Sentences with phrase «rarely seen objects»

According to The Art Newspaper, the Terra Sancta Museum, as it will be known, will display some of the hundreds of rarely seen objects drawn from the Franciscans» collections in Jerusalem.
In creating this series, Azoulay interviewed past and current Israel Museum staff members, using their testimonies as a guide for gathering information on rarely seen objects and spaces that carried special meaning for her subjects.
Organized by the Focus - Abengoa Foundation in Seville, Spain, explores the use and meaning of light in Islamic art and science through 150 rarely seen objects spanning more than 10 centuries.

Not exact matches

Even the recent history of pastoral care by E. Brooks Holifield sees women, slaves and «others» primarily as the objects of care, rarely as caregivers and never as the source of new ideas.
A team led by astronomer Steven Majewski of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville sorted through a half - billion objects in the 2MASS catalog to find several thousand M giants, a distinctive class of red - giant star common in the Sagittarius dwarf but rarely seen above or below the plane of our galaxy.
Carolee Schneemann: Kinetic Painting begins with rarely seen examples of the artist's early paintings of the 1950s and their evolution into assemblages made in the 1960s, which integrated objects, mechanical elements, and modes of deconstruction.
This small, but enlightening and enriching exhibition at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac in Salzburg, brings together 12 of these «objects», rarely ever seen, and recently acquired by the J Paul Getty Museum and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) from the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, set up by the artist before his death from HIV / Aids - related complications at the age of 42.
Uniting different perspectives of seeing and subverting spatial conditions of representational forms in the 20th century this exhibition does not only present rarely seen work but also narrates different layers of art historical approaches leading to the long lasting meaning of representational object and space in art.
A new Site Specific project by Matthew Jensen at Green - Wood Cemetery where he has assembled a room - sized cabinet of curiosities drawing from specimens and photographs amassed in his many walks through the cemetery, as well as from Green - Wood's rarely seen collection of fine art and historic objects
Dr. Eaton will present a theoretical and historical perspective on the exhibition of rarely - seen objects, which have been sourced from the Winterthur Museum and other Philadelphia collections.
Surreal Science continues the Whitechapel Gallery's commitment to showing rarely seen public and private collections, and presents objects from the George Loudon Collection selected by the artist Salvatore Arancio (b. 1974, Italy).
Inventing Downtown opens a window onto these radical efforts with rarely seen artworks by gallery members such as Allan Kaprow, whose 1958 environments, in which the gallery itself became an object with every corner filled with materials, smells, and recorded sound from the street, are represented by photographs taken by his then - wife, Vaughan Kaprow.
Impeccably curated by Sabiha Al Khemir, the Dallas Museum of Art's senior Islamic art advisor, and theatrically installed, Nur (the Arabic word for light) explores the use and meaning of light in Islamic art and science through 150 rarely - seen objects spanning more than 10 centuries.
This exhibition pairs 76 artworks that have rarely been seen outside of France with a selection of objects that inspired Matisse's studio practice.
Featuring a number of iconic works as well as a range of pieces rarely seen, the exhibition explores the continuous terrain mapped by Wilke between language, image and object, incorporating performance, photography, drawings, collages and sculptures rendered in materials as diverse as ceramic, gum, latex, erasers and bronze.
Now, over 40 years later, Yoko Ono: One Woman Show, 1960 — 1971 surveys the decisive decade that led up to Ono's unauthorized exhibition at MoMA, bringing together approximately 125 of her early objects, works on paper, installations, performances, audio recordings, and films, alongside rarely seen archival materials.
London Art Week is rightly appreciated by collectors and art enthusiasts alike as a unique platform to discover and purchase rarely - seen art and artefacts, including exceptional objects sourced from private collections.
Tracing the development of the artist's extraordinary visual vocabulary, the exhibition includes 155 works on paper, numerous experimental videos, and over 150 archival objects, including rarely seen sketchbooks, journals, exhibition flyers, posters, subway drawings, and documentary photographs.
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