Sentences with phrase «represented as an art dealer»

Not exact matches

From director Alejandro Alvarez Cadilla, Fisk, «Untitled Portrait» follows a seasoned artist on the cusp of becoming a high - priced artist as he risks everything to be represented by a world - renowned New York art dealer.
The organizer, the American painter and art dealer William Copley, conceived of it as an intermedia and intergenerational publication, presenting works by an impressive array of artists, both well - known and emerging, including the Dada and Surrealist luminaries Marcel Duchamp, Man Ray, and Meret Oppenheim; Pop artists Richard Hamilton and Roy Lichtenstein; composers Terry Riley and La Monte Young; and an up - and - coming generation of conceptual and post-studio artists represented by Joseph Kosuth and Bruce Nauman, among others.
Gallery's famous owner Emmanuel Perrotin is one of the world's greatest art dealers, well regarded in the art world for being quick to identify emerging talents, as he hosted first solo shows and represented such great names as Damien Hirst, Takashi Murakami, Maurizio Cattelan, and more recently, JR and KAWS.
As a member of the Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA) and the Association of International Photography Art Dealers (AIPAD), the gallery is committed to representing and exhibiting artworks of the highest quality in every regard.
Hosted by the Morris Collectors, one of the museum's affiliate groups, this year's fair features such leading dealers as Hampton3 Gallery from Taylors, South Carolina and Augusta's Tire City Art Gallery, both showing and selling the work of nationally, internationally, and locally renowned printmakers; artists» atelier King Snake Press from Greenville, South Carolina, representing the work of more than a dozen artists; Augusta State University art professor Kristin Casaletto; ASU gallery director, artist Jack Cheatham; University of Georgia professors and artists Melissa Harshman and Jon Swindler; Savannah College of Art and Design professor and artist Dale Clifford, and artists Kent Ambler, Suzy Schultz, Andrea Emmons, and Katherine LiArt Gallery, both showing and selling the work of nationally, internationally, and locally renowned printmakers; artists» atelier King Snake Press from Greenville, South Carolina, representing the work of more than a dozen artists; Augusta State University art professor Kristin Casaletto; ASU gallery director, artist Jack Cheatham; University of Georgia professors and artists Melissa Harshman and Jon Swindler; Savannah College of Art and Design professor and artist Dale Clifford, and artists Kent Ambler, Suzy Schultz, Andrea Emmons, and Katherine Liart professor Kristin Casaletto; ASU gallery director, artist Jack Cheatham; University of Georgia professors and artists Melissa Harshman and Jon Swindler; Savannah College of Art and Design professor and artist Dale Clifford, and artists Kent Ambler, Suzy Schultz, Andrea Emmons, and Katherine LiArt and Design professor and artist Dale Clifford, and artists Kent Ambler, Suzy Schultz, Andrea Emmons, and Katherine Linn.
Her work has been included in solo exhibitions in New York as well as in her native Japan since 1977, and was successfully represented since the mid-90's by well known New York gallery OK Harris, founded by longtime art dealer Ivan Karp after leaving the Leo Castelli gallery in October 1969.
Her work has been included in solo exhibitions in New York as well as in her native Japan since 1977, and was successfully represented since the mid-90's by well known New York gallery OK Harris, founded by longtime art dealer Ivan Karp after leaving the Leo Castelli gallery in October 1969, and until Karp passed away, in 2012.
This small, 60 - year survey puts Parsons's art on a much more equal footing with her achievement as a dealer and even with the work of the giants she represented.
More than simply championing and exhibiting challenging, conceptual art, as a dealer Butler created a market for artwork that was often represented in the physical world by nothing more than a certificate.
In gallery news: David Zwirner has announced a US$ 50 million new Renzo Piano - designed space to open in New York in spring 2020, which will serve as the gallery's headquarters (later this month David Zwirner will also open its first Asia space in Hong Kong)-- «fortune favours the brave» Zwirner told the New York Times; Tomoo Gokita is now represented by Blum & Poe — he will have a solo show at the Los Angeles gallery in autumn 2018; and street art dealer (and once Banksy's agent) Steve Lazarides is opening his new gallery, Lazinc — a joint partnership with Qatari magnate Wissam Al Mana — in London's Mayfair this week with a solo show by artist JR..
Describing itself as «a boutique pop - up art fair,» the event will take place Friday - Sunday, Jan. 12 - 14, at 160 Spear St.. It will present artists represented by four reputable dealers that fall just outside the San Francisco establishment: Chandra Cerrito Contemporary and Slate Contemporary, both based in Oakland; Mill Valley's Seager Gray Gallery; and George Lawson, who closed his brick - and - mortar space last year and whose website says he is «on sabbatical and the exhibition program is temporarily suspended.»
With increasingly fewer dealers of modern art in the fair, more of their contemporary counterparts — dealers identified as primary market leaders — devoted their inventory to lucrative secondary market works by artists or estates they either represent or don't, making their booths into consignment shops and altering the profile of the gallery.
Independent and represented artists, as well as some of Toronto's respected art dealers enter a dialogue about the history and current place of artists and commercial galleries.
He has handled virtually every kind of case, many involving sophisticated issues and sizeable amounts at stake, representing all kinds of parties such as entrepreneurs, developers, traders, physicians, partners, shareholders, officers and directors, corporations and banks, partnerships, LLC's, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, construction companies, software companies, accountants, law firms, art dealers, private utilities, and even pro-bono the community surrounding Wrigley Field.
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