's rapidly evolving
urban culture.
Exploring how
artists interpret
urban and rural landscape through the lens of their own cultural, political or spiritual ideologies, the exhibition reveals the inherent tensions between landscape represented as a transcendental or spiritual place, and one rooted in social and political histories.
Featuring the work of various
artists representing creatures and stories of both myth and reality, «A Bestiary»
explores the apparent juxtapositions of the
urban bestiary, relating to both the 1995 show and the present.
A Shade Away will feature new work by Denver - based
artist Derrick Velasquez, who uses prefabricated architectural moldings to
explore the broader politics of design and
urban development.
The
artist's intention is to establish a progressive path through several purposefully built interconnected environments which enables the viewer to experience the passage from a dimension of noise, chaos and visual saturation — expressing life in contemporary cities — to a neutral setting where he intends to conduct a methodical dissection of familiar
urban components with recourse to the unconventional media and destructive techniques which he has been
exploring in his work.»
In his upcoming exhibition «Animal», the Spanish
urban artist aims to
explore the conflict between our innate animal instincts and our present lives, which are coated with the dependence of technology and our fear for the unknown.
Its concept, which has remained essentially unchanged over the past decades, reflects the ideas of the participating
artists; the curatorial team invites
artists from all over the globe to
explore the relationship between art, public space, and the
urban environment, and to develop new, site - specific works.
-LSB-...] Curator and writer Carla Acevedo - Yates reviews an
urban art project by Puerto Rican
artist Pepón Osorio, «reForm» (August 28, 2015 - May 20, 2016, commissioned by Temple Contemporary, Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia), a two - year installation and public engagement project
exploring the loss experienced by a Puerto Rican community with the closing of Fairhill Middle School in North Philadelphia, a public school established in 1887 and then shut by the Philadelphia School Reform Commission in 2013.
For nearly fifty years, the Harrisons have produced work across a vast range of disciplines, working in collaboration with biologists, ecologists, historians, activists, architects,
urban planners and fellow
artists to initiate dialogues and create works
exploring biodiversity and community development.
Emerging Indian
artist Sahil Naik
explores the links between acts of destruction, the media and
urban environment in «Ground Zero».
Snap Judgments
explores African photography in terms of content and style, organized into four main thematic groups that reflect the issues addressed by African
artists today — landscape;
urban formations; the body and identity; and history and representation — around which Africa's experimental
artists have articulated individual artistic styles and languages.
Artist Heidi Nam's mixed media and collage works
explore the transient state of our rapidly changing
urban spaces.
Born in Miami of Cuban parents
artist José Parlá's vibrant works
explore the multi-layered histories of cities and
urban environments; his paintings and site - specific installations are created both in his large carriage house studio and also works outside throughout city surfaces.
In an age when Banksy's installations are protected by Plexiglas and graffiti
artists exhibit in galleries as well as on the street, «Make Your Mark»
explores the work of thirty - five
urban artists who use mark - making techniques — drawing, painting, and other methods — to create a diverse array of work.
As an
artist with a background in
urban planning and archaeology, Uzelman works with scavenged materials
exploring the possible histories embedded in found objects.
Gordon Matta - Clark was an American
artist best known for his site - specific artworks he made in the 1970s, whose practice consisted of
exploring and subverting
urban architecture.
Kim Abeles is a Los Angeles
artist who
explores and maps her
urban environment to chronicle broad social issues.
Artists featured
explore the rural and
urban through documentary methods as well as constructed, stylistic approaches.
Searching for truth in new places, these
artists explored materials that came from
urban and industrial refuse.
Mennour juxtaposes Morellet, a pioneering minimalist who passed away in 2016 at the age of 90, with Mohamed Bourouissa, a young Algerian - born Parisian
artist whose multimedia practice
explores contemporary social tensions and cultural idiosyncrasies, especially in
urban environments.