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Distance from Earth Magnitude Group ... [1] between LG and Sculptor Group: Forms pair with NGC 300 ... Sculptor group: 183 MADCASH-1 (MADCASH J074238+652501-dw) ...
Chillida's sculptures concentrated on the human form (mostly torsos and busts); his later works tended to be more massive and more abstract, and included many monumental public works. [4] Chillida himself tended to reject the label of "abstract", preferring instead to call himself a "realist sculptor".
Chris Booth (born 30 December 1948) is a New Zealand sculptor and practitioner of large-scale land art. [citation needed] [1]He has participated in numerous land art projects and exhibitions internationally and created significant public sculpture commissions in NZ, Australia, the Netherlands, the UK, Germany, Italy, Denmark, France and Canada.
NGC 300 (also known as Caldwell 70 or the Sculptor Pinwheel Galaxy [4]) is a spiral galaxy in the constellation Sculptor. It was discovered on 5 August 1826 by Scottish astronomer James Dunlop . [ 5 ]
Renowned Colombian painter and sculptor Fernando Botero, whose depictions of people and objects in plump, exaggerated forms became emblems of Colombian art around the world, has died. Lina Botero ...
Kappa 1 Sculptoris is a binary star [2] system in the southern constellation of Sculptor. It is faintly visible to the naked eye, with a combined apparent visual magnitude of +5.51. [ 2 ] Based upon an annual parallax shift of 12.91 mas as measured from Earth, [ 1 ] it is located roughly 250 light years from the Sun .
Spiral Jetty by Robert Smithson from atop Rozel Point, Utah, in mid-April 2005 Time Landscape by Alan Sonfist, at LaGuardia and Houston Streets in Manhattan, 1965-present. Land art, variously known as Earth art, environmental art, and Earthworks, is an art movement that emerged in the 1960s and 1970s, [1] largely associated with Great Britain and the United States [2] [3] [4] but that also ...
He was taught by the French sculptor Miguel Verdiguier at Cordova, and at the Academy of San Fernando in Madrid. In 1799 Charles IV awarded him a pension of 12,000 reals to visit Paris and Rome. In 1804 he executed a statue of Ganymede while in Paris, now in the Museo del Prado , which gained him immediate recognition as a leading sculptor.