Kanada:The painting “Halifax” by Gerhard Richter: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

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== Address and further information ==
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== Address ==
 
'''Anna Leonowens Gallery'''<br>
 
'''Anna Leonowens Gallery'''<br>
 
1891 Granville St<br>
 
1891 Granville St<br>
Halifax, NS <br>
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Halifax, NS  
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* [http://theanna.nscad.ca// Website of the Gallery]<br>
 
* [http://theanna.nscad.ca// Website of the Gallery]<br>
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== Further information ==
 
'''Description of the piece "128 Details of a Picture"'''<br>
 
'''Description of the piece "128 Details of a Picture"'''<br>
 
22:45-23:55<br>
 
22:45-23:55<br>
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* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bH2cx8hAgJs Video ]<br>
 
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bH2cx8hAgJs Video ]<br>

Aktuelle Version vom 12. Oktober 2020, 15:40 Uhr

“Halifax” – detail © Courtesy of the NSCAD University Archive and Permanent Art Collection

With its flourishing arts and music scene, Halifax has inspired well-known figures from all over the world, including artists like Gerhard Richter, who taught for a summer semester as a guest lecturer at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (NSCAD) in 1978. During his stay, the artist didn’t have a studio, so he concentrated on small-form pieces and experimented with photography. Over the course of several evenings, he produced a series of abstract pencil drawings, measuring only 9x7 centimetres. They were exhibited by Konrad Fischer in October 1979.

At the Anna Leonowens Gallery © Courtesy of the NSCAD University Archive and Permanent Art Collection
Anna Leonowens Gallery © Goethe-Institut Montreal

The artwork “Halifax” (1978) was produced at the same time, and he exhibited it in the Anna Leonowens Gallery at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design the same year. He mounted the photographs in a 4x4 grid on 8 white panels and arranged them into two rows with 4 squares. He presented an identical version in a room at NSCAD from August 21st to September 9th, 1978. As an experimental work, he published 128 close-ups of this very painting with the NSCAD Press as a photographic documentation. He assembled the small black and white pictures into a mosaic, creating a new artwork, which he named “128 Details from a Picture”.

Anna Leonowens Gallery © Goethe-Institut Montreal

Address

Anna Leonowens Gallery
1891 Granville St
Halifax, NS

Further information

Description of the piece "128 Details of a Picture"
22:45-23:55