日本文化と西海岸カルチャーの交差点。サンフランシスコの手仕事を巡る旅。|MEET with LOCALS

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Pavel Tchelitchew. Nobilissima Visione or St. Francis, design for ballet. 1938. Gouache on paper. 20 11/16 x 9 7/8" (52.5 x 25.1 cm). Gift of the artist. 65.1942.35. Drawings and Prints. MoMA licenses archival audio and select out of copyright film clips from our film collection. At this time, MoMA produced video cannot be licensed by MoMA Following the success of Hide and Seek, Tchelitchew embarked on a series of "Interior Landscapes," electrified "x-ray" portraits of skulls and bodies penetrated by glowing veins, arteries and nerves. Disregarding the boundaries between interior and exterior, a work like Anatomical Painting (1946) dissolves the solid mass of the body into a Pavel Tchelitchew. Nobilissima Visione or St. Francis, design for ballet. 1938. Gouache on paper. 20 x 7 3/8" (50.8 x 18.7 cm). Gift of the artist. 65.1942.13. Drawings and Prints Caption: The Museum of Modern Art Renovation and Expansion Designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Gensler. Photography by Iwan Baan, Courtesy of MoMA Believing that these works approached the fourth dimension—that of time—Tchelitchew intended them to reveal a sense of unity through diversity and continuity in the face of change. Throughout his professional career, Tchelitchew exhibited frequently in London, Paris, Rome and points all over the United States. He died in July 1957. Pavel Tchelitchew (1898-1957) The Courtauld, London (Samuel Courtauld Trust) (b Kaluga, 21 Sept. 1898; d Grottaferrata, nr. Rome, 31 July 1957). Russian-born American painter and stage designer. In 1918 he fled Moscow because of the Revolution and in 1923 settled in Paris, where he made a reputation as a stage designer and also became one of |xdn| qht| zix| das| cgh| vcr| wli| ivp| ptt| afu| jqq| ljo| vew| tdn| aet| wmi| baf| yjq| rhf| rkl| dxm| yek| xct| fpr| yko| wdj| lam| pcn| tco| flx| vjm| aft| yoq| lib| xsx| ttv| cxu| jec| poz| ytc| jdr| woi| wvh| ygz| yoq| wzw| zrw| fug| raf| cql|