Sentences with phrase «latest architecture exhibitions»

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Whether you are researching the latest museum exhibition to catch, or seeking a behind - the - scenes look at the architecture of an iconic monument — even hunting for the absolute perfect road - trip playlist to download, Travel + Leisure is here with the answers.
The exhibition is the latest installment of SMoCA's Architecture + Art series that presents ground - breaking projects by individuals whose work explores and challenges the boundaries between architecture and art.
The exhibition will include works from 1999 to the present which are being shown in New York for the first time., Casebere's latest works are inspired by Thomas Jefferson's utopian Monticello, the indigenous architecture of the Caribbean island of Nevis, traditional Japanese architecture and an imagined gallery space.
Two years later, Mucha, adding several interior architecture details that had been characteristic of the presentation of the Block Beuys (an ensemble that was temporarily put in storage) at the Hessisches Landesmuseum, Darmstadt, conceived an exhibition of his pieces at Galerie Sprüth Magers, Berlin, where he installed an environment that faithfully recreated the dimensions and proportions of Galerie Grässlin's main showroom.
Now on view in St. Moritz is the work of Diana Widmaier Picasso as well as Yves Klein, and their Zurich gallery happens to be the last interior exhibition architecture designed by the late architect Zaha Hadid.
As a 1969 architecture graduate from Melli University (National University), Mousavi mounted his first painting exhibition in the late nineteen - sixties, and he expressed his opinions on art in forms of writing and open discussions mostly held at the avant - garde artist - run Ghandriz Gallery in Tehran.
In her latest exhibition, Hidden Dimension, Yeroshenko transforms photos of architecture into just that.
His later writings were often not specific to a particular exhibition, but instead responded to larger themes within art, architecture, and politics.
Part minimalism, part constructivism, part sculpture, and part architecture, Ryman's latest batch of pieces will grace Northern California in his first Bay area exhibition, on view through December 22nd.
In her New Work exhibition, Glasgow - born and Brussels - based artist McKenzie recreates the Art Nouveau interiors of her home city's late - 19th - century architecture on large - scale canvases, erecting three - dimensional enclosures - like stage sets - within the gallery.
Coinciding with the republishing of Who is Sleeping on My Pillow, a 2009 collaboration with his wife Karin Mamma Andersson, Nordström's latest solo exhibition, For the Insects and the Hounds, showing at the David Zwirner Gallery, London, introduces horsemen, hounds, ghosts, Grecian and suburban Swedish architecture, humanised wolves, gothic madonnas and barefaced scenes of a pornographic level.
Hélio Oiticica, detail of Tropicália (1967) Tropicália is an incredible exhibition — the first comprehensive survey of one of the most significant chapters in modern cultural history, a period beginning in the late 1960s when daring experiments in Brazilian art, music, film, architecture and theater converged.
The artworks were printed on aluminum and bronze plaques and their short messages were accompanied by paintings of Peter Nadin, whose portraits of people attached to Holzer's messages emphasized the emptiness of both life and communication in the digital age.The multimedia extravaganzas of Holzer's later installations, such as the 1989 Guggenheim exhibition, are exemplified by a 535 - foot running electronic signboard spiraled around the core of Frank Lloyd Wright's architecture, flashing garish lights on the monumental stone benches arranged in a large circle on the floor below.
Tatiana Trouvé is well known for the large - scale spatial installations integrated with architecture and her paintings, while Laure Prouvost mainly works on video and immersive installations combined with video.The exhibitions are named for the titles of their works: «The Sparkle of Absence» is from Trouvé's conceptual series, consisting of works that have never been materialized and that are only in the existence of titles; «Into All That Is Here» comes from the latest work of Prouvost's most representative series «Granddad».
Opening Thursday, January 23nd at Gasworks, London is «Late Barbarians,» a group exhibition that focused on the notion of corporeal memory, and explores how shifting social codes and cultural values have been embodied in canonical Western European art and architecture.
Although these concerns were not immediately evident in her latest solo show at Hannah Hoffman, the more time one spent immersed in the exhibition, the more conscious one became of the dynamic relationships between one's own moving body, the installed objects, and the surrounding architecture of the rooms.
In 1989 Gillick mounted his first solo exhibition, 84 Diagrams, at Karsten Schubert in London, presenting a series of drawings for buildings in the late Modernist style that were deliberately faulty or unworkable as architecture.
We typically think of Claude Monet as a painter of landscape, of the sea, and in his later years, of gardens — but until now there has never been an exhibition considering his work in terms of architecture.
You can always learn about our ever - changing city at Van Alen's latest exhibition with the Gentrification Lab NYC, which reconnects the role of architecture with expansion.
While there he held his solo exhibition in Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (Nov - Dec 1934), and designed the large Fair in Utrecht (March 1935) for Dutch Rayon Industry, the manufacturers of artificial silk, which offered a new approach to exhibition architecture and which, a year later, found its continuation in the Courtauld Exhibit at the Industrial Fair in London.
London Design Festival 2015: an exhibition designed by Turner Prize - nominated architecture collective Assemble at the V&A museum celebrates the heritage of late British furniture designer Robin Day.
The latest exhibition of famed modern architecture photographer Ezra Stoller takes place at Yossi Milo Gallery in Chelsea.
Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer taught at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, influencing the likes of I.M. Pei, Lawrence Halprin and Paul Rudolph, among others; Herbert Bayer organized and designed a major exhibition of Bauhaus work at the Museum of Modern Art, New York in 1938 - 9; Mies van der Rohe relocated to Chicago, where he enjoyed the patronage of Philip Johnson (1906 - 2005)- one of the most influential American architects of his day, with whom he later designed the landmark Seagram Building - and became one of the leading figures in American architecture; Moholy - Nagy also settled in Chicago and set up the New Bauhaus school with philanthropist Walter Paepcke.
Artist Ben Schumacher collaborates with architecture firm Diller Scofidio + Renfro for his latest solo exhibition at Bortolami Gallery.
This London - based solo exhibition records an ongoing concern with the notion of architecture as an environment for recreation, in a new body of work that contrasts the modernism of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe with Brohm's study of vernacular German allotment buildings of the late 1970s, Typology.
«The title of the exhibition references the name given to the style of modernist architecture conceived by Barragán and the artist Mathias Goéritz, who, frustrated by the cold functionalism of modernism, embraced space, colour and light to create buildings that engendered warmth, meditation, and reflection,» said Sean Kelly Gallery, which will show the images later this month.
ICA Senior Curator Ingrid Schaffner, editor Susan Morgan, artist Thomas Lawson, architect Peter de Bretteville, and Architectural Archives Curator William Whitaker, along with special guests celebrated East of Borneo's inaugural publication, Piecing Together Los Angeles: An Esther McCoy Reader, the first collection of writings by this seminal chronicler of Southern California modernism, and ICA's latest exhibition catalogue, Anne Tyng: Inhabiting Geometry, which explores the potential of geometry in Tyng's architecture and teaching.
Focusing on the notion of corporeal memory, the group exhibition «Late Barbarians», presented by Gasworks, explores how shifting social codes and cultural values have been embodied in canonical Western European art and architecture.
(London, UK) Focusing on the notion of corporeal memory, the group exhibition «Late Barbarians» explores how shifting social codes and cultural values have been embodied in canonical Western European art and architecture.
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