His one - time foray into cinema suggests possible new directions and asks further questions: Why not integrate film more visibly
into his painting practice?
Not exact matches
Oneida County's housing stock is among the oldest in New York State, and while sturdy and architecturally aesthetic, is covered with lead - based
paints requiring specialized knowledge of lead - safe work
practices compliant with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations that went
into effect in 2010.
I developed PTSD in 2008 after two serious medical accidents, and I have been creating drawings,
paintings and poetry about my process of recovery.The purpose of this website is to help trauma survivors put effective self - therapy exercises
into practice in their daily lives.
By
painting a picture of how mobile reading is
practiced today and by whom, it offers insights
into how mobile technology can be leveraged to better facilitate reading in countries where literacy rates are low, an advance literacy and learning in underserved communities around the world.
I developed PTSD in 2008 after two serious medical accidents, and I have been creating drawings,
paintings and poetry about my process of recovery.The purpose of this website is to help trauma survivors put effective self - therapy exercises
into practice in their daily lives.
Serving as an overdue affirmation of Hoyland's significance within the field of abstraction, they provide fascinating new insights
into the artist's
practice, and through it, the object of
painting itself.
However, discussing Dalwood's more recent work illuminated his
practice as a whole, helping me to figure «Burroughs in Tangier»
into a much broader understanding of the artist's
paintings.
By mid-career, she had refined this
practice by incorporating charcoal drawing
into acrylic
paintings done on large canvases.
John Berens, Abshalom Jac Lahav 532 Gallery Thomas Jaeckel shows two artists who have made a traditional
practice of
painting into a signature motif.
Although perfectly relevant today — in that Havard is working now (he will be celebrating his 75th birthday on June 29th) and still very engaged in his artistic
practice — Havard somehow turns his
paintings into self - conscious relics.
Though primarily a performance, video, and installation artist, Kjartansson does it all, regularly incorporating
painting, drawing, sculpture, and music (he is pop royalty in his native Iceland)
into his
practice.
In Currin's latest
paintings, the graphic sexuality which has marked his
practice for the last decade is sublimated
into playful, sometimes absurdist symbolism.
According to Sara Reisman ``... Wojciech Gilewicz»
practices is about expanding the scope of
painting specifically and art art generally
into the realm of daily life, usually public and sometimes private... Gilewicz... questions the very nature of art, dismantling it from the rarified, official spaces of culture to a much wider field that leads to the discovery that life itself as art.»
Louisa Chambers recent
practice responds to ongoing research
into depiction and visual perception on two dimensional surfaces (more specifically, concentrating on the mediums of drawing, collage and
painting).
Dark, ominous forms began to crowd his
paintings, coalescing
into what would become a new language that consumed his
practice over the next ten years.
Through her
practice of
painting photographs, Harrison takes a medium designed in many ways for multiplicity and converts it
into a unique work.
Empowered by all the happenings in her personal life, both good and bad, Eva Hesse poured her inspiration
into her artistic work comprised of drawings,
paintings, and sculpture, constantly pushing the borders of her own
practice and thus moving the whole art movement forward with her.
His process of working ideas out first on paper parallels my
practice of using watercolor studies as a springboard
into painting.
He has neither bought
into the paradigm of deskilling nor aligned himself with the widely
practiced style of provisional
painting.
In this Tuesday Evenings presentation, Bradford is back to share insights
into the
paintings featured in her FOCUS exhibition, as well as other works and the enduring path of her
practice as a devoted painter and longtime member of the New York art community.
York Art Gallery is home to an expansive collection of 1,118 easel
paintings that provides a detailed insight
into Western European
practice.
Carroll Dunham, an important New York — based artist working in
painting, drawing, and printmaking, discusses his
practice, from coming
into his own in the late 1970s to his current contributions as a maker and a writer within the continuum of art.
Using drawing and
painting as a creative outlet, this lifelong exercise has evolved
into a compelling restorative
practice.
Bayrle integrates dépendance's renewed venue of two exhibition spaces mirrored architecturally
into the constellation of two periods in the artist's
practice: The left gallery with works from 1990s and the right gallery with new
paintings (all 2015).
In the 1990s, Fisher began to expand his
practice into painting, drawing, and installations.
The works in this exhibition are part of an ongoing series that breaks down the
practice of
painting into its component parts and fetishizes each one.
Since the 1950s, artist Maria Lassnig has incorporated
painting techniques from various art - historical periods
into her
practice — realism, surrealism, and expressionism alike — in an effort to develop a distinct style of
painting that blends figuration with abstraction.
She wrote in part: «the
painting should not be acceptable to anyone who cares or pretends to care about Black people because it is not acceptable for a white person to transmute Black suffering
into profit and fun, though the
practice has been normalized for a long time.»
Characterized by a continuously expanding investigation
into painting, her
practice considers a multiplanar site for constructed light and shifting space.
In addition, the original impetus of his grandmother asking him to
paint a landscape for her has developed
into his current studio
practice.
Join artist Polly Apfelbaum and art historian Faye Hirsch in exploring how the printmaking process sparks a spirit of inquiry and experimentation in the studio, and delve
into the intersection between printmaking and
painting in contemporary
practice.
Beginning in the 1980s, Beckley underwent a period of introspection and experimentation, branching
into painting and reexamining his
practice of sculptural constructions.
Wittenberg's
practice commences, in this instance, with a loose watercolor
painting on paper, then oil and acrylic, collapsing
into a line drawing, and then, finally, monotype printing.
In this way, each artist in Double Vision
practices his or her own version of alchemy, transforming yarn, clay or
paint into something far more refined, precious and mysterious.
Often integrating mixed media materials
into her large - scale acrylic - on - canvas
paintings, Parsons pushes the formal aspects of her
practice just enough to let the luxuriant palette and seemingly, but not simply, whimsical content hold center stage, while proving that she has true skin in the game.
«It's a rare opportunity to peer
into the
practice of the late artist, whose
paintings were prefaced by study drawings and watercolors that are lesser - known but equally beautiful.»
As the
practice of
painting moves ever further from the confines of the canvas, it continues to pour over
into sculptural forms, installation, and new media.
Razvan Boar's new body of work brings his accomplished drawing
practice into the realm of
painting.
A highly respected art conservator
practicing in Roxbury, Connecticut, Yost's experience restoring fine oil
paintings from the eighteenth to twentieth centuries has allowed him to translate the techniques of the masters
into contemplative landscapes for modern viewers.
Not only is this book an overview of contemporary
painting, it is also an enquiry
into how we experience its images, what they mean and why the
practice remains vital.
He then refocused his
practice exclusively to pictorial translations of the same optical ideas
into painting and drawing until 2007.
What began with obsessive - compulsive word drawings a decade ago grew
into a collaged
painting practice — one might call it an image hoarder's bricolage — that incorporated everything from advertisements of amplifiers and actual clearance stickers to Budweiser labels and nightclub wristbands.
In many ways small and mid-sized galleries are where artistic
practice is
practiced before it stagnates
into art work — that is the repetition and reapplication of a method, like Andy Warhol's celebrity prints, Yayoi Kusama's spots or Damien Hirst's spot
paintings.
Presenting a translation of the artist's imagination
into perceptible experience through a combination of moving image, performance, and
painting, Warboys»
practice spans across a range of media and, intentionally, she has not settled on one fixed mode of working.
While Kang's expanded
painting practice is rooted in her research
into classical Korean poetry, craft, and dance, her concerns are firmly articulated in the present.
Krasner's will stipulated that the home (where she originally
painted) and the studio both be a place of insight
into her and Pollock's
practices and a broader educational resource for students of modern art in America, and the site now features a study center that includes archives and interviews.
While this aversion to naming and categorization positions her vast and diverse body of sculptures, drawings,
paintings and mixed media works
into a relational
practice that defies the specificities of medium or periodization, it also takes form in the artist's blatant refusal to identify herself or her work as feminist.
His concurrent
practices of
painting and drawing reflect on specific places and experiences — from the deeply symbolic to the notational — translating sensations and memories
into abstract compositions.
Inclusive of his characteristic abstraction and bold color, the show furthers his
practice of combining ordinary substances (such as velcro, spray
paint, wood, debris, and staples)
into three - dimensional geometric works.
Bedford: One major consequence of that survey show, which I think we're only beginning to see bear fruit, is roughly as follows: yes, your career has become more extraordinary; yes, the
paintings have become even better, as the pavilion will demonstrate; and yes, you've been able to spread your wings in terms of social
practice, but you've also forced a wedge
into the history of art that has revealed afresh your genuine predecessors: Norman Lewis, Sam Gilliam, Jack Whitten, Melvin Edwards, Alma Thomas — these people have become differently visible as a consequence of the need among museums and art historians to account for where you came from.