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Art Make-Up (1967) — video in which Nauman slowly covers his face and upper torso with white, then pink, then green, then black makeup, until by the end he looks like a negative image [1] Initially the films were intended to be projected simultaneously on four walls of a room. Although this form of installation was never realized for this ...
Topological Gardens was a 2009 art exhibition by Bruce Nauman at the 53rd Venice Biennale. The artist, representing the United States at the Biennale , received the festival's Golden Lion prize for best national participation.
The Guggenheim holds four versions of None Sing Neon Sign by Bruce Nauman. [21] Of these four, one is a 1970 fabrication, a 2005 exhibition copy, a 2006 exhibition copy, and a 2013 exhibition copy. The 2005 and 2006 copies were made by Nauman's approved fabricator but were significantly different from the original 1970 fabrication.
In 1967-68 artist Bruce Nauman made two videos (among many performance-based videos) in which he presents the idea of the contemporary artist as a somewhat businesslike but degraded clown/actor. In Art Make-Up (1967–68) Nauman videotapes himself applying successive layers of white, pink, green and black makeup to his entire face, arms, and torso.
Body Pressure is a 1974 performance piece by American artist Bruce Nauman. The performer or viewer is instructed to press "as much of the front surface of your body ... against the wall as possible", then to "[p]ress very hard and concentrate ... Think how various parts of your body press against the wall; which parts touch and which do not".
In 1970 Kaltenbach left the New York contemporary art world and returned to California, taking up a position at California State University, Sacramento where he taught until 2005. Kaltenbach chose to refashion his practice in California, abandoning public conceptual work and instead adopting the persona of a "Regional Artist" with a focus on ...
She was hired as an associate director of the Museum of Modern Art in 2008. [2] [4] At MoMA, Halbreich curated a 2014 retrospective of German artist Sigmar Polke and a 2018 Bruce Nauman exhibition. [5] [6] In September, 2017 Halbreich was appointed director of the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation. [7]
The Walter and McBean Galleries were located at in Russian Hill, as part of the former San Francisco Art Institute's Chestnut campus. [1] [2] It has presented an influential program of exhibitions highlighting innovative work by emerging artists and experimental work by more established artists, from throughout the United States and abroad.