Want this question answered?
You probably mean Joseph Stella (1877-1946). He was an Italian-born American painter. He painted futuristic visions mostly of industries. Sometimes he alluded to Christian altarpieces by putting together three industry views, so implying that industry was replacing religion.
It is a geometric model of the physical universe . The three dimensions are length, width, and depth or height
The artist paints only three paintings a year.
sc
Three would be:The invention of the printing pressThe reformationForming of the Spanish inquisition
I wasn't familiar with this piece until I looked it up. It is a chair, a life-size photo of that chair, and an enlarged dictionary definition of the word "chair." If your gallery is displaying this work, you don't get the chair, the photo or the definition; you get a copy of the definition, a drawing explaining how to set it up, and instructions to get a chair, photograph it and blow the photo up to full size, create the poster with the definition on it (all of which is much easier now that we have big inkjet printers, than it was when Kosuth devised this piece) and hang it in a certain fashion. Kosuth asks, is a concept valid if its realization changes every time it's executed? My feeling of this piece is, it only displays its full power as a collection, perhaps in a book or a web page. If you see one installation of One and Three Chairs you think, "so what?" In isolation, this is a very boring work. Only when you see how a number of people have executed Kosuth's concept does this make sense.
I wasn't familiar with this piece until I looked it up. It is a chair, a life-size photo of that chair, and an enlarged dictionary definition of the word "chair." If your gallery is displaying this work, you don't get the chair, the photo or the definition; you get a copy of the definition, a drawing explaining how to set it up, and instructions to get a chair, photograph it and blow the photo up to full size, create the poster with the definition on it (all of which is much easier now that we have big inkjet printers, than it was when Kosuth devised this piece) and hang it in a certain fashion. Kosuth asks, is a concept valid if its realization changes every time it's executed? My feeling of this piece is, it only displays its full power as a collection, perhaps in a book or a web page. If you see one installation of One and Three Chairs you think, "so what?" In isolation, this is a very boring work. Only when you see how a number of people have executed Kosuth's concept does this make sense.
When the delivery truck careened through the town circle, it left three chairs in the fountain. A complete dining room set has six chairs, not three chairs. Does the orchestra's string section have room for three chairs?
Some examples of conceptual art include "Fountain" by Marcel Duchamp, "One and Three Chairs" by Joseph Kosuth, and "My Bed" by Tracey Emin. These works challenge traditional notions of art by focusing on the ideas and concepts behind the piece rather than the physical craftsmanship.
141.75 (A+)
$189/4 chairs = $47.25 per chair. Then $47.25/chair x 3 chairs = $141.75 total for 3 chairs.
Three types of patio chairs are wicker, wooden, and metal. It is all about preference as to which one is more preferred. However, most of the best selling patio chairs are metal chairs.
Three Chairs for Betty - 1953 was released on: USA: 23 January 1953
one row of 18 chairs two rows of 9 chairs three rows of 6 chairs
The cast of Three Chairs for Betty - 1953 includes: Robert Hutton as Bob
National Business Furniture has a large selection of orthopedic chairs, including Air Comfort System chairs, Ortho chairs and Devon chairs. All three brands are high quality.
Three Chairs for Betty - 1953 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Approved USA:Passed (National Board of Review)