1227 items, 145ms

» Refine your search

"Charles Hope"

Related Searches:




Object Sub Type

Organization

Classification

Object Type

Artist Traits

Region

Nationality

Mentions Per Year

Artist Name

Collections

Genres

Decade Work Created

Untitled (Map)
© » KADIST

Charles Avery

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Charles Avery has been constructing a narrative in his work since 2004. Between fantasy and reality, The Islanders is a very particular universe he has created in which to gather his disparate ideas. His practice primarily involves drawing, sculptures, texts and installations which participate in the epic and dreamlike narrative whole in the course of making.

Shadows V, Set of 3
© » KADIST

Charles Gaines

Photography (Photography)

To make his series Shadows (1980), Gaines subjected 20 potted plants to a uniform procedure. Each is pictured four times: a photograph of the plant, a photograph of its shadow, a drawing of the plant, and a drawing of its shadow. Instead of lending structure to disparate entities, this system serves a counterintuitive purpose, dissolving the object.

Untitled (Waiters dancing with Itinerants, Onomatopoeia)
© » KADIST

Charles Avery

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Since 2005, Charles Avery has devoted his practice to the perpetual description of a fictional island. Replete with its own population and constantly shifting topography, Avery’s intricately conceived project amounts to an ever-expanding body of drawings, sculptures, installations and texts which evince the island. Exhibited incrementally these heterogeneous elements serve as terms within the unifying structure of the island – as multiple emissions of an imaginary state, and as a meditation on the central themes of philosophy and the problems of art-making.

SEA STATE 6: Capsize
© » KADIST

Charles Lim

Film & Video (Film & Video)

In SEA STATE 6 Charles Lim takes the viewer down the Jurong Rock Caverns in Singapore, a massive underground infrastructure for oil and fuel storage, built to support the commercial operations of oil traders, petrochemical ventures and manufacturing industries in the area. The first of its kind in Southeast Asia. Located at a depth of 130 meters beneath the Banyan Basin on Jurong Island, the Caverns provide infrastructural support to the petrochemical industry that operates on Singapore’s Jurong Island, a cluster of islets reclaimed into one major island and connected to the mainland in the 1980s.

SEASTATE 6: Phase 1
© » KADIST

Charles Lim

Film & Video (Film & Video)

In SEA STATE 6 Charles Lim takes the viewer down the Jurong Rock Caverns in Singapore, a massive underground infrastructure for oil and fuel storage, built to support the commercial operations of oil traders, petrochemical ventures and manufacturing industries in the area. The first of its kind in Southeast Asia. Located at a depth of 130 meters beneath the Banyan Basin on Jurong Island, the Caverns provide infrastructural support to the petrochemical industry that operates on Singapore’s Jurong Island, a cluster of islets reclaimed into one major island and connected to the mainland in the 1980s.

Adam
© » KADIST

Jean-Charles de Quillacq

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Adam is an emblematic work within Jean-Charles de Quillacq’s oeuvre. The artist has created a number of pieces entitled Adam , referring to original man, incarnated in multiple objects at once. Materially, Adam is a fluorescent yellow walking rope with an epoxy coating on one side, rendering the structure rigid, demonstrative of his sculptural practice which is both conceptual and sensual.

Charles Baudelaire
© » KADIST

Mary Reid Kelley

Photography (Photography)

Kelley’s 2015 portrait of the poet Charles Baudelaire is one of a series of poets, rappers, and other thinkers who have influenced the artist’s ideas about beauty, creativity, and expression. As a challenging artist who marches to her own drum, Mary Reid Kelley is in the vanguard of a generation that blends the digital and the analog to dialogue with history. From 2009 to the present, she has made videos that fuse live performance, animation, drawing, sculpture, and digital design.

A Variation on Powers of Ten
© » KADIST

Futurefarmers

Photography (Photography)

In 2011-12 the San Francisco-based collective Futurefarmers staged a 10-part series of conversations and collaborations with scientists, theorist, and philosophers inspired by Charles and Ray Eames’s film, Powers of Ten (1977). PoT was an IBM sponsored documentary that visualized the relative scale and limits of the known universe, both macro and microscopic, through a sequence of magnifications by 10-to-the-x-power. Using the picnic as human-scale index, Futurefarmers capture their meetings with scholars through audio, photography, and then distributed the results publicly through a website and publication .

Black Star Press
© » KADIST

Kelley Walker

Painting (Painting)

The triptych Black Star Press is part of the series ‘The Black Star Press project’ initiated in 2004 by the American artist Kelley Walker. The images in this series are taken from a photo essay on the struggle for civil rights in Alabama, directed by Charles Moore in 1962 (and published by the magazine ‘Life’) which showed the repression of the black population and persistent inequalities in the southern United States. The title “Black Star Press” is taken from the name of the news agency where Charles Moore worked, and it refers to the young black man shot fighting for the rights of his community.

Miriam Maine’s funeral, ca 1990
© » KADIST

Santu Mofokeng

Photography (Photography)

Mofokeng’s experiences during the turbulent time of the 1980s in South Africa led to a turn in his practice, opting to turn to the crowd, focusing on individual faces and bodies within the masses to tell a story of the collective resistance that is present in the daily life and surroundings of South African townships. “Miriam Maine’s funeral” urges the viewer to connect to the sadness that they are witnessing in the scene. Miriam Maine — the sister in law of Kas Maine a tenant farmer Mofokeng documented for historian Charles Van Onselen — was a respected member of the Bloemhof community.

The Pudic Relation between Machine and Plant
© » KADIST

Isadora Neves Marques

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The Pudic Relation between Machine and Plant shows a looped scene where a robotic hand touches a “sensitive plant” — Mimosa Pudica, a species characteristic for closing on itself when touched. The name of the plant was derived from Carl Linnaeus sexual taxonomy of plants: pudica referring both to the external sexual organs, shyness and modesty. In a poem written by Erasmus Darwin (Charles Darwin’s grandfather) titled The Loves of the Plants (1789), this plant is associated, jokingly, with British Botanist Joseph Banks’s famous sexual adventures during his botanical expedition to the tropics.

The Lonely Age
© » KADIST

Connie Zheng

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The Lonely Age by Connie Zheng is the first chapter in a trilogy of short experimental films about the complex temporalities of navigating ongoing environmental crises, as seen through the lens of seeds real and imagined. The film is set in a highly toxic and ecologically ravaged near future, in which people begin to hear rumors of seeds that have washed up on the shores of California after escaping from a factory in China. The seeds are rumored to possess curative properties, but they are also said to be sentient.

Moonscape
© » KADIST

Mona Benyamin

Film & Video (Film & Video)

A moonscape is a vista of the lunar landscape or a visual representation of this, such as in a painting. The term “moonscape” is also sometimes used metaphorically for an area devastated by war. Moonscape by Mona Benyamin is inspired by and dedicated to the Lunar Embassy—a company that now sells land on a variety of planets and moons, established in 1980 by a man called Dennis M. Hope, who claimed ownership of the Moon.

Strange Culture
© » KADIST

Lynn Hershman Leeson

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Lynn Hershman Leeson’s genre-bending documentary Strange Culture tells the story of how one man’s personal tragedy turns into persecution by a paranoid, conservative, and overzealous government. Through interviews, scripted acting, and illustrations, Hershman Leeson outlines the series of absurd events that led to New York state’s case against the former SFAI Associate Professor and artist Steve Kurtz. By closely following Kurtz’s story, Hershman Leeson reveals a strange ripple effect of the Bush administration’s destructive policies.

La Edad de Oro
© » KADIST

Javier Castro

Film & Video (Film & Video)

In the film La Edad de Oro (The Golden Age) Javier Castro asks several children to describe what they want to be when they grow up and what their best career option is in Cuba. Their responses are telling: some hopeful or playful in nature as one would expect, and others crudely revealing the harsh reality that the children perceive. The work takes its title from a children’s magazine produced by José Martí in 1889, during the years leading to the Cuban War of Independence from Spain in which Marti lost his life.

After Scarcity
© » KADIST

Bahar Noorizadeh

Film & Video (Film & Video)

After Scarcity is a sci-fi video-essay that tracks Soviet cyberneticians (1950s – 1980s) in their attempt to build a fully-automated planned economy. If history at its best is a blueprint for science-fiction, revisiting contingent histories of economic technology might enable an access to the future. Vindicating this other internet , the work presents the economic application of socialist cybernetic experiments as extraordinary to financial arrangements and imaginations of our time.

Prêt à faire une grosse bêtise
© » KADIST

Alain Séchas

Sculpture (Sculpture)

A cat, standing like a human being, is looking at us with round and dazed eyes and holds a gun. In the background, we notice a range of unwelcoming buildings, closed in with barbwire. A sentence is inscribed inside of one of the clouds, as if it were a speech bubble, and comments ?with hope or disillusion?

This Day
© » KADIST

Imran Qureshi

Painting (Painting)

At first glance, This Day by Imran Qureshi appears to be an energetic, gestural painting reminiscent of Action Painting from the mid-20th century. But upon closer inspection, highly detailed floral elements reveal themselves amongst the bold red brushstrokes. The botanical motifs in Qureshi’s work represent life and regeneration while the red paint refers to death and mortality.

Fireflies
© » KADIST

Fiamma Montezemolo

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Montemozolo writes of the work: “ Fireflies is the result of a sudden event—and its transformation/translation into an art work—that erupts within a life, altering its flow, suspending it, creating a momentary intensity and deviation of the flow, channeling it somewhere unexpected. This unforeseen deviation is dissected in terms of affects in the time frame of 5 minutes. The affects that emerge in the piece are characterized by a sense of movement between pain and hope, and a work of association between cancer and expectancy.

Lifesize Draft
© » KADIST

Szabolcs Kisspál

Installation (Installation)

Lifesize Draft is the second of two sculptures on a similar theme, the first one being Utopia Battery, (2008). The latter is also in an edition of 3, one of which is in the collection of the Ludwig Muzeum, Budapest. Although Lifesize Draft was made after Utopia Battery, Kisspal conceived it more or less at the same time and sees the two works as closely related.

Sometimes It Was Beautiful
© » KADIST

Christian Nyampeta

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The film Sometimes It Was Beautiful by Christian Nyampeta poetically addresses the systemic conditions leading and emerging from the 1994 Rwandan genocide, which had lasting and profound effects on Rwanda and neighbouring countries like Congo. The divergent opinions of the characters, as well as suggestive gestures, settings, and marks inscribed in the landscape highlight the different approaches in addressing the slow violence linked to the enduring impact of colonialism and imperialism, the pursuit of knowledge, and the conservation of heritage, culture, and object repatriation. Structured into six chapters, the film imagines a meeting between improbable friends and interlaces dialogues, with choreography of dancers, places and objects.

HIKARI
© » KADIST

Aki Kondo

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Hikari (Light) (2015) depicts a fantastical and wrenching story about Juneko, a terminally ill young woman who communicates with her lover, a painter, through a portrait of her produced shortly after her death. As Juneko becomes sicker, her hair begins to fall out, a symptom of her unnamed illness. As her condition deteriorates, the film toggles back and forth with the animated story of Mogeji, a white strand of hair inhabiting Juneko’s body who becomes anthropomorphized through Kondo’s animation and recounts his own story of mortality and loss.

2013.10.20 Kesen-cho
© » KADIST

Naoya Hatakeyama

Photography (Photography)

Naoya Hatakeyama’s series Rikuzentakata (2011) documents the devastating aftermath of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Throughout the series of sixty C-prints (five of which are included in the Kadist Art Foundation’s collection), Hatakeyama’s photographs depict scenes of torn landscapes and leveled homes, demolished villages and massive piles of detritus pummeled beyond recognition. The images serve as records of disaster, seemingly driven by an intense need to bear witness to collective trauma.

This year, missing witness…
© » KADIST

Brook Andrew

Photography (Photography)

This year: missing witness by Brook Andrew consists of a multi-layered collage of photographs. The work features newspaper cut-outs of the phrases: “This year: be prepared…” and “missing witness” overlaid onto a disaster scene, upon a worn-up manuscript. Pulled from The New York Times , the image is of a destroyed temple on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi, that has increasingly experienced natural disasters due to climate change.

2012.11.4 Takata-cho
© » KADIST

Naoya Hatakeyama

Photography (Photography)

Naoya Hatakeyama’s series Rikuzentakata (2011) documents the devastating aftermath of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Throughout the series of sixty C-prints (five of which are included in the Kadist Art Foundation’s collection), Hatakeyama’s photographs depict scenes of torn landscapes and leveled homes, demolished villages and massive piles of detritus pummeled beyond recognition. The images serve as records of disaster, seemingly driven by an intense need to bear witness to collective trauma.

Happy Island - The Messianic Banquet of the Righteous
© » KADIST

Akira Takayama

Film & Video (Film & Video)

In Akira Takayama’s work Happy Island – The Messianic Banquet of the Righteous , five video screens perpendicular to the floor feature footage of cows grazing and resting in the rolling hills of a farmland. Renamed ‘The Farm of Hope’ by owner Masami Yoshizawa, the property is located 14 kilometers away from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, and is part of a now restricted area that became highly contaminated with radiation after an earthquake and tsunami caused leaks from the plant in 2011. Most of the livestock in the restricted areas have either starved to death after being abandoned by their owners or have suffered from the effects of radiation.

The Dreamcatcher
© » KADIST

Kudzanai-Violet Hwami

Painting (Painting)

This painting is the direct result of the artist’s research into her roots. Kudzanai-Violet Hwami sought to find a way to immerse herself in present-day Zimbabwe, spending a month at an artist-run space Dzimbanhete on the outskirts of Harare and living with a traditional healer. According to the artist, the experience left her feeling othered by the inability to fully integrate herself into the place she called home.

2012.3.24 Kesen-cho
© » KADIST

Naoya Hatakeyama

Photography (Photography)

Naoya Hatakeyama’s series Rikuzentakata (2011) documents the devastating aftermath of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Throughout the series of sixty C-prints (five of which are included in the Kadist Art Foundation’s collection), Hatakeyama’s photographs depict scenes of torn landscapes and leveled homes, demolished villages and massive piles of detritus pummeled beyond recognition. The images serve as records of disaster, seemingly driven by an intense need to bear witness to collective trauma.

Terminal 3
© » KADIST

He Xiangyu

Film & Video (Film & Video)

He Xiangyu’s Terminal 3 presents excerpts from the lives of young African acrobats attending the Hebei Wuqiao Acrobatic Arts School in China. Acrobatics, which had a rich history as a court display in imperial China, is now integral to the cultural industries and tourism sector in Wuqiao, continuing a legacy of expending bodies for monetary gain. From 2016 to 2019, He intermittently went to Wuqiao Acrobatics School in Hebei Province to record the daily lives of the students who study a variety of acrobatic skills during their year-long program.

Too fragile to handle it without
© » KADIST

Tirdad Hashemi

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

The Blue Poisoning series , reveals the outcome of artist Tirdad Hashemi’s weary and depressed days in the winter of 2022, following their second migration from Paris to Berlin. The color blue expresses the feelings of sadness and loneliness felt by the artist in the frozen Berlin cold. In the drawing, lonely and tormented bodies seem to struggle to live; despite their suffering, they still hope.

Naoya Hatakeyama

Charles Avery

Charles Lim

Charles Lim Yi Yong’s work encompasses film, installation, sound, recorded conversations, text, drawing, and photography...

Mona Benyamin

Mona Benyamin is a visual artist and filmmaker whose work examines intergenerational perspectives on hope, trauma, and identity...

Emmanuel van der Auwera

Emmanuel van der Auwera is interested in conspiracy theories, surveillance photography and its ubiquity, giving texture to major events that are frequently smoothed out by media reporting...

Charles Gaines

American Artist

American Artist makes experimental work in the form of sculpture, video, and software that comments on histories of race, technology and forms of knowledge production...

Brook Andrew

Brook Andrew is a Wiradjuri and Ngunnawal Aboriginal Australian artist and scholar whose interdisciplinary practice examines hegemonic narratives relating to colonialism and modernism...

Fiamma Montezemolo

Born in Rome, Fiamma Montezemolo is both a cultural anthropologist (PhD, University of Naples) and an artist (MFA, San Francisco Art Institute)...

Bahar Noorizadeh

Bahar Noorizadeh is filmmaker, writer, and platform designer...

Akira Takayama

Aki ra Takayama is a Japanese theat e r director known for creating projects that challenge the c onventional framework of theater ...

Yu Ji

Yu Ji is a precise artist with multiple preoccupations, references, and interests; she comes from a long tradition of erudite, polymath approaches to art making...

Lynn Hershman Leeson

Connie Zheng

Connie Zheng is an artist, writer, filmmaker, and field recordist...

Kudzanai-Violet Hwami

UK-based artist, Kudzanai-Violet Hwami was born in Gutu, Zimbabwe in 1993 and lived in South Africa from the ages of 9 to 17...

Isadora Neves Marques

The work of writer, visual artist and filmmaker Isadora Neves Marques focuses on the politics of nature, in specific relation to ecology; economics; cultural production; and social and ontological segregation...

Tirdad Hashemi

Leaving Iran in 2017, Tirdad Hashemi now cultivates perpetual movement, between their hometown of Tehran, Istanbul, Paris, and Berlin...

He Xiangyu

Having grown up in China during a period of rapid urbanization and social change, He Xiangyu is especially attentive to the mutability of things and environments...

Jean-Charles de Quillacq

Artist Jean-Charles de Quillacq erects works which have a complicated relationship to remaining upright...

Imran Qureshi

Pakistani artist Imran Qureshi’s practice revives 16th century Mughal miniature painting...

Christian Nyampeta

Christian Nyampeta’s works investigate how individuals and communities negotiate forms of socially-organized violence...

Kelley Walker

Luke Murphy

Luke Murphy is a systems-based artist whose work is loosely bound by common themes of quantifying elements of the psyche and spirit with a particular interest in the Gnostic gospels, religious paintings, and digital languages – codes and systems to make art...

Futurefarmers

Futurefarmers is an international, trans-disciplinary network...

Santu Mofokeng

The photographic artwork of Santu Mofokeng (b...

Aki Kondo

Aki Kondo utilizes animation, video, and mixed media to explore such varied topics as intimacy, loss, and the human body...

Mary Reid Kelley

Drawing from literature, plays, and historical events, Mary Reid Kelley makes rambunctious videos that explore the condition of women throughout history...

Javier Castro

Javier Castro was born in the in the neighbourhood of San Isidro in the heart of Habana Vieja, Cuba, where he lives and works...

© » ART CENTRON

about 3 months ago (02/10/2024)

Arrests Made in Marc Chagall Print Theft Case - Artcentron Home » Arrests Made in Marc Chagall Print Theft Case ART Feb 10, 2024 Ξ Leave a comment Arrests Made in Marc Chagall Print Theft Case posted by ARTCENTRON Marc Chagall, Eve (1971)...

© » HYPERALLERGIC

about 3 months ago (02/07/2024)

Sleeping Polar Bear Snuggling on Iceberg Wins Photo Award Skip to content "Ice Bed" (2023), digital photo (© Nima Sarikhani, Wildlife Photographer of the Year; all images courtesy the artist and Natural History Museum, London) In an era of immeasurable chaos caused by unsustainable human activity across the planet, it’s crucial to look within the natural world for order, hope, and to feel grounded as things spiral around us...

© » CONTEMPORARYAND

about 3 months ago (01/18/2024)

Lesley Lokko Receives Royal Gold Medal 2024 for Architecture | Contemporary And search for something search C& AMÉRICA LATINA EN FR MEMBERSHIP EN FR Editorial All Editorial Features Installation Views Inside the Library Interviews News Opinions Events All Events Art Fairs Conferences Exhibitions Festivals Performances Screenings Talks / Workshops C& Projects C& Artists’ Editions C& Commissions C& Center of Unfinished Business Show me your shelves! C& Education Mentoring Program Critical Writing Workshops Lectures / Seminars Membership Opportunities Print C& Audio Archive On Tour Places Explore IN CONVERSATION INSTALLATION VIEW WE GOT ISSUES DETOX LABORATORY OF SOLIDARITY CONSCIOUS CODES CURRICULUM OF CONNECTIONS LOVE ACTUALLY OVER THE RADAR BLACK CULTURES MATTER INSIDE THE LIBRARY LOOKING BACK Follow About Contact Newsletter Advertise Imprint Data protection Membership Contemporary And (C&) is funded by: Editorial All Editorial Features Installation Views Inside the Library Interviews News Opinions Events All Events Art Fairs Conferences Exhibitions Festivals Performances Screenings Talks / Workshops C& Projects C& Artists’ Editions C& Commissions C& Center of Unfinished Business Show me your shelves! C& Education Mentoring Program Critical Writing Workshops Lectures / Seminars Membership Opportunities Print C& Audio Archive On Tour Places Explore IN CONVERSATION INSTALLATION VIEW WE GOT ISSUES DETOX LABORATORY OF SOLIDARITY CONSCIOUS CODES CURRICULUM OF CONNECTIONS LOVE ACTUALLY OVER THE RADAR BLACK CULTURES MATTER INSIDE THE LIBRARY LOOKING BACK GO TO C& AMÉRICA LATINA About Contact Newsletter Advertise Imprint Data protection Membership News Lesley Lokko Receives Royal Gold Medal 2024 for Architecture One of the world’s highest honours in architecture goes to architect, educator, author and curator Lesley Lokko....

© » SLASH PARIS

about 4 months ago (01/08/2024)

Jean-Charles de Quillacq — Les poulains deviennent des chevaux — Galerie Marcelle Alix — Exposition — Slash Paris Connexion Newsletter Twitter Facebook Jean-Charles de Quillacq — Les poulains deviennent des chevaux — Galerie Marcelle Alix — Exposition — Slash Paris Français English Accueil Événements Artistes Lieux Magazine Vidéos Retour Précédent Suivant Jean-Charles de Quillacq — Les poulains deviennent des chevaux Exposition Techniques mixtes Jean-Charles de Quillacq, Ouverte (Discomfort), 2023 (Détail) Collage et acetone sur poster — 59,7 × 80 cm Courtesy de l’artiste et galerie Marcelle Alix, Paris Jean-Charles de Quillacq Les poulains deviennent des chevaux Encore 27 jours : 11 janvier → 9 mars 2024 « J’étais un morceau d’usine pour l’éternité...

© » SLASH PARIS

about 4 months ago (01/08/2024)

Jean-Charles de Quillacq — Les poulains deviennent des chevaux — Marcelle Alix Gallery — Exhibition — Slash Paris Login Newsletter Twitter Facebook Jean-Charles de Quillacq — Les poulains deviennent des chevaux — Marcelle Alix Gallery — Exhibition — Slash Paris English Français Home Events Artists Venues Magazine Videos Back Previous Next Jean-Charles de Quillacq — Les poulains deviennent des chevaux Exhibition Mixed media Jean-Charles de Quillacq, Ouverte (Discomfort), 2023 (Détail) Collage et acetone sur poster — 59,7 × 80 cm Courtesy de l’artiste et galerie Marcelle Alix, Paris Jean-Charles de Quillacq Les poulains deviennent des chevaux Ends in 27 days: January 11 → March 9, 2024 “I was a piece of factory for eternity.” Georges Navel, Travaux [Works], Gallimard, 1995, p.108 How can one rediscover desire when its very mechanics are monopolized by capitalism? Where can our desire still intrude in the plethora of poetic, pornographic, intellectual, psychological, promotional, and political offerings? In the field of ruins of the imaginary, increasingly littered with Instagram images of war victims, portraits of friends who left this world too soon, calls for help from NGOs, and—in their wake—, images of ever more exhibitions we couldn’t see, parties that always look better from afar, clothes that would finally suit our morphology, or the latest accessories needed to help us sleep....

© » DIANE PERNET

about 4 months ago (12/31/2023)

Alejandro Jodorowsky gives us hope for 2024, please read it… – A Shaded View on Fashion Diane Pernet A LEGENDARY FIGURE IN FASHION and a pioneer of blogging, Diane is a respected journalist, critic, curator and talent-hunter based in Paris...

© » DIANE PERNET

about 5 months ago (12/14/2023)

MARQUIS DE SADE by Charles Daniel McDonald – A Shaded View on Fashion ´ Sade: Freedom or Evil ´ is an exhibition that delves into the influence and reputation of the infamous French writer and philosopher, the Marquis de Sade , from whom the term ´sadism´ derives and it’s a journey not for the faint-hearted...

© » MODERN MET ART

about 5 months ago (12/12/2023)

Artist Shares Secrets of Realistic Portrait Drawing in New Class Home / Drawing / Pencil Drawing Artist Shares Secrets of How To Draw Incredibly Realistic Portraits [Interview] By Jessica Stewart on December 12, 2023 Brazilian artist Matheus Macedo is known for his incredibly realistic portraits...

© » KQED

about 5 months ago (12/11/2023)

‘Murder in Boston’ Examines the History of Racism in the City | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer The Do List ‘Murder in Boston’ Is What a Docuseries Should Look Like Linda Holmes Dec 11 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Facebook Share-FB Twitter Share-Twitter Email Share-Email Copy Link Copy Link ‘Murder in Boston’ is a three-part docuseries about the 1989 murder of Carol Stuart...

© » HYPERALLERGIC

about 5 months ago (12/10/2023)

Next to a Keith Haring Mural, Original Artworks by Rikers Detainees Skip to content Installation view of Creating Within: Art from Rikers and the NYC Health + Hospitals Art Collection at NYC Health + Hospitals/Woodhull, with Keith Haring's 1986 mural above (photo Aaron Short/ Hyperallergic ; all other photos by Samuel Rodriguez/New York City Health + Hospitals) Some of New York’s most interesting artists happen to be creating work outside the traditional art world — and inside the city’s correctional system...

© » FLASH ART

about 5 months ago (11/27/2023)

"HOPE" Museion / Bolzano | | Flash Art Flash Art uses cookies strictly necessary for the proper functioning of the website, for its legitimate interest to enhance your online experience and to enable or facilitate communication by electronic means...

© » TWOCOATSOFPAINT

about 5 months ago (11/26/2023)

Charles LeDray: Securing memory – Two Coats of Paint Charles LeDray, Shiner, 2015–2023, wood, mat board, acrylic paint, enamel paint, watercolor, polyurethane, fabric, leather, embroidery floss, acrylic yarn, silicone rubber, Lava soap, mother of pearl, Fimo, pretzel bits, rabbit fur, bubble gum, wax, cinnamon oil, shoe dye, metal, copper wire, electrical tape, acrylic, foil, pumice, plastic, eraser, letterpress print, printed paper, 5 3/4 x 34 x 23 7/8 inches Contributed by Barbara A...

© » SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

about 6 months ago (11/18/2023)

Transcending the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, this musical ensemble plays a message of hope for the Middle East | South China Morning Post Advertisement Advertisement Performing arts in Hong Kong + FOLLOW Get more with my NEWS A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you Learn more The West-Eastern Divan Ensemble at the Pierre Boulez Saal concert hall in Berlin, Germany...

© » BOMB

about 7 months ago (10/04/2023)

BOMB Magazine | Zoë Buckman Interviewed Necessary (Required) Cookies that the site cannot function properly without...

© » CREATIVETIME

about 17 months ago (12/16/2022)

Moving Chains Will Hibernate for Winter, Starting December 19, 2022, Reopening to the Public Spring 2023 - Creative Time Moving Chains Will Hibernate for Winter, Starting December 19, 2022, Reopening to the Public Spring 2023 December 16th, 2022 Tweet Email Creative Time, Governors Island Arts, and Times Square Arts announce the planned seasonal pause of Charles Gaines’s Moving Chains , starting December 19, 2022...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

British artist says she had previously refused to sell her work to the YBA collector after his ad campaign rocketed Margaret Thatcher to power in 1979...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Notorious Art Collector Charles Saatchi Is Selling Off Another 100 Works From His Gallery in a Low-Priced Christie’s Online Auction - via artnew news...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

The art collector Charles Saatchi appears to be relinquishing control of the country’s best-known and most popular private museum of contemporary art....

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

The Sydney restaurateur will auction nearly 170 works by artists such as John Olsen and Charles Blackman - but there are some he can’t bear to part with....

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Collector George Wells on How His Gift to Morehouse College Raises Hope for Future Generations - via ARTnews...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Future of Hope - Durjoy Bangladesh Foundation About Us Mission & Vision The Collection Partners Contact Us Projects & Programming Majhi International Art Residency Elephant in the room Bhumi Future of Hope No Place Like Home News Press releases & News Interviews Features Search Search About Us Mission & Vision The Collection Partners Contact Us Projects & Programming Majhi International Art Residency Elephant in the room Bhumi Future of Hope No Place Like Home News Press releases & News Interviews Features About Us Mission & Vision The Collection Partners Contact Us Projects & Programming Majhi International Art Residency Elephant in the room Bhumi Future of Hope No Place Like Home News Press releases & News Interviews Features Search Future of Hope আশা ! 9 Invited Artists & Their Works Creative Transmission During Pandemic History and Present Pandora, in Greek mythology, the first woman...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Who Bought Elizabeth Peyton’s $2.1 Million David Bowie Portrait at Sotheby’s? This NFT Collector Diversifying Into Blue-Chip Art - via artnew news...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

These are they key players who organizers of the inaugural Taipei Dandai art fair hope will flock to the exhibition....

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Uli Sigg’s Formidable Collection at M+ Is a Beacon of Hope in a Changing China—Even If a Particular Ai Weiwei Work Is Notably Absen - via artnet news...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

"I want to have contributed towards Nigerians and Africans knowing what they are...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Phoebe Saatchi Yates, daughter of noted collector Charles Saatchi, has announced plans to open a 10,000-square-foot gallery in London that will exhibit the work of “unknown” and “unseen” artists...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 21 months ago (08/16/2022)

Kuiz: Sejauh Manakah Pengetahuan Anda Tentang Penapisan Seni di Malaysia? | ArtsEquator Skip to content Baik buku yang dilarang mahupun frasa yang tabu, dunia seni kita telah menyaksikan semuanya...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 26 months ago (03/03/2022)

UNHEARD: Hearing Singapore women composers loud and clear | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints Jamie Chan March 3, 2022 By Nicole Toh (825 words, 3-minute read) “When do women get to be heard for who we are?” That was the question raised by Rachel Lim, a Singaporean soprano and UNHEARD ’s founder at the start of the concert...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 46 months ago (08/04/2020)

Burning Questions: Is There Still Hope for Integrity and Intimacy in Online Performance? | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints August 4, 2020 Artists today have to grapple with being true to their creative integrities while dealing with the limitations of tech platforms and live delivery methods...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 55 months ago (10/29/2019)

Weekly Southeast Asia Radar: Cambodia's Charles Dickens; Yangon's graffiti scene | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Radar Via Frontier Myanmar October 29, 2019 ArtsEquator’s Southeast Asia Radar features articles and posts about arts and culture in Southeast Asia, drawn from local and regional websites and publications – aggregated content from outside sources, so we are exposed to a multitude of voices in the region...

© » KADIST

about 3 months ago (02/12/2024)

© » KADIST

about 13 months ago (04/20/2023)

© » KADIST

about 32 months ago (09/19/2021)

© » KADIST

about 101 months ago (01/11/2016)

© » KADIST

about 110 months ago (04/07/2015)

© » KADIST

about 116 months ago (10/20/2014)

© » KADIST

about 133 months ago (05/25/2013)

© » KADIST

about 136 months ago (03/01/2013)

© » KADIST

about 165 months ago (10/02/2010)

© » KADIST

about 165 months ago (10/02/2010)

© » KADIST

about 182 months ago (05/30/2009)

© » KADIST

about 182 months ago (05/30/2009)