Sentences with phrase «photo installation uses»

Chantal Gervais» photo installation uses the human body to explore the transient nature of existence.

Not exact matches

My works (photos, paintings, installations, etc.) are informed by the character of structures and the people who build, design, finance, or use them.
Some of Olivier's recent projects include her mirrored remix of a Revolutionary War battle memorial in Philadelphia for the Monument Lab project and her wall and car - shaped installations at Lehigh University that incorporate used clothing and discarded shoes (see photo, above).
They attempt to rematerialize the photograph through meticulous printing, using film and other disappearing photo technologies, and by creating photo - sculptures and installations.
Using photo collage and a multi-channel video installation — flexible mediums that respond to and traverse the boundaries of genre, culture and history — her works are aesthetically framed as photographs.
On the wall: Helmar Lerski, From the series: Metamorphosis through light, 1935/1936, Foreground: Ronald Jones, Untitled (This trestle was used to hold bodies...), 1990, Courtesy and Jean - Pierre Lehmann Collection, Installation view KW Institute for Contemporary Art, 2017, Photo: Frank Sperling
Jane and Louise Wilson's work together includes multiscreen video installations and photo - pieces; their artworks often feature institutional spaces, for example an oil rig, the archives of the Stasi in East Berlin (the building had previously been used by the Nazis and Stalin's Russia), The Houses of Parliament, and the Apollo Pavilion in Peterlee designed by Victor Pasmore.
Stout began her career as a photo - realist painter, but later expanded her work to include mixed media sculpture and installations using found and collected objects.
Dominique Gonzalez - Foerster explores the relationship between fiction and reality, using film, performance, installation and photos.
Throughout her career, O'Grady has blended ideas of personal and political identity, and combines strategies related to humanist studies on gender, the politics of diaspora and feminism, and reflections on aesthetics by using a variety of mediums that include performance, photo installation, moving media, and photomontage.
The artists featured in the exhibition use non-traditional visual media such as video, performance, and photo - installation to push the limits of art production at a time when the concept of a singular culture was under scrutiny.
The exhibition will also feature pieces by John Baldessari, whose works would often draw viewer's attention to minor details, absences or the spaces between things; Alfredo Jaar, multidisciplinary artists best known for his installation works; John McCracken, whose monochromatic sculptures explore the relationship between objects and their surrounding spaces; Bruce Nauman, whose conceptual works conceptual works that explore space, language, and the body; Lorna Simpson, whose photo - conceptualist works investigate the relationship between image and text; and Vassilakis Takis, a kinetic artist who uses electromagnetism to suspend human beings and objects in space.
He has never allied himself with any particular group, but he shared with some of his contemporaries, such as Michelangelo Pistoletto and Giulio Paolini, a progression from conceptual works, including installations, photo - works and books, towards a use of assemblage.
Lorraine O'Grady (b. 1934) combines strategies related to humanist studies on gender, the politics of diaspora and identity, and reflections on aesthetics by using a variety of mediums that include performance, photo installation, moving media, and photomontage.
We welcome a wide range of photo - and image - based approaches, including documentary photography, conceptual photography, video art, video installation, social practice, archival or aggregated projects, interactive and emerging media (including virtual and augmented reality), and information art (using photography and / or associated data).
MoMA collaborated with Google Arts & Culture Lab on a project using machine learning to identify artworks in installation photos.
In this photo from a different installation, it appears that the legs sit on concrete Sonotube foundations, which isn't as minimal as one can get; Other British builders like FACIT homes use helical piles.
Want to know more: Here is a story originating from the Christian Science Monitor «Google's Open Skies Raise Cries» courtesy of CBS News; also an article from The Indian Sunday Express: «Technology: Search and Destroy — Google has stunning entries for its photos of the world's most secret military installations»; and, a reference back to the tongue - in - cheek competition launched by the Register (in the UK) which challenged users to find black helicopters at sensitive sites using Google Earth «Google Earth: the black helicopters have landed».
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