Nevelson: Wood Sculptures (1973); Glimcher, Arnold. From Wordnik.com. [Louise Nevelson.] Reference
Photographs of four large-scale sculptures by Nevelson. From Wordnik.com. [Jewish Women Artists - Louise Nevelson] Reference
Dawns + Dusks: Louise Nevelson (1976); Murray, Elizabeth. From Wordnik.com. [Louise Nevelson.] Reference
In numerous interviews, Nevelson described her predestined path. From Wordnik.com. [Artist's Slice of City Is Restored to Life] Reference
Nevelson left her son with her parents to travel through Europe. From Wordnik.com. [Jewish Women Artists - Louise Nevelson] Reference
Grain elevators, like a white Louise Nevelson sculpture, Alberta. From Wordnik.com. [What Is Wrong with Loving Canada?] Reference
Nevelson later added white and gold coloring to her constructions. From Wordnik.com. [Jewish Women Artists - Louise Nevelson] Reference
Louise Nevelson: Atmospheres and Environments (1980); Anderson, Wayne. From Wordnik.com. [Louise Nevelson.] Reference
For this installation, Nevelson created several anthropomorphic totems. From Wordnik.com. [Louise Nevelson.] Reference
By the time I met Nevelson, she was world famous and, I believe, quite rich. From Wordnik.com. [Women I Have Dressed (and Undressed!)] Reference
Louise Nevelson passed away tragically on April 17 1988 in her home at New York. From Wordnik.com. [SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles - Part 577] Reference
Nevelson appeared in a Life magazine spread posing with Moon Garden + One in 1958. From Wordnik.com. [Louise Nevelson.] Reference
At this time, Nevelson was exposed to the artwork of Marcel Duchamp and Pablo Picasso. From Wordnik.com. [Jewish Women Artists - Louise Nevelson] Reference
At the front of the chapel, Nevelson hung from the ceiling a gilded abstract crucifix. From Wordnik.com. [Louise Nevelson.] Reference
While urban settings were to become her canvas, Nevelson grew up in bucolic Rockland, Me. From Wordnik.com. [Artist's Slice of City Is Restored to Life] Reference
This page includes slides of eight Nevelson works that are in the Whiney Museum collection. From Wordnik.com. [Jewish Women Artists - Louise Nevelson] Reference
In 1947, Karl Nierendorf died unexpectedly, depriving Nevelson of her staunchest supporter. From Wordnik.com. [Louise Nevelson.] Reference
The City of New York also honored Nevelson by naming a plaza after her in downtown Manhattan. From Wordnik.com. [Jewish Women Artists - Louise Nevelson] Reference
In 1931, Nevelson went to Munich to study with the well-known modernist painter Hans Hofmann. From Wordnik.com. [Louise Nevelson.] Reference
Nevelson is renowned for her "assemblages," found objects she transformed into large sculptures. From Wordnik.com. [Fern Siegel: Stage Door: Occupant, Cirque Dreams Jungle Fantasy] Reference
In her honor, an area near the World Trade Center in New York is named after her as Nevelson Plaza. From Wordnik.com. [SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles - Part 577] Reference
One evening Nevelson, dressed to the nines, was being honored by a prestigious college of the arts. From Wordnik.com. [Women I Have Dressed (and Undressed!)] Reference
But the "vicissitudes" were brutal, and Albee, who was friends with Nevelson, is still tough on her. From Wordnik.com. [Fern Siegel: Stage Door: Occupant, Cirque Dreams Jungle Fantasy] Reference
Tiring of Munich, Nevelson traveled around Europe, working as an extra in films in Vienna and Berlin. From Wordnik.com. [Louise Nevelson.] Reference
When I was a kid, Nevelson was a frequent celebrity houseguest of the art-and-oil crowd in Fort Worth. From Wordnik.com. [Art Fairs to Remember] Reference
This page includes a brief biography of Louise Nevelson, as well as photographs of five Nevelson works. From Wordnik.com. [Jewish Women Artists - Louise Nevelson] Reference
This link includes a brief biography of Nevelson and representations of three of the Louise Nevelson stamps. From Wordnik.com. [Jewish Women Artists - Louise Nevelson] Reference
When Nevelson was 60 years old, she started to weld discarded objects and steel into rigid geometrical forms. From Wordnik.com. [Jewish Women Artists - Louise Nevelson] Reference
Nevelson (1899-1988), known in her time as the "Grande Dame of Contemporary Sculpture," designed the park in 1978. From Wordnik.com. [Artist's Slice of City Is Restored to Life] Reference
In the mid-thirties, Nevelson turned from drawing to sculpture and it was here that she found her true artistic identity. From Wordnik.com. [Jewish Women Artists - Louise Nevelson] Reference
Occupant chronicles the life and times of Nevelson; part bio, part quest for that intangible quality that defines an artist. From Wordnik.com. [Fern Siegel: Stage Door: Occupant, Cirque Dreams Jungle Fantasy] Reference
After her return to the United States in 1932, Nevelson joined a circle of well-known artists that included Diego Rivera and Ben Shahn. From Wordnik.com. [Jewish Women Artists - Louise Nevelson] Reference
The element of cubism that Nevelson adopted for her own was the structuring of abstract compositional elements within a geometric grid. From Wordnik.com. [Louise Nevelson.] Reference
This Day in History March 6, 2000 Louise Nevelson stamps issued by U.S. Postal Service. From Wordnik.com. [Louise Nevelson.] Reference
Beginning with Mike’s birth, the Nevelson domestic situation worsened. From Wordnik.com. [Louise Nevelson.] Reference
This page includes a biography of Nevelson and a list of Nevelson’s exhibitions. From Wordnik.com. [Jewish Women Artists - Louise Nevelson] Reference
"Certainly, I would think with the Nevelson play that it would be clear to anybody. From Wordnik.com. [Edward Albee at 80:] Reference
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