Between 40 and 50 artists will
give small artworks, with each receiving a commission of their choice.
Not exact matches
Jenkins» gorgeous collage
artwork and impeccable design sense combine to
give children a tantalizing, comparative view of creatures large and
small, with petite critters depicted alongside cropped portions of much larger beasts.
-LCB- page: Section1; -RCB--- > Bristol based Artist, Heather Tweed will again be
giving residents and visitors to Edinburgh the chance to search for and keep a series of
small artworks that will be hidden around the City Centre.
In contrast to Miyajima's large scale public
artworks, which
give an idea of the immersive nature of his work but are not on display during the exhibition in Sydney, his exhibited Pile Up Life sculptures (2009) are
small «stupas» moulded from dried earth and studded with blue or red LEDs.
No matter where you are, there's plenty to keep you busy until the end of the year: All around the world, from Alcatraz to Beijing, museums, galleries and other arts institutions are
giving us good reason to fill our social calendars — even on the
smaller scale (take the first ever showcase of all of artist Louise Bourgeois's famous hanging
artworks, for example, or the limited - time, roving installation «You Belong Here,» currently afloat in neon on the Mississippi River in New Orleans).
Olga furnished her snug bijou of a space with gifts of
small - scale
artworks that she was
given by her husband, artist friends, dealers and other collectors.
Beginning in the early nineties, McCollum expanded his interests in quantity production to include explorations into the ways regional communities
give meaning to local landmarks and geological oddities in establishing community identity, and collaborated with a number of
small towns and
small historical museums in Europe and throughout the United States, bringing attention to the way local narratives develop around objects peculiar to geographic regions, and drawing comparisons to the way
artworks develop meaning in a parallel manner.
Originally conceived in 1995 by curators Hans Ulrich Obrist and artist Christian Boltanski for London's Serpentine Gallery (but on a much
smaller scale), the exhibition «Take Me (I «m Yours)» touches on themes of ownership and consumer culture and encourages viewers to engage with
artworks by
giving them away.
A
small stretch of wall between two doors in this entryway could've easily been overlooked and ignored, but functional
artwork and a singular chair
give it purpose and presence, practically asking people to stop for a moment and take a look around.