Sentences with phrase «name of a dead woman»

The» «girls» we added just to piss people off,» says Kathe Kollwitz, one of the original members of the New York faction, which adopts the names of dead women artists as pseudonyms.
The Guerrilla Girls were founded in New York in 1985, each member taking the name of a dead woman artist as a pseudonym, for example Frida Kahlo and Georgia O'Keeffe.
The Guerrilla Girls» billboard paused at the Museum of Fine Arts, which the group, whose members are anonymous and take the names of dead women artists as pseudonyms, complained does not display women artists equally.
performs using the name of a dead woman artist and wears a gorilla mask to conceal her true identity.

Not exact matches

According to the Los Angeles coroner's report, she lay dead for the better part of a year before a neighbor and fellow actress, a woman named Susan Savage, noticed cobwebs and yellowing letters in her mailbox, reached through a broken window to unlock the door, and pushed her way through the piles of junk mail and mounds of clothing that barricaded the house.
If you Google the name of the guy mentioned towards the end who looks fondly on as his 7 year old daughter talks about dead bodies and death, («Benjamin Ramrajie»), you'll see that he was arrested for aggravated assault on a pregnant woman... just over 7 years ago.
Apart from being dead, to get included it clearly helped to be male (about one in fifty entries are women, reflecting the invisibility of women in the history of science); to have won a Nobel prize (at least before 1980); to have lived and worked in Europe, particularly in Britain or Germany; and to have been immortalised in the name of a law, principle or structure.
(Aronofsky) The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected)(Baumbach) The Death of Louis XIV (Serra) On Body and Soul (Enyedi) Molly's Game (Sorkin) B - Graduation (Mungiu) The Lego Batman Movie (McKay) Icarus (Fogel) The Florida Project (Baker) Lady Macbeth (Oldroyd) Rocco (Demaizière and Teurlai) Brawl in Cell Block 99 (Zahler) Faces Places (Agnès Varda and JR) The Unknown Girl (The Dardennes) The Breadwinner (Twomey) Nobody Speak: Trials of the Free Press (Knappenberger) Wheelman (Rush) Wonder Wheel (Allen) C + Beach Rats (Hittman) Baby Driver (Wright) Blade Runner 2049 (Villeneuve) Colossal (Vigalondo) Ghost in the Shell (Sanders) Coco (Unkrich and Molina) My Happy Family (Ekvtimishvili and Groß) Gaga: Five Foot Two (Moukarbel) Gerald's Game (Flanagan) Abacus: Small Enough to Jail (James) Brigsby Bear (McCary) Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie (Soren) C Get Out (Peele) Phantom Thread (Anderson) The Post (Spielberg) The Disaster Artist (Franco) Dunkirk (Nolan) Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold (Dunne) The Killing of a Sacred Deer (Lanthimos) Becoming Warren Buffett (Kunhardt and Oakes) The Death of Stalin (Iannucci) Logan (Mangold) The Discovery (McDowell) Wind River (Sheridan) The Ornithologist (Rodrigues) Mudbound (Rees) American Made (Liman) The Trip to Spain (Winterbottom) Saving Capitalism (Gilman and Kornbluth) Our Souls at Night (Batra) Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (Rønning and Sandberg) The Lego Ninjago Movie (Bean, Fisher and Logan) Star Wars: The Last Jedi (Johnson) C - John Wick: Chapter 2 (Stahelski) Wonder Woman (Jenkins) It (Muschietti) What Happened to Monday (Wirkola) Call Me by Your Name (Guadagnino) Darkest Hour (Wright) The Square (Östlund) Split (Shyamalan) Spider - Man: Homecoming (Watts) Guardians of the Galaxy Vol.
2, Rules Don't Apply, Free Fire, Alien: Covenant, Mindhorn, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales, Wonder Woman, The Mummy, Trench, War Machine, Transformers: The Last Knight, Baby Driver, Spider - man: Homecoming, The Beguiled, Dunkirk, War For the Planet of the Apes, The Big Sick, Mean Dreams, PACMen, Mountain, Watch the Sunset, Valerian and the City of a thousand Planets, Jungle, Call Me By Your Name, 78/52, Guardians of the Strait, Final Portrait, Tragedy Girls, Australia Day, Faces Place, Song To Song, Chasing Trane, Lucky, Manifesto, Killing Ground, Loving Vincent, Let Sunshine In, Brigsby Bear, The Killing of a Sacred Deer, Hostages, Voyage of Time (IMAX Edit), The Belko Experiment, Glory, Winnie, The Square, Rey, The Documentary of Dr G Yunupingu's Life, Wonderstruck, Austerlitz, Beatriz At Dinner, Logan Lucky, It, mother!
We find him next in a refugee camp, where he joins forces with a woman he doesn't know, who has just recruited an orphan girl from within the camp, to form a fake family, adopting names on the passports of dead fellow Sri Lankans.
But Stevens isn't actually dead, and when he awakens in a strange capsule seconds later, he's greeted by a woman named Goodwin (Vera Farmiga), who informs him that he's part of a military experiment that's trying to stop a terrorist attack in Chicago.
Korean star Yoo Ah In and «The Walking Dead» actor Steven Yeun star in this loose adaptation of Haruki Murakami's 1992 New Yorker short story about a working - class delivery boy named Jongsu who falls for a mysterious young woman who claims to have grown up with him.
It follows Detective Cassie Maddox as she is assigned to the case of a dead woman who looks exactly like her — and uses a name that Cassie herself once used as an alias.
Together Paz and Morales enter the hotel and discover, in the dead man's room, a most unusual suspect, an otherworldly woman by the name of Emmylou Dideroff.
The dead woman, whose name was not released, was checking the home of a vacationing friend when the American pit bull terrier jumped a fence and pounced.
One of them ominously named «Dead Woman's Pass».
Mario stops him in time with the help of a little butterfly named Tippi, only to realize that Tippi is really Timpani, the woman Bleck thought was dead (though now she's a butterfly).
, ArtPharmacy (Blog), June 12 Elisa della Barba, «What I loved about Venice Biennale 2013», Swide, June 2 Juliette Soulez, «Le Future Generation Art Prize remis a Venise», Blouin Artinfo, May 31 Charlotte Higgins, «Venice Biennale Diary: dancing strippers and inflatable targets», The Guardian On Culture Blog, May 31 Vincenzo Latronico, «Il Palazzo Enciclopedico», Art Agenda, May 31 Marcus Field, «The Venice Biennale preview: Let the art games commence», The Independent, May 18 Joost Vandebrug, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye», L'Uomo Vogue, No. 441, May / June «Lucy Mayes, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye», a Ruskin Magazine, Vol.3, pp. 38 - 39 Rebecca Jagoe, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye: Portraits Without a Subject», The Culture Trip, May Lynette Yiadom - Boakye, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye on Walter Richard Sickert's Miss Gwen Ffrangcon - Davies as Isabella of France (1932)», Tate etc., Issue 28, Summer, p. 83 «Turner Prize - nominated Brit has art at Utah museum», Standard Examiner, May 1 Matilda Battersby, «Imaginary portrait painter Lynette Yiadom - Boakye becomes first black woman shortlisted for Turner Prize 2013», The Independent, April 25 Nick Clark, «David Shrigley's fine line between art and fun nominated for Turner Prize», The Independent, April 25 Charlotte Higgins, «Turner prize 2013: a shortlist strong on wit and charm», guardian.co.uk April 25 Charlotte Higgins, «Turner prize 2013 shortlist takes a mischievous turn», guardian.co.uk, April 25 Adrian Searle, «Turner prize 2013 shortlist: Tino Sehgal dances to the fore», guardian.co.uk, April 25 Allan Kozinn, «Four Artists Named as Finalists for Britain's Turner Prize», The New York Times, April 25 Coline Milliard, «A Crop of Many Firsts: 2013 Turner Prize Shortlist Announced», Artinfo, April 25 Sam Phillips, «Former RA Schools student nominated for Turner Prize», RA Blog, April 25 «Turner Prize Shortlist 2013», artlyst, April 25 «Turner Prize Nominations Announced: David Shrigley, Tino Sehgal, Lynette Yiadom - Boakye and Laure Prouvost Up For Award», Huffpost Arts & Culture, April 25 Hannah Furness, «Turner Prize 2013: a dead dog, headless drummers and the first «live encounter» entry», Telegraph, April 25 Hannah Furness, «Turner Prize 2013: The public will question whether this is art, judge admits», Telegraph, April 25 Julia Halperin, «Turner Prize shortlist announced», The Art Newspaper, April 25 Brian Ferguson, «Turner Prize nomination for David Shrigley», Scotsman.com, April 25 «Former Falmouth University student shortlisted for Turner Prize», The Cornishman, April 29 «Trickfilme und der Geschmack der Sonne», Spiegel Online, April 25 Dominique Poiret, «La Francaise Laure Prouvost en lice pour le Turner Prize», Liberation, April 26 Louise Jury, «Turner Prize: black humour artist David Shrigley is finally taken seriously by judges», London Evening Standard, April 25 «Turner Prize 2013: See nominees» work including dead dog, grave shopping list and even some paintings», Mirror, April 25 Henry Muttisse, «It's the Turner demise», The Sun, April 25 «Imaginary portrait painter up for Turner Prize», BBC News, April 25 Farah Nayeri, «Tate's Crowd Artist Sehgal Shortlisted for Turner Prize», Bloomberg Businessweek, April 25 «Turner Prize finalists mix humour and whimsy», CBC News, April 25 Richard Moss, «Turner Prize 2013 shortlist revealed for Derry - Londonderry», Culture24, April 25 «David Shrigley makes 2013 Turner Prize shortlist», Design Week, April 25 «The Future Generation Art Prize@Venice 2013», e-flux.com, April 21 Skye Sherwin, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye», The Guardian Guide, March 2 - 8, p. 36 Amie Tullius, «Seasoned by Whitney Tassie», 15 Bytes, March «ARTINFO UK's Top 3 Exhibitions Opening This Week, ARTINFO.com, February 25 Orlando Reade, «Whose Oyster Is This World?»
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