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...sufficient wattage to house one's work: the former Bankside power station, which for almost 20 years provided electricity for London, and will for the foreseeable future provide heat for its art and tourist scene. The Tate Modern, as the new gallery is known, is the brainchild of Nicholas Serota, director of Britain's venerable Tate galleries. And it's the adopted child and most high-profile work to date of the Swiss architectural firm Herzog & De Meuron...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Architecture: Industrial Revolution | 5/22/2000 | See Source »

...deal of the most inventive and solid painting in the '80s keeps being done by the English. One thinks immediately of Frank Auerbach, Howard Hodgkin or half a dozen others. And among them, prominently, one thinks of Malcolm Morley. Morley is 52. His first retrospective-curated by Nicholas Serota, director of London's Whitechapel Art Gallery, and handsomely introduced by Art Historian Michael Compton-has spent the past year touring from Basel to London to Chicago; it opened this month at its final stop, New York City's Brooklyn Museum. With its 52 paintings, the show spans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Haunting Collisions of Imagery | 3/5/1984 | See Source »

Eric Lubell after leading Lubell by two points in the second round. Harvard's Jim Strathmeyer (177) fell to Gil Serota, 5-4, after Serota reversed a hold 15 seconds before the end of the match...

Author: By Richard H.P. Sia, | Title: Matmen Save Face in Three Matches As Princeton Crushes Harvard, 23-11 | 2/6/1973 | See Source »

Faller returned to competition against Princeton after missing three meets with an injured shoulder. He celebrated his comeback by decisioning the Tigers' Gil Serota...

Author: By Deacon Dake, | Title: Matmen Visit Yale As Elis Eye Title | 2/24/1971 | See Source »

...light. And revealed by the light was, if not one of nature's noblemen, at least a child artist worthy to write another "Janitor's Boy". For out in Revere where thrills are thunderbolts and in the spring a young man's fancy lightly turns foolish Lillian Sidney Serota has arisen to proclaim her muse. In a recent edition of the Boston Traveller--to use the style affected by my friends in the next column--Lillian does her stuff, to the extent of one story, "The Eternal Triangle". And it is really worth mentioning, worth even more than mentioning...

Author: By D. G. G., | Title: THE CRIME | 3/4/1926 | See Source »

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