Word: tates
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...LUCAS L. TATE...
...career, Peake developed Parkinson's disease in 1956. Despite attempts to improve his health with electroconvulsive therapy - in which high-voltage electricity is passed through the brain - he died in 1968 at the age of 57. His wife Maeve Gilmore, almost destitute after he died, went to the Tate Gallery to sell her husband's body of work. She was offered ?1,500 for the complete collection. Disgusted, she stormed out. If there is any justice, Mervyn Peake: The Man and His Art may well ensure that such snubs are not repeated...
...Tate Gardner...
...Perry’s work is bright, candied, and full of three-dimensional elements such as a field of pink foam cones jutting from the canvas. An odd combination of Richard Hamilton—the early Pop artist—and Chris Ofili, whose million dollar installation in the Tate London has been creating a stir, Perry is one of the most adventurous artists on display.Unfortunately for Beth Swanström, the owner of the gallery, it is often difficult to find an audience for such art in Boston; thus, she is relocating to New York. Other gallery managers also...
...image." By that, he doesn't mean simply photographs, posters or films, though lots of Hollywood examples turn up in his conversation. "Image is imaginary," he says, "right?" And to whom does the image belong? Celebration Park opens with a giant neon sculpture saying, "I do not own Tate Modern or the Death Star." Other neon signs, all beginning with the words "I do not own," follow, disavowing possession of such cultural icons as Charlie Chaplin's Modern Times and John Cage's noteless musical composition 4'33", both of which, like the Death Star, figure in Huyghe's work...