Sentences with phrase «lot of other artists»

«There are a lot of other artists whose work you're going to see who are new and young,» said Thompson.
And a lot of other artists too!
Hang out in most offices or any boutique hotel lobby, and you'll see a lot of other artists» work, doing the same sort of thing.
And I think because of transparency and the formats I can get away with with certain kind of color situations that I would bet that a lot of other artists can't handle.
Describing how the panel judged which artists to include in the Power 100, Rappolt said: «With someone like Wolfgang Tillmans, he's an artist that a lot of other artists reference.
Guest blogger: Alyson B. Stanfield, Art Biz Blog Galleries have a lot of other artists in their stables.
And to be a more confident about getting yourself out there, which is something I think me and a lot of other artists find taxing and exhausting.»
Its helped me and I'm sure will also be of great benefit to an awful lot of other artist.
If there are lots of other artists doing the same thing as you, a gallerist isn't going to get excited about your work.
Kelly could remind you of lots of other artists, but this was less a matter of influence as it was of parallel discoveries and tangential development.
Lots of other artists were toying with photography in nondocumentary ways — Duane Michals and William Wegman, for example — and many were using their own bodies as subject matter in photographs, including Ana Mendieta and Bruce Nauman.

Not exact matches

In other words, we see a secular band with a distinctive sound (Mumford and Sons is a good example) and perhaps six months to a year later, there's a band that sounds an awful lot like Mumford and Sons singing generic praise and worship lyrics instead of whatever the secular artist was singing about.
It seems the trigger to a lot of her problems was her dad leaving the family and her world collapsing as she knew it and, as an artist taking that pain or other pain / frustration and channeling it into her music in a real and no BS kind of way.
We saw a lot of Banksy's art, as well as a number of other UK artists, such as Stewy and Otto Schade (Osch).
«I guess I must be, because this film represents a lot of ideas and feelings I have as an artist,» he said, going on to highlight his movie's «environmental message and the idea that we are all connected to each other as human beings.»
It is a lot of fun and is a great way to meet artists / crafters / bakers and other locals.
And of course, I'm listening a lot to some other modern artists.
Other artists, such as Ed Sheeran, were offered verified profiles, but the singer / songwriter turned it down, claiming he didn't have time to be going on a lot of dates and that he'd rather spend his time talking about his music.
It gets a 3 because you can tell the environmental artists put a lot of work into the game, the gameplay itself is copy pasta'ed from other games, the story is SJW tripe and boring as heck.
There's lots of great stuff going on here, but sometimes it happens to neglect the quite extraordinary artists coming from other parts of the globe.»
And artists work best alone — best outside of corporate environments, best where they can control an invention's design without a lot of people designing it for marketing or some other committee.
A lot of these series go on for many volumes, so if a reader is interested, they'll pick up other books in the series or by the same author or artist.
I imagine it it does well, we'll see it for other devices in time, but I'm surprised by some of the reactions - getting the artists of Naruto, One Piece and Ouran Host Club to all sign onto digital editions must of take a lot of work and negociating with Shonen Jump Japan's editorial and Hakuensha [who did dip their toes into digital in the past with that english digital manga site that closed that they were involved in, mind you]
Artists come in pink, blue, and lots of other colors, too.
Second: While the incredible help we've received from TezukainEnglish, Helen McCarthy, Ed Sizemore and many other fans is obviously a huge part of the campaign's success, we're doing a lot of marketing as well, partnering with artists, writers and other companies.
You have to do a lot of other things, like formatting your book, hiring a cover artist or designing one yourself, distribution and marketing.
On the other hand, they launched a lot of artists who did go on to make successful graphic novels.
In other production news for Wii U, our programmers, testers and artists are working on lots of optimization tasks to get the best possible performance.
«We got out of the gate quickly without a lot of disruption, which enabled us to focus on the other fundamental pieces we needed to build, while leaving the artists to work in their world undisturbed.»
Telltale usually recruits lots of talented voice - over artists from their previous games such as Adam Harrington who voices Bigby Wolf and The Woodsman having already voiced LeChuck and Moose in Tales of Monkey Island, Matches in Back to the Future, Foreman Isaac Davner and Repairman Scruffman in Puzzle Agent 2, Andy St. John in The Walking Dead: Season 1 and Jerry and Leland in The Walking Dead: 400 Days as well as Melissa Hutchison who voices Toad Junior and Beauty with Melissa Hutchison's adaptable voice acting having already featured as many other characters such as Stinky in the Sax and Max seasons; Trixie Trotter in Back to the Future; and most popular of all is the role of Clementine The Walking Dead: Seasons 1 and 2, amongst other videogames, alongside Dave Fennoy voices Bluebeard who perfectly voiced the lead protagonist Lee Everett in The Walking Dead: Seasons 1 and 2 opposite Melissa Hutchison and has voiced Dr. Montrose in Law & Order: Legacies and many videogame and television characters.
We were never part of something like this, so somehow we reached there and that was one amazing experience of our lives, we met a lot of amazing people, other game developers, designers, artists and much more».
If I do buy out of a studio and the artist is not represented, I spend a lot of time explaining how the market works and give her a couple of other people to talk to who are gallerists.
A lot of successful artists do leave Da behind, but their footprints are still there for others to follow.
I've mentioned before, and lots of others agree, that artists have an unfair advantage in business.
Lots of artists had not just signature sales, but also other moments of realization that validated their choice to pursue art in a serious way.
There are a lot of artists who are selling their art online for free, without paying a management fee or doing other things, but they have more than paid for it in other ways: sleepless nights spent working on their Web site, hours spent learning how to upload high resolution images, use social media to gain a following, and write effective copy so that your visitors turn into buyers.
I sell a lot of work each month, mostly prints, tried etsy but its easy to get lost there among the thousands of artists, and a few other free sites, I get most of my sales through promoting on facebook and instagram, and use pay pal for payment, I bring in between $ 500 to $ 1000 a month (the $ 1000 being around the holidays) Its not enough to make a living but its great supplemental income!
Talk to other artists before you spend a lot of time getting set up on a new online gallery.
At that time I read a lot of bad advice about how an artist's blog should be about the art only and that anything else was «off topic» and would turn people away (because they don't want to waste time hearing about you and your interests other than your art).
Along with Ligon, Anatsui, Ofili and Thomas, there are a number of other black artists whose works (several with multiple lots) are up for auction across the three major houses, familiar names including Jean Michel - Basquiat, Mark Bradford, Nick Cave, Rashid Johnson, Kerry James Marshall, Julie Mehretu, Oscar Murillo, Chris Ofili, Martin Puryear, Lorna Simpson, Carrie Mae Weems, Jack Whitten, Kehinde Wiley and Kara Walker.
Other lots to watch at Christie's are a 1982 painting by Jean - Michel Basquiat, Woman Reading by Roy Lichtenstein, and a 2004 work by Cy Twombly created by the artist in his home off the coast of Italy.
With this group of artists, there's a lot of debt to the foundation of Pop art, to Warhol and other artists in the Pop arena.
It has been said that a lot of conceptual artists come from sculpture rather than painting or other disciplines.
I think that that argument, that line, might very well have led to Wade and lots of other smart artists who are making paintings for reasons that are really quite different than the artists of my generation.
For an artist as out of gas when it comes to ideas about «critiquing whiteness» and «recasting the role of women as subject versus objects,» and all the other boilerplate things artists have been «critiquing» in many of the exact same ways for the last 25 years — since the 1993 Whitney Biennial — Ghada Amer certainly produces a lot of work, most of which looks more or less the same.
The dangerous thing right now is that there are lots of good young artists, and when they see other people's success, their goal becomes to achieve it in a few months or a year.
TM: Matthew [Day Jackson] is one of a number of artists that I've found myself working with a lot over the course of my career — others include Charles Avery, Roger Hiorns, Keith Wilson, and Erik van Lieshout, and a little more recently Matthew Darbyshire and Jess Flood - Paddock.
«Life, Jazz and Lots of Other Things» is Sam Nhlengethwa's first solo museum exhibition in the U.S. Based in Johannesburg, Nhlengethwa is revered as one of South Africa's leading contemporary artists.
Not only artists» studios, but also bars, restaurants, yoga studios, shops and a lots of other commercial and not profit spaces opened their doors to let dive people into Bushwick's creative climate.
Other top lots in the sale included Uruguayan artist Joaquín Torres - García's tempera on board titled Grafismo universal sobre fondo gris, 1937, which sold to a US dealer for $ 1.4 million (estimate: $ 1 million / 1.5 million) and Claudia Bravo's realist - style painting of draped, multiple - colored fabrics, Psalterium, 1998, which sold for $ 1.1 million (estimate: $ 800,000 / 1.2 million).
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