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The Green Gallery was an art gallery that operated between 1960 and 1965 at 15 West 57th Street in Manhattan, New York City. The gallery's director was Richard Bellamy , and its financial backer was the art collector Robert Scull . [ 1 ]
He ran New York's Green Gallery, from 1960 until 1965 an art gallery at 15 West 57th Street in Manhattan. [1] He then ran the Noah Goldowsky Gallery on Upper Madison Avenue for a few years. Bellamy attended the University of Ohio in Cincinnati for one semester. In 1949 he visited Provincetown, Massachusetts, and its summer art colony.
The Green Gallery is a contemporary art gallery located in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The gallery was founded by John Riepenhoff in the attic of his apartment in Milwaukee's Riverwest neighborhood in 2003. The name "Green Gallery" was both an homage to Richard Bellamy's Chelsea gallery in the 1960s and an ironic reference to the attic's sky blue ...
This is a list of contemporary art galleries, i.e., commercial galleries for-profit, privately-owned businesses dealing in artworks by contemporary artists born after 1945. Galleries on this list meet the following criteria: The gallery has played a major role in career of significant or well-known artists born after 1945
Robert Morris (February 9, 1931 – November 28, 2018) was an American sculptor, conceptual artist and writer. He was regarded as having been one of the most prominent theorists of Minimalism [1] along with Donald Judd, but also made important contributions to the development of performance art, land art, the Process Art movement, and installation art. [2]
Image Title Year Location Image online [3] Old Woman with a Ball of Yarn: 1906: Private collection Image online [4] [5] Young Woman on a Sofa (Mariaska): 1907: Private collection
Anthony Green RA (30 September 1939 – 14 February 2023) was an English realist painter and printmaker best known for his paintings of his own middle-class domestic life. [1] His works sometimes used compound perspectives and polygonal forms—particularly with large, irregularly shaped canvasses.
Green was Keeper of fine art at the Laing Art Gallery from 1971 to 1977. [1] One of his early acquisitions for Newcastle was Laus veneris by Edward Burne-Jones.In 1977 he became the curator of York Art Gallery, a post he held until 2003 when he left to become an independent art historian. [2]