Violence and cultural sophistication may in fact have gone hand in hand in creating
the first urban societies.
Not exact matches
1988 14 th Street Dance Center / Emanu - el Midtown YM - YWHA Artists Space Bang on a Can Composers» Forum Gyula Csapó Cunningham Dance Foundation Dance Theater Workshop Dancing in the Streets Danspace Project The Drawing Center En Garde Arts Grand Windows Amy Greenfield John Jesurun The Kitchen The Knitting Factory Robert Kovich Susan Marshall & Company Movement Research Phill Niblock / Experimental Intermedia Foundation Maria Nordman Performance Space 122 The Poetry Project Primary Performance Group PS 1 / Institute for Art and
Urban Resources Real Art Ways Susan Rethorst Roulette Ellsworth Snyder / The
First Unitarian
Society Elizabeth Streb / Ringside Sun & Moon Press Telluride Institute David Tudor White Columns The Wooster Group Bill Young and Dancers
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.
Translated into English for the
first time, the voices of these characters are manifested in a sound installation in the Curve, where the earthquake comes to represent the rising tensions of
society facing the ruins of
urban environment, political and religious power and social relationships.
The Chiltern Street gallery was key to the launch of the Superhumanism (or Super Humanism) movement, [6] which is defined as «art about people, people living the life of an
urban society», [7] and about which Treadwell wrote the
first book in 1979.
«But even this remarkably adaptable
society — one of the
first urban civilisations built in a desert — could not cope forever with a falling water table and intensifying aridity.
Having watched
urban beekeeping grow from an illegal, underground activity into an accepted part of community sustainability, she suggests that she too has found her place in
society as a result: «This is the
first time in my life when I've just felt absolutely on the right path.»
For the
first time, the U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD) has asked the American
Society of Home Inspectors (ASHI) to give information to prospective home buyers that explains: