2,147 research outputs found
Glazing Over: A Review of Glazing Options for Works of Art on Paper
This paper summarises the advantages and disadvantages of glazing options, focusing on works on paper. In light of continuous improvements being made to the physical and optical properties of glass and plastics, combined with improved museum practice and safer art transport, new products have been introduced and the suitability of glass as a glazing option is re-assessed. The author looks at the results of tests carried out on glazing at Tate and suggests that the performance and safety of any glazing is only as good as the quality of the framing, packing, handling and transportation to which the glazed work is subjected
Interview wtih Ethel Tate
Ethel Rogers Tate (1904-1994) is interviewed by Lorraine Crittenden on May 20, 1986 as a part of the Western North Carolina Tomorrow Black Oral History Project. Tate was born in 1904 in East LaPorte. Her father worked in mica mines and the children helped. Tate talks about schooling, the Depression, wars, her experience with the Civil Rights movement and racial inequality. She and her husband Millard "Miller" Tate (1902-1982) owned a car and their house in the thirties. He was a farmer and a truck driver. After her children were grown, Tate worked as a maid at Western Carolina University
Josef Albers, Eva Hesse, and the Imperative of Teaching
This paper examines affinities between the Bauhaus-indebted instructional methods and practices of Josef Albers and the sculpture of Eva Hesse, his student at Yale University. The author argues that pedagogy affects artistic practice, or that the means or process through which artists are educated contributes to how they approach their work
Les Immatériaux Revisited: Innovation in Innovations
The author introduces her in-depth survey of the exhibitionLes Immatériaux, conducted during the show at the Centre Pompidou in 1985 (and published in 1986). The survey allowed new, non-statistical methodologies to be tested and today represents a valuable source of information about Jean-François Lyotard’s and Thierry Chaput’s landmark exhibition
‘Remembering Exhibitions’: From Point to Line to Web
The author discusses the proliferation of the new genre of ‘remembering exhibitions’ as part of the recent interest in the history of landmark exhibitions, and focuses on three forms of re-enactment which she terms replica, riff and reprise. She also considers open-source, open-access online archives that can reshape the recording, reception and reiteration of an exhibition
Military Avoidance: Marcel Duchamp and the 'Jura-Paris Road'
The essay traces military relationships in the work of Marcel Duchamp (1887–1968), paying particular attention to his notes of 1912 known as the 'Jura-Paris Road'. These are interpreted as 'military texts' and the author shows how military concerns remained with Duchamp throughout his career, resulting in facetious outcomes that obscured uneasy preoccupations
To Be Continued: Periodic Exhibitions (Documenta, For Example)
In this paper the author reflects on the early history of the Documenta exhibitions held every five years in Kassel, Germany, from 1955. Recalling his long engagement with the topic of the historiography of exhibitions, he compares documenta with earlier exhibitions at Recklinghausen and with Skulptur-Projekte Münster, drawing out the special features of what he calls periodic exhibitions
Dawn Gandy, Danny Tate, and Sheri McMullan in a Joint Junior Recital
This is the program for the joint senior recital of mezzo-soprano Dawn Gandy, baritone Danny Tate, and soprano Sheri McMullan. Pianist George Mann assisted Gandy; pianist Melanie Glover assisted Tate; pianist Dawne Miller assisted McMullan. The recital took place on November 18, 1976, in the Mabee Fine Arts Center Reictal Hall
James Tate, 5th Annual ODU Literary Festival
James Tate is the author of 11 books of poetry, among them The Lost Pilot, The Oblivion Ha-Ha, Absences, Viper Jazz, and most recently Riven Doggeries, published by Ecco Press in 1979. In 1977, Tate won the Yale Series of Younger Poets Award. Since then, he has received a National Institute of Arts and Letters Award for Poetry, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship. He has taught at the University of California at Berkeley, Columbia University, and Emerson College, and is currently a professor of English at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. His poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The Nation, The American Poetry Review, Poetry, and The Paris Review, and his work is represented in The Norton Anthology of Modern Poetry and The Best of Modern Poetry. He is a board member of the Associated Writing Programs
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