Huliq News Tagged: "Prints"

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Abstract Expressionist Prints At Worcester Art Museum, Worcester

The Worcester Art Museum is pleased to present Abstract Expressionist Prints — on view through March 16, 2008 — curated by David A. Acton, Curator of Prints, Drawings and Photographs.

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Houston Museum Presents Mexican Prints

Houston Museum presents Gráficos Políticos: Mexican Prints, 1900—1950. The exhibition is on view through January 13, 2008.

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Mike Perry Prints At London Photographers’ Gallery

Print Sales presents the most recent body of work by Mike Perry at London Photographers’ Gallery. All prints are available to purchase, please ask for further information.

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Smithsonian Museum Presents Prints By Sean Scully

“The Prints of Sean Scully” presents for the first time at the Smithsonian American Art Museum a selection of 57 works from a master set of prints that was acquired in 2001 and is updated annually with newly created works. Scully chose the Smithsonian American Art Museum as the only museum in the United States to receive a master set. The artist’s prints range from large-scale, monumental compositions to smaller, more intimate expressions of the artist’s ideas.

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San Francisco Museum Presents ‘Strange Tales’

Through September 2, the Asian Art Museum will present Yoshitoshi’s Strange Tales: Woodblock Prints from Edo to Meiji. The exhibition offers a rare opportunity to view one hundred superb color woodblock prints by Taiso Yoshitoshi (1839–1892), the last great master of ukiyoe, whose career straddled two eras.

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Cleveland Museum Offers Fine Print

The 23rd Annual Fine Print Fair, Cleveland’s largest and most comprehensive exhibition of fine prints, will take place on September 28-30, 2007 at Cuyahoga Community College’s Corporate College.

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Andreas Feininger's New York Opens At Saint Louis Art Museum

The Saint Louis Art Museum announces opening of Andreas Feininger's New York, an exhibition of eight large black and white prints that form a compelling portrait of the city and its environs in the late 1940s.

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Prints, Drawings, Watercolors By William H. Johnson Comes To Philadelphia Museum

The career of William H. Johnson (1901-1970) was one of the most brilliant yet tragic of any early 20th-century American artist. Best known for his lively paintings of the African American experience in the rural South and urban North, Johnson was also an accomplished printmaker and watercolorist whose style shifted from dramatic expressionism to what he termed a more "primitive" approach using bright and contrasting colors and flattened, two-dimensional forms.

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Woman Made Gallery Presents Works Of ATYL

Pop culture, representations of women and Utopic fantasy coalesce in the work of ATYL. Employing a color palette reminiscent of your favorite jolly rancher, ATYL creates computer generated images that reference the stylistic conventions of popular video games.

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Carnegie Museum Explores Japanese Printmaking

Three key trends in Japanese art history beginning with the advent of the Meiji period in 1868 and extending through the 1980s are represented in Modern Japanese Prints: 1868-1989, on view through April 15, 2007, at Carnegie Museum of Art.

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Michael Mazur: Art Of The Print At Boston Museum

Artist Michael Mazur has generously donated his archive of editioned prints to the MFA. This collection spans nearly five decades and includes some 400 works executed in a great diversity of printmaking media and styles from expressive figuration to lyrical abstraction. Among his primary sources of inspiration are the human figure and landscape.

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A Tribute To Herbert Quick

When Herbert Quick passed away this October he left UCR/CMP not only his life's archive of prints, but a remarkable set of thirty-seven 3-ring binders which preserves in carefully numbered chronological order, contact prints of the photographs he considered of greatest significance. Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of these binders is that they contain 8x10 contact sheets that were dry mounted back-to-back before being inserted into clear poly sheets.

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