Sentences with phrase «include photorealism»

Other artists featured in the exhibition include Quang Ho, Michael Klein, Daniel Sprick, Chuck Close, Miriam Dougenis, and Louise Peabody, among others, and highlight the diverse ways that realism can be executed, including photorealism, hyperrealism, magic realism and painterly realism.

Not exact matches

The exhibition, «Guggenheim Collection: The American Avant - Garde 1945 - 1980,» will feature works by artists including Chuck Close, Donald Judd, Jackson Pollock, Andy Warhol, and Charles Bell, representing genres including pop art, photorealism, abstract expressionism, and minimalism.
(Re) presentation pays homage to the Realist art movement yet elevates a variety of art making practices, including, but not limited to, assemblage, portraiture, appropriation, or even photorealism and photo montages.
Featured artists include Jared Flaming, Antonio Romano, Beau Stanton, and Swoon, as well as renowned photorealism photographers Bob Gruen and Patrick McMullan of rock and roll and nightlife fame, respectively.
A pioneer in the male - dominated field of photorealism, in 1966 Flack was the first photorealist to have work acquired by MoMA and one of the first women to be included — along with Mary Cassatt — in the seminal art history textbook, H.W. Janson's «History of Art.»
His work is included on the cover and in the book Photorealism in the Digital Age (Harry N. Abrams, 2013).
Photorealism, she explained, was a cousin of pop art, but it didn't seem to include the subtle social criticism that fueled the work of Andy Warhol, James Rosenquist and others.
This other history — one that existed despite (and perhaps to some degree against) the «American hegemonies,» as Algus puts it, of Abstract Expressionism, Pop art, Minimalism, Conceptual art, and Photorealism — is primarily European, and the group of artists he included worked in France, Germany, and Italy.
Highlights include a solo show by Robert Motherwell (at Guild Hall), a sprawling exhibition by William J. Glackens (at the Parrish) and a group exhibition presenting Photorealism in the seventies (at Nassau County Museum of Art).
The event is from 10 AM — 3 PM and the schedule for the day includes: All day Great Hall Music by guitarist Carl LeBlanc All day Galleries Scavenger hunt All day 1st Floor Elevator Lobby Art on the Spot activities 10:15 Great Hall Ballet performance inspired by Degas» Little Dancer, Aged Fourteen by Young Audiences» students 10:45 2nd Floor Galleries Readings inspired by Degas» Little Dancer, Aged Fourteen 11:30 2nd Floor Galleries StoryQuest with author Alex McConduit 11:45 Stern Auditorium Odyssey Art Contest award ceremony 12:00 Great Hall Ballet performance by Pembo Cieutat Academy of Dance 12:45 1st Floor Galleries Family tour of «Photorealism» 1:00 Great Hall Ballet performance by the Schramel Conservatory of Dance «Pro-Track» dancers.
This major survey, which is accompanied by a catalogue, includes work from the late 1970s to the present, encompassing the artist's early experiments in Photorealism and»80s - era neo-Pop, and her canvases populated by horses, ballerinas, little girls, modish young women, cats, birds, and punk musicians.
His work is included on the cover and in the book Photorealism and the Digital Age.
Lord's recent publications include Gordon Parks: The Making of an Argument (2013), and contributions to Photorealism: Beginnings to Today (2014) and East of the Mississippi: Nineteenth - Century American Landscape Photography (2017).
The most significant of the often loosely defined movements of early contemporary art included pop art, characterized by commonplace imagery placed in new aesthetic contexts, as in the work of such figures as Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein; the optical shimmerings of the international op art movement in the paintings of Bridget Riley, Richard Anusziewicz, and others; the cool abstract images of color - field painting in the work of artists such as Ellsworth Kelly and Frank Stella (with his shaped - canvas innovations); the lofty intellectual intentions and stark abstraction of conceptual art by Sol LeWitt and others; the hard - edged hyperreality of photorealism in works by Richard Estes and others; the spontaneity and multimedia components of happenings; and the monumentality and environmental consciousness of land art by artists such as Robert Smithson.
The Other nominees for the inaugural year included sculptor Richard Deacon, the collaborative duo Gilbert & George, abstract painter Howard Hodgkin and sculpture and installation artist Richard Long — but unlike his fellow nominees Morley just did not fit into any one particular genealogy; with his connection to Photorealism, or Super-realism — as he named it — later being discarded by the artist in favour of a more expressive method of painting — that critics deemed a kind of Neo-expressionism.
Morley's work is currently included in «Picturing America: Photorealism in the 70s», on view at the Deutsche Guggenheim in Berlin until 10 May 2009.
[6][23] This internationalization of photorealism is also seen in photorealist events, such as The Prague Project, in which American and non-American photorealist painters have traveled together to locations including Prague, Zurich, Monaco and New York, to work alongside each other in producing work.
Though the height of Photorealism was in the 1970s the movement continues and includes several of the original photorealists as well as many of their contemporaries.
Nearly all modern art styles and genres are represented in the Tate collection, including: Impressionism, Expressionism, Cubism, Suprematism, De Stijl, Neo-Plasticism, Dada, Surrealism, Conceptual Art, Abstract Expressionism, Action Painting, Colour Field Painting, Pop - Art, Post-Modernism, Op - Art, Minimalism, Assemblage, Photorealism and Street Art, to name but a few.
Gallery inventory includes paintings, drawings, sculpture, and prints by established artists from significant Post-War movements including Abstract Expressionism, Color Field, Minimalism, Pop Art, and Photorealism.
Superrealism Emerging out of Pop Art and Photorealism, this is an American - based figurative genre in which certain stereotypical individuals are re-created down to the last true - to - life detail, using polyester / fibreglass and other materials including human hair.
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