Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Catch the Schedule for the Yale Center for British Art

Yale Center for British Art

CONCERT

Chamber Music

Johan Joseph Zoffany, The Gore Family with George, third Earl Cowper, 1775, oil on canvas, Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection

Wednesday, October 31, 12:30 pm

 

Graduate students from the Yale School of Music will perform chamber music in the Library Court. Space is limited. Learn more...

PROGRAM FOR TEACHERS

Visual Literacy Consortium

Educators in the Library Court, Yale Center for British Art, photograph courtesy of the Education Department

Thursday, November 1, 4–5:30 pm

 

This informal group of K-12 educators will meet to explore visual literacy and its role in the school curriculum. Ideas presented in the summer teacher institute are incorporated in gallery time to work toward an expanded notion of literacy that includes making meaning from visual and written texts. Learn more...

FILMS OF INNOCENCE AND EXPERIENCE

These screenings are a part of the artist’s film series Films of Innocence and Experience, with titles selected by George Shaw. All screenings are free and, unless otherwise noted, take place in the Center’s Lecture Hall. Seating is limited. The description below is written by Shaw:

A Clockwork Orange, photo courtesy of Photofest
A Clockwork Orange


Friday
November 2, 7 pm
(Whitney Humanities Center,
53 Wall Street)


“If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face—forever.” So wrote George Orwell in 1984. That picture and that future appeared in cinemas as A Clockwork Orange. Based on Anthony Burgess’s 1962 novel, Kubrick’s film follows the teenage Alex and his gang of “droogs” on a trail of rape, murder, and “ultraviolence” leading to his eventual psychological “rehabilitation.” In the spirit of much dystopian science fiction, the film remains shocking and relevant. Kubrick himself withdrew the film from British release in response to allegations that it led to copycat violence (1971, rated R, 136 minutes).

The Offence, photo courtesy of Photofest
The Offence


Saturday
November 3, 2 pm


In this psychological crime drama, Sean Connery plays police detective Johnson investigating the murder of a child. The film follows the arrest and interrogation of one of the suspects, during which Johnson violently unravels as he replays his own disturbing life and is taunted by the prisoner. As in many of Sidney Lumet’s films, we see innocence beaten into experience and the injustice of social institutions (1973, rated R, 112 minutes).


Image credits (top to bottom): Johan Joseph Zoffany, The Gore Family with George, third Earl Cowper, 1775, oil on canvas, Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection; Educators in the Library Court, Yale Center for British Art, photograph courtesy of the Education Department; Vanessa Bell, Self-Portrait, ca. 1915, oil on canvas, Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Fund; A Clockwork Orange, photo courtesy of Photofest; The Offence, photo courtesy of Photofest; Print made by John Dixon, after Sir Joshua Reynolds, Count Ugolino della Gherardesca and His Sons in Prison, 1774, mezzotint on paper, Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection; Visitors in the Long Gallery, Yale Center for British Art, photograph © Elizabeth Felicella / ESTO; 2017–18 Student Guides, Library Court, Yale Center for British Art, photograph by Richard Caspole; George Shaw, It’s All The Same to Me, 2014–15, Humbrol enamel on board, Private Collection, courtesy of the artist and the Anthony Wilkinson Gallery, London, © George Shaw 2018; George Shaw, Ash Wednesday: 7.00am, 2004–5, Humbrol enamel on board, Private Collection, courtesy of the artist and the Anthony Wilkinson Gallery, London, © George Shaw 2018; Joseph Wright of Derby, The Prisoner, 1787 to 1790, oil on canvas, Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection; John Copley, The Ambulance, 1918, lithograph, Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Fund, © The Estate of John Copley; Reference Library, Yale Center for British Art, photograph by Richard Caspole; Philippe Mercier, The Sense of Sight, 1744 to 1747, oil on canvas, Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection; Travertine bracelet by Pico Design, The Moth and Butterfly jewelry collection, photograph by Peter Italiano Photography

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Contact:
+1 203 432 2800
Yale Center for British Art
1080 Chapel Street
New Haven, CT  06520
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Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Wanna be at Art Miami for the DEC. season? Satalite Art Show info below

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SATELLITE ART SHOW

TWO WEEKS LEFT TO APPLY!

"a reminder of why you like art in the first place.”  HYPERALLERGIC
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WE WANT YOU!

This is your chance to be a part of Miami's most celebrated art fair. Do the right thing and submit your application today.
SATELLITE ART SHOW 2018 will be held in a 33,000 sq foot lot directly across the street from The Ice Palace Studios, home of NADA Art Fair and Viacom Studios. We are also conveniently located a few short blocks from Art Miami, Context and the Perez Art Museum.
"The most impressive art-viewing experience we’ve had in recent memory” – Art F City
SATELLITE 2018 will forgo the typical white-walled tent structure and will instead provide shipping containers, construction offices and a "drive in" mobile platform (art vehicle parking), in essence creating a mini village of free-standing exhibitions. Without the constrictions of a typical venue, our new location will also allow us to debut large-scale public installations and projects. We are making this move to enhance the experiential nature of our fair and to advance our low price mandate for participation. We will continue to champion young galleries, artist-run spaces and alternative spaces in an effort to allow access to groundbreaking new works of art for arts patrons and the community at large.
SATELLITE is the most competitively priced fair in Miami. We provide additional savings ($700 - $1000 off) for returning exhibitors, solo artists, artist-run spaces and non-profits. Join Us!

Exhibition platforms for you to utilize:

SHIPPING CONTAINERS (160 sq ft or 320 sq ft)
CONSTRUCTION OFFICES (160 sq ft or 320 sq ft)
PUBLIC INSTALLATIONS (the sky is the limit)
DRIVE YOUR OWN VEHICLE EXHIBITION IN! (cars, vans, u-hauls, buses, RV's, etc.)

"SATELLITE proudly occupies the liminal boundary between contemporary art and cultural trendsetter, serving as a glimpse through the looking glass into the future of groundbreaking art.” - ARTEFUSE

MIAMI ART WEEK APPLICATION CLOSES NOVEMBER 5th!

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Drive your art vehicle in!
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Art inside shipping containers!
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SATELLITE ART SHOW is now in the heart of the action!
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INTERESTED IN SPONSORING?

Let's develop a fully realized partnership for Miami Art Week. Please contact us to become involved on a sponsor level
Past Sponsors: Lyft, Pabst Blue Ribbon, Red Bull, Curatious and Perrier

ABOUT SATELLITE

SATELLITE was created in 2015 as an opportunity for young dealers, artist-run spaces and non-profits to exhibit during Miami Art Week. Since its conception, SATELLITE has grown in scale and prominence and now features art-based projects by established commercial galleries, socially engaged non-profits, and international alternative spaces. By fostering a range of programming, SATELLITE is able to offer patrons and collectors with a unique experience where art is at the forefront of creative expression, activism, and curiosity. In this way, SATELLITE is the antagonist to the standard fair and in turn, fills the voids left by Miami Art Week's soullessness through collaboration, direct engagement, and fun. SATELLITE is your chance to experience and collect new works of art without the restrictions customary to traditional settings!
SATELLITE is an artist-run organization consisting of team members Brian Andrew Whiteley, Alex Paik, Jesse Bandler Firestone, Anna Liisa Benston and Quinn Dukes.
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CONTACT

Brian Whiteley | Creative Direction 
brian@satellite-show.com
Alex Paik | Fair Curator 
alex@satellite-show.com
Quinn Dukes l Performance Curator 
quinn@performanceisalive.com
Anna-Liisa Benston I Sponsorships & Partnerships 
annaliisa@satellite-show.com
Press Inquiries 
info@satellite-show.com
General Inquiries 
info@satellite-show.com
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Monday, October 22, 2018

Rebecca Bird Wins Commission for 15 x 91 foot Mural for the Ground Floor of New Seattle Children's Research Institute's Building Cure



 

                                                           copyright 2018 Dan Torop
Rebecca Bird :: October, 2018 :: Studio Brooklyn          

Rebecca Bird Wins Commission for 15 x 91 foot Mural for the Ground Floor of New Seattle Children's Research Institute's Building Cure
  
NEW YORK, October 22, 2018 - William Holman Gallery and Seattle Children's Research Institute are very pleased to announce the award of a major interior mural commission to artist Rebecca Bird, a native of Seattle, Washington, who lives and works in New York. The mural, to be completed over the next ten months, will be unveiled during the summer of 2019 at the opening of Seattle Children's newest pediatric research facility Building Cure™, located at Stewart Street and Terry Avenue, in downtown Seattle.
Bird was selected from over 125 regional and national artists invited to be part of the competitive selection process. Spanning the full length of a basketball court and 15 feet tall, the mural is one of the largest interior commissions of its kind in the United States, and will occupy the Stewart Street Lobby public interior space, visible from the street 24 hours a day and open to the public during business hours. The composition focuses on a series of narrative vignettes about the history and mission of the research institute within an abstracted landscape representing the broader field of human experience and future endeavor. 
William Holman Gallery 
Chip Holman :: chip@wholmangallery.co
C. 646.286.7254      O. 212.475.1500
 
Works by Rebecca Bird can also be seen here: 
 
About Seattle Children's Research Institute:  

About the new Building Cure:
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The Miami Art Season is not too far off in the Future:EXHIBITOR LIST ANNNOUNCED SCOPE MIAMI BEACH | DECEMBER 04-09

 Aaron Collier, "Should We Leave a Record of our Progress" | Courtesy of Octavia Art Gallery
 
EXHIBITOR LIST ANNNOUNCED
SCOPE MIAMI BEACH | DECEMBER 04-09
Celebrating its 18th edition, SCOPE Miami Beach returns to its bespoke pavilion on the sands of Ocean Drive and 8th Street. Honoring its ongoing mission to provide a platform for discovery, SCOPE welcomes a diverse range of over 130 contemporary exhibitors, including a selection of participants representing SCOPE's New Contemporary section.

SCOPE will continue our acclaimed 360° experience of VIP Programming, immersive Special Projects, compelling brand integrations and a dynamic array of Museum and Cultural Partners, as well as welcoming legendary publication HI-FRUCTOSE to the SCOPE Atrium.
PLATINUM FIRST VIEW
Tues | Dec 4 | 12pm - 4pm  
Platinum Cardholders  
VIP + PRESS PREVIEW  
Tues | Dec 4 | 4pm - 8pm   
VIP Cardholders + Press  
PUBLIC HOURS  
Wed-Sun | Dec 5-9 | 11am- 8pm

 
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Saturday, October 13, 2018

In London" Anima Mundi:ONYA McCAUSLAND LANDSCAPES Saturday, 20 October 2018, 7.00 - 9.00 pm


A N I M A   M U N D I







ONYA McCAUSLAND LANDSCAPES




Dear Jamie



Anima-Mundi and the Artist request the pleasure of your company for the launch of Onya McCausland’s solo exhibition ‘Landscapes’


LAUNCH EVENT :  Saturday, 20 October 2018, 7.00 - 9.00 pm 

AT :  Anima-Mundi, Street-an-Pol, St. Ives, Cornwall, UK, TR26 2DS

RSVP :  mail@anima-mundi.co.uk or +44 (0)1736 793121




                




EXHIBITION FOREWORD

‘Landscapes’ is the second solo exhibition at Anima-Mundi by the London-based artist and academic Onya McCausland (b. UK, 1971). Following on from her 2012 show ‘Sited: Salt Green / Blue Earth’, ‘Landscapes’ will extend across all three floors of the gallery and focus on McCausland’s recent collection of paintings in varying scales and applicaitons, guiding the viewer through three specific and creatively significant landscapes : Saltburn (floor 1), Cuthill (floor 2) and Deerplay Hill (floor 3). McCausland’s multi-layered, minimalist paintings and wall installations are made from ‘waste ochres’, produced as a result of the mining industry, and each floor of the exhibition will pay homage to the origin of the materials used, recording the aesthetic intensity and unique quality of each landscape. McCausland’s research (in collaboration with the coal authority and UCL) has led to the creation of high-quality artist pigments in a range of rich, earthy ochres (ranging from primrose yellow to burnt terracotta) giving new purpose to an otherwise redundant and environmentally damaging material.

To preview the exhibition online click here






Anima-Mundi  .  Street an Pol  .  St Ives  .  Cornwall  .  TR26 2DS  .  Tel : 44 (0) 1736 793121

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