NOTES FROM THE FIELD.The J. Paul Getty Jean Paul Getty (December 15, 1892 – June 6, 1976) was an American industrialist and founder of the Getty Oil Company. Biography Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, into a family already in the petroleum business, he was one of the first people in the world with a Museum has announced an important gift of 256 Brett Weston photographs. Weston (1911-93), the son of Edward Weston, forged his own photographic career after starting off as an apprentice to his father in Santa Monica during the 1930s. After early forays into documentary photography, covering metropoles on both coasts, Weston turned his attention to the natural landscape. He has been credited with leading his more famous father in the direction of the sand dunes, boulders and plants that comprise much of the elder Weston's later work. These 256 prints are of special importance because, in a dramatic gesture on his eightieth birthday, Brett Weston burnt most of his negatives to express his belief that a negative should only be printed by the photographer. The photographs are a gift from Christian Keese, an art collector and chairman of American Bancorp of Oklahoma. . . . The New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Foundation for the Arts (NYFA NYFA New York Foundation for the Arts (New York, NY) NYFA New York Film Academy NYFA New York Fashion Academy (Seattle, WA) NYFA New York Flora Association (Albany, NY) ) has awarded over $1 million, in the form of $7000 individual grants, to 161 New York State artists in the following fields: Computer Arts, Crafts, Film, Nonfiction Literature, Poetry, Performance Art/ Multidisciplinary Work, Printmaking/Drawing/Artists Books and Sculpture. NYFA is New York's largest grant provider to individual artists, providing nearly $8 million in grants and services annually. Since 1985, NYFA has awarded nearly 3000 artists with more than $18 million dollars. This year saw the first award of the NYFA Prize, a $25,000 unrestricted additional award to the $7000 Fellowship. Monteith mon·teith n. A large punch bowl having a notched rim on which cups can be hung. [Possibly after Monteith (Monteigh), an eccentric 17th-century Scotsman who wore a cloak scalloped at the hem.] McCollum, a Fellow in Film, received this new award after being selected by NYFA's Artist Advisory Committee from six finalists chosen from the NYFA Fellowship recipients. The following eight categories will be included in the 2002 Fellowships: architecture/environmental structures, choreography, fiction, music composition, painting, photography, playwriting/screenwriting and video. For more information on the 2001 Fellows, or to obtain an application for 2002 Fellowships, visit www.nyfa.o rg/artists_fellwships/index.html. . . . The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
af·ter·im·age n. 28, no. 5 for more on this artist], Justin Cronin, Vincent Feldman, William Larson, Enid Mark, Gabriel Martinez, Maria Rodriquez, Laurence Salzmann, William Smith, Ron Tarver and Shanti Shanti (from Sanskrit शािन्त śāntiḥ) can mean:
IMLS Institute for Museum and Library Services (US) IMLS Institute of Medical Laboratory Sciences ), an independent federal grantmaking agency that supports the natio n's libraries and museums. A Professor and Interim Director of the School of Library and Information Studies at Texas Woman's University Texas Woman's University, main campus at Denton; state supported; primarily for women; est. 1901. It is the largest state-supported university for women in the country. , Martin is also a librarian, archivist ARCHIVIST. One to whose care the archives have been confided. and administrator. His areas of interest include the history of American libraries and librarianship and the history of the exploration and mapping of the American southwest. . . . The Dorothea Lange-Paul Taylor Prize was awarded to photographer Paola Ferrarlo and writer Mary Cappello. This $10,000 annual award is given to encourage documentary work in the tradition of American photographer Lange and social scientist Taylor. Ferrario and Cappello's project "Pane Amaro/ Bitter Bread: The Struggle of New Immigrants to Italy" will document new immigrants' arrivals in rural areas-the areas where immigrants lives usually go unrecorded. For a copy of the guidelines and an application for next year's Lange-Taylor prize, send SASE SASE - Specific Application Service Element. Opposite: CASE. to Lange-Taylor Prize Committee, Center for Documentary Studies, 1317 W. Pettigrew St., Durham, NC 27705 The Fri ends of Photography in San Francisco has announced a major new award for emerging photographers. The Bucksbaum Family Award for American photography includes a cash prize of $10 000 as Nell as a solo exhibition at the Ansel Adams enter, the museum of the Friends of Photography, and it will be given annually to an emerging American photographer. Fifteen photography experts around the country will be asked for nominations and a panel of five judges will select: he final recipient from nominees that have not previously received national or international recognition. The first winner of this award will be announced in August this year and the accompanying exhibition is scheduled for October 9 through November 11. |
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