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Posts Tagged ‘ARTS’

Visual Arts Building

19 Dec

Some cool visual art images:

Visual Arts Building
visual art
Image by jekemp

Foundation Visual Art & Design – Art and Creativity Class
visual art
Image by vancouverfilmschool
For two days in March 2010, VFS presented an immersive 2-day educational experience, exclusively for the most creative and driven high school students in North America.

Find out more at vfs.com/standout

Foundation Visual Art & Design – Art and Creativity Class
visual art
Image by vancouverfilmschool
For two days in March 2010, VFS presented an immersive 2-day educational experience, exclusively for the most creative and driven high school students in North America.

Find out more at vfs.com/standout

 
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Posted in Photographs

 

Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts UEA, Norwich

16 Dec

Some cool visual art images:

Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts UEA, Norwich
visual art
Image by .Martin.

Frist Center for Visual Arts
visual art
Image by hypergenesb
Nashville’s Frist Center for the Visual Arts opened in April 2001. It is the former Post Office building that was built in 1934. More: www.fristcenter.org

 
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Posted in Photographs

 

Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts Re-opens

15 Dec

A few nice visual art images I found:

Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts Re-opens
visual art
Image by .Martin.

Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts UEA, Norwich
visual art
Image by .Martin.

Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts UEA, Norwich
visual art
Image by .Martin.
Walkway

 
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Posted in Photographs

 

Leu Center for the Visual Arts – Spring 2008 86/366

13 Dec

Some cool visual art images:

Leu Center for the Visual Arts – Spring 2008 86/366
visual art
Image by Paul Chenoweth
End of the day shot featuring the electric red tulips just down the hill from Belmont University’s Leu Center for the Visual Arts.

Inside the Foundation Visual Art & Design campus
visual art
Image by vancouverfilmschool
Find out more about VFS’s one-year Foundation Visual Art & Design program at www.vfs.com/foundation

 
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California: Stanford University – Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University – Burghers of Calais

12 Dec

Some cool visual art images:

California: Stanford University – Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University – Burghers of Calais
visual art
Image by wallyg
Les Bourgeois de Calais (The Burghers of Calais) is one of the most famous sculptures by Auguste Rodin. It serves as a monument to the heroism of six burghers in Calais during a siege by the England in the Hundred Years’ War in 1347.

After a victory in the Battle of Crécy, England’s King Edward III besieged Calais, an important French port on the English channel, and Philip VI of France ordered the city to hold out at all costs. Which it did for a over a year. Philip failed to lift the siege and starvation eventually forced the city to parlay for surrender. Edward offered to spare the people of the Calais if any six of its top leaders would surrender themselves. Edward demanded that they walk out almost naked, wearing nooses around their necks and carrying the keys to the city and castle. One of the wealthiest of the town leaders, Eustache de Saint Pierre, volunteered first and five other burghers–Jean d’Aire, Jacques and Pierre de Wissant, Jean de Fiennes, Andrieu d’Andres–soon followed suit. Though the burghers expected to be executed, their lives were spared by the intervention of England’s Queen, Philippa of Hainault, who persuaded her husband by saying it would be a bad omen for her unborn child. Rodin depicts a larger than life Saint Pierre leading the envoy of emaciated volunteers to the city gates, prepared to meet their imminent mortality.

The monument was initially proposed by Omer Dewavrin, mayor of Calais, for the town’s square in 1884. Unusual in that monuments were usually reserved for victories, the town of Calais had long desired to recognize the sacrifices made by these altruistic men. Rodin’s controversial design echoed this intent–the burghers are not presented in a heroic manner, but sullen and worn. His innovative design initially presented the burghers at the same level as the viewers, rather than on a traditional pedestal, although until 1924 the city, against Rodin’s wishes, displayed it on an elevated base.

The original statue still stands in Calais. Other casts stand around the world–the Victoria Tower Gardens, in the shadow of the Houses of Parliament in London; the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, the Rodin Museum in Philadelphia, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, the Brooklyn Museum in New York City, Musée Rodin in Paris, the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo, the Rodin Gallery in Seoul, and Glyptoteket in Copenhagen, to name a few. Some installations have the figures tightly grouped with contiguous bases, while others have the figures separated. Some installations are elevated on pedestals, others are placed at ground level. This bronze cast, at Stanford University’s Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts, consists of six separate pieces which are slightly sunken, concealing the bottom few inches of the bases, and spaced such that viewers can walk between the figures. The museum claims this is how Rodin wished them to be displayed.

Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts, Norwich
visual art
Image by Xavier de Jauréguiberry
C402_35
15/08/2008 : Norwich, University of East Anglia, Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts

 
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Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts, Norwich

10 Dec

Some cool visual art images:

Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts, Norwich
visual art
Image by Xavier de Jauréguiberry
C403_03
15/08/2008 : Norwich, University of East Anglia: Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts (Norman Foster, 1974-78)

Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts, Norwich
visual art
Image by Xavier de Jauréguiberry
C403_02
15/08/2008 : Norwich, University of East Anglia: Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts (Norman Foster, 1974-78)

Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts, Norwich
visual art
Image by Xavier de Jauréguiberry
C402_18
15/08/2008 : Norwich, University of East Anglia: Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts (Norman Foster, 1974-78)

 
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Posted in Photographs

 

Higher Ground: A Century of the Visual Arts in East Tennessee

05 Dec

A few nice visual art images I found:

Higher Ground: A Century of the Visual Arts in East Tennessee
visual art
Image by Knoxville Museum of Art
Higher Ground: A Century of the Visual Arts in East Tennessee, is a new permanent installation of works from the Knoxville Museum of Art collection celebrating the art and artists of Knoxville and the surrounding region.

The fascinating and complex story of our area’s rich artistic heritage and its connections to the larger currents of American art are largely unknown, and certainly underappreciated. Highlights of the new installation include important works by Catherine Wiley and Lloyd Branson, pioneering artists who introduced Knoxville audiences to Art Nouveau, Impressionism, and other international art movements of their day; Joseph and Beauford Delaney, two of America’s most significant African-American artists; and works from the 1950s and 1960s by the Knoxville Seven, a group of progressive artists connected to the University of Tennessee who transformed and energized the area’s artistic climate. Art from more recent decades includes mixed-media objects by visionary sculptor Bessie Harvey along with a selection of works by leading area artists whose creations represent the quality and diversity of art-making in the region today.

www.knoxart.org

Higher Ground: A Century of the Visual Arts in East Tennessee
visual art
Image by Knoxville Museum of Art
Higher Ground: A Century of the Visual Arts in East Tennessee, is a new permanent installation of works from the Knoxville Museum of Art collection celebrating the art and artists of Knoxville and the surrounding region.

The fascinating and complex story of our area’s rich artistic heritage and its connections to the larger currents of American art are largely unknown, and certainly underappreciated. Highlights of the new installation include important works by Catherine Wiley and Lloyd Branson, pioneering artists who introduced Knoxville audiences to Art Nouveau, Impressionism, and other international art movements of their day; Joseph and Beauford Delaney, two of America’s most significant African-American artists; and works from the 1950s and 1960s by the Knoxville Seven, a group of progressive artists connected to the University of Tennessee who transformed and energized the area’s artistic climate. Art from more recent decades includes mixed-media objects by visionary sculptor Bessie Harvey along with a selection of works by leading area artists whose creations represent the quality and diversity of art-making in the region today.

www.knoxart.org

 
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NMCAC ARTS Lab Sizzle Reel Stereoscopic 3D

20 Apr

Promotional reel of stereoscopic 3D content prepared and presented for the New Mexico Computing Applications Center’s Gateway Rollout event on 25 January. Created by The Art, Research, Technology and Science Laboratory at the University of New Mexico by Jonathan Strawn, David Beining & Dan Felker. With additional material from Project TOUCH at the University of New Mexico. Music by Michael Stearns.
Video Rating: 0 / 5

 
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