Sentences with phrase «who signed his paintings»

Drafted by critic and painter Rodolphe de Repentigny (who signed his paintings with the pseudonym Jauran) and countersigned by Louis Belzile, Jean - Paul Jérôme and Fernand Toupin, it was quite different from the REFUS GLOBAL, which had appeared in 1948.

Not exact matches

The better picture you can paint of your sales process — who your buyers are, how they find you, why they select you, and how long it takes them to sign on the dotted line — the better we can help you move that process along.
Wanderers» recent financial reports painted a particularly bleak picture and Freedman, who is desperate for new recruits to reinvigorate a team thrashed 7 - 1 by Reading last weekend, could have more licence to make signings this month with one of his higher earners out of the door.
She painted Mr. Silver as a politician who went back on his promises to protect tenants by holding private meetings with Glenwood lobbyists and signing off on a version of a rent regulation bill that the company favored.
To get around any red tape, Mr. Betsch brought the idea directly to Town Board members, who have the authority to sign off on having a local road painted.
Wilmer Olivencia, Jr., who coordinates the city's Anti-Graffiti and Clean City Program, says a fast response makes it easier to remove the paint from walls, signs or other objects where the graffiti was left.
Once influenced by a fleeting fling with an artist who wore a thrifted blazer he had hand painted dollar signs on the back and sleeves, I no longer feel the need to make a statement everyday.
This means, of course, that in a film with Hugh Jackman and Sigourney Weaver, the stars are Die Antwoord and the voice of Sharlto Copley, who learns, under their loving tutelage, how to Fred Sanford - walk, throw shiruken, wear bling, and get vandalized with dollar signs and obscure, instantly - regrettable spray - painted slogans.
Meanwhile, Cole has just inked another property deal with a Russian named Uri (Karel Roden) who needs help cutting through some red tape, and as a sign of his appreciation, he allows Cole to borrow his lucky painting until the deal is complete.
In our latest Crew Call podcast, Gassner describes the «brutality» philosophy of the future that both he and director Denis Villeneuve painted, how famed concept artist Syd Mead who worked on the original film was involved in the sequel, and how most of 2049 was shot with actual sets (despite that gorgeous birdeye's shot of the cliff - tall Atari sign).
In the rather clunkily titled Three Bridges Outside Ebbing, Missouri she plays a grieving mother who hand - paints three signs leading into her home town, each with a provocative message aimed squarely at Woody Harrelson's police chief, who she blames for failing to catch her daughter's killer several months after the fact.
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri follows Mildred Hayes (McDormand), a woman who - after growing frustrated with th lack of activity surrounding her daughter's murder case - goes to war with the local law enforcement bu painting three controversial signs which lead into her town.
«Though Trumbull worked on the painting for years in hopes of including all of the signers, the lesser - known delegates and the ones who died in the decades just after the Declaration of Independence was signed didn't make the cut,» Sneff writes.
Just because your kids are headed to college, it doesn't mean they'll graduate Two new reports out this month describing who completes college and the warning signs for students at risk of dropping out paint a picture of a much different future than the one most parents imagine for their kids.
- character creation lets you choose skin color, face, eye color and haircut - later in the game you can get glasses, pants, shoes and other stuff - start off by meeting Tom Nook and his posse of Happy Home employees - this includes Lyle the Otter and Digby the Dog, who give advice and help to keep the game moving forward - Lottie the Otter is Lyle's niece and handles the front desk in the game - she welcomes you every time you boot up the game and tells you what to do next - gameplay starts off with placing furniture, but quickly evolves into something more - place a house on the world map and cycle through seasons to see what you like - house can modified with different roofs, doors, colors and more - every animal unlocks new furniture for you to use - completing a lot of requests is vital to getting a lot of content - characters will react to everything that you place and remove in the house - three pieces of furniture must be in or outside of the house and these need to implemented into the final design - if you don't follow this rule, your animal customer will not approve - add wallpaper, carpets, lamps, signs, music covers, paintings and much more - by completing special objectives in the office, which you pay for with Play Coins, you can even expand the feature set - set background sounds, choose curtains, change up furniture, display fossils and get a bigger variety of fish and paintings.
The real jokesters, in Naumann's way of thinking, include the «excessivist» artist who signed his work Joachim - Raphaël Boronali and showed a picture that was painted by a donkey's tail at the Salon des Indépendants in Paris in 1910.
This means that people who signed up for your art newsletters, daily paintings, and other stuff about you that they love won't see it.
The Irascibles were a group of American abstract artists who, in 1950, signed an open letter, to the president of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, rejecting the museum's exhibition: American Painting Today — 1950, and boycotting the accompanying competition.
The works looked like the type of painting - and - sculpture hybrids popular now, but they were made in the 1970s by Michelle Stuart, an 82 - year - old artist who signed with Tonkonow in 2010, after about a decade without representation.
I enjoyed Heather Van Uxem's sculpted spiders and dark stained wood, Samuel Gélas's paintings of displaced people in Guadeloupe, and an imagined alphabet of dented squares from Tim Roseborough — who allowed one to take home one's name, signed by him in ordinary cursive.
Such was the case of an extraordinary group of Brazilian artists who sent their paintings to a group show in London as a sign of a support.
Recently, Lehmann Maupin signed its first Chinese artist, the 40 - year - old Liu Wei, who works in painting and photography, but has been focused recently on large - scale architectural sculptures that resemble cityscapes and are made from unconventional materials, like door frames and books.
Other works in the exhibition include Jorge Pardo's handcrafted wooden palette and modernist designed furniture that question the nature of the aesthetic experience; pioneering conceptual artist Joseph Kosuth's discourse on aesthetics in neon, An Object Self - Defined, 1966; Rachel Lachowicz's 1992 row of urinals cast in red lipstick, which delivers a feminist critique of Duchamp's readymade; Richard Pettibone's paintings of photographs of Fountain; Richard Phillips» recent paintings based on Gerhard Richter's highly valued work; Miami artist Tom Scicluna's neon sign, «Interest in Aesthetics,» a critique of the use of aesthetics in Fort Lauderdale's ordinance on homelessness; the French collaborative Claire Fontaine's lightbox highlighting Duchamp's critical comments about art juries; Corey Arcangel's video Apple Garage Band Auto Tune Demonstration, 2007, which tweaks the concept of aesthetics in the digital age; Bernd and Hilla Becher's photographs, Four Water Towers, 1980, that reveal the potential for aesthetic choices within the same typological structures; and works by Elad Lassry and Steven Baldi, who explore the aesthetic history of photography.
That includes more sign painting, such as Tips for Painters Who Want to Sell or a quote on «esthetic judgments» from Clement Greenberg.
No wonder Evans, who painted under various pseudonyms, signed these paintings S.S. David while saving his real name — or rather a variation on his given name, David Scott Evans — for the «serious» work on which his reputation was based at the time: now - forgotten genre scenes and portraits of rich young women.
The exhibition Geraldo Industrial seeks to engage the public with this rich process of work, illustrated by a precise selection of paintings, photographs and furniture - all signed by Geraldo de Barros, addressing the multiple nature of the artist, who was one of the pioneers in Brazil's Concretist movement.
Ironically, in «Tips for Artists Who Want to Sell,» his cheeky 1966 - 68 sign painting, L.A.'s John Baldessari gives the sardonic lowdown.
Ralf Winkler, the German artist who rose to fame in the 1970s with his caterwauling, violent, humorous, rigorously flat paintings of stick figures, animals and monsters that he signed with the pseudonym A. R. Penck (the better to elude unsympathetic East German officials, at least for a while), has periodically made stuffed felt sculptures.
Basquiat's work — a make - shift wall inside of the gallery graffitied with expressive marks — was a standout success next to videos by Keith Haring and Kenny Scharf, hand - painted text signs by Jenny Holzer, figurative sculpture by John Ahearn and Tom Otterness, and others who would define art of the 1980s.
A super-promising artist who uses sign - painting techniques, math, mysticism, and philosophy to «explore the impossible... to violate itself, or crumple it, or double it back on itself.»
And I realized I had to do something 1983 Rammelzee vs K Rob «Beat Bop» 1984 First shows at Clarissa Dalrymple and Nicole Klagsbrun's Cable Gallery (artists of Wool's generation who begin showing same period include Philip Taaffe Jeff Koons Mike Kelley Cady Noland and James Nares 1984 produces first book photocopied edition of four: 93 Drawings of Beer on the Wall 1984 Warhol Rorschach paintings 1986 First pattern paintings 1987 Joins Luhring Augustine Gallery 1987 First word paintings 1988 Collaborative installation with Robert Gober one painting by Wool (Apocalypse Now) one sculpture by Gober (Three Urinals) one collaborative photograph (Untitled) and a mirror Gary Indiana contributes a short piece of fiction to the accompanying publication 1988 In Cologne sees show of Albert Oehlen's work meets Martin Kippenberger 1988 First European shows Cologne and Athens 1988 Collaborates with Richard Prince on two paintings: My Name and My Act 1989 Museum Group shows in Amsterdam Frankfurt am Main and Munich Whitney Biennial 1989 One year fellowship at the American Academy in Rome 1989 Starts taking photographs 1989 Publishes Black Book an oversized collection of 9 - letter images 1989 Fall of the Berlin Wall 1990 Meets Larry Clark 1991 First survey mounted at Boymans - Van Beuningen Museum Rotterdam publishes accompanying artist's book Cats in Bag Bags in River color photocopies of photographs of black and white paintings 1991 Creates edition of small paintings for ACT - UP New York Needle Exchange 1991 Participates in Carnegie International includes painting and billboard with truncated text announcing «THE SHOW IS OVER» 1991 Meets Jim Lewis 1991 Relocates studio to East 9th Street in New York 1992 LA riots 1992 DAAD residency in Berlin 1993 Publishes Absent Without Leave 160 black - and - white images from travel photographs taken over previous 4 years 1993 Begins silkscreened flower paintings 1993 Meets Michel Majerus 1994 Makes road - signs for Martin Kippenberger's Museum of Modern Art Syros 1994 New York Knicks lose to Houston Rockets in Game 7 NBA Finals 1995 Organizes retrospective of the New Cinema late 70's New York underground Super-8 films 1995 First spray - paintings 1995 Kids 1996 East Village studio severely damaged in building fire leaving Wool without a working space for 8 months artist's insurance photos become portfolio Incident on 9th Street 1997 Marries painter Charline von Heyl 1998 Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles mounts mid-career retrospective travels to Carnegie Museum of Art Pittsburgh and Kunsthalle Basel 1998 Begins silkscreen re-imaging of own work 2001 Solo exhibition at Secession Vienna 2002 «Grey» paintings 2003 East Broadway Breakdown photos of New York City 2005 First digital drawings 2006 Contributes art to Sonic Youth Rather Ripped 2007 Collaborates with Josh Smith on Can Your Monkey Do the Dog 2008 Collaborates with Richard Hell on Psychopts 2008 Christopher Wool lives and works in New York and Marfa Texas
Signed and dated (at lower center): Joseph Stella 1919 Silverpoint and crayon on paper Joseph Stella was a visionary artist who painted what he saw, an idiosyncratic and individual...
And then there was this dealer who always prodded me to incorporate sign painting into my work.
Maryse Ducaire Roque, signed her name M. Ducaire, was a female French impressionist who was best known for her paintings of the female nude.
My favourite works are all by female artists, who are so often absent from Italian art history: Carla Accardi's fluorescent and candy - coloured Rotolo Arancio and Rotolo Verde (Orange Roll and Green Roll, both 1967), painted on sheets of rolled - up transparent plastic sheeting; Irma Blank's Twelve Chapters (1977), 12 laboriously hand - written books filled with the artist's elegant abstract signs, and Lisetta Carmi's I Travestiti (Transvestites, 1965 — 71), a pioneering and much censored photographic project about the trans community in Genoa.
«An American Language» Guerrero Gallery Artforum International; April 1, 2012; Turvey, Lisa; 700 + words Any passerby who chanced upon this group show would have immediately realized that all was not business as usual: Suspended from Guerrero Gallery's ceiling was a hulking wooden swing - stage scaffold bedaubed with enamel stains and labeled sign paint.
More broadly, Krasner's calligraphic paintings revealed the artist's exploration of symbols and sign systems; she explained, «I thought of [my unconscious messages] as a kind of crazy writing of my own, sent by me to I don't know who, which I can't read, and I'm not so anxious to read.»
Where so many other painters seek to convey their artistic ambitions through signs of intensive labor, grand scale, daunting complexity or serious themes, Heilmann, who began as a ceramist, seems to position painting as ceramics by other means.
So if you really love a painter like Laura Owens, who just recently had a solo show at the Whitney, but you can't afford her paintings (which have sold at auction for upwards of $ 1.755 million), buying a signed and dated Laura Owens print for $ 1,800 is a great alternative.
The vivid, garish, and clashing colors in many of Richter's abstract paintings were probably inspired by those Pop artists who exaggerated the simplified, bold, and eye - catching qualities of magazine illustrations, posters, signs, and billboards.
Did the buyer who is suing you sign a lead paint disclosure form?
I am in love with my welcome sign from Heritage Gallery, Marian Zimmerman, who is the artist, hand paints every sign for every season.
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