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303 Gallery is an art gallery in Manhattan, New York. It was established in 1984 by owner and director Lisa Spellman, described by art critic Jerry Saltz as "one of the greatest New York gallerists of our time". [1] The gallery hosts contemporary works by contemporary American artists, including film, video, and painting. [1] [2]
Sue Williams (2000), published by 303 Gallery. A Fine Line (2003), published by Palm Beach Institute of Contemporary Art. Art for the Institution and the Home (2003), published by Walther König. They Eat Shit (2010 edition), published to accompany the 1993 exhibition at the Walter/McBean Gallery of the Chicago Art Institute.
494 Gallery, "Pride and Prejudice," Shari Diamond and Honor LaSSale, NYC, 1995 The Gallery at Hunter College, "Beyond Circumstance," Curated by Margeret McInroe, NYC, 1995 42nd Street Development Project and Creative Time, NYC, 1994
There I Was, a gallery show at the 303 Gallery in New York and book released in 2009, is a perfect example of Schorr's abilities to push the limits of medium and perspective. Drawing on her experience with the drag car racer Charlie Snyder and his surprising death in Vietnam, Schorr questions everything regarding reportage, memory, and the ...
At 303 Gallery in 1988, Wool and fellow artist Robert Gober presented a collaborative exhibition and installation which included Wool's seminal text-based painting, Apocalypse Now (1988). The work features words from a famous line in Francis Ford Coppola's film Apocalypse Now, based on the Joseph Conrad novel Heart of Darkness. [7]
A German museum worker was fired after hanging his own art on the gallery’s walls. The 51-year-old exhibition technician, a self-proclaimed “freelance artist,” smuggled one of his paintings ...
Mary Heilmann is an American painter based in New York City and Bridgehampton, NY. She has had solo shows and travelling exhibitions at galleries such as 303 Gallery (NY, NY) and Hauser & Wirth (Zurich) and museums including the Wexner Center for the Arts (Columbus, OH) and the New Museum (NY, NY).
Several coaches are squarely on the NFL hot seat entering Week 18, with Mike McCarthy and Brian Daboll among those facing uncertain futures.