Not exact matches
us a
picture of your special pet friend
in landscape format, and include his / her name for placement on our
picture gallery.
• Ed Paschke (1939 — 2004), neon - lit Chicago Pop artist Jeff Koons (b. 1955), world - famous sculptor of elevated banality and gleaming toys Prema Murthy (b. 1969), Net - conscious media artist Sarah Morris (b. 1967), brainy geometric abstractionist and appropriationist Jennifer Rubell (b. 1970), food artist extraordinaire Tony Matelli (b. 1971), hyperrealistic sculptor of flora and aggressive fauna • Edward Kienholz (1927 — 1994), Ferus
gallery co-founder, iconic Los Angeles artist Jack Goldstein (1945 — 2003),
Pictures Generation star and looper of films Ashley Bickerton (b. 1959), Neo-Geo artist of lurid island pop Mark Dion (b. 1961), naturalist conceptualist and arch-cataloguer • Vito Acconci (b. 1940), seminal father of transgressive»70s performance art Kathryn Bigelow (b. 1951), artist - turned - «Hurt Locker» director Ken Feingold (b. 1952), conceptualist sculptor of heads Robert Longo (b. 1953), wizard of charcoal and graphite, disturber of «Men
in Cities» Mark Innerst (b. 1957), engineering - slanted
landscape painter Brock Enright (b. 1976), postmodern pop - culture investigator David Salle (b. 1952), brainy Neo-Expressionist descendent of Picabia Annette Lemieux, lecturer of visual and environmental studies at Harvard Michele Zalopany, pastel Postmodernist • Dan Graham (b. 1942), sculptor of reflective / transparent psychological architecture R.H. Quaytman (b. 1961), literary - minded process painter of high intellectual wattage Cameron Rowland (b. 1988), conceptual found - object sculptor • Julian Schnabel (b. 1951), Neo-Expressionist godhead and Hollywood filmmaker Bill Saylor, sketchy maximalist and Harmony Korine collaborator Greg Bogin (b. 1965), post-Net minimalist
JMcK: You play with the
gallery space just as Capability Brown played with the
landscape, both big steps
in conceptual terms away from the strictures of the
picture plane, and from easel painting.
In his work at the Leeds Art
Gallery, Horizon (Leeds), he made a selection of a dozen or so 19th and early 20th
landscape paintings from the extensive Leeds Art
Gallery permanent collection, and hung them at different heights so that a formed a single horizon, which cut across their (often ornate)
picture frames.
In fact, there's currently a Turner painting hanging in Tate Modern — not a gallery in which you would expect to see a 19th century landscape picture — next to the Rothko roo
In fact, there's currently a Turner painting hanging
in Tate Modern — not a gallery in which you would expect to see a 19th century landscape picture — next to the Rothko roo
in Tate Modern — not a
gallery in which you would expect to see a 19th century landscape picture — next to the Rothko roo
in which you would expect to see a 19th century
landscape picture — next to the Rothko room.
The
gallery is almost unique
in London for having its own garden, a beautiful
landscaped area overlooking a restored stretch of the Regent's Canal at Wenlock Basin which has been used to great effect for installations by
gallery artists such as Yayoi Kusama and Alex Hartley (A Gentle Collapsing II, 2016,
pictured).
His fascination with mythical
landscapes has been nourished by
pictures in the National
Gallery and
in «The Caged Bird's Song» one senses the excitement of the fusion of different strands of his own art coming together with the historic tradition of tapestry - making.»
Altdorfer was a leading exponent of the style, and his
Landscape with Footbridge (1517 - 20, National
Gallery, London) is believed to be the first ever pure
landscape picture in oil.
The thirteen paintings and one diptych, most intimately sized but some of epic dimensions,
in Hurvin Anderson's first New York solo
gallery exhibition can be classified as
landscapes: They
picture the lush, equatorial scenery of Trinidad, where the London - based artist spent some time a few years ago.
BILL POWERS —
In your last show at Gagosian
Gallery there were
pictures of your signature
landscapes, only now they're obscured by the tops of houses and factory buildings.
Nikolai Astrup: Painting Norway @ Dulwich
Picture Gallery Breathtaking paintings of fire are the highlight
in this fantastic exhibition of
landscape paintings.
Both Bush and Macdonald began their careers oriented towards the
landscape painting of Canada's iconic Group of Seven (the subject of an exhibition at the Dulwich
Picture Gallery in London from October, 2011 into January, 2012).
When holding
in landscape, you have the flash toggle, front - facing camera toggle, HDR toggle and settings shortcut on the left side with the different modes, video shutter,
picture shutter and a shortcut to the
gallery available.