McGlynn has also been influenced by a growing up in post-WWII America and its specific zeitgeist - described by Cady Noland as a specific, gestalt experience — as well as
other contemporary artists such as Olivier Mosset, Rachel Whiteread, Sadie Benning, Jacob Kassay, Mona Hatoum, Doug Ashford, David Hammons and Liam Gillick, among others.
Unlike
other contemporary artists such as Fabian Marcaccio who deconstructs the medium quite literally by silk — screening impastoed gestures and exposing the stretcher; and Joseph Marioni, David Simpson, or other monochromatic painters who have reduced the medium to its most essential elements; Doig steadfastly reflects an ambiguous yet familiar place between high and popular culture, and familiar locations and nowhere.
Not exact matches
View works by
contemporary Ubudian
artists as well as traditional schools of art
such as Batuan — practiced by Brahman
artists — and Sanur, which features highly stylized paintings of sea creatures and
other animals.
Since launching in 2011, the Prize has established itself as a tastemaker for some of the most exciting
contemporary artists in painting and drawing, recognising emerging talent ahead of
other prizes for recent graduates,
such as Catlin and Bloomberg New
Contemporaries.
Also one of America's foremost publishers of
contemporary fine art prints and sculpture, Chalk & Vermilion Fine Arts and its Martin Lawrence retail galleries represent a number of today's most popular
artists from around the world,
such as Philippe Bertho, Fanny Brennan, Robert Deyber, Erté, François Fressinier, Kerry Hallam, Liudmila Kondakova, Felix Mas, and
others.
Although several sculptures employ crackle glaze and
other nods to traditional pottery, the works in this exhibition are notable for the wide range of effects achieved with
such contemporary materials as epoxy resin, catalyzed polyurethane, and high - gloss automotive paint mixed to the
artist's specifications and applied with an airbrush.
In Golden Arches, the
artist has intentionally avoided the use of plastic and
other contemporary mass - produced industrial goods, opting instead for
such traditional sculpting materials as plaster, bronze and gold.
They are organized alphabetically by subject, under
such entries as «Art and Capitalism,» «Childhood,» «Entropy (After Smithson),» «Matter,» «My Work,» «
Other Artists,» and «Poetry,» and they include Andre's reflections on Michelangelo and Duchamp, on Stein and Marx, and
such contemporaries as Eva Hesse, Robert Smithson, Robert Morris, and Damien Hirst.
Frielicher, along with
other artists including Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, and Betty Parsons lived and worked on the East End, and it's still a thriving magnet for
contemporary artists such as Julian Schnabel, Jennifer Bartlett, Chuck Close, Annie Leibovitz, Mary Heilmann, and Lynda Benglis.
Other exhibitions
such as «It Takes a Nation: Art for Social Justice: With Emory Douglas, and the Black Panther Party, Africobra, and
Contemporary Washington
Artists» at American University in Washington, D.C., and «Ruddy Roye: When Living is a Protest» at Steven Kasher, make the connection between earlier black rights movements and today's Black Lives Matters activism.
LAND supports dynamic and unconventional artistic practices using a tripartite approach: Commissioning public projects of site - and situation - specific works with national and international
contemporary artists Collaborating with a variety of institutions and organizations,
such as universities, museums, and theaters as well as
other types of spaces, industries, and entities Offering additional programs
such as performances, workshops, residencies, discussions, and publications LAND is an ongoing endeavor with three primary types of annual programming: LAND 1.0 projects are large - scale, multi-
artist, multi-site exhibitions and single - site group exhibitions, LAND 2.0 projects feature a new commission by a single mid-career or established
artist, and LAND 3.0 projects feature new work by lesser known or emerging
artists
Be sure to check out booths by Galerie Ernst Hilger from Vienna, representing the works of
artists such as Erró and Mel Ramos, along with exponents of Austrian modernism from the 1960s onward and the main exponents of the most important international art movements of the 20th century; Galerie Lisa Kandlhofer from Vienna, representing emerging and mid career
artists; Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac from London, Paris and Salzburg, specialised in international,
contemporary art representing around 60
artists and a number of renowned estates; SUPPAN FINE ARTS from Vienna, focusing on international and modern as well as representatives of art after 1945; and PIFO Gallery from Beijing, representing a selection of Chinese and international
artists with a core focus on minimalism and abstraction; among
others.
While Mike Kelley took this up in the 1980s, and
artists such as Sheila Pepe, Sheila Hicks, and Josh Faught have plotted
other trajectories of textile in the expanded field, Susan Cianciolo's work reopens these questions surrounding the matriarch, the amateur, artisanship, and collectivity in the context of the accelerated speed of
contemporary cultural production.
In addition to
contemporary works by the gallery's stable of international
artists (including important L.A. figures
such as Paul McCarthy, Mark Bradford and Richard Jackson), there will also be museum - grade exhibitions organized by Schimmel and
other curators.
Border Zones and Liminal Bodies This screening features short video art pieces by 12 U.S. and international
artists that invite viewers to contemplate
contemporary issues,
such as migration and refugee crises, disability and the body in movement, feminicide in Ciudad Juárez, water insecurity, and
other issues.
At Turner
Contemporary, it will be displayed within the context of a trans - historical exhibition that includes figures such as Thomas Gainsborough, Joseph Wright and Angelica Kauffman, as well as major 20th - century and contemporary artists including Andy Warhol, Lucian Freud, Louise Bourgeois, Damien Hirst, Sarah Lucas, Ian Breakwell, Felix Gonzales - Torres and many others (over 100 work
Contemporary, it will be displayed within the context of a trans - historical exhibition that includes figures
such as Thomas Gainsborough, Joseph Wright and Angelica Kauffman, as well as major 20th - century and
contemporary artists including Andy Warhol, Lucian Freud, Louise Bourgeois, Damien Hirst, Sarah Lucas, Ian Breakwell, Felix Gonzales - Torres and many others (over 100 work
contemporary artists including Andy Warhol, Lucian Freud, Louise Bourgeois, Damien Hirst, Sarah Lucas, Ian Breakwell, Felix Gonzales - Torres and many
others (over 100 works in total).
Taking selected works from the Collection as its point of departure, including seminal pieces by some of the most prominent
artists from Central, Eastern and South - East Europe since the 1960s, including historical works by Mladen Stilinović, Július Koller, Valie Export, Geta Brătescu, Edward Krasiński and Sanja Iveković, the exhibition stages an interplay between these and
other historical,
contemporary and newly produced works that interpret and critically examine the collection by
artists such as Nika Dubrovsky, Tim Etchells, Marcus Geiger, Ashley Hans Scheirl, Vlatka Horvat, David Maljković, Oscar Murillo, Manuel Pelmus and Stephen Willats.
I was unsure about pursuing a career in art before I saw works by
other contemporary artists of African descent,
such as Wangechi Mutu, Julie Mehretu, Kerry James Marshall, Chris Ofili, Yinka Shonibare, and El Anatsui.
This exhibition mixes historical work by
artists such as Jacob Lawrence, Victor Patricio Landaluze, Camille Pissarro, Wifredo Lam, Amelia Pélaez, and Armando Reverón, with works by
contemporary artists, including Allora and Calzadilla, Janine Antoni, Renée Cox, and Ebony Patterson, among many
others.
Contemporary artists aged 18 to 80 from around the world have created these artworks that were inspired by
such issues as racism, sexism, discrimination, health care, climate change, transgender rights, white supremacy, gender equality, and gun control, among
others.
Contemporary artists such as Ed Ruscha, Doug Aitken, Ugo Rondinone, Christian Marclay, Elliott Hundley, Phillip Taaffe and many
others have all expressed their intense admiration for Conner's work.
The
artists included in Go Figure, have collectively exhibited internationally at venues
such as Deste Foundation Center for
Contemporary Art in Athens, Greece, El Museo de Barrio in New York, Weatherspoon Museum, NC, Andrea Rosen Gallery, NY, Bellweather, NY, Roebling Hall, Tate Modern, London, PS1, NY, The Brooklyn Musuem, MOMA, Mexico City, The Whitney Museum of American Art, Musée D'art Contemporain in Montréal among
others.
The show features some 70 masterpieces of US
contemporary art by
artists such as Alex Katz, Jeff Koons, Jenny Holzer, Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Longo, Cindy Sherman, Jeff Wall, Andy Warhol, among
others.
The
artist's work is included in collections
such as the National Museum of Fine Arts, Havana Cuba; the National Museum of Engraving, Buenos Aires, Argentina; the Afrika Museum, Berg en Dal, The Netherlands; the Museum of
Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA; and the Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, among
others.
The museum attracts art lovers with exhibitions of the permanent collection, which comprises of major works by
artists such as Bacon, Calder, van Gogh, Matisse and Picasso, and temporary shows with
contemporary artists such as Jeff Koons and Philippe Parreno, and public art projects by Louise Bourgeois, Jenny Holzer, and
other renowned
artists.
Artist's Writing as Site of the Artwork October 24, 2014 10:30 am - 1:30 pm The talk addresses the function of writing by
artists such as Donald Judd and his
contemporaries: from Duchamp to Brian O'Doherty to Carl Andre, Hélio Oticicia, Robert Smithson, Eva Hesse, Robert Barry, Lucy Lippard, Mel Bochner and
others.
This exhibition mixes historical work by
artists such as Jacob Lawrence, Victor Patricio Landaluze, Camille Pissarro, Wifredo Lam, Amelia Peláez, and Armando Reverón, with works by
contemporary artists, including Allora and Calzadilla, Janine Antoni, Renée Cox, and Ebony G. Patterson, among many
others.
This event considers the function of text,
artist's writing and artistic language as departure points to explore the necessity of writing for a wide range of
contemporary artists» working today
such as Martha Rosler, Hito Steyerl, Jonas Staal, Cai Gu - Qiang, Miguel A. Lopez, Marion von Osten and the many
others who emphasize the act of writing as either a significant part, or as the main site of their artistic production.
''... With two
other locations in New York and Beverly Hills, Los Angeles, Sundaram Tagore Gallery represents some of the most well known
contemporary artists,
such as Hiroshi Senju and Judith Murray...»
Prior to joining Artpace, Kanjo served as the Curator of
Contemporary Art at the Portland Art Museum (1996 - 1999) where she managed a lively contemporary art program within the city's general museum, and secured selected acquisitions by such artists as Robert Irwin, Michael Lazarus, Claes Oldenburg, Diana Thater, a
Contemporary Art at the Portland Art Museum (1996 - 1999) where she managed a lively
contemporary art program within the city's general museum, and secured selected acquisitions by such artists as Robert Irwin, Michael Lazarus, Claes Oldenburg, Diana Thater, a
contemporary art program within the city's general museum, and secured selected acquisitions by
such artists as Robert Irwin, Michael Lazarus, Claes Oldenburg, Diana Thater, among
others.
These sketchbook drawings of portraits of young men and erotic portrayals of male nudes contrasted with the work of
other contemporary gay
artists,
such as Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns, who considered Warhol «too swish.»
His Pop sensibility is now standard practice, taken up by major
contemporary artists such as Richard Prince, Takashi Murakami, and Jeff Koons, among countless
others.
The exhibition's first iteration, entitled Space Force Construction, opens V — A — C's new permanent headquarters in Venice and incorporates
contemporary projects by international
contemporary artists such as Tania Bruguera, Abraham Cruzvillegas, Barbara Kruger, Taus Makhacheva, Mikhail Tolmachev, and many
others.
In particular, the initiative will allow for original scholarship on works of art that have been recently given to the Museum, by notable
contemporary African American
artists such as Nayland Blake, Willie Cole, Lorna Simpson, Kara Walker, and Carrie Mae Weems, as well as by
other living
artists of many identities working in various types of media.
The museum also regularly partners with
other leading art institutions to co-curate and produce exhibitions,
such as the collaboration with Deutsche Bank and the Yokohama Museum of Art for Still Moving: A Triple Bill on the Image; Museum of
Contemporary Art Tokyo for Trans - Cool TOKYO (highlighting works by Japanese
artists such as Yayoi Kusama and Yasumasa Morimura); and Video, An Art, A History with the Pompidou Center (Bill Viola, Jean - Luc Godard, Bruce Nauman).
The Botín Foundation's collection is focused primarily on
contemporary fine art and comprises paintings, drawings, sculptures and installations by renowned international
artists such as Miroslaw Balka, Tacita Dean, Carlos Garaicoa, Mona Hatoum, Joan Jonas, Jannis Kounellis, Julie Mehretu, Antoni Muntadas, Gabriel Orozco, and Juan Uslé, among
others; pieces from the collection are usually showcased through thematic temporary exhibitions in the galleries on the upper floor of the west wing.
While I'd love for the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston to pass on one of its never - ending «once in a lifetime» opportunities to rent
other museums» Impressionist collections, it's hard to see how San Antonio's interests don't include giving the city its first look at a significant concentration of works by the
artist Green has argued made the most important painting of the 20th century — especially since SAMA's
contemporary collection includes painters
such as Hans Hofmann and Richard Diebenkorn whom Matisse influenced.
Highlights from the collection include furniture by Charles and Ray Eames, ceramics by Beatrice Wood, and sculptures by Claire Falkenstein, George Rickney and Peter Voulokos; Early 20th Century European Modernist paintings by Vasily Kandinsky, Alexej Jawlensky and
others from the Milton Wichner Collection; and
contemporary artists such as James Jean, Sherrie Wolf, and Sandow Birk whose paintings have recently been added to the collection.
The gallery's program features young international
artists interspersed between historically researched exhibitions,
such as Desire of the
Other, a critique of
contemporary collecting and our recent Dash Snow exhibition, for example.
While his work focuses on external aspects
such as society and the
others, or gazes internally as he explores the methodology of painting expression in reflecting his pure inner self and emotions, the exploration of these polarities allows the
artist to reflect on multiple aspects of relating in
contemporary socieities.
She has also served as Curator at the Aldrich
Contemporary Art Museum in Ridgefield, Connecticut, working with artists such as KAWS, Hope Gangloff, Brazilian troupe Chelpa Ferro, Andrea Dezso, Brody Condon and others; Assistant Curator of architecture and design at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, where she worked on groundbreaking exhibitions such as «Cai Guo - Qiang: I Want to Believe», «Zaha Hadid», and «Restoring a Masterpiece: Frank Lloyd Wright «s Guggenheim Museum»; Curator of Collections and Public Programs at the Price Tower Arts Center in Bartlesville, Oklahoma, a facility housed in Frank Lloyd Wright's idiosyncratic tower and now a World Heritage Site; Director of Community Outreach of the Queens Theatre in the Park in New York City, a premier performing arts venue that serves the most ethnically diverse county in the nation; and as Project Coordinator for the Mexico Now Festival, New York City's first — and only — annual festival of contemporary Mexican art
Contemporary Art Museum in Ridgefield, Connecticut, working with
artists such as KAWS, Hope Gangloff, Brazilian troupe Chelpa Ferro, Andrea Dezso, Brody Condon and
others; Assistant Curator of architecture and design at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, where she worked on groundbreaking exhibitions
such as «Cai Guo - Qiang: I Want to Believe», «Zaha Hadid», and «Restoring a Masterpiece: Frank Lloyd Wright «s Guggenheim Museum»; Curator of Collections and Public Programs at the Price Tower Arts Center in Bartlesville, Oklahoma, a facility housed in Frank Lloyd Wright's idiosyncratic tower and now a World Heritage Site; Director of Community Outreach of the Queens Theatre in the Park in New York City, a premier performing arts venue that serves the most ethnically diverse county in the nation; and as Project Coordinator for the Mexico Now Festival, New York City's first — and only — annual festival of
contemporary Mexican art
contemporary Mexican art and culture.
The gallery's programme features young international
artists interspersed with historically researched exhibitions,
such as Desire of the
Other, a critique of
contemporary collecting, and Dash Snow Hello, this is Dash, the
artist's first solo exhibition in London.
His work was also featured in many important group exhibitions,
such as L'art vivant aux États - Unis (1970, Fondation Maeght, Saint - Paul, France),
Contemporary Black
Artists in America (1971, Whitney Museum of American Art), Lamp Black: Afro - American
Artists, New York and Boston (1973, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston), Another Generation (1979, The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York), Afro - American Abstraction (1981, P.S. 1
Contemporary Art Center, Queens), and The Appropriate Object (1989, Albright - Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo), among
others.
Peckham - based
artist, graffiti writer and
contemporary artist Remi Rough stands apart from
other street art - leaning practitioners in that his work is often referred to as «visual symphonies», thanks to his keen eye for the geometrical treatment of form, colour, line and space, and inspired by avant - garde movements
such as Suprematism and Italian Futurism.
The convening also forefronted
artists such as Postcommodity, Autumn Knight, and Guillermo Gomez - Pena, among
others, who gave performances about identity and identity politics, called out the racial divides and absurdities in arts administration and funding structures, and lay bare
contemporary colonizing forces.
In addition to its collections of Old Masters, its Impressionist, Post-Impressionist, Expressionist and Cubist paintings, as well as works of Constructivism, Dadaism and Surrealism, the museum maintains an impressive holding of
contemporary and postmodernist art, by Swiss, German, Italian, and American
artists,
such as Joseph Beuys, Georg Baselitz, A.R. Penck, Walter Dahn, Martin Disler, Siegfried Anzinger, Rosemarie Trockel, Robert Gober, Andy Warhol, Jasper Johns, Brice Marden, Bruce Nauman, Jonathan Borofsky, Francesco Clemente, Mimmo Paladino, Enzo Cucchi, and
others.
Gao suggests that compared to the more mainstream
contemporary artworks, particularly those acquired by museums or
other arts institutions during the 1990s, China's blossoming period of Apartment Art provided more thought - provoking simplicity, as the essence of
such work «dwells within an
artist's innermost being».
Exhibitions have showcased numerous
contemporary art movements
such as Minimalism, Neo-Expressionism, and Britart by Young British
Artists, as well as avant - garde art from China, while featured artists have included outstanding figures like Andy Warhol (1928 - 87), Phillip Guston (1913 - 80), Richard Serra (b. 1939), Anselm Kiefer (b. 1945), Gerhard Richter (b. 1932), Donald Judd (1928 - 94), Damien Hirst (b. 1965), and Tracey Emin (b. 1963), among many
Artists, as well as avant - garde art from China, while featured
artists have included outstanding figures like Andy Warhol (1928 - 87), Phillip Guston (1913 - 80), Richard Serra (b. 1939), Anselm Kiefer (b. 1945), Gerhard Richter (b. 1932), Donald Judd (1928 - 94), Damien Hirst (b. 1965), and Tracey Emin (b. 1963), among many
artists have included outstanding figures like Andy Warhol (1928 - 87), Phillip Guston (1913 - 80), Richard Serra (b. 1939), Anselm Kiefer (b. 1945), Gerhard Richter (b. 1932), Donald Judd (1928 - 94), Damien Hirst (b. 1965), and Tracey Emin (b. 1963), among many
others.
The most significant of the often loosely defined movements of early
contemporary art included pop art, characterized by commonplace imagery placed in new aesthetic contexts, as in the work of
such figures as Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein; the optical shimmerings of the international op art movement in the paintings of Bridget Riley, Richard Anusziewicz, and
others; the cool abstract images of color - field painting in the work of
artists such as Ellsworth Kelly and Frank Stella (with his shaped - canvas innovations); the lofty intellectual intentions and stark abstraction of conceptual art by Sol LeWitt and
others; the hard - edged hyperreality of photorealism in works by Richard Estes and
others; the spontaneity and multimedia components of happenings; and the monumentality and environmental consciousness of land art by
artists such as Robert Smithson.
The intensely engaging works of
such contemporary artists as the Guerrilla Girls, Barbara Kruger, Jenny Holzer, Mark Lombardi, Trevor Paglen and
others examine the political as a primary subject of their art, looking at the structures, interrelationships and language of influence and control.