Sentences with phrase «taking polaroids»

You, too, can be a part of the panda party because calendar photographer and famed artist Rachel Stern will be there in person taking polaroids!
Thomas (Mpho Koaho) is bright and hard - driving, taking Polaroids of tourists on Rush Street for $ 5 to make money.
i took a polaroid of it when i was 15...
Remember in the movie Clueless when Cher took Polaroids of her outfits before wearing them!
I don't take Polaroids any more but I still draw, and all that comes together.
[16] Between 1998 through 2000, in collaboration with the photographer Anton Corbijn, she worked on a project called «Stripping Girls», which took the strip clubs and peep shows of Amsterdam as their subject; [17] while Corbijn exhibited photographs in the show, Dumas took Polaroids which she then used as sources for her pictures.
In the early 1990s, the artist took Polaroids of the underside of a table and chairs in his kitchen and was struck by the expansive and immersive world they conveyed.2 He sought to re-create this experience in the round, and beginning in 1992 his work turned from handmade to industrially fabricated, from modestly scaled to nearly four times life - size, and from somewhat abstracted to more directly representational.

Not exact matches

Most of the polaroids are of trips Eddie and I took together or of my niece when she was a little baby, so they're extra special to me.
I got a polaroid for christmas and I've been obsessed with taking snapshots of random things
Throughout the whole evening one of the staff members was taking pictures of us with a polaroid camera and they even had a flower crown and a unicorn hat to make the pics even more funny.
There's a ton of never - before - seen material inside, including Ridley Scott's storyboards, H.R. Giger's alien concept art, and Polaroids taken on the set.
Taken from Polaroids and other found imagery, Le Mépris combines mysterious paintings of a parade in his mother's hometown, standing water in local canals, and the eponymous painting of the fireplace of the Villa Malaparte, where Godard's film was shot.
Nevertheless, the Polaroids in this exhibition, taken with the Big Shot camera in the 70s and 80s, were, as Peter Hay Halpert described, «unlike his other photographs... these reveal Warhol, the photographer, to a greater degree than we have recognized.
So, those were the first Polaroids I took in New York.
The book reflects all the style of Scott's world, from snapshots of fittings in his studio to Polaroids taken backstage at shows and editorial work from Inez and Vinoodh, Steven Meisel, Ellen von Unwerth, and Terry Richardson, among others.
Here he also showcases unique Polaroids from the 1970s and a selection of images taking animals as their subject matter.
From the softly focused, romantic images the Pictorialists made in the early 1900s to the casual color polaroids Andy Warhol took of the celebrities around him in the early 1970s, these works also trace the evolving styles and functions of photography as it documented artistic movements and increasingly served as a primary artistic medium in itself.
Roe Ethridge (b. 1969) shows eight photographs derived from previously dismissed Polaroids (2005 — 07) he took of everyday surroundings such as a black bag at his studio.
Polaroids taken by Christopher Wool on the occasion of his exhibition at the Cable Gallery, New York, June 5 — July 21, 1984
Published on the occasion of the exhibition Isaac Julien: «I dream a world» Looking for Langston, at Victoria Miro (18 May — 29 July 2017) this lavishly illustrated publication includes texts by Isaac Julien and Pulitzer Prize winning critic Hilton Als, alongside rare archival material including storyboards by artist John Hewitt, colour polaroids taken during the making of the film and additional material relating to its original presentation and critical reception.
A crucial aspect of Dumas's work is her discovery of the images from which she draws inspiration, be it in newspapers, magazines, film stills, films or polaroids she herself has taken.
Gober packed a lot of material (including a page from an article by sex researcher Dr. John Money that shows Polaroids Bess took of his genitals) into the vitrines for the Whitney Biennial and will have more here.
He is most well known for his body of work taken in the 1980s that experimented with a wide variety of photographic formats including gelatin silver prints, large size polaroids, and photogravures (such as Irises, 1987).
By painting layer upon layer of whites and off - whites over silkscreened elements used in previous works — monochrome forms taken from reproductions, enlargements of details of photographs, screens, and polaroids of his own paintings — he accretes the surface of his pressurized paintings while apparently voiding their very substance.
Here we find Eugene von Bruenchenhein's copious photographs of his often topless and apparently game wife; the rather creepier ballerina - doll pictures made by Morton Bartlett, after devoting laborious attention to crafting the dolls themselves; the insouciant intensities of Greer Lockton, revolving around gender reassignment and the refashioning of icons, both cultural (Jackie O.) and subcultural (Candy Darling) through dolls and photographs; and selections from the inscrutable archive of Polaroids taken of actresses on television by the anonymous photographer known as Type 42.
Social documentarian and artist Nancy J. Parisi will create souvenir Polaroids for guests, who will take home gift bags sponsored by Yelp!
A series of screen prints of Joseph Beuys reproduce a polaroid picture that Warhol took of the German artist when they came face - to - face for the first time in 1979.
This theme of regimented, mechanized beastliness is countered by Dash Snow's digital prints of what look like enlarged Polaroids; although taken in recent years, these shaggy guys fighting with feather pillows or thrusting out of water with bare - breasted beauties on their shoulders radiate hippie hijinks.
This exhibition of polaroid portraits of himself taken by artist friends - including Andy Warhol, Francis Bacon and Joseph Beuys - is a subversive exercise full of sly jokes about the nature of style.
Since 1968, Hamilton has offered artist friends a polaroid camera and asked them to take a picture of him.
The Polaroids indicate pleasure through the time they were taken and the possibility of returning to these times.
From the artist: I started taking self - portrait Polaroids in the late 80's.
This is an old polaroid picture, also taken in a photobooth, when Dave and I were 14 years old!
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