Sentences with phrase «seriously as an artist»

Brolin is the male equivalent of those actresses (like Michelle Pfeiffer early in her career) who aren't taken seriously as artists because they're too pretty.
There seems the possibility that Anger Management has a pulse unrelated to Nicholson's freak show persona — that had Sandler the courage to continue to buck his image he would one day be taken seriously as an artist rather than a peddler of low art to low people.
It was while working on The Soft Skin that Truffaut really began to obsess over Hitchcock's films, and, as Jones explains, the French filmmaker would soon after be instrumental in Hitchcock's starting to be taken seriously as an artist in America.
Although it's possible that her beauty was the reason she never really got taken seriously as an artist.
Being taken seriously as an artist is about creating a body of work that gets the attention and praise of people in this art world.
If she felt anger about not being taken seriously as an artist because she was a woman, she was not alone.
It's part of the Lowry myth — the myth of many famous artists, in fact, whether or not it actually happens to be true — that he's never been taken seriously as an artist by critics or by cognoscenti.
«If you want to be taken seriously as an artist, you can not avoid painting.»
In this excerpt from Phaidon's monograph on the artist, Durham talks to curator and historian Dirk Snauwaert about the New York art world of the 1980s, the fight to be taken seriously as an artist, and how, in his eyes, «you can't lose your own identity» Read more
Because of that, Postmasters [Gallery in Manhattan's Tribeca neighborhood] showed the whole body of that work and all of a sudden people had to rethink, because if you come from dysfunction you can be taken seriously as an artist.
She came of age in an era when women weren't taken seriously as artists or academics.
It was rare for women to be taken seriously as artists in the 18th century and even rarer for them to be accepted as explorers and scientists, yet George III bought Merian's work and it has been in the Royal Collection ever since.
Will they stand a better chance at being taken seriously as artist's than I have?
Her marriage to sculptor Tom Doyle in 1962 gave her an entree into the New York art world, but that world took few women seriously as artists.
Alexis Rockman: I think I have an innate attraction to types of figuration, if I think about my childhood, but I also went through a period when I started painting in a so - called «serious» way out of art school, where I was trying to take myself seriously as an artist.

Not exact matches

But I would appeal to any scientist who happens to be reading this book to think seriously that people such as poets, artists of every kind, mystics and indeed ordinary people of faith may be receiving truth in an entirely different way from that to which he is accustomed.
If truth is relevant and the bible is not the word of God, then the artist should follow his art and quit hiding as a pastor (that statement was a little rough and I thought long and hard before placing it there, but I hope it causes you to seriously consider your calling.
A graduate of Calvin College, his success provided hope that artists and scholars could escape the Christian bubble and be taken seriously in their own right rather than only as part of the chorus in the newly developing «Christian» art subculture.
Some of our readers may not remember this, on account of the fact that they were zygotes, but 1990 was a year in which people actually took Michael Bolton and Kenny G seriously as musical artists.
Peters is a seriously funny dude and talented accent artist, but his material in this special does a disservice to his capacity as a performer.
One tends to forget, now that the term «Disneyfication» has been in wide use for quite a while, that there was a time when Walt Disney and his employees were taken seriously not merely as producers of «kid's movies», but as ARTISTS.
I agree with amberb, women are still struggling for recognition as artists, even as writers, still struggling to be taken seriously, and still struggling with social expectations that make it harder to follow a career without experiencing conflicts men don't face, for the most part, unless they choose to participate equally in raising a family.
I first started seriously writing in the mid-1980s when it was still called «vanity press» and saw commercial publication as a form of validation as an artist.
And clearly I am not alone in thinking this, the list of artists who have signed up for this event range from national and international stars such as Yoko Ono (seriously?!?), and Jeff Bridges; local superstars like Penelope Gottlieb, Ann Diener and John Nava; old favorites from the Haley Collective like Yoskay Yamamoto, J. Shea9, Tanner Goldbeck, and Larry Mills; and up - and - comers like Inga Guzyte and Zack Paul.
Always a model but never an artist might well have served as the motto of the seriously aspiring young woman in the arts of the 19th century.
Do you mean if you want to be taken seriously by the famous critics and wealthy collectors, or do you mean if you want to make a living as an artist?
Came at a time when i am seriously refocusing how to operate and build my brand as an artist.
It narrows its scope to nine artists, some of whom — such as the Belgian Evelyne Axell — have remained seriously under - known in New York.
Mack's subversive work underscores the struggles of many women artists in the 1970s who found their role as homemaker monotonous and often an obstacle to being taken seriously in a male - dominated art world.
Besides, if an artist has to take himself this seriously, he may as well chase the great white whale.
She studied visual art briefly, but never seriously considered a career as an artist.
The Painted World includes paintings by important historical figures such as Paul Feeley (1910 - 1966), Yayoi Kusama, and Myron Stout (1908 - 1987); Moira Dryer (1957 - 1992) and Steven Parrino (1958 - 2005), two influential artists whose lives were cut short; and younger artists who are seriously pursuing abstraction, such as Mark Grotjahn and Ann Pibal.
I started letting go of thoughts such as, «it's so hard to be an artist / native artist in the current modern context» or «one artist in millions gets taken seriously by contemporary culture and the art market».
It mean only that I as a critic, like Schnabel as artist, wants to be taken seriously.
So while New Image Painting may not change much in the tastes of an art market that prefers its signifiers empty and flexible, the fact remains that the exhibition's authors — its curators and, presumably, its artists — are taking the problems of the market seriously as a cultural force.
Nevertheless, he marked him out as an artist whom Castelli should seriously consider.
In celebration of the publication of Louise Nevelson: Light and Shadow, art historian and biographer Laurie Wilson discusses the remarkable life and art of one of the great sculptors of the 20th century in a presentation that considers the key elements of Nevelson's work, the links between her childhood experiences and adult life as an artist, the major influences on her evolving style, the challenges she faced to be taken seriously, and the relationship between her public face and the flesh - and - blood woman.
Miami, Florida During the first week of December, Miami becomes the global center of the art world, as thousands of the best - known galleries and artists (not to mention some seriously discerning collectors) descend upon the city for what has become known as Miami Art Week.
Author and artist Katrin Eismann offers some seriously high - profile work, including her own, as examples for teaching you how to use the digital medium to create, edit, and output images that will wow your audience.
«She took her role as an advocate for arts education as seriously as her work as an artist,» Parker told Bravo.
«But I know Philippe as a curator and I know how seriously he takes artists.
, ArtPharmacy (Blog), June 12 Elisa della Barba, «What I loved about Venice Biennale 2013», Swide, June 2 Juliette Soulez, «Le Future Generation Art Prize remis a Venise», Blouin Artinfo, May 31 Charlotte Higgins, «Venice Biennale Diary: dancing strippers and inflatable targets», The Guardian On Culture Blog, May 31 Vincenzo Latronico, «Il Palazzo Enciclopedico», Art Agenda, May 31 Marcus Field, «The Venice Biennale preview: Let the art games commence», The Independent, May 18 Joost Vandebrug, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye», L'Uomo Vogue, No. 441, May / June «Lucy Mayes, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye», a Ruskin Magazine, Vol.3, pp. 38 - 39 Rebecca Jagoe, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye: Portraits Without a Subject», The Culture Trip, May Lynette Yiadom - Boakye, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye on Walter Richard Sickert's Miss Gwen Ffrangcon - Davies as Isabella of France (1932)», Tate etc., Issue 28, Summer, p. 83 «Turner Prize - nominated Brit has art at Utah museum», Standard Examiner, May 1 Matilda Battersby, «Imaginary portrait painter Lynette Yiadom - Boakye becomes first black woman shortlisted for Turner Prize 2013», The Independent, April 25 Nick Clark, «David Shrigley's fine line between art and fun nominated for Turner Prize», The Independent, April 25 Charlotte Higgins, «Turner prize 2013: a shortlist strong on wit and charm», guardian.co.uk April 25 Charlotte Higgins, «Turner prize 2013 shortlist takes a mischievous turn», guardian.co.uk, April 25 Adrian Searle, «Turner prize 2013 shortlist: Tino Sehgal dances to the fore», guardian.co.uk, April 25 Allan Kozinn, «Four Artists Named as Finalists for Britain's Turner Prize», The New York Times, April 25 Coline Milliard, «A Crop of Many Firsts: 2013 Turner Prize Shortlist Announced», Artinfo, April 25 Sam Phillips, «Former RA Schools student nominated for Turner Prize», RA Blog, April 25 «Turner Prize Shortlist 2013», artlyst, April 25 «Turner Prize Nominations Announced: David Shrigley, Tino Sehgal, Lynette Yiadom - Boakye and Laure Prouvost Up For Award», Huffpost Arts & Culture, April 25 Hannah Furness, «Turner Prize 2013: a dead dog, headless drummers and the first «live encounter» entry», Telegraph, April 25 Hannah Furness, «Turner Prize 2013: The public will question whether this is art, judge admits», Telegraph, April 25 Julia Halperin, «Turner Prize shortlist announced», The Art Newspaper, April 25 Brian Ferguson, «Turner Prize nomination for David Shrigley», Scotsman.com, April 25 «Former Falmouth University student shortlisted for Turner Prize», The Cornishman, April 29 «Trickfilme und der Geschmack der Sonne», Spiegel Online, April 25 Dominique Poiret, «La Francaise Laure Prouvost en lice pour le Turner Prize», Liberation, April 26 Louise Jury, «Turner Prize: black humour artist David Shrigley is finally taken seriously by judges», London Evening Standard, April 25 «Turner Prize 2013: See nominees» work including dead dog, grave shopping list and even some paintings», Mirror, April 25 Henry Muttisse, «It's the Turner demise», The Sun, April 25 «Imaginary portrait painter up for Turner Prize», BBC News, April 25 Farah Nayeri, «Tate's Crowd Artist Sehgal Shortlisted for Turner Prize», Bloomberg Businessweek, April 25 «Turner Prize finalists mix humour and whimsy», CBC News, April 25 Richard Moss, «Turner Prize 2013 shortlist revealed for Derry - Londonderry», Culture24, April 25 «David Shrigley makes 2013 Turner Prize shortlist», Design Week, April 25 «The Future Generation Art Prize@Venice 2013», e-flux.com, April 21 Skye Sherwin, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye», The Guardian Guide, March 2 - 8, p. 36 Amie Tullius, «Seasoned by Whitney Tassie», 15 Bytes, March «ARTINFO UK's Top 3 Exhibitions Opening This Week, ARTINFO.com, February 25 Orlando Reade, «Whose Oyster Is This World?&artist David Shrigley is finally taken seriously by judges», London Evening Standard, April 25 «Turner Prize 2013: See nominees» work including dead dog, grave shopping list and even some paintings», Mirror, April 25 Henry Muttisse, «It's the Turner demise», The Sun, April 25 «Imaginary portrait painter up for Turner Prize», BBC News, April 25 Farah Nayeri, «Tate's Crowd Artist Sehgal Shortlisted for Turner Prize», Bloomberg Businessweek, April 25 «Turner Prize finalists mix humour and whimsy», CBC News, April 25 Richard Moss, «Turner Prize 2013 shortlist revealed for Derry - Londonderry», Culture24, April 25 «David Shrigley makes 2013 Turner Prize shortlist», Design Week, April 25 «The Future Generation Art Prize@Venice 2013», e-flux.com, April 21 Skye Sherwin, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye», The Guardian Guide, March 2 - 8, p. 36 Amie Tullius, «Seasoned by Whitney Tassie», 15 Bytes, March «ARTINFO UK's Top 3 Exhibitions Opening This Week, ARTINFO.com, February 25 Orlando Reade, «Whose Oyster Is This World?&Artist Sehgal Shortlisted for Turner Prize», Bloomberg Businessweek, April 25 «Turner Prize finalists mix humour and whimsy», CBC News, April 25 Richard Moss, «Turner Prize 2013 shortlist revealed for Derry - Londonderry», Culture24, April 25 «David Shrigley makes 2013 Turner Prize shortlist», Design Week, April 25 «The Future Generation Art Prize@Venice 2013», e-flux.com, April 21 Skye Sherwin, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye», The Guardian Guide, March 2 - 8, p. 36 Amie Tullius, «Seasoned by Whitney Tassie», 15 Bytes, March «ARTINFO UK's Top 3 Exhibitions Opening This Week, ARTINFO.com, February 25 Orlando Reade, «Whose Oyster Is This World?»
Many collages went untitled, as if the «message» were of no concern and many wound up with provisional titles such as «Good»n Fruity Madonna,» reflecting instead the process and materials rather than any will of the artist, reflecting style over content and a refusal on the artist's part to take the art, or himself, too seriously.
But there is a powerful shared preoccupation with, to put it as nakedly as possible, «I.» In a period whose presiding spiritual disease is narcissism, the artists we most admire play, seriously, with what we can know about who we think we are.
This idea swims against a tide that has been gathering strength since the post-war period, when artists began to work seriously at shrinking that separation between art (that is aesthetic intervention) and life (the everyday, social relations that describe what this exhibition regards as our supposed purgatory in contrast to a heaven of artistic concerns).
Gallery co-owner David Eichholtz says, «The main thing that's driving my interest is not a celebration per se of the historical effect of «The Responsive Eye» but the desire to contextualize a couple of things — that these artists really pursued visual perception seriously as a lifelong ambition, and that younger artists continue to find hard - edge geometric are compelling and imbue it with content.»
A new reckoning for Ross Bleckner was certainly afoot at Mary Boone in Chelsea on Saturday night, where the artist's new paintings — a kind of retrospective of the new, as one visitor noted — was waking people up to what a seriously good painter the guy really is.
Allen Ginsberg might be famous for his poetry, but he took his photographic practice seriously, especially in his later years, when he imagined himself as a bit of an artist.
A self - taught artist, he sketched and painted for pleasure from an early time, but it wasn't until the 1940s when a long battle with tuberculosis disrupted his life and job as a bank official, that he began painting seriously, and in 1951 he began exhibiting his work in public.
Cardinal - Schubert took her role as an artist seriously, wielding a potent and personal visual language that embraced narrative.
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