Photographs by Corrado Serra. “Studio Job MAD HOUSE is the first solo museum exhibition in the US to explore the creative vision of design collaborators Job Smeets (Belgian, b. 1970) and Nynke Tynagel (Dutch, b. 1977), who established their atelier Studio Job in Belgium in 2000. They transformed two of the… Read More
Monthly archives of “March 2016”
Edgar Degas: A Strange New Beauty at The Museum of Modern Art, March 26, 2016 – July 24, 2016
“With the major exhibition Edgar Degas: A Strange New Beauty, The Museum of Modern Art brings new focus to Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas’s (French, 1834–1917) extraordinary and rarely seen monotypes and their impact on his wider practice. It is the first exhibition in the U.S. in nearly… Read More
Dinosaurs Among Us, through January 2, 2017 and The Titanosaur, a permanent exhibition at American Museum of Natural History, March 21, 2016 – January 2, 2017
Photographs by Corrado Serra. Dinosaurs Among Us “The next time you dodge a pigeon on the sidewalk, watch a sparrow eat from a feeder in a backyard, or order chicken for dinner, know that you just had an encounter with a modern dinosaur. Dinosaurs never… Read More
The Art and Whimsy of Mo Willems at New-York Historical Society Museum & Library, March 18, 2016 – September 25, 2016
“Mo Willems’ work boldly and artfully melds the humor and wonder of youth with a complex understanding of the human experience, so it speaks to readers of all ages,” said Louise Mirrer, President and CEO of the New-York Historical Society. “The Art and Whimsy of… Read More
“L’image volée” (The Stolen Image) at Fondazione Prada, March 18 – August 28, 2016
“L’image volée,” includes more than 90 works produced by over 60 artists from 1820 through the present day. Demand’s idea for the exhibition is to explore the way we all rely on pre-existing models, and how artists have always referred to existing imagery to make their own. Questioning… Read More
Isaac Mizrahi: An Unruly History at The Jewish Museum, March 18 – August 7, 2016
Isaac Mizrahi: An Unruly History is the first exhibition focused on the influential American fashion designer, artist, and entrepreneur. The exhibition starts with his first collection in 1987 and runs through the present day with over 250 works, including clothing and costume designs, sketches, photographs, and an immersive video… Read More
In the Wake: Japanese Photographers Respond to 3/11at Japan Society, March 11 – June 12, 2016
“The catastrophic earthquake and tsunami that struck northeast Japan on March 11, 2011 and triggered an on-going nuclear crisis has been met with an overwhelming reaction in the arts, marking a profound shift in the contemporary Japanese cultural landscape. Opening five years to the day… Read More
A Japanese Constellation: Toyo Ito, SANAA, and Beyond at The Museum of Modern Art, March 13 – July 4, 2016
“A Japanese Constellation maps a network of architects who gravitate around Toyo Ito (born 1941) and SANAA, the office founded in 1995 by Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa. Focusing on work made since the start of the twenty-first century, the exhibition highlights themes that link… Read More
Robin Cracknell: Childhood at Sous Les Etoiles Gallery, March 10 – April 30, 2016
London-based photographer Robin Cracknell explores themes of love, loss and memory using a unique non-digital process combining traditional film photography and cinematography, and shooting with old, sometimes damaged cameras and salvaged 35mm cine film. In his series Childhood, single father Cracknell offers a stylized, personal… Read More
Thom Browne Selects at Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, March 4 – October 23, 2016
For the new installment of the “Selects” series fashion designer Thom Browne explores ideas of reflection and individuality with a site-specific installation that includes more than 50 of the museum’s historic and contemporary mirrors and frames together with some of his personal items such as a desk, chair,… Read More
International Pop at The Philadelphia Museum of Art, February 24 – May 15, 2016
“This exhibition chronicles a dynamic global phenomenon that emerged in the United Kingdom and United States in the postwar era and swept rapidly through countries in Western Europe, Eastern Europe, Latin America, and Japan. Driven by a new generation of artists in the mid-1950s to… Read More
The Met Breuer opens with Unfinished: Thoughts Left Visible, March 18-September 4, 2016, Nasreen Mohamedi, March 18-June 5, 2016 and Relation: A Vijay Iyer Residency, March 18-31, 2016
Photographs by Corrado Serra. Unfinished: Thoughts Left Visible is a major thematic survey featuring unfinished works of art from the Renaissance to the present day. It examines a subject that is critical to artistic practice: the question of when a work of art is finished. Nasreen Mohamedi is… Read More
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