This major exhibition will bring together sculpture, drawings, prints and
rare photographs of the artist.
The book also features
rare photographs of the artist as a young man and full - color reproductions of Noland's early formative work.
Not exact matches
Highlights
of the exhibition include a
rare Julia Margaret Cameron
photograph made in Sri Lanka towards the end
of her life; a self - portrait by Ellsworth Kelly drawn in Paris in 1949; the first collaborative work by Peter Fischli and David Weiss, a set
of 10
photographs called the Sausage Series; a new painting on paper by Brice Marden; one
of the art brut
artist Adolph Wolfli's largest and most important drawings; a portrait
of Lucian Freud by Walker Evans; and a mescaline drawing by Henri Michaux.
On view in this exhibition are exceptional and
rare photographs spanning the history
of the medium, including examples by pioneers Diane Arbus, Julia Margaret Cameron, and Anne Brigman and contemporary
artists Kelli Connell, Ann Parker, and Elaine Stocki.
He also made an important series
of photographs of Parisian graffiti in the 1930s, which was exhibited at MoMA in 1956 and is being celebrated in this show featuring a selection
of silver gelatin prints and two large and
rare tapestries that the
artist had fabricated from composites made from his pictures in the late - 1960s.
In addition to paintings by several Gutai members, including Yoshihara, Atsuko Tanaka, Shozo Shimamoto, Sadamasa Motonaga, Kazuo Shiraga and Akira Kanayama, the exhibition includes examples
of the Gutai journal and other publications; documentation
of the 1958 Gutai exhibition at the Martha Jackson Gallery in New York, works by New York
artists who related strongly to Gutai;
rare videos
of Gutai exhibitions and performances in Japan; and
photographs of American
artists — including Jenkins, Alice Baber, Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, and John Cage — visiting the Gutai group in 1964.
This exhibition brings together the
artist's iconic black and white self - portraits, a group
of colour
photographs that have not been publicly exhibited since 1983,
rare sepia landscapes and, in collaboration with the
artist's estate, introduces a group
of his
photographs in a large - scale format for the first time.
Alongside early works by Georgia O'Keeffe, cityscapes by Edward Hopper and
photographs by Alfred Stieglitz, Paul Strand and Edward Weston are
rare loans such as a painting by E E Cummings, better known for his poetry, and Edward Steichen's c1920 work Le Tournesol (The Sunflower)-- one
of the few paintings not destroyed by the
artist when he turned to photography and not seen in Europe since being shown in Paris in 1922.
Kazuo Shiraga also features a complete facsimile
of the
artist's personal scrapbook
of photographs documenting his public performances and painting process — a
rare treasure never before seen by the public.
Featuring the work
of 60
artists and including 164 vibrant paintings, powerful murals,
photographs, sculpture, and more, this landmark exhibition is a
rare opportunity to see era - defining artworks that changed the face
of art in America.
From paintings and
photographs, to the footage
of performances, the installment is an extraordinarily huge and
rare overview
of the work
of a living
artist.
This comprehensive sampling
of photographs is a chronicle
of the
artist's life and interactions, where we are offered the
rare opportunity to see things as Warhol saw them.
Hampstead's Zebra One Gallery has unveiled
rare and never - before - seen
photographs of legendary
artists including Salvador Dali, Pablo Picasso and Joan Miro, currently on display until the end
of September.
The Getty Research Institute offers changing exhibitions
of rare books, manuscripts,
photographs,
artists» notebooks, and other materials from the special collections
of the Research Library related to the history
of art and architecture.
Here his
rare photograph of Andy Warhol shows the
artist in his studio holding the acetate bearing his famous image
of Marilyn.
At an art party on a
rare night out recently, he was
photographed kissing the
artist William Powhida on the side
of the head while Jerry Saltz looked on and threw some horns for the camera.
The current exhibition at James Barron Art in Kent offers a
rare opportunity to appreciate Siskind's breakthrough
photographs of, as the
artist put it, «the detritus
of our world which I am combing for meaning».
This exhibition commemorates some
of these boundary - pushing shows and
artists through a selection
of rare films, videos,
photographs, and ephemera from the MCA's archives.
These pieces include original Jarry woodcuts, a
rare photograph of Jarry in his fencing studio plus other original photos, and works by such modern
artists as Joan Miró, Thomas Chimes, and William Kentridge.
The Frick's presentation — the first major exhibition devoted to the
artist outside his native France — assembles forty - eight works on paper and in wax, terracotta, plaster, marble, and bronze, as well as
rare nineteenth - century books
of photographs and engravings; many
of these have never before been exhibited.
This volume collects drawings and poems by the
artist, alongside a selection
of rare black - and - white portraits and documentary
photographs by Ugo Mulas.
Forrest Bess: Seeing Things InvisibleDate: April 12, 2013 - August 18, 2013 (Recurring daily) Venue: The Menil CollectionWeb: http://www.menil.org/exhibitions/ForrestBessSeeingThingsInvisible.phpA presentation
of over forty paintings, along with
rare works on paper,
photographs and selected letters by local
artist Forrest Bess will be presented at the Menil.
Our most important archive materials include original copies
of personal diaries and letters; original clippings, exhibition announcements, and catalogues; many personal and
rare photographs from
artists» and friends» estates; and a series
of taped interviews recorded in the 1970s.
Mixing
rare black - and - white vintage prints
of classic images by Robert Frank, Lee Friedlander, Diane Arbus and Garry Winogrand with luscious, eye - popping works in color by
artists ranging from Stephen Shore and William Eggleston to Cindy Sherman, Alec Soth, and Andreas Gursky, Real to Real:
Photographs from the Traina Collection celebrates photography's fundamental richness and plasticity.
The booth unites three
of Woodman's
rare color
photographs, including one
of the
artist in a bathtub, the black - and - white tiled floor beautifully juxtaposing her blurred body, with a couple dozen
of Pessoa's earthy sculptures.
Other significant additions include a suite
of 25
photographs from Lewis Baltz's seminal 1971 series The Tract House; a
rare early self portrait by Sally Mann from 1976; Laurie Simmons» 1987 gelatin silver print, Walking Camera (Jimmy the Camera); Lorna Simpson's 1991 Coiffure, a triptych
of gelatin silver prints and ten engraved plastic plaques; Chuck Close's daguerreotype portraits Cindy Sherman and Self - Portrait, both from 2000; and Hiroshi Sugimoto's Oscar Wilde (2000), all
of which complement works by these
artists already in the collection.
Also included is Andy Warhol's Little Electric Chair, 1964 that Twombly traded directly with the
artist, a cerulean blue in stark contrast with the dark silkscreen inks and, two
rare early works by Bruce Nauman, including one
of only three Light Trap
photographs, William T. Wiley or Ray Johnson Trap, 1967.
McGinley has gone from being perceived as the hottest young photographer in town to being considered a serious
artist with a
rare gift for creating enduring color
photographs —
photographs that show us the best
of youth.
We have an abundance
of beautiful things in the Joan Mitchell Foundation Archives — sketchbooks,
photographs, prints,
rare books, and gifts from other
artists among them — but what matters most to me, and to the scholars who visit, is the information these materials hold and reveal.
«Focus on Abstract Gems» exposes
rare drawings, prints,
photographs, and paintings from some
of the most significant
artists of the 1950's and 60's.
Rare, archival
photographs documenting Colmer's process behind the creation
of his films accompany the exhibition, providing unique access into this area
of the
artist's practice.