[13] He was later included in «50 Photographs by 50 Photographers», another MoMA show
organized by photographer Edward Steichen, [13] and he lectured at the New School for Social Research.
They are archived on slide sheets
organized by photographer image next to image without interruption.
This reprise of a 1997 show
organized by photographer Irene Fertik marks the donation of 35 prints by the photographers to the museum's permanent collection.
Not exact matches
In 2000, Wolfgang Tillmans became the first
photographer to win the annual Turner Prize
organized by Tate in London.
Tell it to the Birds inhabited the Mylayne Pavilion in Millennium Park's Lurie Garden for a special one day event,
organized by The Art Institute of Chicago & The Arts Club of Chicago alongside their exhibition of avian
photographer Jean - Luc Mylayne, Mutual Regard.
Prager was the 2012 winner of the FOAM Paul Huf Award, a prize
organized by the museum and awarded annually to a young
photographer.
This photograph expands the ICA / Boston's holdings of work
by Rineke Dijkstra, one of the most influential
photographers working today, and registers the museum's early support of the artist in 2001, when the ICA
organized her first museum survey.
Photographers Among Us is
organized by the Addison Gallery of American Art and curated
by Tessa Hite, Curatorial Fellow.
Recent solo exhibitions have been
organized by the Wexner Center for the Arts in Columbus, Ohio; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Aldrich Museum in Ridgefield, Connecticut; the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago; the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis; The Saint Louis Art Museum; the
Photographers» Gallery in London; The Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles; the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; and the Long Beach Museum of Art in California.
Painters &
Photographers is
organized by Jamilee Lacy, PC — G Director and Curator.
Photographer unknown, Documentation of installation for Art in the Anchorage 7,
organized by Creative Time, 1990.
GENERATION WEALTH
BY LAUREN GREENFIELD In her first major retrospective, Ms. Greenfield, a
photographer and documentarian,
organizes 25 years» worth of her anthropologically tinted investigations of money culture into a single piece.
After Hurricane Sandy in 2012, Wyatt and the Foley Gallery
organized #SANDY, an exhibition of iPhone photographs
by professional
photographers that raised $ 21,000 for rebuilding efforts in New York City.
«Back to Fort Scott,» is the fourth exhibit
organized by the Gordon Parks Foundation that has deeply examined an individual LIFE Magazine story that the
photographer worked on.
The series,
organized by Leandro Villaro, brings to life the work of featured
photographers and other notable guest artists and scholars, offering a unique opportunity to engage with them in an intimate setting as they discuss their work and process.
FOG events include a conversation between artist Sterling Ruby and Lawrence Rinder (director of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive), a panel
organized by SFMOMA's Modern Art Council exploring the influence of women in art and culture, a conversation between artist Tomás Saraceno and Chris Flink (executive director of the Exploratorium), a book signing with
photographer Todd Hido, a panel exploring artist Trevor Paglen's Sight Machine (a multimedia performance at Pier 70 on January 14), and more.
«First Show / Last Show,»
organized by Vito Schnabel, is a group exhibition in the former Germania Bank building, an 1898 landmark that was once home to the
photographer Jay Maisel.
In addition to her Guggenheim retrospective, Catherine Opie: American
Photographer, her work has been featured in recent solo exhibitions
organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Aldrich Museum in Connecticut.
Recent solo exhibitions of Opie's work have been
organized by the Wexner Center for the Arts in Ohio; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Aldrich Museum in Connecticut; the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago; the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis; The Saint Louis Art Museum; the
Photographers» Gallery in London; The Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles; The Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; and the Long Beach Museum of Art in California.
For the second iteration of The Neighbors at The Bronx Museum of the Arts, guest curator Sofía Hernández Chong Cuy
organizes two concurrent exhibitions: Sanctuary, featuring work
by the Andrea Bowers, and Home, presenting work
by photographer Andrea Aragón.
Images of Stamm's street interventions will be included in his show, as well as documentation
by photographer Abby Robinson of his participation in the Pool Project
organized by artist Russell Maltz at the C.W. Post College, Greenvale, NY, in the late 1970s.
A reprise of an exhibition
organized by the Department of Cultural Affairs in the late 1990s, this group show features the work of seven African American
photographers working in Los Angeles since the late 1940s.
Crossed Purposes, a major traveling exhibition pairing the work of Joyce Kozloff with that of her husband,
photographer Max Kozloff, was
organized by the Butler Institute of American Art in Youngstown, Ohio and traveled to a number of museums around the country during 1999 and 2000.
At his invitation, the painter Richard Hawkins and the
photographer Catherine Opie have
organized a mini-retrospective of paintings - on - photographs
by an art school classmate, Tony Greene, who died of AIDS in 1990 at 35.
JULIE DICKOVER is the director of the Crisp - Ellert Art Museum at Flagler College in Saint Augustine, Florida, where she has
organized exhibitions
by artists such as Montreal based video artist Julie Lequin and
photographer Mark Ruwedel, as well as a collaborative interdisciplinary project and exhibition with Portland, Oregon based artist Harrell Fletcher.
Julie Dickover is the director of the Crisp - Ellert Art Museum at Flagler College in Saint Augustine, Florida, where she has
organized exhibitions
by artists such as Montreal based video artist Julie Lequin and
photographer Mark Ruwedel, as well as a collaborative interdisciplinary project and exhibition with Portland, Oregon based artist Harrell Fletcher.
A recent New York exhibition
organized by two curatorial colleagues from my days as Senior Curator of Painting and Sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art, Peter Galassi, former Chief Curator of Photography, and John Elderfield, erstwhile Chief Curator of Drawings and subsequently Chief Curator of Painting and Sculpture, surveyed the paintings and photographs devoted to such imagery
by artists ranging from Thomas Eakins, Jean - Léon Gérôme, Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Alberto Giacometti, Jasper Johns and Philip Guston, to Constantin Brancusi (as
photographer) and André Kertész (documenting Piet Mondrian's studio) to Robert Rauschenberg and Lucas Samaras (as
photographers.)
A retrospective of the late
photographer's still lifes, portraits, images of fine art, street scenes, and celebrations of gay and lesbian culture,
organized by gallery director Andrea Packard and
photographer Ron Tarver, who has been awarded a Pew Fellowship and a Pulitzer Prize and who teaches at Swarthmore.
After exhibitions at Light Work and the Palitz Gallery at SU's Lubin House in New York City, the SUArt Galleries
organized an international tour of the exhibition
by this highly influential but under - recognized
photographer.
The sixth in a series of cross-cultural symposia
organized by Lucy Lippard, the four artists interviewed here — gay activist and self portrait artist Lyle Ashton Harris, Chicano
photographer and tourist Robert Buitron, Cherokee writer, curator, and video creator Rayna Green, photography critic and professor at University of California - Irvine Catherine Lord, and Chinese - American video artist Valerie Soe — discuss the role of photography and creation of culture.
Photographer Zoe Strauss, whose first solo museum show was
organized by ICA in 2006, debuts a new slideshow of her recent work.
Bourke - White and Mary Morris were the first female press
photographers on staff at any daily newspaper in the U.S. Prominent in our exhibition are works
by Morris Engel depicting an integrated school, children on New York streets, Coney Island scenes, and pictures of workers
organizing to strike.
• Successfully
organized a world tour spanning 85 countries, and exceeding the celebrity's financial goals • Restructured the celebrity's personal life,
by finding and employing appropriate household staff for a recently bought mansion • Provided tour support
by performing extensive research of city and venue and ensure that
photographers capture behind the scene happenings and the main event • Updated celebrity's statuses (for events and otherwise) on social media channels such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram • Handled celebrity's business with publicists, reporters, agents and business managers in person and over the telephone and email • Ensured celebrity's safety and wellbeing throughout the day, especially during public appearances