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40 Sentences With "found art"

How to use found art in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "found art" and check conjugation/comparative form for "found art". Mastering all the usages of "found art" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Screenland Every now and then, the internet coughs up a viral video that has the quality of found art.
Most venues are customized with graffiti and installations of found art, as well as the pieces included in the tour.
And mainly it's my art, sculpture, mixed mediums, found art, paintings, iPad art, that tell the majority of the story.
Then I moved to Berlin to be an artist after graduating from art school, but I found art to be really unfulfilling.
Ms. Pensato, who found art-world success relatively late, transformed the likes of Mickey Mouse and Batman into ambiguous and sometimes scary creatures.
A dancer from New Hampshire, she made found-art collages using old books and scraps of rusty metal, layers of Gesso and paint.
They wrote: In our Edition 3 Report, we found Art Museums had the highest community engagement, whether or not virtual participation was taken into account.
It sounded off the cuff, but also like the decontextualized middle of a line, rather than the beginning; it had the found-art feeling of a sample.
They were fashion conscious, food conscious, and into graphic design, found art and weird old "physical media" just as the digital kind began to sweep it away.
Its warehouse of found art, reclaimed wood, vintage furniture, Edison bulbs and taxidermied creatures helped create a particular Brooklyn look that has made the neighborhood a global brand.
It is an album because a musician made it and it is broken up into songs, but it is also a diary, a balled-up tissue, found art.
Related: Obliterated Hard Drives Are Found Art for the 21st Century A Look Inside the Academy Award-Winning 'Ex Machina' A Robotic Ceiling Sets the Precedent for AI Architecture
But since getting tattoos, I feel very proud of the fact that I've found art and images that I like so much that I'd put them permanently on myself.
Since graduating from the School of Visual Arts, she's exhibited her tongue-in-cheek brand of found-art mixtures all around New York, in Philadelphia, Wyoming, Mexico, Colombia, and more.
When a favorite Chinese souvenir shop closed across the street, he replicated it in his gallery, selling the store's mugs for either $2.50 (regular price) or $250 (as "found art").
As Luca Antonucci of Colpa Press said at the 2016 San Francisco Art Book Fair, which he helped found, art book and zine fairs are like an education in buying art.
The Wu-Tang Clan's RZA might have recognized the comically askew dubbing in his beloved '70s and '80s kung fu movies as found art, repurposable to glorious effect as hip-hop samples.
She is an author who delights in the intensity of her subject matter — she has found art in the macabre since wandering through the cemeteries of her native New Orleans as a child.
We'd call people and inform them if they found art they didn't want because of a homoerotic element we'd make them an offer, or take a tax deduction, and that resulted in some gifts.
Though she has described her childhood as "desolate," growing up in the shadow of parents who were decorated war heroes and high up in the country's communist government, Ms. Abramovic found art a way to rebel.
These remarkable birds woo their potential mates by constructing circles, cones, or maypole-like structures out of twigs, then ornamenting both the structures and the ground within and around them with stones, shells, beetle cases, colorful fungi and other found art.
Widely regarded as a giant in the field, Malchiodi helped found Art Therapists for Human Rights in response to Karen Pence's decision to put art therapy at the top of her agenda and the American Art Therapy Association's initial decision to work with her.
Fensterstock, Lauren. "Fresh Paint, New Media." Art New England. April/May 2007. Print.Fensterstock, Lauren. "Found." Art New England. February/ March 2007. Print.Fensterstock, Lauren. "The Maine Print Project." Art New England. December/January 2007. Print.Fensterstock, Lauren. "John Whalley." Art New England.
Themes covered in her art have been described as "cultural histories of women's labour in building homes, in motherhood, cooking and teaching." She has worked in various media, including oil and acrylic, found art, recycled materials, pottery, paper and cloth.
Ramona Solberg (1921–2005) created eccentric yet familiar jewelry using found objects; she was an influential teacher at the University of Washington School of Art and often referred to as the "grandmother of Northwest found-art jewelry". She was an art instructor in and around Seattle for three decades as well as a prolific jewelry artist.
Kazem was born in 1969 and was the son of a taxicab At age 14, Kazem decided to drop out from school and join the army. He found art as a mean to scape his reality and express himself as a teenager, he started to investigate his surrounding environment as a keen artist to explore new methods of art.
His father was a minor government official who died when Pál was still a small child. He originally studied to be a lawyer, but found art more to his liking. His first lessons were in Munich with Alexander Wagner, followed by a stay in Paris with Jean-Paul Laurens.Biographical notes @ the Pál Vágó Memorial Society website.
The German Genius: Europe's Third Renaissance, the Second Scientific Revolution and the Twentieth Century. Simon and Schuster. See Chapter "Germany's Montmartre: The Other Dachau" Uhde found art appealing while studying at the Gymnasium at this city, and in 1866 he was admitted to the Academy of Fine Arts in Dresden. Totally at variance with the spirit prevailing there, later that year he left his studies to join the army.
Kate Kowsh, Liz Sadler and Dareh Gregorian (August 1, 2012), $4M piece foundArt lost 42 yrs. New York Post. Between 2008 and 2012, following the death of photographer Harry Shunk in 2006,John Leland (August 11, 2012), Surprise Bounty for Cleanup Artist New York Times. the Lichtenstein Foundation acquired the collection of photographic material shot by Shunk and his János Kender as well as the photographers' copyright.
Rodriguez began to pursue an art degree at Merritt College in 1966 where she discovered the Chicano movements. In 1970, she received a scholarship and attended the San Francisco Art Institute. She found art school to be isolating and chaotic and it wasn't what she expected. Patricia was happy and excited to be accepted to such a prestigious art school but she didn't want to be a minimalist painter at the time like everyone else.
The majority of the student body during WWII were women because "many ... [male] students and graduates, new in the armed services, found art-related duty as draftsman, camefleurs, mapmakers, or illustrators." Professors were also drafted and Mattison was forced to take over teaching a still life painting course on top of his normal course load. At the June 1963 commencement, instead of reading the honor roll as usual, Mattison read the names of Herron students serving the country.
As a young child, Mérida had both music and art lessons, and his first passion was music, which led to piano lessons. From 1907 to 1909, the family went to live in the small town of Almolonga in the Quetzaltenango Department of Guatemala, where they were from. Here he continued music and art lessons. At age 15, a malformation of his ear caused him to lose part of his hearing, so his father steered him towards painting. He felt “defeated” by music but found art to be an acceptable substitute.
Rubin believed the children benefited from making art but found teaching to be less satisfying than she had hoped. In 1963, Rubin learned about a study of children's art at a local Child Study Center nursery and contacted the director, Dr. Margaret McFarland, to volunteer her services. Although Rubin had no clinical background, McFarland invited her to facilitate art therapy with children diagnosed with schizophrenia. Rubin found art therapy to be immensely gratifying and sought the guidance of art therapists Margaret Naumburg and Edith Kramer to further her career as a trained art therapist.
Painting or drawing on walls was originally forbidden, though graffiti, which could be viewed as art or vandalism, occurred throughout the prison's operational years. This rule was relaxed in special cases – including, from 1976, long-term prisoners within their own cells – but only for work considered art and not graffiti. Art, or art therapy, was not officially permitted until the 1980s; graffiti was never formally permitted, but in the prison's last six months, with closure imminent, the rule was not enforced. A more contemporary prison artist was Dennis (NOZ) Nozworthy, who stated that he found art on death row, in 1982.
In Billboard, Rob Tannenbaum praised Art Angels as "a marvel of meticulous, even obsessive home-studio recording, uncompromised by bandmates or collaborators". Clash magazine's Maya Rose Radcliffe deemed it "the truest representation of Grimes we've heard yet: 'Art Angels' is boundary pushing, it's listenable and it's Boucher's most ambitious and most consistent work to date" and commended the production of the album as the "one thing that does tie it all together". Although referring to Art Angels as "simultaneously [Boucher's] most accessible and her least personal body of work", Consequence of Sound also said it exemplified her artistry, being "performative, maximalist, joyful, and broad". DIYs El Hunt found Art Angels "impossible to resist", possessing an "instant, limb-grabbing appeal".
Similar contemporary found art shoreline galleries went up around the San Francisco Bay Area, including the toll bridge plaza of the San Mateo–Hayward Bridge, the Bayshore Freeway interchange in Larkspur, in Redwood City, at the Albany Bulb, and in Rodeo. In 2018, Ned Kahn and Pete Beeman were selected as finalists for artworks at the Emeryville Marina; like the earlier mudflat sculptures, the installations are intended to be visible from the eastern approach to the Bay Bridge. A permit application for Kahn's sculpture was rejected by BCDC on September 30, 2019, but Beeman indicated he was still interested in the commission, which he has tentatively titled Emeryville Serpent after a similar mudflat sculpture.
General Idea had been publishing their periodical FILE since 1972. The enormous interest they received internationally led them to found Art Metropole as a means for other artists to access their distribution system, and as an archive of artists' materials, especially artists books, periodicals, video, audio, and ephemera. They conceived Art Metropole as the gallery shop and archive from the 1984 Miss General Idea Pavilion. In 1974, they opened their doors to the public in an abandoned space over a Greek restaurant in downtown Toronto. The building had originally been built in 1911 for one of Toronto's earliest art galleries, Art Metropole (which closed in the forties,) and from this came the name for the artist-run space Art Metropole.
Born in New York City, Al Hansen was a friend to Yoko OnoEthan Smith "Beck and Yoko Ono sound off on found art, family ties, and flying pianos" , New York Magazine Sept 1, 1998 and John Cage. While serving in Germany in World War II, Hansen pushed a piano off the roof of a five-story building. This act became the foundation of one of his most recognized performance pieces, the Yoko Ono Piano Drop. Many artists have also destroyed or altered pianos including John Cage, Joseph Beuys, Nam June Paik"Museum Zero" and Raphael Montañez Ortiz. Amazone 3/9 in Cologne, Germany Hansen studied with composer John Cage at the now famous 1958 Composition Class at the New School for Social Research in New York City along with fellow students, Dick Higgins, George Brecht, and Allan Kaprow amongst others.
Howard Vincent O’Brien (1888–1947) was an American novelist and journalist best known for his memoir Wine, Women and War and his columns for the Chicago Daily News, "All Things Considered" and "Footnotes".WorldCat Identities O’Brien was born in Chicago in 1888, where he lived for his entire life, save for his time at Yale University and fighting in World War I. O’Brien worked as an editor of the Printers' Ink magazine, and moved on from this endeavor to found Art magazine before becoming a first lieutenant of artillery in World War I. By 1920, he had written several novels, including Trodden Gold, An Abandoned Woman, Thirty, and his anonymous autobiography, Wine, Women, and War. He became the literary editor of the Chicago Daily News in 1928, where he also contributed the column "All Things Considered", which he wrote until his death in 1947.
The Athenian newspapers were polarized on this issue of censorship and crammed with vitriolic letters by academics and other well known poets and writers as a drawn out debate concerning the art in question commenced. In an open letter published in the national paper Nonda writes, “…my soul is filled with bitterness because I have foundArt on the Run” in the proverbial “City of Art and Culture”, I raise protest against the cultural and artistic circles in Athens.” Spiros Vikatos, his former teacher in the Academy, stood by the young painter’s work and supported him against the attacks, as did other more progressive artists and writers such as the novelist Stratis Mirivilis, who wrote a heavily satiric article about the censors in the leading Athens newspaper. These first shows in Athens, although scandalous, had also received rave reviews. There were articles in the all the national Greek newspapers praising the remarkable Greek painter who was to “triumph in Paris” but the fiasco concerning his allegedly pornographic art was the beginning of a troubled relationship with the city of his birth.

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