Sentences with phrase «installation explored themes»

As with most of his work, this installation explored themes informed by the materials, community, and location in which he was working.
Ann Wessmann's objects and installations explore themes relating to time, memory, beauty and the ephemeral.
Abdul Abdullah is an Australian artist, whose striking paintings, photographs and installations explore themes of belonging, racism and alienation.
Inaugurating on April 7 at NAK in Germany, Fischerspooner's unique site - specific installation explores themes like self - construction and idolization.
Andrew Erdos» sculptures, videos, photography, and mixed - media installations explore themes related to time, light, and the sublime.
Billed as «an immersive installation exploring themes of deconstruction, confinement, fragility and war», the show presents a series of wire sculptures in a room filled with the cloying scent of baked apple strudel.
The gallery brings to Fog Fair newcomers including conceptual artist Ian Wallace, who plays with the boundaries between photography and painting; and Turner - Prize nominee Nicole Wermers, whose mixed - media works and installations explore themes of lifestyle, consumption, and class.

Not exact matches

The installation uses a large canvas, paint, and Sharpie markers, interlacing drawings with short messages and poetry that explore themes of place, childhood adventure, and exploration.
Inspired by the Richard Tuttle installation at Tate Modern, explore the themes of textiles, text and the everyday with your class.
From his earliest works, Mellors has explored themes tied to contemporary society, from mediation and cultural systems, to technology, art and civilization through the use of video, installations, puppets and animatronics equipped with an irreverent and cutting irony.
Steve Locke (born 1963) is an African American artist who explores figuration and perceptions of the male figure, and themes of masculinity and homosexuality through drawing, painting, sculpture, and installation art.
Rachel Feinstein's idiosyncratic oeuvre is diverse in mediums and influences; while she works primarily in sculpture, the artist's paintings, drawings, and installations are equally important vehicles through which themes of femininity, beauty, and literature are explored.
His video installation Confessions of a Justified Sinner explores the theme of the divided self in the stories of James Hogg and Robert Louis Stevenson.
Exploring themes of observation, interpretation and her identification with an «ancestral» past, Boyce produced an installation and book entitled Peep.
Her sculptures and installations, which are informed by her extensive studies of Latin American, Caribbean and African art and religion, frequently explore themes of the African cultural diaspora and spirituality.
Female but maybe not Feminist, Biscayne Times, Victor Barrenechea, October 2008 Susan Lee - Chun Artist Profile, Theme Magazine, May / June 2008 Miami Contemporary Artists, Clear Magazine, April / May 2008 Voices, NY Arts, February / March 2008 Asian Artists on Display in BMOCA Exhibits, Boulder Daily Camera, Jenny Bergen, February 22, 2008 Urban Art Access: Art Basel Miami Beach, December 2007 Art Basel Miami Beach Notebook: A Party for the Arty, Economist, Jessica Gallucci, December 2007 Miami Contemporary Artists Book, Julie Davidow & Paul Clemence, November 2007 Susan Lee - Chun, H Magazine (Spain), Pedro Paricio, November 2007 Hurricane Project I, El Nuevo Herald, Adriana Herrera, Sept. 30, 2007 Los grabados de Goya inician una interesante temporada, El Nuevo Herald, Adriana Herrera, Sept. 16, 2007 Eight make the cut, Miami Herald, Daniel Chang, September 15, 2007 To the Brink and Back, Miami New Times, Carlos Suarez de Jesus, September 13, 2007 Body Double: Through a lens starkly, LA Times, Holly Myers, September 12, 2007 Ever more galleries in Wynwood, Miami Herald, Brett Sokol, September 7, 2007 Optic Nerve IX: MOCA Review, Miami Art Guide, Michelle Weinberg, September / October issue No. 10 Visual Power, Miami Herald, Tom Austin, August 5, 2007 Snitzer show brings 59 Homegrown Artists together, Miami Herald, Elisa Turner, July 22, 2007 Wynwood Gallery Installations show the District «Artistic Heart, Miami Herald, Brett Sokol, July 13, 2007 Stop at X, Broward & Palm Beach New Times, Michael MIlls, April 26, 2007 Asian Style and Taste, LA Times, Scarlet Cheng, January 11, 2007 Banquet Art Exhibition at Pacific Asia Museum, The Epoch Times, Dan Sanchez, Dec. 10, 2006 Critic's Pick, Miami Herald, Elisa Turner, December 8, 2006 Almost Famous, Ocean Drive Magazine, October 2006 Young at Art, Miami Herald, Elisa Turner, September 10, 2006 Galleries & Museums, Chicago Reader, September 8, 2006 Home Groan, Miami New Times, Carlos Suarez De Jesus, August 16, 2006 Cuatro Artistas en Casa, El Nuevo Herald, Jose Antonio Evora, August 8, 2006 Urban Sprawl, Sun - Sentinel, Emma Trelles, July 30, 2006 Exploring Urban Life With Art «WLRN ArtStreet with Meredith Porte, July 2006 Around Town, Coral Gables Living Magazine, June / July 2006 Five Years and Going Strong, Design Miami Magazine (vol.1, No. 2), Tiffany Chestler, May 2006 Metro - Pictures, Miami Herald, Elisa Turner, May 14, 2006.
In their first show with the gallery since 2009, artist duo Jennifer Allora and Guillermo Calzadilla present a show focused on three works that represent the breadth of their collaborative multimedia practice and explore existential themes — a sculptural installation made from acrylic lecterns, dinosaur bones, and the remains of extinct species; a performance in which three vocalists whistle at a four - billion - year - old rock; and a sound work based on recordings of breath.
May 23 - August 4, 2013 Sanford Biggers has achieved international prominence over the last decade with a diverse body of work that explores themes of identity, race, African - American history, and spirituality, often by blending installation and performance.
The 34 - year - old Canadian artist, long revered for his Google Street View screengrabs (circa 2009 — ongoing), has explored darker themes in his latest videos and installations — and the art world has taken notice.
She creates fiber - based sculpture, installations, drawings, and photographs, exploring themes of sensuality, emotional struggle and loss.
-- Lucas Samaras «During the first three decades of his long career, American artist Lucas Samaras (b. 1936 in Greece) turned to pastel to produce small, intimate works that explored themes present in his better - known paintings, sculptures, and installations.
Conversations with the Collection: Memory I September 12, 2015 — January 10, 2016 As the University of Chicago reflects upon its 125 - year history, the Smart presents an experimental installation on the theme of Memory that explores art's relationship to the recollection of personal and cultural histories, nostalgia, and other facets of memory.
Adriana Corral's installations, performances, and sculptures explore universal themes of loss, injustice, concealment, and memory.
Celebrated artists like Kader Attia, Wangechi Mutu, and Yinka Shonibare MBE explore the themes of paradise, purgatory, and hell with video, photography, printmaking, painting, sculpture, fiber arts, and mixed media installation.
«Cloud» is an example of her innovative use of materials and echoes a theme she previously explored in a 2004 video installation titled «Cloudscape,» which featured the late artist Terry Adkins (1953 - 2014).
In her work, themes of interdependence and survival are consistently explored through various media, such as performance, installation, photography, and film.
This companion volume to the artist's largest exhibition to date is a feast taken from countless visual documents of Kelley's early formation, such as his involvement with the experimental band Destroy All Monsters (DAM), which also featured Jim Shaw, Cary Loren, and Niagara (born Lynn Rovner) in 1973 while Kelly and Shaw were students at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor; early performative sculptures and objects; drawings; paintings; handmade dolls and stuffed animal sculptures; photography; videos; and endless inventive installations in various forms and shapes that explore and deal with the themes of self - destruction, repression, class relations, sexuality, religion, politics, and whatever else lies between the grotesque and the sublime, the sacred and the profane.
Themes of colonization, sexuality, loss and resilience — the complexities of historic and contemporary Indigenous experience — are explored in a variety of mediums, including painting, film / video, performance and installation.
They and their compatriots explore themes of otherness and difference in film, sculpture, painting, photography and installation.
Exploring themes of observation, interpretation and her identification with an «ancestral» past, Boyce produced both an installation and book entitled «peep».
The interactive, site?specific installation made from Styrofoam, phosphorescent pigment, and ultraviolet light explores the effects of light and audience participation - themes central to Sonnier's creative output.
With Indo - Persian miniature painting forming the basis for all of her work — including her own approach to this traditional art form, as well as animation, video, photography, murals, and installation — Shahzia Sikander explores history, politics, and current events, as well as interpersonal themes.
Zoë Buckman (b. 1985 Hackney, East London) is a multi-disciplinary artist working in sculpture, installation, and photography, exploring themes of Feminism, mortality, and equality.
Spanish - born artist Isidro Blasco combines architecture, photography and sculptural installation to explore themes of perception and urbanism.
This exhibition highlights 21 contemporary artists from across the state exploring environmental themes through installation, painting, photography, sculpture, sound, and video.
Multi-disciplinary London - based artist Zoë Buckman explores themes of feminism, mortality and equality in her sculptural, photographic and installation work.
In the form of a large scale group installation, the 6 artists will be exploring the work created over the duration of this project, interlinking themes and practices to create new narratives and tales.
The Program in Visual Arts presents «You Are Not Required to Fight Fires,» an exhibition of new work by Princeton senior Kathleen Ma, whose mixed media works (audio - video installations, diagrams, and poetry) explore themes of authority, instructions, agency, and individual / collective responsibility.
Through the use of these varied mediums of sculpture, photography and installation, Soares explores themes of time and its passage, the history of art, manifestations of love and human subjectivity in all its forms.
Incorporating elements of sculpture, video, audio, light installation, and live performance, the exhibition creates a surreal landscape of the city exploring themes such as alienation, immigration, the subconscious, childhood, fantasy, film, Hollywood, and dreams.
In the form of a large scale group installation, the artists will be exploring the work created over the duration of this project, interlinking themes & practices to create new narratives.
Her interdisciplinary installation and performance works explore themes of nature, technology and the body as they relate to mythology, feminism and the production of cultural ideology.
He often works in various craft traditions with simple materials when he makes pictures and installations in which colonialism and its consequences are explored, and topics such as South Africa and Zimbabwe's history and contemporary are dealt with alongside themes such as migration, national identity and borders.
Opening to the public on Wednesday, 27 July 2011, For Tomorrow For Tonight features new work that explores the theme of night through video, photographs and installation.
André Guedes (b. 1971, Portugal) advances in his work a social and political critique, exploring subjects (upon researching historic and literary themes) and information (Guedes often incorporates documentation in his artwork) as his artistic media, leading to installations, performances, stage sets and urban interventions.
Sanford Biggers has achieved international prominence over the last decade with a diverse body of work that explores themes of identity, race, American history, and spirituality, often by blending installation and performance.
Suzi Davidoff is an artist based in the Chihuahuan desert of west Texas, creating drawings, paintings, prints and collaborative installations that explore themes of structure and perception of the natural world.
, Dazed 2016 Spellbinding Pieces at the 2016 SPRING / BREAK Art Show, Village Voice 2016 AO On - Site — New York: SPRING / BREAK Art Show, Art Observed 2016 Beyond the Main Fair: 9 Things to see this Armory Arts Week, Paper Mag 2016 Nicole Reber Artist Feature, Le Roy Magazine 2016 3 Poems, Divine Magnet 2015 Shoot, If That Ain't Too Pretty, Poetry Foundation 2015 Our Time on the Moon, Slow Youth 2015 Hyperallergic's Review of Art Books and Zines # 2, Hyperallergic 2015 This art show aims to slow down time in New York, Dazed 2014 Nicole Reber Explores the Dark Side of Paradise With Hawaiian - Themed Works, Complex 2014 Aloha, Business Casual: Nicole Reber's Hawaiian Shirt Exhibition At AMO Studios, Vice 2014 Cuestiones Generacionales, S Moda 2013 The Language of Passwords as an Installation, Metal
Alison Saar is an American artist who explores themes of African cultural diaspora and spirituality through her paintings, sculptures, and installations.
Dzama's multidisciplinary installation will continue themes explored in Une Danse des Bouffons: a different Marcel (Duchamp)'s chess obsession.
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