Sentences with phrase «features artists who»

Drawn primarily from the Arts Council Collection and supplemented by loans from other major UK collections, as well as the artists themselves, this exhibition features artists who have made some of the greatest contributions to art in Britain in the past forty years or more, including Tony Cragg, Antony Gormley, Hamish Fulton, Richard Long, Anthony McCall and David Nash.
Not unlike Arte Viva Arte, the much - critiqued international group show curated by Christine Macel at the 2017 Venice Biennale, this year's Sondheim Finalist exhibition features artists who embrace staunchly personal content rather than the collective or social.
It features artists who have participated in Light Work's Artist - in - Residence and exhibition programs.
He was the first artist to participate in the project «Inside the White Cube», which features artists who are not represented by the British gallery.
Galan makes a balance of the period in which besides participating in the residence he also set up a major solo exhibition at White Cube, as a part of the project «Inside the White Cube,» which features artists who are not represented by the British gallery.
The show features artists who have ties to Connecticut, as a place to live and / or work.
The international group exhibition at Kunstpalais features artists who approach the topic in a variety of media.
Galan makes a balance of the period, in which besides participating in the residency, he also set up a major solo exhibition at White Cube, as a part of the project «Inside the White Cube,» which features artists who are not represented by the British gallery.
The catalogue, which accompanies the circulating exhibition curated by Michael A. Quigley, includes essays by Sarah McFadden and Carter Ratcliff commenting on the historical perspective of textile - based art and features artists who sought projects outside the restrictions of the commercial fabric industry.
Taken loosely from Louise Bourgeois» renowned series of psychologically rich environments, the exhibition features artists who expose the tensions between functionality and aesthetics.
An installation dedicated to New York in the 1980s explores the period of creative revitalization in such neighborhoods as the East Village and Soho and features artists who frequently worked across disciplines and in collaboration with one another, including Ashley Bickerton, George Condo, Nan Goldin, and Sherrie Levine.
Southland, curated by Patrick Martinez, features artists who shed light on these underrepresented communities and areas of the city: Downtown, San Bernardino, the Eastside, and the High Desert further East.
The exhibition features artists who employ rural images and subjects such as horseracing, honkytonks, and homesteading, and addresses how the visual culture of geographic regions shapes perception and identity.
Following earlier editions on the 2001 - 2002 New York art season, on neglected artists from the 80s and early 90s, and on museum acquisitions, this new volume rounds up the stray dogs of contemporary art — Charley 5 features artists who have remained forgotten, proudly secluded or just unnoticed, in spite of their visionary work.
Sisters of the Moon features artists who investigate ideas related to mysticism and mythology, illuminating the creative spaces where female identity, artistic practice and spirituality converge.
The show features artists who have come to be associated with Last Rites — Dan Quintana, Naoto Hattori, David Stoupakis, menton3, Paul Booth — as well as many unexpected participants like Hannah Yata, Nicomi Nix Turner, Brin Levinson and Jean Labourdette.
Co-curated by Constance M. Lewallen and Karen Moss, and initially developed as part of the Getty Foundation's collaborative exhibition series Pacific Standard Time, State of Mind features artists who played a seminal role in the emergence of «California Conceptualism.»
This fun, highly eclectic show features artists who happily appropriate found objects from everyday life, manipulate and copy them to prevent them from disappearing.
This group exhibition features artists who consider how time is shaped and made visible through performed acts, unique measuring systems, and other uncommon means.
Recasting Site features artists who emphasize the rediscovery of the ordinary by subverting the commercial and cultural packaging of experience.
The Time Is N ♀ w features artists who represent a variety of positions on the spectrum from figural representation to abstraction, including: Magdalena Abakanowicz, Ruth Asawa, Hannelore Baron, Mary Bauermeister, Lee Bontecou, Deborah Butterfield, Barbara Chase - Riboud, Elaine de Kooning, Jay DeFeo, Claire Falkenstein, Gertrude Greene, Nancy Grossman, Grace Hartigan, Lee Krasner, Yayoi Kusama, Lee Lozano, Alice Trumbull Mason, Joan Mitchell, Alice Neel, Louise Nevelson, Agnes Pelton, Florence Miller Pierce, Irene Rice Pereira, Anne Ryan, Betye Saar, Kaye Sage, Janet Sobel, Nancy Spero, Dorothea Tanning, Lenore Tawney, Alma Thomas, Charmion von Wiegand, and Claire Zeisler.
Blow Up: Inflatable Contemporary Art features artists who use air as a sculptural medium.
This episode features artists who synthesize disparate aesthetic traditions, present taboo subject matter, discover innovative uses of media, and explore the shape - shifting potential of the human figure.
Curated by Sam Jablon, this show features artists who play with the line between abstraction and language.
From the studio as a site of labor, to one that blurs production, performance, and spectacle, to a concept that defines the artist's own identity, the exhibition features artists who, in response to changing socio - economic influences, represented new modes of working and living that would subsequently spread across society.
This month, Sculpture features artists who transform materials and processes to conceive new ways of approaching sculptural form.
The Time Is Now features artists who represent a variety of positions on the spectrum from figural representation to abstraction, including: Magdalena Abakanowicz, Ruth Asawa, Hannelore Baron, Mary Bauermeister, Lee Bontecou, Deborah Butterfield, Barbara Chase - Riboud, Elaine de Kooning, Jay DeFeo, Claire Falkenstein, Gertrude Greene, Nancy Grossman, Grace Hartigan, Lee Krasner, Yayoi Kusama, Lee Lozano, Alice Trumbull Mason, Joan Mitchell, Alice Neel, Louise Nevelson, Agnes Pelton, Florence Miller Pierce, Irene Rice Pereira, Anne Ryan, Betye Saar, Kaye Sage, Janet Sobel, Nancy Spero, Dorothea Tanning, Lenore Tawney, Alma Thomas, Charmion von Wiegand, and Claire Zeisler.
Summerford Legacy features artists who have studied under Professor Summerford.
This experiment is aligned with the Pulitzer's current exhibition, Art of Its Own Making, which features artists who examine materials, environment, and how generative elements impact the works of art they create.
The exhibitions of photographic portraiture features artists who blur the line between editorial photography and fine art, and includes Valerie Belin, Robert Bergman, Elkins, Jill Greenberg, Steve Pyke, Tomoko Sawada and Martin Schoeller.
This exhibition features artists who expand the domains of self - portraiture by blurring the distinction between reality and fantasy, artifice and authenticity, and public and private imagery.
Bronx Calling features artists who participated during the past two years and is presented concurrently at The Bronx Museum of the Arts and Wave Hill.
From the studio as a site of labor, to one that blurs production, performance, and spectacle, the exhibition features artists who have contended with rapidly evolving socio - economic influences and have reflected new ways of living and working in their own studios and practices.
Michelle Grabner (Professor in the Painting and Drawing Department at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, who also teaches at Yale, is an artist herself, and oversees two alternative art spaces in the Midwest) noted that her section of the 2014 Whitney Biennial «features artists who have come to the fore as figures of influence, both inside and outside the geographic and commercial centers of the art world.
The show features artists who have adapted the techniques of Pop Art into their own unique contemporary styles.
Taking the use of the age - old measurement unit the cubit (the length of a forearm) in ancient art forms as a point of departure, this show features artists who have developed their own systematic approaches to artmaking.
The idea is to feature every artist who participates in the 2015 exhibition with an image of the work donated and their information.
The exhibition, which reflects the gallery's focus on both Modern and contemporary art, will encompass a variety of schools and movements (such as the Cubists and British Modernists) and will feature artists who are contemporaries of, or influenced by, one another.
This is the Queens Museum's biennial exhibition featuring artists who live and work in the city's most ethnically diverse borough.
Opening tonight is a group exhibition curated by Ricky Swallow titled, «GRAPEVINE ~» featuring artists who have all worked in clay, in California, for more than 40 years.
The exhibition intends to feature both artists who clearly use traditional drawing methods to forge their artistic language, and artists — who although not traditional draughtsmen, have produced works which can be closely related to a vision of what does, in fact, constitute a drawing.
Fergus McCaffrey opens a six - week series of performance art featuring artists who use their bodies and materials to create site - specific work, including live performance, sound, installation and supporting multimedia works with all set within the context of the gallery.
Participating Artists: Diana Gabriel, Magalie Guerin, Alexander Herzog, John Phillips, Melody Saraniti, Christopher Smith, Scott Stack January 25 — February 21, 2015 Reception: Sunday, January 25, 3 6 pm Curated by Karen Azarnia The Riverside Arts Center is pleased to present All In, a group exhibition featuring artists who share a love for painting and a reverence for abstraction.
This section will feature artists who received their gallery debuts with Hudson, or who had a long history with Feature Inc. in the 1980s and»90s, like Tom of Finland at David Kordansky, Takashi Murakami at Gagosian, and Raymond Pettibon at David Zwirner.
Titled For Your Infotainment / Hudson and Feature Inc., the section at Frieze New York will feature artists who received their gallery debuts or had a long history at Feature Inc. in the 1980s and «90s, which includes such seminal figures as Tom of Finland, Raymond Pettibon, Tom Friedman and Takashi Murakami.
One show featured an artist who sketched, painted and made ceramic models of extant buildings throughout Newark.
«In its first year,» says Silverman, «I will curate a series of shows featuring artists who explore the explicit tropes and subtle nuances of design in their artworks.
Featuring artists who worked across Latin America, the USA, and Western Europe, it also sheds new light on the diverse body of British artists who formed part of Signals London's network.
Southern Exposure's group exhibition White Hot Lamp Black explores the edges of perception, featuring artists who -LSB-.....]
New scholarship was presented and panels featured the artists who contributed commissioned works to the exhibition — Derrick Adams, Aaron Fowler, Meleko Mokgosi, Barbara Earl Thomas, and Hank Willis Thomas.
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