Panel from the Pergamon Altar's East Frieze - Athena Group Sculpture | 3D Printed Ancient Greek Art, Unique Home Decor, Classical Frieze Replica, Elegant Historical Art This 3D printed sculpture replicates the iconic Athena Group from the East Frieze of the Pergamon Altar. Representing a masterpiece of Hellenistic art, this piece captures the dynamic and powerful imagery of the ancient Greek gods in battle. Perfect for history enthusiasts, art collectors, or anyone looking to bring a piece of classical antiquity into their home, this frieze panel serves as a striking and sophisticated decor element. Note: If you have any questions, please send us a message.
Bring a decorative decadence to your everyday routine with the Archivolto Dressing Table with two frieze drawers. Evocative of elegant interiors with a hint of Art Deco it pairs perfectly with a sleek interior space. W46 x D22 x H31 in W116 x D57 x H80 cm Table Top | Ash Veneer Frame | Brass Steel
Galleries rolled out painting and sculpture with comprehensible narratives, and the shouty atmosphere of previous editions gave way to something more considered
Discover the emerging visual artists to put on your radar this year.
Galleries rolled out painting and sculpture with comprehensible narratives, and the shouty atmosphere of previous editions gave way to something more considered
Discover the emerging visual artists to put on your radar this year.
Frieze Sculpture Park includes work by Yayoi Kusama, Ursula von Rydingsvard, Thomas Schütte and Franz West. It is open in Regent’s Park until 18 October
His ‘brutalist dollhouses’ invite viewers into the void ‘in the friendliest manner’
Frieze, 130 Montgomery St, San Francisco
The summer exhibition returns to Regent's Park in London where the fair's organizers hope it will be seen by 5 million visitors.
Galleries rolled out painting and sculpture with comprehensible narratives, and the shouty atmosphere of previous editions gave way to something more considered
The Paris-based international art advisor chooses her favourite pieces from the Frieze New York edition, including 1970s wire sculpture by Alan Saret and printed aluminium piece by Jordan Wolfson
#ArtThursdays Frieze Sculpture 2022 at Regent's Park 14TH SEPTEMBER - 13ND NOVEMBER 2022 View this post on Instagram A post shared by Stööki (@stooki) For this week's #ArtThursday feature we headed to see Frieze Sculpture 2022 in The Regent’s Park. Curated by Clare Lilley (Yorkshire Sculpture Park Director) for the tenth consecutive year. The awesome line-up consists of 19 international artists, and it was the perfect way to spend an Autumn day at this public art exhibition. Frieze Sculpture is free and open to all and runs alongside Frieze London and Frieze Masters, which both take place from 12 to 16 October 2022 in The Regent’s Park, bringing together the world’s leading galleries to celebrate the creative spirit of the city. Check out a rundown of each of the pieces featured below... 👀 Ida Ekblad, BOOK OF BOREDOM, 2022 (Galerie Max Hetzler) Conveying a rich sense of abundance and corporality, this painted bronze sculpture presents a vibrant composition, filled with fragmented, angular patterns and shapes, from the artist’s own expressive paintings. Follow: idaekblad Ugo Rondinone, yellow blue monk, 2020 (Gladstone) Ugo Rondinone’s yellow blue monk (2020) is part of the artist’s recent “nuns + monks” series. These works explore the transcendence offered by the natural world, and through color, form, and mass, evoke an altogether contemporary version of the sublime. Follow: @ugorondinone0 Matthew Darbyshire, Hercules Meets Galatea, 2022 (Herald St) The re-imagining of Greco-Roman figures in Hercules Meets Galatea encourages us to examine the ever-changing lexicon of sculptural motifs including sign, symbol, substance, structure, surface, source and sexuality. Follow: @sussudiodarbyshire John Giorno, SPACE MIRRORS MIND, 2022 (Almine Rech) The John Giorno Foundation and Almine Rech present a previously unseen sculpture by John Giorno from the late series entitled Stone Poems: a found glacial granite into which a poetic phrase is engraved. Follow: @giornofoundation / alminerech Alicja Kwade, Tunnel-Tell (Ceci Sera), 2020 (KÖNIG GALERIE & PACE Gallery) A solid boulder is punctured effortlessly by a stainless-steel tube. Tunnel-Tell (Ceci Sera) examines the space of brute matter by permitting viewers to peer through solid mass. This simple act allegorizes our own limited view of what we call reality. Follow: @alicjakwade Jordy Kerwick, Vertical Plane Me, 2022 (Vigo Gallery) Jordy Kerwick (Australia, b. 1982) transports you into his dream world of mythology, folk law and misadventure, that feel like a reinterpretation of his 10-year-old self’s hopes, dreams and fears. These sculptures carved in Portland Stone are inspired by Ken Webster’s book ‘Vertical Planes’ (1989). Follow: @jordykerwick John Wood and Paul Harrison, 10 signs for a park, 2022 (GALERIA VERA CORTÊS) 10 SIGNS FOR A PARK The kind of signs you see in a park, but not the signs you see in a park. They don’t point you anywhere, tell you anything or ask anything of you. They point at themselves, tell you things you already know and only ask you to have a little think. The kind of think you’d have in a park. Follow: @galeriaveracortes / @woodandharrison Tim Etchells, Don’t Look Back, 2022 (VITRINE, London / Basel) A simple idiomatic phrase, cut into weathering steel, asks us to think about it afresh in dialogue with context and landscape. Follow: @tim_etchells N.S. Harsha, Desired for – Arrived at, 2021 (Victoria Miro & Vadehra Art Gallery) Harsha’s bronze sculpture Desired for – Arrived at is constructed not on the basis of linearity or logic but on the crooked, visceral movements of desire in our ever-changing positions in life. Follow: @victoriamirogallery / @vadehraartgallery Shaikha Al Mazrou (b. 1988, UAE), Red Stack, 2022 (Lawrie Shabibi) Enlarging her folded steel sculptures, which resemble balloons and displays of origami, Al Mazrou seeks to represent tension, weight and space, borrowing from conceptual art and geometric abstraction, and formally from minimalism. Follow: @lawrieshabibi Ro Robertson, Drench, 2022 (Maximillian William) The latest manifestation of Ro Robertson’s exploration of the ‘terrain of the queer body’ which welds the figure and landscape as one. Follow: @maximillian_william Pablo Reinoso, Speaker’s Corner, 2022 (Waddington Custot, London) With the convivial grouping of his ‘Speaker’s Corner’, Pablo Reinoso invites you to sit down and relax, to chat with friends or contemplate the beautiful natural surroundings of The Regent’s Park. Follow: @waddingtoncustot Emma Hart, Big Time, 2022 (The Sunday Painter) Hart makes art that does something; here setting her sculptures to work outside. Radiant ceramic sundials, reinvented with faces, wait for exposure. Each dial is under a different time pressure, taking way too much or not having enough. Follow: @thesundaypainter Beverly Pepper (1922-2020), Curvae in Curvae, 2013-2018 (Marlborough) Follow: @marlborough_gallery Péju Alatise, Sim and the Yellow Glass Birds, 2022 (kó Art Space, Lagos, Nigeria) Sim is a nine-year old girl who lives in two worlds. In one world she is a domestic servant in Lagos. In the other world, Sim lives in dreamland with talking birds and butterflies where she can fly. Follow: @peju.alatise / @ko_artspace Join our mailing list to keep up to date with the #ArtThursdays blög störies! The Regent's Park London, NW1 4NR #StookiMovement
Allow your students to create their own Greek Architecture! They can add their own frieze, capital, shaft, and relief sculpture in the pediment area. The Temple of Hephaestus was used as inspiration for this drawing sheet. This ties in with the Greek PowerPoint which also has a grading scale available for this activity. Greek Bundle https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Ancient-Greece-Bundle-8147584 Greek Theater Masks https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Greek-Theater-Masks-8147560 Blank Amphora https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Blank-Amphora-9876369 Power Point https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Fine-Arts-Survey-Ancient-Greece-8051469 Test https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Test-Fine-Arts-Survey-Greek-8034338
His ‘brutalist dollhouses’ invite viewers into the void ‘in the friendliest manner’
Discover new and ambitious works by today's most exciting and influential artists
This year’s Focus section promises a hotbed of up-and-coming talent, from an ambitious installation of ceramics by Sophie Wahlquist to Edgar Ramirez’s visceral works reflecting on the dystopian fabric of the city
Frieze Sculpture 2021 is on view until 31 October at Regent's Park, London. From cast-bronze monsters to giant pineapples, discover this year's international offering, in pictures
With artists this year including Huma Bhabha, Tracey Emin, Robert Indiana and Tom Sachs.
As major exhibitions at Nasher Sculpture Center, National Gallery of Art and the Museum of Cycladic Art honour the iconoclastic sculptor, novelist Hermione Hoby reflects on her six-decade career
The Cherokee/Choctaw artist explores the contemporary possibilities of Indigenous art at Denver Art Museum
The final part in a series of our editors’ initial impressions from documenta 14 Athens, Amy Sherlock on the fourth and largest of the main venues
His ‘brutalist dollhouses’ invite viewers into the void ‘in the friendliest manner’
ART The Frieze Art Fair pitches collectors some great contemporary art and their new tent in NYC. A week ago, the Frieze Art Fair ended their first New York Fair in a $1.5 million, 1/2 mile long, white, twisting-snake-like tent on Randall's Island. Randall's Island, as it turns out, is the most difficult place to get to in all of greater New York City. No subway, confused cab drivers about how to get there or expensive special ferrys which only run during events there. Randall's is an island after all, and at one time it was the home to a psychiatric ward which New Yorkers with a lack of compassion generally referred to as the "idiot asylum". For five days it was again occupied by 1000+ crazy artists shown by 180 very serious art dealers from around the world. The fair was timed to coincide with the top art buyers being in Manhattan for the big auctions, happening in the city at the same time. (Edvard Munch's "The Scream" $119.9 million, Warhol's "Chairman Mao" $17.4 million, Mark Rothko's "Orange, Red, Yellow" $86,882,500 etc.- at Sotheby's and Christie's) There were several satellite fairs, fashion shows, parties and panel discussions organized to take advantage of the long Frieze Art Weekend in New York City. On Sunday the fair had timed tickets and was sold out. Out of the thousands of artworks shown, here are 50 pieces which were shown at the Frieze Art Fair, 2012. Enjoy. "ACHTUNDZWANZIGSTERMAERZZWEITAUSENDUNDELF" Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Zurich Andrea Zittel "A-Z Aggregated Stacks #7" Andrea Rosen Gallery, NY Anish Kapoor, "Untitled" (Fiberglass) Lisson Gallery, London/Milan Antony Gormley "TENSE" Sean Kelly Gallery, NY (sculpture in plex case) - Galerie Guido W. Baudach, Berlin Olaf Nicolai (opaque black neon) Galerie Eigen + Art Leipzig, Berlin Claude Rutault, "definition/method 523: reduplication 4" (detail) Glerie Perrotin Paris, Hong Kong Daniel Ferman, "Lea" sculpture - James Cohan Gallery NY / Shanghai David Maljkovic, "Untitled" plant / shelf, Metro Pictures, NY Ivan Morley (sewn thread on canvas) Kimmerich Gallery, NY (wall sculpture) Galerie Meyer Kainer, Vienna (sculpture) Galerija Gregor Podnar - Berlin Ljubljana Gedi Sibony "Untitled" cardboard and paint Greene Naftali, NY IRAN do ESPRIRITO SANTO "Twist 7B" (Pencil on photogram) Sean Kelly Gallery, NY Jarbas Lopes -(detail) schreaded plastic bags- A Gentil Carioca, Rio de Janeiro. Jaume Plensa "Yorkshire Soul III" Galerie Lelong, Paris/Zurich/NY Jose Damsceno "Manifold Fountain" Galleria Fortes Vilaca, Sao Paulo Jose Damsceno "Pipe Rock Circuit" Galleria Fortes Vilaca, Sao Paulo Josephine Halvorson, "Chalkboard" (oil on canvas painting) Sikkema Jenkins & Co., NY Joshua Callagham "Two Dollar Umbrella" (large) Steven Turner Contemporary, L.A. KAWS, "CHUM (KCA3)" James Cohan Gallery NY/Shanghai Michael Joo, "Farmers & Merchants" (mirrored glass) Kukje Gallery, Seoul / Tina Kim Gallery NY Lara Favaretto "361 C" wool chord over a found painting - Galleria Franco Noero, Turin, Italy Lara Favaretto "361 C" (wool chord detail) LOS CARPINTEROS "Derrame de Pared ORO dos" (gold plated brass) Sean Kelly Galery, NY LOUISE BOURGEOIS "Untitled" fabric 2005 CHEIM & READ Gallery, NY ABELOW, "The Artist" (drawing series) James Fuentes, NY Massimo Bartolini "Milu's Airplane" wood, 2009, Firth Street Gallery, London Subodh Gupta "Et tu, Duchamp?" Houser & Wirth Gallery, NY Louise Bourgeoise "Untitled" 2004 sculptures hanging in trees, Houser & Wirth Gallery, NY Liz Cohen "Trabantimino" (custom beige car) Salon 94, NY Jorge Mendez Blake "All the Borges' books" (the disappearance of books in libraries will lessen their mirror of societies - all of the books authored by Jorge Luis Borges were checked out of every library in NYC and placed in a crate at Frieze during the duration of the fair.) the "barely-there" drawing represents the loss of books. Meessen De Clercq Contemporary Art - Brussels, Belgium Paulina Olowaska, "Natascha" neon, Metro Pictures, NY Ruben Grilo "Laser piece no.1" (detail of projected animated image) - NoguerasBlachard (gallery), Barcelona Ryan Gander "Asian discount, 1993 by Santo Sterne by Ryan Gander" " (detail) - Annet Gelink (gallery), Amsterdam Ryan McLaughlin (BFA-RISD, lives & works in Berlin - painting series) Luttgenmeijer, Berlin. Rylan Suggett, "TV On/Off" Mixed Media on fabric, Richard Telles Gallery, Los Angeles Lorna Simpson (ink and collage) Salon 94, Bowery, NY Lisa Williamson, Shane Campbell Gallery, Chicago Steven Shearer, "Plaster" (photo-inkjet print) Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Zurich Subodh Gupta "The Family Nest" Hauser & Wirth Gallery, NY (6 wall sculptures in various colors) Tanya Leighton Gallery, Berlin The Breeder gallery, Athens (featured painting) Mandla Reuter, "The Gate" concrete & steel - Galerie Mezzanin, Vienna Vermelho (gallery) Sao Paulo (graphite drawings) Vik Muniz "Washington Crossing the Delaware" (detail) - Sikkema Jenkins & Co. NY Vik Muniz "Washington Crossing the Delaware" (after Emanuel Leutze, medium: torn pictures from magazines) 60 x 108 inches - Sikkema Jenkins & Co. NY Weiwei Ai "Moon Chest" 2008 (Huali wood) Lisson Gallery, London / Milan Jay DeFoe "Untitled" (summer image) oil and collage on paper Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Zurich Olaf Nicolai "Why women like to buy textiles that feel nice" (detail) Galerie Eigen + Art Leipzig, Berlin Danny McDonald, "Big Corn" Isabella Bortozzi Gallerie Amanda Ross-Ho "Time Waits for No One" (large) The Approach, London The crowd inside the tent at Frieze Art Fair NY, 2012. FOOD The Frieze Art Fair took some time to think about the food service available at this isolated location. Inside the tent were The Fat Radish (a salad and sandwich option), Sant Amroeus Cafe, Frankies Spuntino Restaurant, Intelligensia Coffee and outside the tent was Roberta's Pizza, The Standard and Biergarten. Plus there were several Food Trucks parked near the North Entrance to the tent. Until later, Jack All photos of the Frieze Art Fair are © Copyright 2012 Jack A. Atkinson and were taken with permission of the fair administration and the individual galleries. ARTSnFOOD, All rights reserved. Concept & Original Text © Copyright 2012 Jack A. Atkinson under all International intellectual property and copyright laws. Images © individual artists, fabricators, respective owners or assignees
neutelings riedijk architects, in collaboration with iris van herpen, has designed naturalis, the national research institute for biodiversity, in leiden.
Regent’s Park is the perfect place to go on an autumn day in London. Autumn foliage from Regent’s Canal to St John’s Lodge and Frieze sculpture makes this one of the best autumn walks in London.
Scissors by Michael Craig-Martin in the garden at Chatsworth House
721 5th Avenue the vanished New York City Art Deco building designed Warren and Wetmore home of Stewart and Company and then Bonwit Teller.
#ArtThursdays Frieze Sculpture 2022 at Regent's Park 14TH SEPTEMBER - 13ND NOVEMBER 2022 View this post on Instagram A post shared by Stööki (@stooki) For this week's #ArtThursday feature we headed to see Frieze Sculpture 2022 in The Regent’s Park. Curated by Clare Lilley (Yorkshire Sculpture Park Director) for the tenth consecutive year. The awesome line-up consists of 19 international artists, and it was the perfect way to spend an Autumn day at this public art exhibition. Frieze Sculpture is free and open to all and runs alongside Frieze London and Frieze Masters, which both take place from 12 to 16 October 2022 in The Regent’s Park, bringing together the world’s leading galleries to celebrate the creative spirit of the city. Check out a rundown of each of the pieces featured below... 👀 Ida Ekblad, BOOK OF BOREDOM, 2022 (Galerie Max Hetzler) Conveying a rich sense of abundance and corporality, this painted bronze sculpture presents a vibrant composition, filled with fragmented, angular patterns and shapes, from the artist’s own expressive paintings. Follow: idaekblad Ugo Rondinone, yellow blue monk, 2020 (Gladstone) Ugo Rondinone’s yellow blue monk (2020) is part of the artist’s recent “nuns + monks” series. These works explore the transcendence offered by the natural world, and through color, form, and mass, evoke an altogether contemporary version of the sublime. Follow: @ugorondinone0 Matthew Darbyshire, Hercules Meets Galatea, 2022 (Herald St) The re-imagining of Greco-Roman figures in Hercules Meets Galatea encourages us to examine the ever-changing lexicon of sculptural motifs including sign, symbol, substance, structure, surface, source and sexuality. Follow: @sussudiodarbyshire John Giorno, SPACE MIRRORS MIND, 2022 (Almine Rech) The John Giorno Foundation and Almine Rech present a previously unseen sculpture by John Giorno from the late series entitled Stone Poems: a found glacial granite into which a poetic phrase is engraved. Follow: @giornofoundation / alminerech Alicja Kwade, Tunnel-Tell (Ceci Sera), 2020 (KÖNIG GALERIE & PACE Gallery) A solid boulder is punctured effortlessly by a stainless-steel tube. Tunnel-Tell (Ceci Sera) examines the space of brute matter by permitting viewers to peer through solid mass. This simple act allegorizes our own limited view of what we call reality. Follow: @alicjakwade Jordy Kerwick, Vertical Plane Me, 2022 (Vigo Gallery) Jordy Kerwick (Australia, b. 1982) transports you into his dream world of mythology, folk law and misadventure, that feel like a reinterpretation of his 10-year-old self’s hopes, dreams and fears. These sculptures carved in Portland Stone are inspired by Ken Webster’s book ‘Vertical Planes’ (1989). Follow: @jordykerwick John Wood and Paul Harrison, 10 signs for a park, 2022 (GALERIA VERA CORTÊS) 10 SIGNS FOR A PARK The kind of signs you see in a park, but not the signs you see in a park. They don’t point you anywhere, tell you anything or ask anything of you. They point at themselves, tell you things you already know and only ask you to have a little think. The kind of think you’d have in a park. Follow: @galeriaveracortes / @woodandharrison Tim Etchells, Don’t Look Back, 2022 (VITRINE, London / Basel) A simple idiomatic phrase, cut into weathering steel, asks us to think about it afresh in dialogue with context and landscape. Follow: @tim_etchells N.S. Harsha, Desired for – Arrived at, 2021 (Victoria Miro & Vadehra Art Gallery) Harsha’s bronze sculpture Desired for – Arrived at is constructed not on the basis of linearity or logic but on the crooked, visceral movements of desire in our ever-changing positions in life. Follow: @victoriamirogallery / @vadehraartgallery Shaikha Al Mazrou (b. 1988, UAE), Red Stack, 2022 (Lawrie Shabibi) Enlarging her folded steel sculptures, which resemble balloons and displays of origami, Al Mazrou seeks to represent tension, weight and space, borrowing from conceptual art and geometric abstraction, and formally from minimalism. Follow: @lawrieshabibi Ro Robertson, Drench, 2022 (Maximillian William) The latest manifestation of Ro Robertson’s exploration of the ‘terrain of the queer body’ which welds the figure and landscape as one. Follow: @maximillian_william Pablo Reinoso, Speaker’s Corner, 2022 (Waddington Custot, London) With the convivial grouping of his ‘Speaker’s Corner’, Pablo Reinoso invites you to sit down and relax, to chat with friends or contemplate the beautiful natural surroundings of The Regent’s Park. Follow: @waddingtoncustot Emma Hart, Big Time, 2022 (The Sunday Painter) Hart makes art that does something; here setting her sculptures to work outside. Radiant ceramic sundials, reinvented with faces, wait for exposure. Each dial is under a different time pressure, taking way too much or not having enough. Follow: @thesundaypainter Beverly Pepper (1922-2020), Curvae in Curvae, 2013-2018 (Marlborough) Follow: @marlborough_gallery Péju Alatise, Sim and the Yellow Glass Birds, 2022 (kó Art Space, Lagos, Nigeria) Sim is a nine-year old girl who lives in two worlds. In one world she is a domestic servant in Lagos. In the other world, Sim lives in dreamland with talking birds and butterflies where she can fly. Follow: @peju.alatise / @ko_artspace Join our mailing list to keep up to date with the #ArtThursdays blög störies! The Regent's Park London, NW1 4NR #StookiMovement
Monumental bas-relief friezes by Charles Comfort, Central Station (French: Gare Centrale), 895 de la Gauchetiere West, Montreal. Central Station was the result of a Public Works construction program that began in 1938,. It opened on July 14, 1943. The station’s Departure Hall is decorated with the historic Charles Comfort frieze that illustrates the lives of Canadians, their industries, their activities and dreams for the future. Decorative elements and themes show people engaged in a wide array of typical Canadian work and leisure activities. They are situated across both ends of the main station concourse.