Word: exhibitionisms
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Horiuchi's arrival after years of obscurity (he still runs a small Seattle art shop for a living) was dramatic. At his first one-man show in May 1957 at Seattle's Zoe Dusanne Gallery, 22 of his 24 casein and tempera paintings on rice paper were snapped...
Spasibo. In the city's hottest May weather in 79 years, elite Muscovites peeled last week to shirtsleeves and sat entranced in the same hall in which Pianist Van Cliburn triumphed. Swaddled in white ties and tails, the visitors played "Incandescently," reported New York Times Critic Howard Taubman. The...
Kenneth McIntosh '58, of Kirkland House and New York City has received the Paul Revere Frothingham Scholarship for 1957-58 and Marshall A. Wolf '58, of Eliot House and Chicago, has been awarded the Palfrey Exhibition prize, the University announced yesterday.
By uncompromising standards even at the cost of sharp criticism (e.g., the Manchester Guardian called his decision against Churchill "rather hoity-toity"), Rich has kept Chicago at the top of big league U.S. museums. He originated a score of important shows, most recently the exhibition of paintings by Pointillist Georges...
The largest crowd to see a lacrosse match this year was subjected to an unfortunate exhibition by the Crimson goalies. Dick MacKinnon frankly admitted afterwards to having an "off-day," and Chris Stone, his replacement for five minutes during the third period, fared no better.