Sentences with phrase «often autobiographical»

Exploiting the creative potential of free association and past experience, he created deeply personal, often autobiographical, images by drawing liberally from such disparate fields as urban street culture, music, poetry, Christian iconography, African - American and Aztec cultural histories and a broad range of art historical sources.
Angel Otero is quickly becoming well known for his textured canvases that weave between abstraction and representation taking their subject matter from an ongoing personal and often autobiographical narrative from his childhood in Puerto Rico.
Afro's works are often autobiographical, drawing on past memories conjured up some time after the event in order to allow the instant to be recalled through his senses rather than as mental images.
Neel's paintings are often autobiographical and coloured by her personal losses.
These color works are often autobiographical, depicting fathers and sons or dreamy adolescent boys; others show shirtless models — posed on a bed or amid lush paradisiacal greenery — and betray the intense voyeuristic pleasure of the man behind the lens.
Lee's multimedia art is often autobiographical, drawing inspiration and material from both the traumas and mundanities of her young life.
Her projects are often autobiographical in nature, maintaining a focus on womanhood, memories and the development of society.
Hyon Gyon addresses cultural identity, sexual politics, grief, catharsis and ecstasy in her highly expressive and often autobiographical body of work.
Often autobiographical, many of the paintings also reference Moore's personal life and his HIV - positive status.
Exploiting the creative potential of free association and past experience, he created deeply personal, often autobiographical, images by drawing liberally from such disparate fields as urban street culture, music, poetry, Christian iconography, African and Aztec cultural histories and a broad range of art historical sources, a practice that is particularly evident in this work.
He passionately poured his soul into often autobiographical and allegorical expressions which weave figures and landscapes into a tapestry of color.
Four years later, his father hanged himself; Guston discovered the body and subsequently sought solace by hiding in a cupboard lit by a naked bulb, the image of which would become a prevailing motif in the oddly disquieting, figurative, often autobiographical paintings he began to make in his fifties.
With work that is deeply personal, often autobiographical, and open to talking about subjects rarely covered in this medium, Freeman has garnered a reputation for disruptive ideas that examine our digital existence.
A fond and appreciative portrait of one of American journalism's superstars, «Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold» may not contain any revelations that will surprise those who've followed Didion's eloquent, often autobiographical writing over the years.

Not exact matches

Since his autobiographical 2006 debut A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints, director Dito Montiel has been able to acquire impressive casts for his often problematic but sometimes compelling examinations of fractured masculine psyches.
Part of this is probably because Baumbach's output is remarkably personal (the temptation to read it as directly autobiographical is often overwhelming), so it has changed as he has changed.
While the novel isn't autobiographical in terms of the plot elements, it does contain many of my views on life, the philosophies which have influenced me, and the questions about life which I often ask myself and wiser people around me.
Returning to the years immediately following his move to New York City in 1958, the exhibition illustrates the ways Dine incorporated household objects ---- often loaded with autobiographical import ---- into his paintings and sculptures as extensions of and metaphors for the human body.
Often inspired by autobiographical details and by the arduous transformations of his home country, Paci's work intertwines personal narratives with metaphorical and poetical chronicles of the experience of life in exile.
Often drawing upon autobiographical, art historical or sociological sources, Ruby's work is frequently referred to as «post-humanist» — a term that broadly describes a society which, thanks in part to technological advancement, has evolved beyond fixed categories of being (e.g. time / place), or predetermining classifications (e.g. animal / human).
These combinations of drawing, painting and collaged text present brief autobiographical utterances culled from their original context and transformed into often poetic evocations of distant places and encounters.
Regarded as a seminal figure in gay and lesbian cinema, and in particular, pre-Internet video - work, Benning's short films often feature autobiographical content in fragmented narratives that address feminism, gender identity, and youth and popular cultures.
Sarah's autobiographical subject matter presents an unpretentious approach to rendering people, places and things with vibrant, meticulous and detailed brushwork characteristic of the egg tempera medium in which she often paints.
Art historian Lucy Lippard wrote at the time: «Certain elements — a central focus (often «empty,» often circular or oval), parabolic baglike forms, obsessive line and detail, veiled strata, tactile or sensuous surfaces and forms, associative fragmentation, autobiographical emphasis, and so forth — are found far more often in the work of women than of men.»
Wilkes makes works that are often intimate and autobiographical, sometimes using mannequins to create domestic scenes that are not immediately fathomable, and subject to interpretation.
Based on a black and white photograph from the 1930s reproduced in the Sunday Express, a copy of which his mother found under the carpet of the house they moved to in 2006 when his family reluctantly left the farm following the death of his father and the subsequent financial hardship of farm trading, the image has poignant autobiographical association for the artist which he often revisits.
While his work is often times infused with autobiographical elements that blur the distinction between art and reality, López's interdisciplinary approach to art nourishes from daily encounters, mundane rituals, and subtle visual codes embedded into life.
His often complex compositions — typically of sunlit interiors of rooms and gardens populated with friends and family members — are both narrative and autobiographical.
Pindell, a charter member of the A.I.R. Gallery in New York, often mines the twin themes of racism and sexism in her strongly autobiographical work.
His art made in the last decade often explores the theme of the «origins» of civilization and incorporates autobiographical reflections, including his childhood memories of watching the physical torture and suffering of his parents during the Cultural Revolution (1966 — 76), states the museum in an artist bio.
These new autobiographical works portray the tangled roots of her ancestry and deal with her interpretation and perception of prejudice, often among African - Americans themselves, in reaction to the blending and merging of skin colors and cultures.
Because you often appear in the images, do people assume they're autobiographical?
Though produced with conceptually rigorous and minimalist strategies, these works were chosen because they represent intimate moments in these artists» lives which may include autobiographical or narrative qualities, often presented in the form of giving themselves over to their audience in a metaphorical or literal sense.
Through objects, performances and installations, Sahib explores both formal and autobiographical themes, relating often to intimacy, sexuality, relationships, desire and community.
Through her eloquent, diaristic writing, it becomes increasingly clear that, whilst often associated with the Minimalists, her work was actually defined by a powerful emotional and autobiographical reflex.
Often focused on a queer experience of the post-Soviet world, his work transforms descriptive accounts into literary dramas, autobiographical reflections, and philosophical inquiries.
Often referred to as an autobiographical or confessional artist, her paintings are both narratives of personal and communal experiences.
Sometimes infused with a sly sense of humor, Pierson's work is inherently autobiographical; often using his friends as his models and referencing traditional Americana motifs, his bright yet distanced imagery reveals the undercurrents of the uncanny in the quotidian.
Through objects, performances and installations, Sahib explores both formal and autobiographical themes, relating often to intimacy, sexuality...
They often portray autobiographical images of interior domestic scenes, while his landscape and figure painting was inspired by the countryside around Connemara, his Belfast home and his London flat.
His Pop pictures were painted in a style reminiscent of abstract expressionism, but - like his older contemporary Robert Rauschenberg (1925 - 2008)- Dine is best noted for his assemblage art and his witty compositions combining the painted canvas with found objects, often of an autobiographical nature.
They pair autobiographical, intensely personal images of Auder's surroundings, with art historical genres (Still Life, Memento,...) in a dark, but often playful and humorous manner.
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