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| Current | |
None. |
| Past Projects | |
Mark Dion Mark Dion examines the ways in which dominant ideologies and public institutions shape our understanding of history, knowledge, and the natural world. The Marvelous Museum: A Mark Dion Project, Oakland Museum of California, September 11, 2010–March 6, 2011 View the entire project profile | |
Pae White Los Angeles-based installation artist Pae White (b. 1963) explores issues of site and context, while blurring any boundary that may remain between art and design. White uses a range of genres and media, from fine art and product design to urban planning and architecture, typography, and graphics. In Between the Outside-In, New Langton Arts, May 5 - July 18, 2009 View the entire project profile | |
Chris Drury Chris Drury creates ephemeral assemblies of natural materials. His work explores the connections between nature and culture, inner and outer, systems within the body, and systems on the planet. Drury often collaborates with scientists and technicians from a broad spectrum of disciplines. Chris Drury: Mushrooms|Clouds, Nevada Museum of Art, August 10–October 5, 2008 View the entire project profile | |
Shi Guorui Beijing-based photographer Shi Guorui is internationally recognized for his large-scale photographs produced with a camera obscura, including projects at the Great Wall of China, the Shanghai riverfront, and K2, the second highest mountain in the world. Shi Guorui: Reproduction and Refashioning, de Young Museum, May 26–September 23, 2007 View the entire project profile | |
Cornelia Parker London-based sculptor Cornelia Parker has earned a reputation for sculptural installations that manifest the theory that matter is never destroyed, but is merely transformed into something else. Through a combination of visual and verbal allusions, her work triggers cultural metaphors and personal associations that allow the viewer to witness the transformation of the most ordinary objects into something compelling and unexpected. New Work by Cornelia Parker, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, November 19, 2005–March 5, 2006 View the entire project profile | |
Richard Long Distinguished British artist Richard Long has spent his career making art that expresses his connection to the land. The signature walks that he initiated in the late1960s were documented with text, maps, and photographs. In the 1980s he began applying mud handprints directly to walls. Large lines and circles of stones, slate, and sticks created from materials collected on his walks inform his more recent work. The Path Is the Place Is the Line, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, January 21–April 25, 2006 View the entire project profile | |
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Inaugural Projects Projects by Antony Gormley, Katherine Johnstone, Alison Kibbey, Kurt Ernest Steger, Jim Toia, and Mary Tsiongas. View the entire project profile. |
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