Sentences with phrase «reality in works of art»

As their Hyundai commission opens to the public at Tate Modern, the artists collective explore shifting perception and parallel reality in works of art with Reem Fadda, recipient of the 2017 Walter Hopps Award for Curatorial Achievement, and curator of the inaugural exhibition at the Palestinian Museum, Ramallah.
And how can you represent a world that is beyond objective reality in a work of art

Not exact matches

His A Whiteheadian Aesthetic has subtly influenced numerous process philosophers and theologians.1 Sherburne's rationalistic approach is embodied in his specific suggestion that for Whitehead an art work is a proposition or a part of a proposition and that aesthetic experience is a feeling of such a proposition; this approach is derived primarily from Whitehead's Process and Reality.
Artists in every medium have an imagination and an intelligence that enables them to pull together what they perceive in the world and contemplate in their souls in the process of creating new works of art that in turn help the rest of us apprehend reality in entirely new ways.
It will be healed when man discovers that his loves in sex, family, nation, work and art participate in the working of a reality which lends final significance to his broken efforts and which in forgiveness and mercy can restore his shattered spirit.
In the new book Bio Art: Altered Realities, William Myers collects the work of artists grappling with the implications of genetic engineering, environmental destruction, and the latest digital technologies.
Her groundbreaking work Atlas in silico is a physically interactive and immersive virtual reality art + science installation that is driven by data from the Global Ocean Sampling Expedition, a survey of marine microbial communities led by the J.
What I love about art / design students is that the realities of working in the «real world» haven't diluted their ideas and imaginations yet.
They sought inspiration in the era's art, specifically the work of the photo - realists, who painted photographs in a style that is both hyperreal and at one remove from reality — evoked by the variety of reflecting surfaces seen in the film — and the op artists, who deployed contrasting visual elements to create vibrating surface tensions on a single plane.
Working with Greenwood in the Art Department, Spencer began with a certain visual reality — aspects of 18th century France — before turning to the animated film or pure homage.
Positive comments from some recent users of this book include: Most schools are full of documents and data... Dr Slater is among the first to show how they can be used to compare what is said on paper and in interviews... The results will shock you... Dr Slater is a successful high school teacher and an award winning author... and here's why... Fantastic little book, punches well above its weight... Makes it seem so simple... the art of the genius... As an advocate of the What Works agenda, I think this book really is a wake - up call... A fantastic insight into the potential for using documents in research... Nails twenty years of research in twenty minutes... Worth every dime... Every student in my class (6th form) has been told to buy this book... and it's easy to see why... Shines a great big light on the power of documents in research... Surely this is the best book in its field... First class... I kept referring to this book in my presentation last week and the audience was ecstatic... Education research, usually has little effect on me... Until now... This book is formidable... Crushes the concept that education research is rubbish... fantastic insight... Blows you away with its power and simplicity... Huge reality check, senior school managers at good schools tell the truth, other's don't, won't or can't, and their students suffer.
In this paper we will highlight and discuss our applications of this type of professional development to show how it might work across different domains including: dramatic arts, digital music, dance (both for coaches and youth peers), robotics and virtual reality.
Work hard till you are 35 — enjoy the power of compounding and well off will be a reality — there is no figure to determine what «well off» means but try and build multiple income streams — in my case furniture, art, antiques, rental income and our salaries have helped us build this stream.
Good recently devoted much of her time to studies in cyberpsychology at the Dun Laoghaire Institute of Art, Design and Technology in Ireland, working alongside academics investigating everything from AI to virtual reality.
, instead of trying to work with business coaches or marketing experts who don't understand the reality of what artists struggle with, and give suggestions that don't make sense in the art marketing world.
Honestly, having spent almost half a decade working within the industry of art websites — with a focus on social networking, online art competitions, and eCommerce — I must say that one of the biggest mistakes artists make when it comes to selling art online is to pay for services that may in reality be of little value to their career.
The historical importance of McCall's work has been recognized in such exhibitions as «Into the Light: the Projected Image in American Art 1964 - 77,» Whitney Museum of American Art (2001 - 2); «The Expanded Screen: Actions and Installations of the Sixties and Seventies,» Museum Moderner Kunst, Vienna (2003 - 4); «The Expanded Eye,» Kunsthaus Zurich (2006); «Beyond Cinema: the Art of Projection,» Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin (2006 - 7); «The Cinema Effect: Illusion, Reality and the Projected Image,» and Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC (2008); and «Dreamlands», Whitney Museum of American Art (2017).
Come Jump With Me is a daring, provocative and witty work that examines the relevancy and significance of creating art in the urgent political reality of Israel.
As much as he wrote about art during his lifetime, as in his book, The Artist's Reality: Philosophies on Art, written about 1940 - 41, he began to stop explaining the meaning of his work with his color field paintings, claiming that «Silence is so accurate.&raqart during his lifetime, as in his book, The Artist's Reality: Philosophies on Art, written about 1940 - 41, he began to stop explaining the meaning of his work with his color field paintings, claiming that «Silence is so accurate.&raqArt, written about 1940 - 41, he began to stop explaining the meaning of his work with his color field paintings, claiming that «Silence is so accurate.»
Merging together photography and street art, his publicly displayed works charged with emotion and heavy social issues are heralds of change in the reality formed by preconceptions built by advertising and the media.
NB: I can not really talk about the reception of my own work, but I can say that as a viewer and recipient of art in different contexts that when, for example, I see a work by Cady Noland at the Art Institute of Chicago or in the Museum Ludwig Cologne, or somewhere else in the world, the initial impetus of the work stays with me the same whilst my view on the surrounding realities can be affectart in different contexts that when, for example, I see a work by Cady Noland at the Art Institute of Chicago or in the Museum Ludwig Cologne, or somewhere else in the world, the initial impetus of the work stays with me the same whilst my view on the surrounding realities can be affectArt Institute of Chicago or in the Museum Ludwig Cologne, or somewhere else in the world, the initial impetus of the work stays with me the same whilst my view on the surrounding realities can be affected.
His concerns with the complexities of reality and perception left him to leave much of his works undocumented so that the art is experienced in the instant it is created not in the reminiscence of stale objects.
Writing in Art in America in October, 2002, Michael Duncan said of the exhibition that it «gave free rein to complex, often offbeat works predicated on alternate realities
The blossoming of kinetic and op art in these regions was largely conditioned by the common political and economic realities the countries were experiencing, which set the artists apart from contemporaries working in the field.
Selected Bibliography «No Border: Zheng Xuewu Solo Exhibition,» Time Out Beijing, Beijing, August 2007; Jonathan Goodman, «Zheng Xuewu at Art Projects International,» Art Asia Pacific, reproduction, New York, Fall 2005; Xenia Tetmajer von Prxerwa, Zheng Xuewu's Lone Journey into Abstraction, exhibition catalog, Redgate Gallery, Beijing, 2004; Zheng Zuoliang, My View of Xuewu Print, catalog essay, Beijing, 2003; Xenia Tetmajer von Prxerwa, A Labyrinth of Reality, catalog essay, Beijing, 2003; Judith Farquhar, Introduction to Zheng Xuewu's Work, exhibition catalogue, reproductions, Art Scene China, Shanghai, 2003; Song Xiaoxia, «The Visual World in the Eye of the Urchin,» Chinese Art, 1999; Li Chun, «To the Tune of a Different Drum: The Paintings of Zheng Xuewu,» Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing, September 1994.
1995 Pasted Paper: Collage in the 20th Century, Louis Stern Fine Arts, Los Angeles, CA 25 Years: An Exhibition of Selected Works, Margo Leavin Gallery, Los Angeles, CA Between Reality and Abstraction: California Art at the End of the Century, Art Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi, TX 1994 Balls, World Cup USA 1994, Newspace, Los Angeles, CA Twentieth — Century Drawings, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA In Plain Sight: Abstract Painting in Los Angeles, Blue Star Art Space, San Antonio, TX Paintings of the 80's, RosamundFelsen Gallery, Los Angeles, CA Fractured Identity: Cut and Paste, Julie Saul Gallery, New York pen & ink, Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, Santa Barbara, CA Fawbush Gallery, New York Very Visual Dialogue, Personal Journeys in Abstract Painting, Rancho Santiago College Gallery, Santa Ana, in the 20th Century, Louis Stern Fine Arts, Los Angeles, CA 25 Years: An Exhibition of Selected Works, Margo Leavin Gallery, Los Angeles, CA Between Reality and Abstraction: California Art at the End of the Century, Art Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi, TX 1994 Balls, World Cup USA 1994, Newspace, Los Angeles, CA Twentieth — Century Drawings, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA In Plain Sight: Abstract Painting in Los Angeles, Blue Star Art Space, San Antonio, TX Paintings of the 80's, RosamundFelsen Gallery, Los Angeles, CA Fractured Identity: Cut and Paste, Julie Saul Gallery, New York pen & ink, Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, Santa Barbara, CA Fawbush Gallery, New York Very Visual Dialogue, Personal Journeys in Abstract Painting, Rancho Santiago College Gallery, Santa Ana, In Plain Sight: Abstract Painting in Los Angeles, Blue Star Art Space, San Antonio, TX Paintings of the 80's, RosamundFelsen Gallery, Los Angeles, CA Fractured Identity: Cut and Paste, Julie Saul Gallery, New York pen & ink, Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, Santa Barbara, CA Fawbush Gallery, New York Very Visual Dialogue, Personal Journeys in Abstract Painting, Rancho Santiago College Gallery, Santa Ana, in Los Angeles, Blue Star Art Space, San Antonio, TX Paintings of the 80's, RosamundFelsen Gallery, Los Angeles, CA Fractured Identity: Cut and Paste, Julie Saul Gallery, New York pen & ink, Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, Santa Barbara, CA Fawbush Gallery, New York Very Visual Dialogue, Personal Journeys in Abstract Painting, Rancho Santiago College Gallery, Santa Ana, in Abstract Painting, Rancho Santiago College Gallery, Santa Ana, CA
He has shown work internationally in many exhibitions including Potty Mouth, Potty War, Pot Roast, Pot is a Reality Kick at Gagosian Gallery in New York, USA Today at the Royal Academy of Arts in London, the 2006 Whitney Biennial in New York, Fantastic Politics at the National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design in Oslo and No Me at Peres Projects in Berlin.
Invoking past and future in a critique of the present, these paintings, photographs, sculptures, videos, and other works document observed, current realities while referencing the aesthetic traditions of 19th - and 20th - century art.
Krasner was given good reason to believe her dream could become a reality when in 1934 she was hired by the Works Progress Administration's Public Works of Art Project to paint murals.
Merantzas showcased his work in solo exhibitions like in 2014 Seeking the Common Ground, a retrospective character exhibition at The Blender Gallery, Athens, GR; installations in 2011 in Unknown heroes, Renown heroes, at the Elika Gallery, Athens; Reality is the informer of imagination in 2009 at State museum of contemporary art, Thessaloniki, GR; Untitled in 2006 at the Qbox gallery, Athens; and an exhibition in two units: Useful Three - Digit Numbers and Fantastic Signals in 1996 at the lleana Tounta Contemporary Art Centre, Atheart, Thessaloniki, GR; Untitled in 2006 at the Qbox gallery, Athens; and an exhibition in two units: Useful Three - Digit Numbers and Fantastic Signals in 1996 at the lleana Tounta Contemporary Art Centre, AtheArt Centre, Athens.
A selection of sculptures, reliefs and paintings by artists working in the area will be exhibited to complement the Gallery's major spring exhibition, Victor Pasmore: Towards a New Reality, which illustrates Pasmore's controversial move from figurative to abstract art.
Later described by art historian Herbert Read as «the most revolutionary event in post-war British art», this experimental period saw Pasmore's work progress towards a new pictorial language and representation of reality.
Naturally, in dealing with false realities, the artist's work continues to explore labor, perception, women's issues and history - as they relate to art and Art History as well, and of course, valart and Art History as well, and of course, valArt History as well, and of course, value.
Nearly a year ago, Young Sun Han's lust for adventure led him to participate in Season 2 of «Work of Art: The Next Great Artist,» the now - canceled reality TV show on BRAVO in which artists competed for the grand prize of $ 100,000 and a solo show at the Brooklyn Museum.
His work summons themes of space and place, reality and realism, art and artifact, with a special interest in experimental narratives and the poetics of illusion.
A pioneer of internet art in Turkey, and initially a painter, Akincitürk's work exists on its own unique plane of a digital yet fundamental human reality, dwelling into the «memetic» dark corners of online communities such as 4chan and suggesting these anarchic and ever - evolving worlds of digital media as the next step of human evolution.
In all these visually varied works - paintings, sculptures, film installation - Lavier's attitude is consistent in presenting issues on the forefront of contemporary art: the paradoxical relationships between painting and sculpture; art and nonart; high art and popular culture; and reality and simulatioIn all these visually varied works - paintings, sculptures, film installation - Lavier's attitude is consistent in presenting issues on the forefront of contemporary art: the paradoxical relationships between painting and sculpture; art and nonart; high art and popular culture; and reality and simulatioin presenting issues on the forefront of contemporary art: the paradoxical relationships between painting and sculpture; art and nonart; high art and popular culture; and reality and simulation.
Bryan Robertson: I've always understood, maybe over-simplistically, that the great abstract art of this century came about by a process of working through reality or some aspect of the physical world — the nude, landscape, the interior or still - life — in stages towards simplification, and then, like a sort of exorcism, a casting away of what Rothko called «crutches», venturing into some form of abstraction without any obvious references to the physical world, but maybe with some distilled, remembered vestiges of its appearance — like Mondrian's sequence of trees.
Through the work of artists Antony Gormley, Humphrey Ocean and Jonathan Yeo, and architect Farshid Moussavi, we will offer a glimpse of possible future applications of virtual and augmented reality in the art of tomorrow.
In contrast to the esoteric, formalistic, and linguistic concerns of much late 1960s conceptual art, the defining principled of Atkinson's work since the early 1970s has been to function as a crucial reflector of immediate political and economic realities and as a catalyst for social change.
«Fyfe's recent work — which operates in the elastic territory between painting, sculpture and drawing — explores both the legacy and current realities of non-representational art.
Guest, Barbara, «Reviews and Previews», Art News (New York), April, volume 53, no. 2, p. 54 Devree, Howard, «About Art and Artists: Moderate Abstractions Make a Lively Exhibition at the City Center Gallery», New York Times, 8 April, p. 25 Newbill, Al, «Fortnight in Review: A Contrasting Trio», Art Digest (New York), 15 April, volume 28, no. 14, p. 20 «Coast - to - Coast: Guggenheim to Show and Buy «Younger» Painters», Art Digest (New York), 1 October, volume 28, no. 1, p. 14 McBride, Henry, «Americans looking east, looking west», Art News (New York), May, volume 53, no. 3, pp.32 - 33 & pp.54 - 56 Devree, Howard, «About Art and Artists: Display of Work by «Younger Americans» Brought Together by J.J. Sweeney», New York Times, 12 May, p. 36 Hunter, Sam, «Guggenheim Sampler: Abstract painting comes of age in a museum exhibition of fifty - four younger Americans», Art Digest (New York), 15 May, volume 28, no. 16, pp. 9 & 31 Devree, Howard, «Americans Today: Selection of Work From East to West Opens at Guggenheim Museum», New York Times, 16 May, section 2, p. 1 - Fremantle, Christopher E, «New York Commentary», Studio (New York), October, volume 148, no. 739, pp. 124 - 126 Arnason, H.H, Reality and Fantasy: 1900 - 1954, catalogue, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis Sweeney, James Johnson, Younger American Painters: A Selection, catalogue, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York 61st American Exhibition: Paintings and Sculpture, catalogue, Art Institute of Chicago Goodrich, Lloyd, «Whitney's Battle for U.S. Art», Art News (New York), November, volume 53, no. 7, pp.38 - 40 & 70 - 73
«Works like Aerospace Folktales altered the way in which documentary photography was conceptualized and used in contemporary art, and the work continues to be an urgent model for representing the political and social realities of our world.»
The very foundation of Ross's work is within the reality of where her art comes into being: the studio, and in particular the studio floor, on which her work is initially composed like a map unfolding in various directions, fitted together from any number of pieces and sewn into place, a sort of cubist quilting.
The artwork featured in ONE YEAR OF RESISTANCE includes works in all mediums, including painting, photography, video, sculpture, printmaking, textile art, virtual reality and performance, that has been created in response to the last year of Trump's politicOF RESISTANCE includes works in all mediums, including painting, photography, video, sculpture, printmaking, textile art, virtual reality and performance, that has been created in response to the last year of Trump's politicof Trump's politics.
This significant body of Frankenthaler's work represents an important period in American art history, and we are thrilled to be working with the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation and museum collections from around the country to make the exhibition a reality
1995 Cotter, Holland, Beneath the Barrage, The Modern's Little Show, The New York Times, April 7, p. C27 Hainley, Bruce Next to Nothing: The Art of Tom Friedman, Artforum, November, pp. 4 - 5, pp. 73 - 77 Kastner, Jeffrey, lo - fo, Frieze, September / October, pp. 72 - 73 Kim Levin, Choices, The Village Voice, May 2, p. 11 Mitchell, Charles Dee, «Critical Mass»: More Than Meets the Eye, Dallas Morning News, February 3 Narbutas, Siaurys, Modernus Menas Padeda Atlaidziau Zvelgti I Pasauli, Lietuvos Rytui, August Rich, Charles, At MoMA: A «Mad» Muse, The Hartford Courant, April 1 Schjeldahl, Peter, Struggle and Flight, The Village Voice, April 18, p. 79 1994 Connors, Thomas, Evanston Art Center, New Art Examiner, May Green, David, Doors of Perception, Burelle's, May, p. 18, p. 23 Mollica, Franco, Tema Celeste, Autumn, p. 64 Perretta, Gabriele, Flash Art (Italian edition), Summer Romano, Gianni, Tom Friedman, Zoom, no. 12 Romano, Gianni, In and Out Liquid Architectures (Through a Few Objects, Temporale, no. 31, pp. 34 - 37 Romano, Gianni, Interactive Child, Arquebuse, May, pp. 24 - 25 Tager, Alisa, Emerging Master of Metamorphosis, The Los Angeles Times, May 3, p. F1, p. F8 Trione, Vincenzo, De Soto, Ulisside del Bello, Il Mattino, May 27 1993 Artner, Alan, Sharp Conceptual Show Dares to be Different, The Chicago Tribune, January 22, section 7, p. 56 Auer, James, There's No More Than a Hairbreath Between Art, Reality in This Exhibit, Milwaukee Journal, January 17 Blair, Dike, review, Flash Art, November / December, pp. 112 - 114 Flynn, Patrick J.B. review, Hair, Artpaper, February Heartney, Eleanor, New York, Dans les Galeries, Art Press, October, pp. 24 - 28 Humphrey, David, New York Fax, Art issues, May / June, pp. 32 - 33 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, February 23, p. 65 Lillington, David, Times, Time Out, June 16 Lillington, David, Times, Metropolis M, Winter, pp. 47 - 49 Nesbitt, Lois, Artforum, Summer, pp. 111 - 112 Paine, Janice T. Hair Pieces: Exhibition Worth Combing, Mikwaukee Sentinel, January 8, p. 8D Shepley, Carol Ferring, Tom Friedman Shapes Art Out of Everyday Things, St. Louis Post - Dispatch, January 14, p. 3E Southworth, Linda, An Extraordinary Exhibition at Arts and Letters, The Washington Heights Citizen & The Inwood News, February 28, pp. 10 - 11 1992 Bernardi, David, News Reviews, Flash Art, May / June, p. 149 Cameron, Dan, In Praise of Smallness, Art & Auction, April, pp. 74 - 76 Faust, Gretchen, New York in Review, Arts, March, p. 79 Kahn, Wolf, Connecting Incongruities, Art in America, November, pp. 116 - 121 Marrs, Jennifer, Simple Style With a Complex Meaning, Courier, October 2, p. 15, p. 18 Smith, Roberta, Casual Ceremony, The New York Times, January 3, section C 1991 Artner, Alan, Friedman Debuts with Winning Simplicity, The Chicago Tribune, February 22, section 7, p. 56 Barckert, Lynda, The Work of Art, The Reader, March 1 Brunetti, John, New City, March 14, p. 14 Heartney, Eleanor, Art in America, December, p. 118 Hixson, Kathryn, Chicago in Review, Arts, May, p. 108 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, September 17, p. 104 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, February 8, section 7, p. 68 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, August 30, section 7, p. 54 Goings On About Town, The New Yorker, September 23, p. 12 Palmer, Laurie, Artforum, May, p. 151 Patterson, Tom, Trio of Solos: Thoughts on Three Current Shows at SECCA, Winston - Salem Journal, September 1, p. C6 Smith, Roberta, Art in Review, The New York Times, September 13, p. C5 1990 Harris, Patty, Four Summer Art Shows, Downtown, August 29, pp. 12A - 13A Levin, Kim, Choices The Village Voice, August 7, p. 1In and Out Liquid Architectures (Through a Few Objects, Temporale, no. 31, pp. 34 - 37 Romano, Gianni, Interactive Child, Arquebuse, May, pp. 24 - 25 Tager, Alisa, Emerging Master of Metamorphosis, The Los Angeles Times, May 3, p. F1, p. F8 Trione, Vincenzo, De Soto, Ulisside del Bello, Il Mattino, May 27 1993 Artner, Alan, Sharp Conceptual Show Dares to be Different, The Chicago Tribune, January 22, section 7, p. 56 Auer, James, There's No More Than a Hairbreath Between Art, Reality in This Exhibit, Milwaukee Journal, January 17 Blair, Dike, review, Flash Art, November / December, pp. 112 - 114 Flynn, Patrick J.B. review, Hair, Artpaper, February Heartney, Eleanor, New York, Dans les Galeries, Art Press, October, pp. 24 - 28 Humphrey, David, New York Fax, Art issues, May / June, pp. 32 - 33 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, February 23, p. 65 Lillington, David, Times, Time Out, June 16 Lillington, David, Times, Metropolis M, Winter, pp. 47 - 49 Nesbitt, Lois, Artforum, Summer, pp. 111 - 112 Paine, Janice T. Hair Pieces: Exhibition Worth Combing, Mikwaukee Sentinel, January 8, p. 8D Shepley, Carol Ferring, Tom Friedman Shapes Art Out of Everyday Things, St. Louis Post - Dispatch, January 14, p. 3E Southworth, Linda, An Extraordinary Exhibition at Arts and Letters, The Washington Heights Citizen & The Inwood News, February 28, pp. 10 - 11 1992 Bernardi, David, News Reviews, Flash Art, May / June, p. 149 Cameron, Dan, In Praise of Smallness, Art & Auction, April, pp. 74 - 76 Faust, Gretchen, New York in Review, Arts, March, p. 79 Kahn, Wolf, Connecting Incongruities, Art in America, November, pp. 116 - 121 Marrs, Jennifer, Simple Style With a Complex Meaning, Courier, October 2, p. 15, p. 18 Smith, Roberta, Casual Ceremony, The New York Times, January 3, section C 1991 Artner, Alan, Friedman Debuts with Winning Simplicity, The Chicago Tribune, February 22, section 7, p. 56 Barckert, Lynda, The Work of Art, The Reader, March 1 Brunetti, John, New City, March 14, p. 14 Heartney, Eleanor, Art in America, December, p. 118 Hixson, Kathryn, Chicago in Review, Arts, May, p. 108 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, September 17, p. 104 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, February 8, section 7, p. 68 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, August 30, section 7, p. 54 Goings On About Town, The New Yorker, September 23, p. 12 Palmer, Laurie, Artforum, May, p. 151 Patterson, Tom, Trio of Solos: Thoughts on Three Current Shows at SECCA, Winston - Salem Journal, September 1, p. C6 Smith, Roberta, Art in Review, The New York Times, September 13, p. C5 1990 Harris, Patty, Four Summer Art Shows, Downtown, August 29, pp. 12A - 13A Levin, Kim, Choices The Village Voice, August 7, p. 1in This Exhibit, Milwaukee Journal, January 17 Blair, Dike, review, Flash Art, November / December, pp. 112 - 114 Flynn, Patrick J.B. review, Hair, Artpaper, February Heartney, Eleanor, New York, Dans les Galeries, Art Press, October, pp. 24 - 28 Humphrey, David, New York Fax, Art issues, May / June, pp. 32 - 33 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, February 23, p. 65 Lillington, David, Times, Time Out, June 16 Lillington, David, Times, Metropolis M, Winter, pp. 47 - 49 Nesbitt, Lois, Artforum, Summer, pp. 111 - 112 Paine, Janice T. Hair Pieces: Exhibition Worth Combing, Mikwaukee Sentinel, January 8, p. 8D Shepley, Carol Ferring, Tom Friedman Shapes Art Out of Everyday Things, St. Louis Post - Dispatch, January 14, p. 3E Southworth, Linda, An Extraordinary Exhibition at Arts and Letters, The Washington Heights Citizen & The Inwood News, February 28, pp. 10 - 11 1992 Bernardi, David, News Reviews, Flash Art, May / June, p. 149 Cameron, Dan, In Praise of Smallness, Art & Auction, April, pp. 74 - 76 Faust, Gretchen, New York in Review, Arts, March, p. 79 Kahn, Wolf, Connecting Incongruities, Art in America, November, pp. 116 - 121 Marrs, Jennifer, Simple Style With a Complex Meaning, Courier, October 2, p. 15, p. 18 Smith, Roberta, Casual Ceremony, The New York Times, January 3, section C 1991 Artner, Alan, Friedman Debuts with Winning Simplicity, The Chicago Tribune, February 22, section 7, p. 56 Barckert, Lynda, The Work of Art, The Reader, March 1 Brunetti, John, New City, March 14, p. 14 Heartney, Eleanor, Art in America, December, p. 118 Hixson, Kathryn, Chicago in Review, Arts, May, p. 108 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, September 17, p. 104 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, February 8, section 7, p. 68 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, August 30, section 7, p. 54 Goings On About Town, The New Yorker, September 23, p. 12 Palmer, Laurie, Artforum, May, p. 151 Patterson, Tom, Trio of Solos: Thoughts on Three Current Shows at SECCA, Winston - Salem Journal, September 1, p. C6 Smith, Roberta, Art in Review, The New York Times, September 13, p. C5 1990 Harris, Patty, Four Summer Art Shows, Downtown, August 29, pp. 12A - 13A Levin, Kim, Choices The Village Voice, August 7, p. 1In Praise of Smallness, Art & Auction, April, pp. 74 - 76 Faust, Gretchen, New York in Review, Arts, March, p. 79 Kahn, Wolf, Connecting Incongruities, Art in America, November, pp. 116 - 121 Marrs, Jennifer, Simple Style With a Complex Meaning, Courier, October 2, p. 15, p. 18 Smith, Roberta, Casual Ceremony, The New York Times, January 3, section C 1991 Artner, Alan, Friedman Debuts with Winning Simplicity, The Chicago Tribune, February 22, section 7, p. 56 Barckert, Lynda, The Work of Art, The Reader, March 1 Brunetti, John, New City, March 14, p. 14 Heartney, Eleanor, Art in America, December, p. 118 Hixson, Kathryn, Chicago in Review, Arts, May, p. 108 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, September 17, p. 104 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, February 8, section 7, p. 68 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, August 30, section 7, p. 54 Goings On About Town, The New Yorker, September 23, p. 12 Palmer, Laurie, Artforum, May, p. 151 Patterson, Tom, Trio of Solos: Thoughts on Three Current Shows at SECCA, Winston - Salem Journal, September 1, p. C6 Smith, Roberta, Art in Review, The New York Times, September 13, p. C5 1990 Harris, Patty, Four Summer Art Shows, Downtown, August 29, pp. 12A - 13A Levin, Kim, Choices The Village Voice, August 7, p. 1in Review, Arts, March, p. 79 Kahn, Wolf, Connecting Incongruities, Art in America, November, pp. 116 - 121 Marrs, Jennifer, Simple Style With a Complex Meaning, Courier, October 2, p. 15, p. 18 Smith, Roberta, Casual Ceremony, The New York Times, January 3, section C 1991 Artner, Alan, Friedman Debuts with Winning Simplicity, The Chicago Tribune, February 22, section 7, p. 56 Barckert, Lynda, The Work of Art, The Reader, March 1 Brunetti, John, New City, March 14, p. 14 Heartney, Eleanor, Art in America, December, p. 118 Hixson, Kathryn, Chicago in Review, Arts, May, p. 108 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, September 17, p. 104 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, February 8, section 7, p. 68 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, August 30, section 7, p. 54 Goings On About Town, The New Yorker, September 23, p. 12 Palmer, Laurie, Artforum, May, p. 151 Patterson, Tom, Trio of Solos: Thoughts on Three Current Shows at SECCA, Winston - Salem Journal, September 1, p. C6 Smith, Roberta, Art in Review, The New York Times, September 13, p. C5 1990 Harris, Patty, Four Summer Art Shows, Downtown, August 29, pp. 12A - 13A Levin, Kim, Choices The Village Voice, August 7, p. 1in America, November, pp. 116 - 121 Marrs, Jennifer, Simple Style With a Complex Meaning, Courier, October 2, p. 15, p. 18 Smith, Roberta, Casual Ceremony, The New York Times, January 3, section C 1991 Artner, Alan, Friedman Debuts with Winning Simplicity, The Chicago Tribune, February 22, section 7, p. 56 Barckert, Lynda, The Work of Art, The Reader, March 1 Brunetti, John, New City, March 14, p. 14 Heartney, Eleanor, Art in America, December, p. 118 Hixson, Kathryn, Chicago in Review, Arts, May, p. 108 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, September 17, p. 104 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, February 8, section 7, p. 68 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, August 30, section 7, p. 54 Goings On About Town, The New Yorker, September 23, p. 12 Palmer, Laurie, Artforum, May, p. 151 Patterson, Tom, Trio of Solos: Thoughts on Three Current Shows at SECCA, Winston - Salem Journal, September 1, p. C6 Smith, Roberta, Art in Review, The New York Times, September 13, p. C5 1990 Harris, Patty, Four Summer Art Shows, Downtown, August 29, pp. 12A - 13A Levin, Kim, Choices The Village Voice, August 7, p. 1in America, December, p. 118 Hixson, Kathryn, Chicago in Review, Arts, May, p. 108 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, September 17, p. 104 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, February 8, section 7, p. 68 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, August 30, section 7, p. 54 Goings On About Town, The New Yorker, September 23, p. 12 Palmer, Laurie, Artforum, May, p. 151 Patterson, Tom, Trio of Solos: Thoughts on Three Current Shows at SECCA, Winston - Salem Journal, September 1, p. C6 Smith, Roberta, Art in Review, The New York Times, September 13, p. 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In a similar vein, work by Michelangelo Pistoletto (b. 1933) addresses the spectator directly through a mirrored surface, blurring the line between the space of the work and the space of the viewer, unifying art and the changing realities of everyday life.
Datumsoria: The Return of the Real is an outcome of «Art & Tech @,» a program initiated at Chronus Art Center and conceived by ZHANG Ga, which aims, through resuscitating the valuable legacy of experiments in art and technology from the mid-20th century, to come to terms with the challenges of a technologically constructed timespace: a new reality that has altogether changed the rules of the game in work and play, in politics and economics, and in artistic imagination and cultural sensibiliArt & Tech @,» a program initiated at Chronus Art Center and conceived by ZHANG Ga, which aims, through resuscitating the valuable legacy of experiments in art and technology from the mid-20th century, to come to terms with the challenges of a technologically constructed timespace: a new reality that has altogether changed the rules of the game in work and play, in politics and economics, and in artistic imagination and cultural sensibiliArt Center and conceived by ZHANG Ga, which aims, through resuscitating the valuable legacy of experiments in art and technology from the mid-20th century, to come to terms with the challenges of a technologically constructed timespace: a new reality that has altogether changed the rules of the game in work and play, in politics and economics, and in artistic imagination and cultural sensibiliart and technology from the mid-20th century, to come to terms with the challenges of a technologically constructed timespace: a new reality that has altogether changed the rules of the game in work and play, in politics and economics, and in artistic imagination and cultural sensibility.
Sensitive to the realities and parallels that exist within intersectionality and the arts, Davis founded the Underground Museum with his wife and fellow artist Karon Davis in the working - class neighborhood of Arlington Heights in 2012.
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