"Everything I Have" by Simon Evans, 2009. Original Museum Poster advertising the "The world is Yours" exhibition in 2009. "Everything I Have" is a meditation on consumerism and Evans own personal consumption, as part of his exhibition: "The World is Yours". Dimensions: 92 x 140,3 cm; 36,22 x 55,23 inches In a mint condition, never been framed. Discover great deals and an expanded product range on our website: www.TheArtAndChaos.com We ship worldwide fully insured with tracking number. If your country is not listed, please contact us for a shipping quote.
Fieldwork Facility helps to create the Museum of Us to bring a London community together.
Planning an Austria family vacation? Look no further, we share our family-friendly itinerary for Austria with kids, including some of the best places to go in Austria with kids and where to stay.
35 x 50 in. (90 x 128 cm) Silkscreen Condition: There are black marks and light creasing along the bottom edge of the poster. The damage should not be visible once the poster is framed. Flavia Cocchi (1962-), a Swiss designer based in Lausanne, created the graphic identity for MUDAC (Museum of Contemporary Design and Applied Arts in Lausanne) and has produced numerous exhibition posters for the museum. Cocchi designed this wonderful poster about posters for a 2006 exhibition at MUDAC. Her design features posters by Josef Müller-Brockmann, Hans Neuberg, William Lloyd, John Rieben and others, all cleverly arranged as if displayed together along the street.
"A Day at the Museum" examines documents that tell the stories of artists' trips to museums over the past two centuries
Earlier this year, the new Shenzhen Maritime Museum proposal by 3XN Architects, B+H Architects, and Zhubo Design was selected among the Top 3 finalists in the
Designed by Bernard Tschumi, the Acropolis Museum in Athens is one of the world's most important archaeological museums, renowned for its great collection of ancient sculpture
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A stylish Art Nouveau exhibition poster featuring a beautiful evening scene. Printed with archival inks on gallery-quality paper in a range of sizes. Free UK shipping. Free international shipping also available.
Useful list of lesser-known cool, fun museums in the U.S. that are good for both kids and adults. Collections and exhibits for art, education, and a great time!
The Garden Museum celebrates one of the greatest botanical artists of the twentieth century, Raymond Booth The Garden Museum, which occupies the deconsecrated church of St Mary-at-Lambeth, explores and celebrates British gardening through its collections, temporary exhibitions, events and garden...
Image 19 of 20 from gallery of Hoki Museum / Nikken Sekkei.
[Dyeing Living and Life, Samiro Yunoki "life LIFE"] Mr. Samiro Yunoki, one of Japan's leading dye artists, is still active at the age of 99. He became a dyeing artist after being enlightened by the ideas of Muneyoshi Yanagi, a folk art activist, and
Perhaps it's it's not surprising that a design museum would have good design. It was lovely to visit the Cooper-Hewitt Museum a few weeks ago and discover an interactive exhibit that relied only on great design along with pencils and paper (plus stickers) to create a compelling visitor experience. Yes, I got to try out their pen--but honestly, I enjoyed this more. The goal of the exhibit was to engage visitors in thinking about how our creative efforts in design can help solve problems. Incredibly clear, the exhibit began with a start here and then an overview of the process of visiting the exhibit. Then it led you step-by-step through the design process, beginning with finding a value (interesting, right? museums don't often talk about values as drivers of behavior). Then you moved to a question. They were broad enough to encourage creative thinking, yet I began to see the constraints that encourage creativity being put into place. You're asked to reflect on both question and value. So far, it's been the incubation step in the creative process. We learn what the process is, and we begin to gather information. But the process still needs more information. Because visitors might not be designers, we're given a hand, with a group of design tactics. Will you use a stage, social media, a public bath or a police station to, say, increase access to healthy food? We're reminded that creative combining is a great way to find solutions. That's why we're asked to pick two cards. We've designed our solutions--but that's not the end. We see real-live designers sharing their projects and we see other visitors sharing their solutions. A physician reminds us that "less is more" is often true in medicine as it is in architecture. Finally, you get to place your project where you think, physically, where it belongs. Does it work in a parking lot? on a roof? in a warehouse? Helping to remind us that the city itself is a living laboratory for all kinds of creative experiments (as a rural dweller myself, it's the same thing with different vocabulary). And although it seemed a bit of an afterthought, I loved this cartoon about successful and unsuccessful community design processes, a reminder that community engagement makes all things better. Thanks Cooper Hewitt for providing us all with the reminder that pens and pencils combined with ideas are a place where creativity lives. When it comes time to develop your next exhibit, consider all the alternatives. PS I did use the pen, but did not look up my saved works when I arrived home.
Julie Mehretu - "Easy Dark". Original Museum Poster. 2017. Dimensions: 90 x 140 cm In mint condition, never been framed. Discover great deals and an expanded product range on our website: www.TheArtAndChaos.com We ship worldwide fully insured with tracking number. If your country is not listed, please contact us for a shipping quote.
Who are museum exhibits for, and what difference does that make?