Sentences with phrase «include groundbreaking work»

In addition to her impact teaching students all over the U.S. as well as globally, some of her notable achievements include groundbreaking work with community cats in the early 90s through Operation CatNip; advancing the field and credibility of shelter medicine through disease prevention, outbreak response and prioritizing lifesaving over euthanasia; and more recent projects like the Million Cat Challenge.
It would take too long to list his other scientific achievements, but the greatest hits might include his groundbreaking work on light and color; his development and refinement of reflecting telescopes (which now bear his name); and other fundamental work in math and heat.
Today, nuclear cloning is one of the essential tools in Dr. Jaenischs laboratory studies of human diseases, including his groundbreaking work on the nature and potential treatment of cancer.
Her research includes groundbreaking work in stem cell therapies for diabetic peripheral neurophathy and drug development for the treatment of ALS.
In 2009 - 2010, The National Museum of Contemporary Art in Athens, Greece, featured Amerika's comprehensive retrospective exhibition entitled UNREALTIME including his groundbreaking works of Internet art GRAMMATRON and FILMTEXT as well as his feature - length work of mobile cinema, Immobilité.

Not exact matches

Tosca developed groundbreaking technology, this time for keg repair including internal and external keg cleaning, and today is the leading keg repair and refurbishing provider in the United States, working with all major brands and many craft brewers.
In 2007 he joined four generations of IPCC authors, including Easterling, in receiving a Nobel Prize for their groundbreaking work.
This groundbreaking work influenced many scientists investigating bone marrow transplant for humans, including the winner of the 1990 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Explore the history and discoveries of Isaac Newton, including his work in mathematics and optics and his groundbreaking laws of motion, at.
But really, he began his career by working steadily in interesting British television since the mid-2000s, including the groundbreaking drama «Skins,» «Doctor Who,» and the Danny Boyle - directed «Babylon» (which is not streaming, but worth tracking down if only for the rest of the cast, which includes Brit Marling, James Nesbitt, and Paterson Joseph).
These include the preparation of regional reports on the status of civil society (1994); publication and global distribution of Citizens - Strengthening Global Civil Society (1995), the organisation's first world report on the state of civil society; regional consultations of members; two World Assemblies (Mexico City in 1995 and Budapest in 1997) of members and allies; an expanding membership (400 by end of 1997) of organisations and individuals across the world; a growing publications record and groundbreaking work by three special Task Forces in 1996 and 1997 on increasing the understanding and visibility of the sector, the legal principles necessary for the sector's empowerment and enhancing the sector's resource base.
Afterward, he began publishing his findings and working privately on groundbreaking theories about the development of animal species, including human beings, and he made a nervous proposal to his cousin Emma.
Fellowships previously bestowed for groundbreaking work in games include Gabe Newell, Peter Molyneux, Shigeru Miyamoto and Will Wright.
An accompanying monographic catalogue was published in 2018 by David Zwirner Books, including new scholarship on Asawa's groundbreaking body of work by art historian Tiffany Bell, as well as an essay by Robert Storr, and an illustrated chronology.
Turk's work has been included in many seminal exhibitions including currently the groundbreaking POPLIFE show at Tate Modern as well as the Venice Biennale the 46th International Istanbul Biennial, Istanbul in 1999; Material Culture, Hayward Gallery, London in 1998 and Sensation: Young British Artists from the Saatchi Collection, Royal Academy of Arts, Saatchi Collection, London in 1995.
This groundbreaking exhibition follows the artist's exploration of interlined topics, including a halting suite of works about 9/11; contemporary «history paintings» on life in America since the events of 9/11; homages to his friends, the women quilt makers of Gee's Bend, Ala.; memories of vanishing ways of life and his childhood in the the South; and evocations of human struggles for freedom.
EXHIBITION «Witness: Art and Civil Rights in the Sixties» opens at the Brooklyn Museum on March 7 and brings together the work of 66 artists (including Barkley L. Hendricks, above) from diverse backgrounds who were compelled to create by groundbreaking events that were transforming the nation.
The show included groundbreaking new works, such as a sensory deprivation chamber that rapidly became one of the highlights of Frieze Week.
THIS YEAR»S SELECTION of the Best Black Art Books includes 12 volumes that in various ways are reframing art history — from scholarly works shedding light on major cultural moments and volumes of groundbreaking photography, to exhibition catalogs surveying broadly the work of important artists such as Kerry James Marshall and Alma Thomas.
EXHIBITION Alma Thomas @ Tang Museum at Skidmore College, Sarasota Springs, N.Y. (Feb. 6 - June 5, 2016): This groundbreaking exhibition assembles major paintings from public and private collections including many rarely shown works by Alma Thomas (1891 - 1978), the first African American woman to have a solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum (1972).
While Frankfort's work seems to eschew some of this historical weight in favor of a nuanced linguistic playfulness suggestive of the paintings of various other artists, including Ed Ruscha, Mel Bochner, Suzanne McClelland, and Kay Rosen, it nevertheless both engages with the physicality of paint and retains a certain conceptual directness evocative of Louise Fishman's groundbreaking «Angry Paintings» from 1973 (recently included in the exhibition «WACK!
Rockport and the surrounding area were a continuing source of inspiration for Chaet's paintings of He first gained recognition for what he calls his «dumb» paintings, when Marcia Tucker, founding director of the New Museum of Contemporary Art, included his work in her groundbreaking exhibition, «Bad Painting» (1978) abstract interiors, still lifes and seascapes.
In 1951, his work was included in the groundbreaking Ninth Street Show, co-organized by Leo Castelli, Conrad Marca - Relli, and the Eighth Street Club, and featuring the work of — among others — Hofmann, Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, and Franz Kline.
The exhibition includes works presented at the groundbreaking 1968 exhibition, as well as other pieces witnessing to Arte povera artists» activity at the time.
Keith Gill, Head of Sale, Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale, Christie's, London: «Among the most iconic works of Fauvism, many of this rare series of London paintings are now housed in museum collections across the world, including the Musée d'Orsay, Paris; Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; and the Tate Gallery, London, where a selection of other works from this groundbreaking London series are currently on view in the exhibition, «Impressionists in London».
PICASSO SCULPTURE The first museum survey of Picasso's sculpture in nearly 50 years includes assemblages made from nontraditional materials like plywood, as well as photographs and works on paper that reveal his groundbreaking approach to sculpting in three dimensions.
Iconic works include New York's landmark Chrysler Building (designed by alumnus and architect William van Alen), groundbreaking covers of Esquire magazine (designed by alumnus and master communicator George Lois), Sesame Street's beloved Big Bird (created by Jim Henson and brought to life by faculty member and master puppet builder Kermit Love), Scrabble (conceived by alumnus and out - of - work architect Alfred Mosher Butts during the Depression), the sleek Corvette C5 (redesigned by alumnus and industrial designer John Cafaro), OXO Good Grips (co-launched by alumnus and industrial designer Tucker Viemeister), and the Dunkin Donuts logo (colors and typeface selected by alumna, faculty member, and industrial designer Lucia DeRespinis).
His groundbreaking works include The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living (1991), a shark in formaldehyde; Mother and Child Divided (1993) a four - part sculpture of a bisected cow and calf; and For the Love of God (2007), a human skull studded with 8,601 diamonds.
The exhibition will show some sixty works by this hitherto little noticed «artists» artist», including groundbreaking series such as his Ice Box Paintings, his comics narratives and Vietnam paintings from the 1950s and 1960s, as well as never - before - exhibited drawings and selected late works from the 1980s to the 2000s...
First recognized for his Pop Art milk bottle paintings and cloud imagery, Goode's work was included in the 1962 groundbreaking exhibit «New Painting of Common Objects,» curated by Walter Hopps at the Pasadena Art Museum (now Norton Simon Museum).
In 1951, his work was included in the groundbreaking Ninth Street Show, co-organized by Leo Castelli, Conrad Marca - Relli, and the Eighth Street Club, and featuring the work of Hofmann, Pollock, de Kooning, Kline, and others.
Over the decades, Baron's work has been contextualized in groundbreaking museum exhibitions including The Poetic Object (San Antonio Museum of Art, San Antonio, TX, 1988); Deep Storage: Collecting, Storing, and Archiving Art (Haus der Kunst, Munich, Germany, 1997); Six Centuries of Prints and Drawings (National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, 2004); and most recently, The Keeper (The New Museum, New York, NY, 2016).
Aug. 30 — Dec. 14, 2014 «Witness: Art and Civil Rights» at Dartmouth Hanover, NH Featuring a range of mediums including photography, painting, sculpture, textiles and mixed - media works, «Witness: Art and Civil Rights in the Sixties,» at the Hood Museum of Art at Dartmouth College, brings together the work of 66 artists compelled by the groundbreaking struggle for racial justice.
In the same year Sonnier's work was included in the Whitney Museum of American Art's groundbreaking Anti-Illusion: Procedures / Materials curated by Marcia Tucker and James Monte in 1969.
Featuring more than 120 works made over the past 50 years, the exhibition includes the artist's photo works combining text and image, early assemblage sculptures, and his groundbreaking environments Al's Cafe (1969) and Al's Grand Hotel (1971), participatory projects that helped put Los Angeles on the map as a center for Conceptual art.
In Brooklyn, Reilly organized several groundbreaking exhibitions, including «Global Feminisms,» a 2007 show featuring feminist works by 80 women artists from 1990 on.
Other exhibitions I'm eager to see include the Jewish Museum's «Pierre Chareau: Modern Architecture and Design» (Nov. 4 to Mar. 26), the work of the designer of the Maison Verre in Paris (1928 - 1932), the groundbreaking house known for its imaginative use of steel, glass and other industrial materials.
Beginning in the 1960s, McCracken exhibited steadily in the United States and abroad, and his early work was included in groundbreaking exhibitions such as Primary Structuresat the Jewish Museum, New York (1966), and American Sculpture of the Sixties at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (1967).
«Late Paintings» becomes the third Francis Bacon exhibition to be held at the Gagosian Gallery, and is the latest in a series of exhibitions focusing on gathering and reexamining the late works of groundbreaking artists including Picasso, Moore and Warhol.
On the occasion of the exhibition, a monographic catalogue will be published by David Zwirner Books, which will include new scholarship on Asawa's groundbreaking body of work by art historian Tiffany Bell, as well as an essay by Robert Storr, and an illustrated chronology.
Dagley's work was included in the groundbreaking group exhibition Post-Hypnotic, which traveled throughout the United States from 1999 - 2001.
Featuring Hirst's most popular images, including «The Incomplete Truth,» «Myth,» «Loving in a World of Desire,» «Hymn,» «For the Love of God,» «Benevolence» and more, the volume brings some of the most controversial and groundbreaking work of contemporary art to a witty coloring - book format.
The exhibition takes a particularly close look at Ono's works from the sixties and seventies, including her influence on Fluxus, Concept Art, Performance, Environments, film, music, her work for peace, and her role in pioneering those groundbreaking ideas.
A number of works invite interaction, including Painting to Be Stepped On (1960/1961) and Ono's groundbreaking performance, Bag Piece (1964).
The exhibition includes a significant portion of the long - term Roberta Breitmore performance project, along with many of her groundbreaking technological works, including Lorna (1984), Room of One's Own (1993), and the film Teknolust (2002).
An essential book on a groundbreaking artist, the volume includes images of dozens of multicolored works accompanied by preparatory drawings and collages, as well as photographs from the studio and the factory.
Lake's groundbreaking early work includes «A Genuine Simulation of...» (1973 — 74), a series of photographic self - portraits retouched with Covergirl makeup, and Miss Chatelaine (1973), a grid of black - and - white photos of the artist, each embellished with a different hat or head of hair cut from Chatelaine, a Canadian women's magazine.
Bound by a green and copper prismatic cover, the exhibition catalogue includes a dialogue between Robert Atkins and Thomas W. Sokolowski on the art world's role in invoking the American psyche of the time, a pop - out timeline of the AIDS crisis, and full - page renditions and descriptions of works by dozens of artists from the groundbreaking exhibition.
The exhibition tracks the artist's evolution back into figuration and the various themes and symbols that comprise his controversial late works, including Blackboard (1969), Edge of Town (1969), The Studio (1969), and Flatlands (1970), which were included in the groundbreaking Marlborough Gallery show, and By the Window (1969), in which Guston creates poignant autobiographical statements.
He eventually amassed a collection of more than 1,600 works from the postwar period, including works by such groundbreaking American artists as Jean - Michel Basquiat, Chuck Close, Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Morris, Jackson Pollock, Robert Rauschenberg, and James Rosenquist, as well as European and Asian artists such as Alberto Burri, Jean Dubuffet, Georges Mathieu, and Kurt Schwitters.
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