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A camera obscura (pl. camerae obscurae or camera obscuras; from Latin camera obscūra 'dark chamber') [1] is the natural phenomenon in which the rays of light passing through a small hole into a dark space form an image where they strike a surface, resulting in an inverted (upside down) and reversed (left to right) projection of the view outside.
Hal Gould (February 29, 1920 – June 25, 2015) was an American photographer and gallery curator. [1] He was an advocate of fine art photography and created a venue which eventually became the Camera Obscura gallery at the Denver Art Museum.
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Sydney Butchkes was born on October 13, 1920 in Covington, Kentucky, and raised in Cincinnati, Ohio. [2] However some sources state he was born in 1922. He studied at the Cincinnati Art Academy (now the Art Academy of Cincinnati), the Art Students League of New York, and The New School in New York City. [2]
Camera Obscura (San Francisco, California) Santa Monica Camera Obscura This page was last edited on 14 January 2020, at 01:58 (UTC). Text ...
The Contemporary Arts Center (abbreviated CAC) is a contemporary art museum in Cincinnati, Ohio and one of the first contemporary art institutions in the United States. The CAC is a non-collecting museum that focuses on new developments in painting, sculpture, photography, architecture, performance art and new media.
The auction listing shows the spelling was corrected. The painting sold for $30,001, according to the auction website.The portrait created in Louisville in December brought in $25,000.
Tony Oursler is known for his fractured-narrative handmade videotapes, including The Loner (1980) and EVOL (1984). Billy Rubin describes EVOL as "(charting) the territory between our passion-charged personal narratives and the near impossibility of representing that desire visually or linguistically, the end result often being nothing more than banal cultural cliches."