Sentences with phrase «glass collection features»

Not exact matches

Made of mouth - blown glass, this colorful glassware collection featuring Charley Harper's original artwork is a charming, whimsical way to serve your favorite drinks.
This curated collection from Space.NK.Apothecary features eight cult beauty products, among them Oribe Dry Texturizing Spray, Smith & Cult Glass Souls Nail Lacquer and Kevyn Aucoin Beauty The Volume Mascara.
The collection features an array of dynamic staples and statement pieces all consciously made with sustainable materials like organic silk and recycled glass.
Twice during Steven Spielberg's Lincoln, a collection of glass plate photographs are featured.
Housed in a turn - of - the - century landmark Beaux Arts building, XV Beacon blends magnificent historical detailing with modern opulence, featuring a grand marble staircase, mahogany paneling, original caged - glass elevator, and a distinguished art collection.
The ever growing exhibits at MOCA feature painting, sculpture, photography and glass collections.
Upon arrival at this 70 - story, glass - and - granite edifice in the center of Miami's business district, guests enter a cavernous lobby featuring a high arched ceiling, trickling water wall, and colossal sculptures that are part of the hotel's $ 3.3 million Latin American art collection.
The first geographical feature you'll notice is the Glass House Mountains — a collection of volcanic cores that pop up from the surrounding plain.
Villa You features large floor to bottom glass windows, so guests will enjoy the beautiful views, Part of Haute Retreats Exclusive Luxury Villa Rentals St. Barts collection.
The prolific Iranian artist, now 90, is most famous for her mirror mosaics and mirror - reverse glass painting; however, the Infinite Possibility collection also features a number of her sketches and drawings, providing a unique look at this extraordinary artist.
The Museum's collection also includes a large installation of art glass by Dale Chihuly, featured in the third floor galleries.
The pastoral 49 - acre landscape comprises fourteen structures, including the Glass House (1949), and features a permanent collection of 20th - century painting and sculpture, along with temporary exhibitions.The campus serves as a catalyst for the preservation and interpretation of modern architecture, landscape, and art; and a canvas for inspiration and experimentation, honoring the legacy of Philip Johnson (1906 -2005) and his partner, David Whitney (1939 -2005).
Misha Nonoo and artist Dustin Yellin have collaborated for a series of custom prints that were featured in Nonoo's s / s 2015 collection, inspired by Yellin's three - dimensional, life size glass sculptures made out from magazine cutouts, flowers, leaves, bugs and things found on the street.
Inspired by the Columbus Museum of Art's Picasso Still Life with Compote and Glass, 1914 — 15 and the Barnes's extensive Picasso holdings, Picasso: The Great War, Experimentation and Change features some 50 works by Picasso drawn from major American and European museums and private collections.
Featuring an iconic wavy glass façade designed by Japanese architect Kisho Kurokawa, The National Art Center, Tokyo does not maintain a permanent collection and relies on loans and travelling exhibitions.
Its permanent collection features ancient antiquities, Asian art, pottery and glass, furniture, clocks, armour, coins and medals, illuminated manuscripts and rare books.
Finch's talk at the New School will focus on the artist's various public and large - scale installations like A Certain Slant of Light (2014 - 15), a site - specific installation at the Morgan Library inspired by its collection of medieval Books of Hours; Trying to Remember the Color of the Sky on That September Morning (2014), a commission for the National September 11 Memorialand Museum composed of 2,983 individual watercolors representing the artist's recollection of the sky on September 11, 2001; Painting Air (2012), an installation of more than 100 panels of suspended glass inspired by the colors of Claude Monet's garden at Giverny; and The River That Flows Both Ways (2009), a permanent installation on New York's High Line featuring an existing series of windows which Finch transformed with 700 individual panes of glass representing the water conditions on the Hudson River over 700 minutes in a single day.
Featured in its world renowned collections are: glass, ceramics, textiles and tapestries, costumes, silver, metalwork, jewellery, prints and printmaking, drawings and photographs.
115, No. 4 Bui, Phong «Artists to Artists», Volume 2, 25 Years of the Marie Walsh Sharpe Space Program Mason, Isabella «Katie Bell at Locust Projects, Miami», Blouin ArtInfo, Nov. 4th Kaiser - Schatzlein, Rob «Katie Bell's Miami Breakthrough», Two Coats of Paint, Sept. 23 Saltz, Jerry, «Never Has My Breath Been Taken Away Like It Was at Knockdown Center» Vulture, June 16 Final Fridays, Artist Interviews Podcast, Episode 17 2015 Namesake, «Namesakes: Katie Bell», Oct. 19 Montem Magazine, Issue # 5 (Tokyo, Japan) Pini, Gary, ’10 Must - See Art Shows Opening this Week», Paper Magazine, Sept. 23 Salama, Cecilia, «Artist Katie Bell Will Pull the Rug Out From Under You», Opening Ceremony Blog, Sept. 24 Johnson, Paddy, «This Weeks Must See Events: Butch Queens and Dykes in Brooklyn, Regular Queens Has Everything Else», Art F City, Sept 21 Butler, Sharon, «Revitalization by Contamination», Two Coats of Paint, Aug. 2 Mullis, Sidney, Maake Magazine, Featured Interview, Fall 2015 2014 BRIC Arts Media, «BRIC Biennial: Volume 1, Downtown Edition», Sept 20 (Exhibition Catalog) Steele, Marjorie, «Reconstructing History: Artists Create Community inside Site: Lab», The Rapidian, Sept. 21 Konau, Britta, «Gouge, Break, and Hammer», The Portland Phoenix, June 25 Eastabrooks, Erin, «The Home - Wrecker: Interview with Brooklyn Artist Katie Bell», SHK Magazine, May 19 Scott, Megan, «18 Under 37 ″, Knox Magazine, Spring 2014 Toomer, Helen, «How Art World Insiders Started Their Must - See Collections», Refinery 29, March 25 Galgiani, Allison, «Artist FlashCards: Why Katie Bell is Boss», Bushwick Daily, March 26 Kimball, Whitney, «Color Wheel: Katie Bell», Art F City, March 12 New American Paintings, # 110, Northeast Edition, March 2014 Bell, Katie, «IMG MGMT: Katie Bell, How We Met», Art F City, Jan 8 «The Form», Viewpoint Magazine UK, No. 33, p. 162-163 2013 Smyth, Cherry and Jost Münster, «Limber: Spatial Painting Practices», Sept. 13 (Exhibition catalog) Katz, Samantha, «Material», Gallery Glass, Episode17, Sept. 17 Steinhauer, Jillian, «Art Rx», Hyperallergic, Sept. 3 «Material», Time Out New York, August 27 Sculpture Center Tumblr, Featured Artist, «Katie Bell», April 22 Cole, Lori, «PAINT THINGS, Beyond the Stretcher», Critics» Picks, Art Forum, March 26 Johnson, Paddy, «8 Great Brooklyn Artists Under 30», The L Magazine, March 13 - 26, Vol.
She championed the presentation of many groundbreaking exhibitions and secured major collection gifts, including the Haub Family Collection of Western American art; 30 masterworks from the 1790s to the present by Charles Bird King, Thomas Moran, Frederic Remington, Georgia O'Keeffe and others; and the Rebecca and Jack Benaroya Collection comprising 225 works including American studio glass featuring Pilchuck Glass School artists such as Dale Chihuly, Ginny Ruffner and Therman Statom, as well as artworks by Northwest artists such as Morris Graves and Deborah Butterfglass featuring Pilchuck Glass School artists such as Dale Chihuly, Ginny Ruffner and Therman Statom, as well as artworks by Northwest artists such as Morris Graves and Deborah ButterfGlass School artists such as Dale Chihuly, Ginny Ruffner and Therman Statom, as well as artworks by Northwest artists such as Morris Graves and Deborah Butterfield.
Consider Fahrbare schwarze Sesselgruppe (Driveable Black Group of Chairs)(1971), a pair of black and chrome forms on casters joined by drooping hoses; and Fingerbank (1979), a collection of pendulous black tubes encased in glass — both of which featured prominently in «Ungestalt,» a group show at the Kunsthalle Basel last summer, alongside work by a multi-generational group of artists, from Marcel Duchamp to Adrián Villar Rojas.
Transformations include the Dorchester Projects, a pair of vacant two - story houses renovated for reuse as a library featuring an inventory of 8,000 LPs from Dr. Wax Records, a record store that closed in nearby Hyde Park; 14,000 volumes from the now - shuttered Prairie Avenue Art and Architecture Bookstore; a collection of glass lantern slides (60,000 images) from the University of Chicago's Art History Department; and temporarily, an archive of Ebony and Jet magazines; as well as a and soul food kitchen.
Located in Basque city of Bilbao in northern Spain, this spectacular structure made of titanium, glass, and limestone features exhibitions organized by the Guggenheim Foundation and by the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, as well as selections from the permanent collection of the Guggenheim museums.
Cigarettes and smoking have featured repeatedly in Hirst's works, as a series of stubs individually isolated and displayed on seventeen rows of narrow shelves in a glass - fronted cabinet in Dead Ends, Died Out, Examined 1993 (private collection), or heaped in a stinking mass of butts, ash and other smokers» detritus in an eight foot wide white ashtray called Party Time 1995 (Denver Art Museum).
Greek and Roman antiquities; Chinese bronzes, tomb figurines, paintings, and calligraphy; an important collection of Pre-Columbian art; medieval European sculpture, metalwork, and stained glass; Renaissance, Baroque, Rococo and 19th - century paintings; 20th - century works by contemporary artists such as Andy Warhol; a major collection of 27,000 original photographs; and 20th - century sculpture, featuring masters like Calder, Lipchitz, Moore and Picasso.
Products launching at the fair include a collection of tables designed by architect Hans Bølling, customisable glass shelving by Werner Aisslinger and stools by Fabio Hendry and Martijn Rigters featuring patterns made from burnt hair.
The Spheres, a collection of three connected glass globes sharing a single environment, encompasses 40,000 plants, as well as rainforest - like water features and trees.
Tactile textures and crafted shapes are well to the fore, with materials such as stoneware, timber, glass and brass featuring strongly in the collection, which includes everything from hurricane lamps, jugs, vases, candlesticks and table lamps to stools, coffee tables, folding screens and shelving.
Part of the Light collection, combining traditional glass blowing techniques and precious materials, this elegant lamp features a base composed of two Murano mouth - blow glass globes.
Check out the exclusive Conran Italia collection (pictured) which features a range of Italian made furniture, hand - blown glass, lighting and decorative accessories including Paola Navone's monochrome serveware.
Inspired by finely crafted jewelry, this exclusive collection features highly decorated glass Christmas ornaments.
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