Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Barbara Linnea Quigley (born May 27, 1958) is an American actress, best known as a scream queen in low-budget horror films during the 1980s and 1990s. Born in Davenport, Iowa , Quigley first pursued her career in the late 1970s, shortly after moving to Los Angeles.
The film marked actress Linnea Quigley's first major role, and she was cast based on modeling photos Foldes had come across of her. [9] Many of the actors in the film were credited under pseudonyms; Robert Gribbin, who portrayed Mark, is credited as Crackers Phinn, while Barbara Bain, who played Patty, was credited as Barbara Monker.
William Quigley has over 475 collectors of his artwork. In June 1985, before entering Columbia University, Quigley had his first show with Andy Warhol in Philadelphia at Henry S. McNeil’s Gallery in Warhol’s “Images of a Child’s World” exhibition.
Independent curator Marvin Heiferman's The Family of Man 1955·1984 was a floor to ceiling collage of over 850 images and texts from magazines, newspapers and the art world shown in 1984 at PSI, The Institute for Art and Urban Resources Inc. (now MoMA PS1) Long Island City N.Y. [89] Abigail Solomon-Godeau described it as a reexamination of the ...
The Pictures Generation, 1974–1984 was an exhibition at The Metropolitan Museum of Art (The Met) in New York City that ran from April 29 – August 2, 2009. [1] The exhibition took its name from Pictures, a 1977 five person group show organized by art historian and critic Douglas Crimp (1944–2019) at New York City's Artists Space gallery. [2]
Architect, artist, professor G [314] Peter Prijdekker: b. 1948 Dutch Swimmer G [315] Edward Irenaeus Prime-Stevenson: 1858–1942 American Novelist G [316] Tom Prior: b. 1990 English Actor G [317] Charlotte Prodger: b. 1974 English Filmmaker, artist L [318] Luke Prokop: b. 2002 Canadian Ice hockey player, 1st NHL player to come out publicly as ...
The Perfect Moment was the most comprehensive retrospective of works by New York photographer Robert Mapplethorpe.The show spanned twenty-five years of his career, featuring celebrity portraits, self-portraits, interracial figure studies, floral still lifes, homoerotic images, and collages.
Black Male: Representations of Masculinity in Contemporary Art was a landmark [1] exhibition held at New York's Whitney Museum of American Art from November 10, 1994 until March 5, 1995. Organized by curator Thelma Golden , Black Male was a survey of the changing representations of black masculinity in contemporary art from the 1970s to the 1990s.