Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Hockney’s closest friend Henry Geldzahler – the legendary curator, critic and king of the New York art world – dominates the centre of the composition, framed by the city’s skyscrapers. Christopher Scott, his then-boyfriend, hovers to the right like a fleeting apparition.

  2. 25 de feb. de 2019 · In one of his greatest works — the double portrait Henry Geldzahler and Christopher Scott, which is being offered from The Barney A. Ebsworth Collection at Christie’s in London on 6 March — the British artist painted Geldzahler with his then partner in their 7th Avenue apartment.

  3. David Hockney’s Henry Geldzahler and Christopher Scott exemplifies his mastery of portraiture during a transformative period in his career. The artwork presents a strikingly modern composition, capturing the influential art curator Henry Geldzahler and his friend Christopher Scott in an interior setting that is both intimate and formal.

  4. Henry Geldzahler es uno de los mejores curadores del siglo XX, y no solo aparece con su socio y pintor Christopher Scott, sino que a través de varios retratos se muestra el paso de los años en su rostro.

  5. Geldzahler is the subject of a documentary film called Who Gets to Call It Art? (2006) by Peter Rosen. He is depicted in portraits by several of his artist friends, including a famous 1969 double portrait by David Hockney of Geldzahler with his then partner, painter Christopher Scott . [15]

  6. Henry Geldzahler and Christopher Scott (1969) — A Watershed Moment for David Hockney. Monday, December 17, 2018. David Hockney’s double portrait of Geldzahler, a curator at The Met, and his partner, painter Christopher Scott, helped to secure his reputation.

  7. 17 de dic. de 2018 · Henry Geldzahler and Christopher Scott is a glowing meditation on human and visual relationships. Hockney’s closest friend Henry Geldzahler – the legendary curator, critic and king of the New York art world – dominates the centre of the composition, framed by soaring skyscrapers.