Sentences with phrase «paintings explore issues»

Her figurative, still life and landscape paintings explore issues of role identification.
Referencing a black - and - white photograph of a screen - printed copy of an Albers that hung in Barragán's home, Magid's painting explores issues of authorship

Not exact matches

From endosymbiosis to malaria and HIV, paintings by artist and geneticist Hunter O'Reilly explore biological processes and issues we face today
Jane O'Hara — the animal advocate and artist whose paintings explore animal issues, depict their plight, and explore our relationships with them — recalls growing up in a family where animals didn't have much of a presence, but she liked them.
My biggest issue with Treasure Seekers II: The Enchanted Canvases was that the game started and BAM you are exploring paintings — it really made no sense and took me a bit of time to get past.
Featuring 42 contemporary artists from around the world whose work spans painting, sculpture, photography, and video, this exhibition explores issues of politics, religion, and racism.
Infused with geometry and animated by issues of abstraction, Lillian Bayley Hoover's paintings explore the ordinary, awkward, overlooked, and imperfect elements of our material environment.
His paintings and works on paper are both provocative and celebratory, exploring race and gender issues through cultural and historical references.
In making the announcement, the museum described her practice thus: «Youngblood explores the iconography of public and private suburban experience, issues of identity, ethics, and representation, and the politics of abstraction using photo - based collage, painting, assemblage, and sculpture.»
Bradford explores social justice issues through collage paintings composed of multiple layers of discard paper, flyers and posters found near his studio.
His current solo exhibition at the South London Gallery, Michael Armitage: The Chapel, absorbs the chapel - like qualities of the gallery space, where his paintings explore Kenyan culture and religion as the context in which to look at mental health issues in East Africa.
2016 — Bohrer, Ashley, The Commodified Built Environment, Red Wedge, August 2015 — Derrick, Andy, Friday Feature, Matthew Woodward, ArtSquare, December Hartigan, Phillip, Seeing the Art For the Trees, Hyperallergic, August Daignault, Kristina, With Matthew Woodward, Inside the Artists» Kitchen, May 2014 — Hartigan, Phillip A, Expo Chicago Fails to Inspire, Hyperallergic, October, Obaro, Tomi, What I'm Doing This Weekend, Matthew Woodward, Chicago Magazine, October Juarez, Frank Art365, Matthew Woodward, May Hildwine, Jeriah, Matthew Woodward, Review, ArtPulse Magazine, April 2013 — Hall, Sarah Elise, Art - Rated, Matthew Woodward, Interview, November Klein, Paul, Art Letter, The Huffington Post, October Sherman, Whitney, Playing With Sketches, Rockport Publishing, October 2012 — Meuller, Rachel, Meticulous Chaos, Be Nice Art Friends, July Taskaporan, Erol, Matthew Woodward, Interview, Neo Collective, July Gumbs, Melissa, View From the Birth Day at the Chicago Cultural Center, Examiner, July Amir, Matthew Woodward's Decaying Drawings, Beautiful / Decay, May Dluzen, Robin, Catalogs of Anonymous Forms, Chicago Art Magazine, April Debat, Don, Unveiling the Unique, Chicago Sun Times, March Mutts, Lost at E Minor, New Art, January 2011 — Vora, Manish, Iconomancy: The Magic of Art, Art Log, November Pocaro, Alan, Keeping Your Balance in the Windy City, Art Critical, October Hausslein, Allison, Fanmail, Dailyserving, November Marszalek, Norbert, One Question, Neotericart, October New American Paintings, Number 95, Midwest Edition, June Cook, Greg, Contained at BCA, The New England Journal of Aesthetic Research, April James, Damian, More Than a Whisper in the Ear, Bad at Sports, January 2010 — Blau, Lilly, Love and Real Estate, The Huffington Post, November Himebauch, Adam, Matthew Woodward, Veoba Magazine, November Pitts, Johnathan, Look What They Found, Baltimore Sun, July Duquette, Laura, Featured Artist, Artery Magazine, May Duquette, Laura, How WNY Has Influenced His Work, Buffalo Rising Magazine, May Pocaro, Alan, Selections From the INDA 5, Aeqai, April Franz, Jason, International Drawing Annual 5, Manifest Gallery, March Solamo Tony, Barrington Hills Courier - Review, January Barber, John, Medium Magazine, Outside Infinity, February Avedesian, Alexi, Vellum Magazine, Spirits, January 2009 — Reed, Marliana, Invisible City Magazine, Issue 6, November Lacy, Rebecca, MuseMemo Magazine, Hauntingly Beautiful, October Abram, A, Spillspace Magazine, All the Wild Horses, September Kohn, Iliana, Lost At E Minor Magazine, Issue 244, 245, August Tremblay, Brenda, Finger - Lakes Explores Connections, Mysteries, WXXI, P.R, August Low, Stuart, Drawing Together Man and Nature, Democrat and Chronicle, August Wheeler, Dan, Upstate Artists Exhibit in Exclusive MAG Show, MPN Now, July Rafferty, Rebecca, The Elephant in the Room, City Newspaper, July 2008 — O'Sullivan, Michael, Modern or Retro?
Abney paints vibrant figurative works that boldly explore popular culture and issues of gender and race.
Composed of 25 works, which include paintings, sculpture, prints, works with paper, and installations, the exhibition explores a range of issues that have occupied Grabner since she started her creative career, such as the history of painting in relation to the present, the relationship of centre to periphery, the significance of routine in life and in art, and the integration of work into family life and vice versa.
«Duchamp's famous «underground» pronouncement struck a chord with Chimes, whose interest in the writings of Antonin Artaud and Alfred Jarry had encouraged him to explore the margins of mainstream art and literature... As a consequence of this withdrawal from the contemporary art scene, Chimes began to investigate issues such as esotericism and mystification in metal boxes and paintings whose irrational and often willfully obscure imagery reveals his affinities with Surrealism.
Infinite Receptors These works are part of an ongoing body of paintings and drawings called Infinite Receptors that explores issues related to lived experiences of black bodies today.
Glenn Ligon on The Great Bieri Based in New York, Glenn Ligon is critically recognized for his text - based paintings that draw on American history and literature and explore issues of race and identity.
2016 Nov. 18 — Wadsworth Atheneum Presents 43rd Annual Festival of Trees & Traditions Nov. 1 — John Trumbull Paintings Central to «Visualizing American Independence» at Wadsworth Atheneum Oct. 5 — First U.S. Exhibition by Artist Dulce Chacón Explores Human Feats and Failures in the Frontiers of Air and Space Sept. 23 — Grant S. Smith to Lead Development, Revitalize Fundraising Initiatives at Wadsworth Atheneum Sept. 9 — First Major Photography Survey in 27 Years to Open at Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art Aug. 16 — Francisco de Zurbarán's «Saint Serapion» Returns to Galleries at Wadsworth Atheneum May 23 — Exhibition to Highlight Diversity of Contemporary Artists, Artworks May 10 — Works by Salomon van Ruysdael and Kehinde Wiley Among Newest Acquisitions by Wadsworth Atheneum April 21 — «Vanessa German / MATRIX 174» to Confront Social Issues of Race and Violence Beginning June 9 March 25 — Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art Names Anne Butler Rice New Director of Education
His works explore modernism through works using grid - like structures, with paintings incorporating maps and focusing on issues of cultural translation.
His work often blends sculpture with painting to explore issues of semiotics, deconstruction and multiplication.
MARK BRADFORD Los Angeles - based artist Mark Bradford paints beautiful, layered abstract canvases that explore poignant social issues.
We will explore the issues central to abstract painting, such as nature, structure, geometry, the human form and master paintings as potential sources of investigation and inspiration.
The panel will explore the timeliness of this recent iteration of digital abstraction, with three artists who variously work through issues such as: how gesture, expression, and authenticity might continue to be possible in a contemporary image - based culture; whether our digital era truly produces an ahistorical condition in which images and marks have no specific reference and no relevant point of origin; how structures of and interfaces with digital technologies have necessitated new models for thinking about memory, distribution, and reproduction, as well as degradation, rupture, breakdown, and the void; and how the ubiquity of the screen in all aspects of life has given rise to a renewed interest in the relationship between two - dimensional and three - dimensional space, with a refreshed focus on tromp l'oeil and «topographical» painting.
Through a variety of media — sculpture, painting, performance, and photography — she has consistently explored issues of wealth and excess, body image and beauty.
Through the media of painting, sculpture, photography and, more recently, film and performance, Shonibare's work explores the previously mentioned issues, alongside those of race and class.
His painting, sculpture, installation, collage, video, and photography explore issues of race and history.
I see myself as essentially a figurative painter in the European tradition, attempting to maintain my craft at the highest level, using paint to explore issues of truth, meaning and value.
Mr. Gersht has become well - known over the past decade for his historically influenced photography and video works that reference the style of Old Master paintings while exploring contemporary issues of violence and trauma.
These works by mapping the element of time and duration explore issues of fabrication, transportation, painting, assembly, disassembly and the integration of the work's elements into the public realm.
Her stunning narrative paintings of fantastic allegory and mythology explore themes surrounding women, sexuality, and complex social and political issues.
A collection of drawings, mixed - media paintings and ceramic pieces that explored the theme of water, through metaphor, visual poetics and myth and how it relates to social and environmental issues.
Her practice, which combines painting, drawing, collage, sculpture, installation, performance, photography, and video, explores issues of gender, culture, and the self, often employing the body as a tool to weave together the personal and political.
Art Quarterly's Editor introduces the Winter 2013 issue of the magazine, and explores the history and purpose of painting, from Van Dyck to Dana Schutz.
Michael Armitage: The Chapel @ South London Gallery East African folklore meets a Gauguin-esque painting style to create these layered works exploring issues such as mental health with demons hovering in the background.
Kawara has also explored these issues in other projects such as the Date Paintings, the binders with newspaper articles entitled I Read (which was shown at the gallery in 1999), and in his postcard projects entitled I am still alive and I got up.
Producing work in a variety of media, including sculpture, prose, painting and installation, Enrique Martínez Celaya interweaves nature and autobiography to explore issues of authenticity and identity.
Shonibare's work explores these issues, alongside those of race and class, through the media of painting, sculpture, photography and, more recently, film and performance.
Yinka Shonibare MBE's work explores issues of colonialism and post-colonialism, alongside those of race, class and cultural identity, through painting, sculpture, photography, film and performance.
Transience explored these issues through paintings, sculptures, photographs, videos, and installations presented in three thematically linked sections: «Demystification,» «Ruins,» and «Transience.»
For this show LA artists will be invited to either work outside their comfort zones and explore our landscape with traditional painting / drawing or to make more conceptual / political work pointing towards the numerous ecological issues facing our city.
Yinka Shonibare's works explore the issues of postcolonialism, national and racial identity, and class through the media of painting, sculpture, photography and film.
In addition to an interest in exploring binary positions, Alexander Kroll's work deals with scale, painting history, intuition, systems, emotions, and painting as a conversational nexus and means of producing an object that can embody and contradict these issues.
Kim's work explores the history of abstract painting, the problems of color and vision, and issues of human identity and existence.
The 40 paintings and drawings explore the cerebral spaces of information technology and issues of cognition and narration as they relate to abstract painting.
At Klaus Von Nichtssagend, Sara Greenberger Rafferty has organzed «Work,» an amusing exhibition of 50 small - scale paintings made by 16 artists exploring issues about labor, value and authorship.
His layered, mixed - media abstract paintings explore social justice issues and bring to light overlooked cultural concerns.
Julie Mehretu, born in Ethiopia and raised and educated in Michigan and Rhode Island, explores the unwieldy issues of mobility, social organization, political entanglement, and global competition in her large abstract paintings.
Yinka Shonibare MBE explores issues of race and class through painting, sculpture, print, photography and film.
A significant figure in the discourse around abstract painting, conceptual art, and identity politics, Howardena Pindell has explored the potential for abstract painting and process - based practices to address social issues throughout her career.
Heri Dono explores power structures and reflects upon socio - political issues of the current times in his new series of paintings and installation artwork.
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