FRENCH DANCE TEACHER!
Jeune enseignante en danse fraichement arrivée a New-York, je suis a la recherche de personnes qui entendraient mes projets. En effet, forte de mes 10ans d’expérience dans l'enseignement de la danse en France (Cannes) et la création de spectacles,Je reste convaincu de l'importance de transmettre mon savoir auprès d'enfants, d'adolescents et de jeunes adultes dans cette langue qui nous est commune, le Francais, afin de faire partager pleinement ma passion pour la danse et l'enseignement. (Jazz,…
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http://www.thejewishmuseum.org/
A trailblazing figure in 20th-century art, Man Ray (1890-1976) revealed multiple artistic identities over the course of his career – Dadaist, Parisian Surrealist, international portrait and fashion photographer – and produced many important and enduring works as a photographer, painter, filmmaker, writer, sculptor, and object maker. Alias Man Ray explores the deliberate cultural ambiguity of Man Ray, who became the first American artist to be accepted by the avant-garde in Paris. It also examines the dynamic connection between Man Ray’s assimilation (few know that he was born Emmanuel Radnitzky to Russian Jewish immigrants), the evolution of his art, and his willful construction of a distinctive artistic persona. Visitors to Alias Man Ray will be privy to his endless experimentation in over 200 works including photographs, paintings, sculptures, objects, drawings, films, and a selection of his writings. This is the first major multimedia Man Ray show at a New York City museum since 1974.
Daily through March 14th, 2010
Hours: From 11am to 5.45pm
Location: The Jewish Museum, Fifth Avenue at 92nd Street, New York, NY,
Admission: $12 adultes, $ 10 seniors, $ 7.50 étudiants, gratuit pour les - de 11 ans
Queensborough Community College Art Gallery, 222-05 56th Avenue, Bayside,
Web: www.qccartgallery.org
Patricia Dreyfus expose pour la première fois aux États-Unis une de ses séries de têtes de terre cuite, dans le cadre de son exposition consacrée au pilotes de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale.
Pour sa première exposition sur le sol américain, Patricia Dreyfus fait côtoyer les têtes sorties de son imagination et qu’elle façonne en quelques minutes avec des photos d’époque qu’elle a trouvées dans le grenier familial et retravaillées. Histoire d’explorer une période qui reste énigmatique pour elle : « Mon père ne m’a jamais parlé de la guerre de 39-45 »
Rococo and Revolution: Eighteenth-Century French Drawings features more than eighty exceptional drawings almost exclusively from the Morgan's renowned holdings. The efflorescence of the ancien régime and its eventual downfall provide the backdrop to a century of remarkable artistic vitality and variety that subtly chronicles the many changes taking place in eighteenth-century France. More
francine leclercq à la gallerie Soho20 Chelsea , 511 West 25th street, suite 605
Jeanne Verdoux profite de ses trajets dans le monde confiné du métro new-yorkais pour croquer à la sauvette les passagers qui l'entourent. Ses dessins, dont la Frederieke Taylor Gallery propose actuellement une petite sélection, sont le témoin d'un échantillon de la population new-yorkaise contemporaine, façon chronique du quotidien ordinaire.
"Support", exhibition curated by Jeremy Adams
Frederieke Taylor Gallery
535 West 22nd Street, 6th Floor
New York, NY 10011
Jusqu'au 14 Août 2009
http://www.jeanneverdoux.com
http://todaysdrawing.blogspot.com
Jeanne Verdoux participera également en tant qu'artiste à l'événement "Fooding d'amour" à PS1 les 25 et 26 septembre prochains organisé au profit de 'hunger in the world'.
French architect Christian de Portzamparc's first childhood drawings were of Captain Haddock and his sailing ships, central elements in the adventures of boy reporter and comic book hero Tintin. Now, with obvious affinity and affection, the Pritzker-Prize-winning architect has designed an exuberant new museum for Tintin, Haddock and the rest of the cartoon crew created by Belgian artist Georges Rémi, known as Hergé. Located in the university town of Louvain-la-Neuve, 20 miles southeast of Brussels, the Hergé Museum is a white "prism" set slightly askew on stilts at the edge of a wooded park, with a soaring interior inspired by the seaports, schooners and cargo steamers of Tintin's travels. The vast lobby, flooded with light through glass walls and skylights, encloses huge structures in odd shapes and pastel colors-pale yellow, coral, lilac, sky blue-connected by open gangways, and a square elevator column in a navy-and-white checkerboard pattern echoes Tintin's famed red-and-white moon rocket. The museum's permanent collection of 80 original plates and more than 800 drawings, photos, posters, figurines and toys features not only Tintin but other Hergé characters and graphic works.