Sentences with phrase «idiosyncratic forms»

Philip Guston is a painter's painter: uninhibited by prevailing movements and continuously pursuing his own language of representation he has managed to move between abstraction and his own idiosyncratic forms of representation with a freedom few artists possess.
They are reined in by architectonic structures, broad fields of color are interrupted by smaller gestures and idiosyncratic forms... his work has a palimpsest effect, where layers of previous activity bleed through the final layers of paint.»
Using the mechanics of collage as a deliberate metaphor for violence, Williams makes repetitive and idiosyncratic forms, fitted from content around specific incidents of sociological chaos.
I am often attracted to paintings of things the way they are found in nature, respecting its subtle tones and mysterious, idiosyncratic forms.
Each artist in the exhibition works though certain media tropes, which are neither appropriated nor directly quoted, but rather percolate within the subconscious and manifest in highly idiosyncratic forms.
Penn has fame, money, his own idiosyncratic form of «suave» and, although far from a favorite performer of mine, a fair degree of sophistication and Are Charlize Theron and Sean Penn more than just friends?
In an essay for Time Penn has fame, money, his own idiosyncratic form of «suave» and, although far from a favorite performer of mine, a fair degree of sophistication and
These pics were taken Penn has fame, money, his own idiosyncratic form of «suave» and, although far from a favorite performer of mine, a fair degree of sophistication and
Penn has fame, money, his own idiosyncratic form of «suave» and, although far from a favorite performer of mine, a fair degree of sophistication and Sean Penn is speaking out following Donald Trump «s «disgraceful» comments about immigrants from Haiti and Africa.
The title of the exhibition, Stones to Stains, alludes to the development of the artist's idiosyncratic form of draftsmanship and its relationship to the transformative properties of water.
The overall form of each work is deliberately eccentric; little regularity is found on the outside edges, which curve and veer and jut out, emphasizing idiosyncratic form over tightly considered composition.

Not exact matches

Bottom line: There's no free lunch on Wall Street and just about every asset class carries its own form of idiosyncratic risk.
Is there something that these systems share in common that would form a new kind of science, or is it all idiosyncratic and special?
Instead, an immediate response in the form of an idiosyncratic immune reaction in genetically susceptible children that takes place within 24 h after inhalation of the etiologic trigger is further reinforced by our results.
A late - night jam that found neighbors phoning police made headlines the following year, and the Hulk came and went with disappointing results.In the subsequent period, Nolte remained in good form, with idiosyncratic and fascinating roles.
In 2006, Jewel formed his own idiosyncratic, independent label Italians Do It Better with Mike Simonetti.
Long, languid takes combined with Thelma Schoonmaker's perfectly idiosyncratic editing style makes this a triumph of form.
Solondz takes that recent comic staple of the overgrown stay - at - home — see also the Duplasses» Jeff Who Lives at Home — and creates what could form a companion piece to Paul Thomas Anderson's idiosyncratic Adam Sandler vehicle, Punch - Drunk Love (2002).
The romance cover is a highly idiosyncratic art form.
These small motels are idiosyncratic examples of the period's Modernist style, with their elementary forms, flat roofs, large windows, and primary colors.
Much of late - 20th - century sculpture seems presaged by this idiosyncratic amalgam, not least the geometric forms of Minimalism, and the spirals of Robert Smithson and Richard Serra.
His work is instantly recognizable, with idiosyncratic cartoon creatures popping up in the oddest of places: in paintings, on functional objects, or piled up on top of each other to form huge totem - poles.
Influenced by both the avant - garde performance of artists like Vito Acconci and Richard Foreman as well as forms of popular entertainment, particularly stand - up comedy, Michael Smith has been cultivating his own idiosyncratic brand of performance art since the late 1970s.
Many of Woodman's gelatin silver prints feature this strong, idiosyncratic abstract lineage, and she also extended her investigation of the serial geometrical form in her large - scale diazotype prints.
Both artists share an interest in small scale, idiosyncratic color through low fire glazing, and highly considered, reductive forms.
Exhibitionism's 16 exhibitions in the Hessel Museum are (1) «Jonathan Borofsky,» featuring Borofsky's Green Space Painting with Chattering Man at 2,814,787; (2) «Andy Warhol and Matthew Higgs,» including Warhol's portrait of Marieluise Hessel and a work by Higgs; (3) «Art as Idea,» with works by W. Imi Knoebel, Joseph Kosuth, and Allan McCollum; (4) «Rupture,» with works by John Bock, Saul Fletcher, Isa Genzken, Thomas Hirschhorn, Martin Kippenberger, and Karlheinz Weinberger; (5) «Robert Mapplethorpe and Judy Linn,» including 11 of the 70 Mapplethorpe works in the Hessel Collection along with Linn's intimate portraits of Mapplethorpe; (6) «For Holly,» including works by Gary Burnley, Valerie Jaudon, Christopher Knowles, Robert Kushner, Thomas Lanigan - Schmidt, Kim MacConnel, Ned Smyth, and Joe Zucker — acquired by Hessel from legendary SoHo art dealer Holly Solomon; (7) «Inside — Outside,» juxtaposing works by Scott Burton and Günther Förg with the picture windows of the Hessel Museum; (8) «Lexicon,» exploring a recurring motif of the Collection through works by Martin Creed, Jenny Holzer, Barbara Kruger, Bruce Nauman, Sean Landers, Raymond Pettibon, Jack Pierson, Jason Rhoades, and Allen Ruppersberg; (9) «Real Life,» examines different forms of social systems in works by Robert Beck, Sophie Calle, Matt Mullican, Cady Noland, Pruitt & Early, and Lawrence Weiner; (10) «Image is a Burden,» presents a number of idiosyncratic positions in relation to the figure and figuration (and disfigurement) through works by Rita Ackerman, Jonathan Borofsky, John Currin, Carroll Dunham, Philip Guston, Rachel Harrison, Adrian Piper, Peter Saul, Rosemarie Trockel, and Nicola Tyson; (11) «Mirror Objects,» including works by Donald Judd, Blinky Palermo, and Jorge Pardo; (12) «1982,» including works by Carl Andre, Robert Longo, Robert Mangold, Robert Mapplethorpe, A. R. Penck, and Cindy Sherman, all of which were produced in close — chronological — proximity to one another; (13) «Monitor,» with works by Vito Acconci, Cheryl Donegan, Vlatka Horvat, Bruce Nauman, and Aïda Ruilova; (14) «Cindy Sherman,» includes 7 of the 25 works by Sherman in the Hessel Collection; (15) «Silence,» with works by Christian Marclay, Pieter Laurens Mol, and Lorna Simpson that demonstrate art's persistent interest in and engagement with the paradoxical idea of «silence»; and (16) «Dan Flavin and Felix Gonzalez - Torres.»
The disparate pieces suggest the constantly evolving construction of Manders's own identity both as a private person and as a public figure, a mental menagerie that has found physical expression in the form of a series of idiosyncratic «rooms.»
Each composition is a finely calibrated balance of idiosyncratic elements that forms a new spatial proposition, possessing a distinct identity and an oftentimes paradoxical logic.
His idiosyncratic practice is about getting inside and exploring this space like a language of his own — somewhere between drawing, painting, and sculpture and between subject, image, and form.
It's an idiosyncratic engagement with a rule - based system to generate form, shape and coherence.»
Named after a gallery that was to become the very first gallery in Soho, and which included like - minded artists Ed Ruda, Mark di Suvero, Peter Forakis, Robert Grosvenor Anthony Magar, Forrest Myers, Tamara Melcher, and Dean Fleming, The Park Place Group was an idiosyncratic bunch whose work, though abstract and geometric, didn't accord with the prevailing Minimalist ethos of pure form.
These first iterations of collage, in particular, are marked by dynamic patterning, idiosyncratic material juxtapositions, flattened forms, and rich, vibrant color that would remain consistent features of his work throughout his career.
Miller's works intuitively combine both conceptual and expressive approaches to create an idiosyncratic hybrid form.
In others cases it makes space for an idiosyncratic or personal engagement with the subject and its forms.
Their inclusion here furthers an ongoing collaboration between Satterwhite and his mother (or now, her work): her idiosyncratic drawings have found their way into his videos and installations since at least 2012, and in this exhibition, her at - home recordings form the core of the video's ethereal soundtrack.
Highly personal and idiosyncratic, this alphabet allows Koraichi to take typically Islamic forms, with their formulaic inscriptions, and subvert them for his personal use, an act of resistance that he sees as privileging the individual over the community.
Judd believed that the search for the new involved, both in his own work and the work of his contemporaries, a rejection of the conventions of painting and sculpture in favor of new forms, which were often aggressively curious or idiosyncratic and startlingly sized or scaled.
A member of the Brazilian Neo-Concrete Movement, Willys de Castro created a diverse and idiosyncratic language of forms that fluctuated between two and three - dimensional space.
Mark Grotjahn continues to invest painting with new discoveries in form and technique, while imbuing the opposites of abstraction and representation with an idiosyncratic range of beautiful and complex meanings.
The Transylvania - born artist's site - specific exhibition at The Aldrich showcases her skill in traditional, labor intensive, hand - crafted book - making, and will take the form of a diorama, in which a series of cut - out panels will reveal layers of a hallucinatory narrative featuring fantasy worlds and idiosyncratic characters.
As daring as her investigation into new forms can be, Larner's sculptures are approachable in their human scale and idiosyncratic vision that favors personal narrative over minimal austerity.
JENNIFER WILLIAMS documents, deconstructs, and recomposes organic and idiosyncratic architectural transformations evident on a macro and micro level, giving form to dissonance within an environment.
His award - winning and internationally exhibited photography, film, performance and installation work forms a personal and idiosyncratic exploration of a local narrative.
In a young city such as Los Angeles, archaeology can take many forms: Small's idiosyncratic museology, Gala Porras - Kim's reappraisal of unattributed objects from the ethnographic Fowler Museum or even the curatorial work of Moshayedi and Walker in excavating little - known art from Los Angeles's recent past.
Revisiting the dichotomies at the heart of modernist painting, Furnas manipulates the boundaries between figure and ground, form and formlessness, and figuration and abstraction, working in an idiosyncratic style that falls somewhere between Carroll Durham's and Kai Althoff s....
The spatial relationships that exist between these abstracted forms are exploited by the artist through her idiosyncratic use of bold planes of flat colour.
More idiosyncratic than ever, Batura's new works utilize classical Greco - Roman stylization juxtaposed with geometric interruptions in both form and surface.
Björn Meyer - Ebrecht's painting's use modernist architecture and design as a starting point, using basic geometric form as an alphabet with which to render these utilitarian and utopian forms into idiosyncratic compositions.
They experimented with new ways of teaching and learning; they encouraged discussion and free inquiry; they felt that form in art had meaning; they were committed to the rigor of the studio and the laboratory; they practiced living and working together as a community; they shared the ideas and values of different cultures; they had faith in learning through experience and doing; they trusted in the new while remaining committed to ideas from the past; and they valued the idiosyncratic nature of the individual.
Nigoghossian's own work, likewise, stems in part from a desire to create foreign objects from a familiar lexicon, to fabricate idiosyncratic, alien forms while referencing and employing established Art Historical modes of expression — which vary from Brutalist and Deconstructivist architecture, to Baroque painting, to Modernist European drawing, to the Abstract Expressionist sculpture of John Chamberlain.
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