Not exact matches
The twelve - song album includes
nineteenth -
and twentieth - century bluegrass classics, such as Jefferson Hascal's «Angel Band» (prominently
featured in the Cohen Brothers» O Brother, Where Art Thou?)
Featuring clips from the film Sholem Aleichem: Laughing in the Darkness, along with lesson plans
and historical background readings, this collection invites students to connect Aleichem's life to the larger transformation of traditional Jewish identity in late
nineteenth -
and early
twentieth - century Eastern Europe.
The exhibition
features almost sixty drawings by many of the artists who have shaped the course of
nineteenth -
and twentieth - century art, from Eugène Delacroix, Edouard Manet, Mary Cassatt,
and Gustav Klimt to Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Robert Motherwell, Richard Diebenkorn, Andy Warhol, Sam Francis,
and David Hockney.
Our extensive inventory of
nineteenth -
and early
twentieth - century American art regularly
features landscapes in the Hudson River School
and luminist styles, as well as still - life, genre,
and marine subjects.
In addition, the exhibition will
feature nearly fifty works from Flavin's personal collection of drawings, including
nineteenth - century American landscapes by Hudson River School artists, Japanese drawings,
and twentieth - century works by artists such as Piet Mondrian, Donald Judd,
and Sol LeWitt.
The three works selected for Soundtracks are Sphere Packing: Mozart (2014; white polymer, 565 audio channels), Sphere Packing: Wagner (2013; glazed porcelain, 110 audio channels),
and Sphere Packing: Cage (2014; plastic, 269 audio channels)-- an abridged walk through the eighteenth,
nineteenth,
and twentieth centuries.2 The series as a whole,
featuring seventeen composers, constitutes nothing less than a broad history of classical music, with surprising insights in terms of productivity, ranging from seventeen compositions (by Claudio Monteverdi) to 1,128 (by Johann Sebastian Bach).
Laurence Miller Gallery is pleased to present Pursuing the Sublime, an exhibition
featuring five contemporary photographers in conversation with five
nineteenth and early
twentieth century Japanese print makers.
Previous exhibitions have
featured Laura Owens (also paired with the Balfour collection) in 2000; Rudolf Stingel (with
nineteenth - century botanical drawings by Indian artists) in 2006,
and John Cage with Merce Cunningham (shown with early
twentieth - century botanical drawings by Lilian Snelling) in 2007.
Highlights from each of these collections
feature prominently in Visionaries
and convey a narrative on avant - garde innovation in the late
nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries.
In addition the exhibition
features nearly fifty works from Flavin's personal collection of drawings, including
nineteenth - century American landscapes by Hudson River School artists, Japanese drawings,
and twentieth - century works by artists such as Piet Mondrian, Donald Judd,
and Sol LeWitt.