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#vic woodson
t5ltherapy · 1 year
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viinas · 3 years
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So when I was in middle school, the first Evernight book came out and I was like. Obsessed with the series in my early adolescence. My taste in books has changed a lot since then so I haven’t revisited the series in years but I was feeling nostalgic recently and read through some of what I remembered to be my favorite bits and wanted to draw some of the characters. 
Forgive me for any inaccuracies because for the details I didn’t remember, I had to skim through the books to find (some to no avail.) For example, I’m not clear on what Bianca’s eye color is or whether Charity’s hair is long or short.
I may have subconsciously modeled Ranulf after Mob. Bowlcut bois.
Also can you tell by my thirsty looking Lucas that I was in love with him in middle school. I wanted to marry him so bad haha.
@claudiagray og senpai notice me
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junker-town · 4 years
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The Falcons’ top priority now should be drafting Chase Young
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Photo by Jamie Sabau/Getty Images
The Ohio State DE would give Atlanta the consistent pass rusher it’s been missing.
Things are not going well for the Atlanta Falcons, and even that in itself might be an understatement. On Sunday, Atlanta dropped to 1-7 on the season following a 27-20 home loss to the Seattle Seahawks. It’s also not looking good for head coach Dan Quinn, who may be leading the Falcons to their worst season since they went 3-13 in 1996.
Atlanta is headed into a bye week, and after the Week 8 loss, Falcons owner Arthur Blank suggested that there might not be a coaching change in the immediate future. Player support of the embattled coach might be enough to keep Quinn until at least the end of the season — as The Falcoholic points out, a coaching change wouldn’t do this team much good at this point.
For now, the Falcons’ main goal should be losing enough so that they can draft Chase Young.
Young would give them the dominant pass rusher off the edge the defense has been missing.
The Ohio State defensive end is arguably the most unstoppable player in college football this season. He has 13.5 sacks through eight games this season (6.5 away from the FBS season record), and he had a career day against Wisconsin this past weekend, getting four sacks and forcing two fumbles.
Chase Young is the best defensive player in college football. Let's try that again, Chase Young is the best PLAYER in college football. pic.twitter.com/U9hTyhyBV8
— PFF College (@PFF_College) October 27, 2019
Young’s play is so impressive that Buckeyes head coach Ryan Day claims he’s better than the No. 2 overall pick from the last draft, Nick Bosa, who’s currently a candidate for NFL Defensive Player of the Year.
“The best I’ve been around,” Day said about Young, via ESPN. “I had a chance to see Nick Bosa last year and I coached in the NFL and saw some really good players at different times. But he is as good as I’ve been around, again, because he’s so versatile.”
Young’s Week 9 performance vaulted into the Heisman conversation, although a defensive player hasn’t won that award since Charles Woodson in 1997.
The Heisman might be a long shot, but at the pace he’s currently playing, Young is a lock to be a top-five pick in the 2020 NFL Draft.
The Falcons need to make defense a priority with this upcoming draft class.
Atlanta doesn’t need much help on offense. With the likes of Matt Ryan, Julio Jones, Calvin Ridley, and Austin Hooper, the team is set at key positions like quarterback, wide receiver, and tight end. The Falcons have done a good job building the offensive line over the last few seasons, too.
Where the Falcons haven’t prioritized much, in the draft or free agency, is improving the defensive line. In recent drafts, the Falcons selected Takkarist McKinley, Grady Jarrett, and Vic Beasley. Still, Atlanta has the worst adjusted sack rate in the league, and the last Falcon to have a double-digits sack season was Beasley in 2016. He totaled only 10 over his next two seasons, and 1.5 so far this year. McKinley has just 13.5 sacks in his whole career. Jarrett currently leads the Falcons with three sacks, though he’s a defensive tackle.
Atlanta could desperately use a consistent edge threat like Young on defense, especially to complement Jarrett. Here’s the Falcoholic’s take on selecting Young as a top-five pick in 2020:
The top priority for the Falcons heading into the 2020 draft must be securing an impact pass rusher. Their failure to acquire one has held the defense back for the better part of a decade. The pass defense will never be successful as long as the pass rush sucks, and a top-5 pick is the perfect place to address that need.
Ohio State’s Chase Young is considered by some to be the best pass-rushing prospect in some time.
The Falcons will have some competition in the race to the top of the draft, though.
Where exactly the Falcons will end up in the draft order will be key.
The Falcons have just one win so far, and the schedule doesn’t get any easier. Their most winnable games remaining are two against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Winless Miami and Cincinnati are currently in the top two spots of the draft order, but they play each other in December. So there’s a chance Atlanta ends up ahead of one of them.
However, even if the Dolphins and Bengals get the Nos. 1 and 2 picks, both of these teams will probably draft a quarterback. Possibilities include Alabama’s Tua Tagovailoa or perhaps Oregon’s Justin Herbert or LSU’s Joe Burrow. Atlanta doesn’t need a quarterback, which means it could still land Young at No. 3 or 4.
If the draft started tomorrow, the only other team that could snag Young before Atlanta is 1-7, but it has needs along the offensive line it’ll likely prioritize. Then again, if Washington opts to take the best player available — which is Young — that could put Atlanta at risk of missing out on him.
The Falcons themselves have already recognized that taking Young would make a ton of sense. After Atlanta’s Week 7 loss to the Rams, the official Falcons podcast discussed drafting Young would be wise to make an immediate impact.
Even if Atlanta isn’t running Quinn’s defense in 2020, Young can be the disruptive piece it’s been missing, and having him alongside Garrett, McKinley, and a healthy Keanu Neal would be quite the scary front seven.
Obviously, where exactly Young and Atlanta end up in the draft order remains to be seen, but if the Falcons keep losing, they could be in position to get him come April. And that might just be the best possible upside for their abysmal season.
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swisscoin4-blog · 5 years
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The Bear’s Den, November 2, 2018
BEAR DOWN, CHICAGO BEARS, BEAR DOWN!!!!
BEARRRSSSS
Medina: Bryce Callahan Is Ballin’ Out and Playing His Way to a Potential Contract Extension - Bleacher Nation - Bryce Callahan is having a breakout year in a contract year. Considering his importance to the defense, is he worthy of an extension?
Bernstein: Bears Getting Their Share Of Breaks - 670 The Score - The Bears are capitalizing on opportune developments -- and must keep doing so.
Bears defense matchup well vs. Bills - ESPN Video - NFL Live’s Tedy Bruschi and Darren Woodson explain their picks for the Week 9 matchup between the Bears and Bills.
Emma: Bears Getting Running Game Off The Ground - 670 The Score - Coach Matt Nagy has vowed for a more efficient Bears rushing attack.
Emma: Vic Fangio - Bears ‘Probably’ Should’ve Rested Khalil Mack Sooner - 670 The Score - Hampered by an ankle injury, Khalil Mack’s status for Sunday remains in doubt.
Letizia's Opponent Outlook: Buffalo Bills By the Numbers - Da Bears Brothers Blog - Here's a deep dive into the numbers for this week's opponent, the Buffalo Bills.
Stankevitz: The Bears have an elite run defense. But how much does that actually matter in today’s NFL? - NBC Sports Chicago - Stopping the run isn't as critical as it used to be in today's pass-happy NFL, though members of the Bears explain why it still is important for the success of their defense.
Bears Mailbag: The Bears' offense vs the Bills' defense will be ... something - NBC Sports Chicago - Answering some your most pressing questions.
Perez: Chicago Bears 2018 Midseason Awards - Bears Wire - Chicago Bears 2018 Midseason Awards, including MVP, Offensive Player of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year and more!
Perez: Sean McDermott uses Bears QB Mitch Trubisky as example for Josh Allen - Bears Wire - Buffalo Bills coach Sean McDermott used Chicago Bears QB Mitch Trubisky as an example for the kind of growth Josh Allen can have next season
Kaufman: Week 9 Key Matchups - ChicagoBears.com - When the Bears take on the Bills Sunday, keep an eye out for these key matchups, including defensive tackle Akiem Hicks against running back LeSean McCoy.
Mayer's Chalk Talk: Is Shaheen returning to practice? - ChicagoBears.com - Senior writer Larry Mayer discusses whether tight end Adam Shaheen will return to practice this week, the Bears not making a trade before the deadline and Jordan Howard’s role after his productive game against the Jets.
Mayer: Run defense remains critical to Bears - ChicagoBears.com - With the proliferation of the passing game in the NFL, a stingy run defense seemingly has lost some of its value. But the Bears realize that stopping an opponent’s ground game is paramount to success.
Mayer: Bears running backs honor Payton - ChicagoBears.com - Walter Payton passed away 19 years ago Thursday, but the legendary Hall of Famer is still very much on the minds of Bears nation, especially the team’s three running backs.
Medina: Wasn't Cody Parkey Supposed to Make Us Forget About the Bears' Kicking Struggles? - Bleacher Nation - Cody Parkey was supposed to bring stability to the kicking game, but some high-profile misses have cast some doubt over the latest kicker to call Soldier Field home.
Finley: After Cody Parkey's miss, Bears coach compares Soldier Field to British Open - Chicago Sun-Times - Cody Parkey’s 40-yard missed field came on a “tough day to kick” Sunday at windy Solider Field, special teams coordinator Chris Tabor said.
Jahns: Why Bills defense is good test for Bears QB Mitch Trubisky - Sun Times - Bears quarterback Mitch Trubisky faces a stiff test this week against the Bills.
Finley: Vic Fangio - Bears 'probably' should have sat Khalil Mack sooner - Sun Times - The Bears might have been wise to sit Khalil Mack once he hurt his right ankle against the Dolphins last month, defensive coordinator Vic Fangio said.
Bears predictions: Week 9 vs. Bills - Sun Times - The Sun-Times’ experts offer their picks for the Bears’ Week 9 game Sunday at the Bills:
Potash: Nathan Peterman expected to start for Bills - Sun Times - Bills quarterback Nathan Peterman has thrown four interceptions this season. He's expected to face the Bears.
Kane: 7 things we heard from Bears coordinators Thursday, including Vic Fangio on letting Khalil Mack play through injury and out-of-line NFL fines - Chicago Tribune - Bears defensive end Khalil Mack was inactive for the first time in 71 career games Sunday against the Jets because of a right ankle injury. He played through the injury for two games because Fangio said the Bears were trying to listen to Mack’s assertions that he was good to play.
Bills 27, Vikings 6: Why this season's most startling upset should be a major warning sign for the Bears - Chicago Tribune - If the Chicago Bears had any urge to see Sunday's game against the last-place Buffalo Bills as a gimme win, they should know better. The Bills' 27-6 destruction of the Minnesota Vikings in Week 3 is a warning sign for Bears coach Matt Nagy and his players.
Kane: Khalil Mack, Allen Robinson remain out in Thursday's Bears practice - Chicago Tribune - Bears outside linebacker Khalil Mack and wide receiver Allen Robinson sat out practice for a second straight day Thursday as both continue to recover from injuries that kept them out of Sunday’s game against the Jets.
Bear Download podcast: The brutality of football and previewing Bears-Bills - Chicago Tribune - Welcome to the weekly Bear Download podcast with Rich Campbell and Dan Wiederer. Listen below or subscribe and listen on iTunes | Spotify | Stitcher | Google Play Rich and Dan preview the Bears' road game Sunday against the Bills. But first they take a deep dive into the brutality of football and...
Audio Mailbag: How Many Wins Will it Take for the Bears to Make the Playoffs? (And More) - Da Bears Brothers Podcast - Da Bears Brothers provide another round of in-depth analysis on questions submitted by the fans in their weekly Audio Mailbag episode.
POLISH SAUSAGE
Projecting 2020 roster locks, bubble players for all 32 NFL teams - ESPN - NFL rosters turn over quickly, and your favorite player could be gone soon. We predicted who will still be on their current teams in two years.
KNOW THY ENEMY
Midseason QB Index: Aaron Rodgers > Tom Brady - NFL.com - Gregg Rosenthal reveals his ranking of all 32 starting quarterbacks at the midpoint of the 2018 NFL season. Have a look at where Aaron Rodgers and Tom Brady land in the pecking order heading into their Week 9 matchup. Ken’s Note: Mitchell Trubisky is worse than Jameis Winston and Blake Bortles? Two benched QB’s? ESPN’s own (stupid) QBR ranks him 7th in the league. I swan, ESPN, consistency be damned.
‘Swiss-Army knife’ TJ Jones expected to take on bigger role in the Lions offense - Pride Of Detroit - It certainly sounds like TJ Jones is expected to take on a much bigger role after the Golden Tate trade.
Viking injury report - Daily Norseman - The list of Minnesota Vikings injuries has been lengthy as of late. And while it doesn’t look like it is letting up, a few names stand out as promising.
Fantasy week 9: A smart player will sit Bills RB LeSean McCoy against the Bears - Sun Times - There’s no reason to wheel out McCoy against a Bears run defense that is third in yards allowed and remains the only team to not allow a rushing TD.
Finley: Bears’ Khalil Mack and Allen Robinson sit — as does Bilal Nichols - Sun Times - Despite Nagy saying that Bilal Nichols being limited with an knee injury Wednesday was precautionary, he did not practice Thursday.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT ON WINDY CITY GRIDIRON
Wiltfong: Both Bears and Bills fans expect a huge Chicago win - Windy City Gridiron - Welcome to SB Nation FanPulse — a survey of fans across the NFL, powered by SurveyMonkey. Each week, we send 32 polls to 100+ plugged in fans from each team. Bears fans, sign up HERE to join...
Berckes' Five Questions with Buffalo Rumblings: “When it comes to Peterson...you just have to wait him out” - Windy City Gridiron - As the Bears roll into Buffalo for their 4th straight game against the AFC East, we prep with Buffalo Rumblings
Householder's 2018 NFL Week 9 Game Preview: Chicago Bears at Buffalo Bills - Windy City Gridiron - The Bears try to make it two in a row with a road trip to Buffalo. Can Chicago drop the Bills through the proverbial table?
Silverstein: When Sid threw seven - Windy City Gridiron - Bears historian Jack M Silverstein looks back at Sid Luckman’s historic 7-touchdown game, 75 years ago this month.
DDKS: Jordan Morgan still available - Windy City Gridiron - There's a young offensive guard out there that has some familiarity with the Bears offense, so should they bring him back?
WCG CONTRIBUTORS BEARS PODCASTS & STREAMS
2 Minute Drill - Website - iTunes - Andrew Link; Steven’s Streaming – Twitch – Steven Schweickert; T-Formation Conversation - Website - iTunes - Lester Wiltfong, Jr.; WCG Radio - Website - iTunes - Robert Zeglinski
THE RULES
Windy City Gridiron Community Guidelines - SBNation.com - We strive to make our communities open and inclusive to sports fans of all backgrounds. The following is not permitted in comments, FanPosts, usernames or anywhere else in an SB Nation community: Comments, FanPosts or usernames that are intolerant or prejudiced; racial or other offensive epithets; Personal attacks or threats on community members; Gendered insults of any kind; Trolling; Click link for full information.
The Bear’s Den Specific Guidelines – The Bear’s Den is a place for Chicago Bears fans to discuss Chicago Bears football, related NFL stories, and general football talk. It is NOT a place to discuss religion or politics or post political pictures or memes, and any posts that do this will be deleted and the poster will be admonished. We do not allow comments posted where the apparent attempt is to cause confrontation in the community. We do not allow gender-directed humor or sexual assault jokes. The staff of WCG are the sole arbiters of what constitutes “apparent attempt to cause confrontation”. We do not allow the “calling out” of other members in any way, shape or form. Posts that do this will be deleted on sight. Bottom line, it’s fine to debate about football, but personal jabs and insults are strictly prohibited. Additionally, if you keep beating the same dead horse over and over and fail to heed a moderator’s warning to stop, you will be banned.
Click on our names to follow us on Twitter:
WCG Contributors: Jeff Berckes; Patti Curl; Eric Christopher Duerrwaechter; Kev H; Sam Householder; Jacob Infante; Aaron Lemming; Andrew Link; Ken Mitchell; Steven Schweickert; Jack Silverstein; EJ Snyder; Lester Wiltfong, Jr.; Whiskey Ranger; Robert Zeglinski; Like us on Facebook.
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Source: https://www.windycitygridiron.com/2018/11/2/18053902/chicago-bears-2018-season-news-updates-analysis-game-eight-buffalo-bills-limit-turnovers-running
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nofomoartworld · 7 years
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Hyperallergic: Art Movements
X-radiograph of Edgar Degas’s “Arabesque over the Right Leg, Left Arm in Front” (© Fitzwilliam Museum)
Art Movements is a weekly collection of news, developments, and stirrings in the art world. Subscribe to receive these posts as a weekly newsletter.
The Guggenheim Museum withdrew three works from its upcoming exhibition Art and China after 1989: Theater of the World, following a public outcry from animal rights activists. The museum attributed their decision to pull works by Peng Yu and Sun Yuan, Huang Yong Ping, and Xu Bing, to “explicit and repeated threats of violence.” An online petition objecting to the works has so far garnered over 750,000 supporters.
Jean Nouvel dismissed claims of worker abuse and exploitation at the Louvre museum in Abu Dhabi as an “old question.” “They have the same conditions, even better conditions, than those I see in other countries,” the architect told the Anglo-American Press Association. “We checked and it was fine. We saw no problem.” A 2015 report by Human Rights Watch concluded that migrant laborers working on Saadiyat Island’s Louvre and Guggenheim museum projects were living in squalid conditions, subjected to wage theft and underpayment, and routinely had their passports confiscated.
A series of X-rays taken by conservationists at the Fitzwilliam Museum revealed Edgar Degas‘s use of wine bottle corks, shop-bought armatures, and old floor boards for his wax sculptures of dancers.
Dissident cartoonist Ramón Esono Ebalé (aka Jamón y Queso) was arrested in Equatorial Guinea. The artist, who has produced work criticizing dictator Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, had travelled back to his home country to renew his passport.
Richard Rogers challenged Prince Charles to engage in a public architecture debate after claiming he knows of five developers who have privately consulted the prince out of fear of his potential opposition. A spokesman for the prince of Wales denied the architect’s claims. In 2015, the Guardian published the so-called “black spider” memos, a number of letters sent by Charles to British government ministers and politicians advocating his stance on a number of socio-political issues — a violation of the monarchy’s tradition of political neutrality.
Nicole Eisenman‘s sculpture “Sketch for a Fountain” (2017) was vandalized for a second time. The work was spray painted with a swastika and a phallus on the eve of Germany’s 2017 election, in which the far-right party Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) made historic gains in the Bundestag.
Hurvin Anderson, “Is it OK to be black?” (2016), oil on canvas, 130 x 130 cm (courtesy the artist)
The 2017 Turner Prize exhibition opened at the Ferens Art Gallery in Hull. This year’s nominees are Hurvin Anderson, Andrea Büttner, Lubaina Himid and Rosalind Nashashibi.
A Manhattan district judge dismissed a lawsuit filed against London’s National Gallery over the ownership of Henri Matisse’s 1908 portrait of Margarete “Greta” Moll.
A group of amateur archaeologists discovered a Roman mosaic in Boxford, England. Part of a larger villa complex, the mosaic is thought to depict Bellerophon, Hercules, and Cupid.
Developers filed an application to destroy the last remaining example of Victorian slum housing in Leicester, England.
The UK’s oldest postcard firm, J Salmon, will close in December. Founded in 1880, the firm remained a family business for five generations.
Anger Management, a pop-up store organized by Marilyn Minter and Andrianna Campbell, opened at the Brooklyn Museum. Featuring works designed by artists including John Baldessari, Jenny Holzer, Barbara Kruger, and Glenn Ligon, the store features objects dedicated to themes of “resistance, hope, and protest.”
The empty lot on the corner of Bedford and North 1st Street in Williamsburg — known to locals for its eccentric dioramas of stuffed animals — was listed for sale.
Transactions
Wisdom King of Passion (Aizen Myōō) (1300s), Kamakura period (1333–1392) to Nanbokuchō period (1336–92), hanging scroll; ink, color, gold and cut gold on silk, 102 x 60.5 cm (courtesy Cleveland Museum of Art)
Agnes Gund donated works by Brice Marden, Robert Colescott, Claes Oldenburg, Donald Sultan, and Adja Yunkers to the Cleveland Museum of Art. The museum also announced a number of other recent acquisitions, including a portrait by Joseph Wright of Derby and a medieval painting of Aizen Myōō, one of the Five Great Wisdom Kings and protectors of the Five Wisdom Buddhas.
The Peabody Essex Museum acquired the Andover Newton Theological School’s collection of Native American and native Hawaiian objects. The museum has committed to identifying possible ownership of the artifacts in compliance with the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990.
Cheryl and Haim Saban donated $50 million to the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures.
Yahoo’s cofounder, Jerry Yang, and his wife, Akiko Yamazaki, donated $25 million toward the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco‘s expansion project.
Peter Fu donated $12 million to the McGill School of Architecture.
The Akron Art Museum received an $8-million grant from the Knight Foundation.
Susan and Stephen Wilson donated $1.5 million to the Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art at Northwestern University.
Gerhard Richter plans to donate a new, multi-part artwork to the city of Münster, Germany.
The Museum of Fine Arts of Montreal acquired Henry Moore’s “Three Piece Reclining Figure No. 1” (1961–62).
The Woodson Research Center at the Fondren Library at Rice University acquired the archive of the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston.
David Hockney donated his 32-panel painting “The Arrival of Spring in Woldgate, East Yorkshire” (2011) to the Center Pompidou.
The Vivien Leigh collection sold at Sotheby’s for £2.2 million (~$3 million) — a figure five times higher than the pre-sale estimate. Highlights included a sketch of the actress by Augustus John, a watercolor by Roger Kemble Furse, and a still life painting by Winston Churchill.
Roger Kemble Furse, “Vivien Leigh Reading with Tissy” (nd), watercolor, pen, ink, and pencil on paper (courtesy Sotheby’s)
Transitions
Gerard Vaughan announced his retirement as director of the National Gallery of Australia.
Linda Blumberg will step down as executive director of the Art Dealers Association of America at the end of the year.
Augustus Casely-Hayford was appointed director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art.
Kathy Halbreich was appointed executive director of the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation.
Marko Daniel was appointed director of the Joan Miró Foundation.
Thomas Sokolowski was appointed director of the Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers University.
Nicola Trezzi was appointed director and chief curator of the Center for Contemporary Art Tel Aviv.
Kwame Kwei-Armah was appointed artistic director of the Young Vic in London.
Colin B. Bailey was elected to the Richard Diebenkorn Foundation’s board of directors.
Sheikha Hoor Al Qasimi was appointed head of the International Biennial Association.
Rendering of the Studio Museum in Harlem’s new building, facade view from 125th Street (courtesy Adjaye Associates)
Diane Wright was appointed curator of glass at the Toledo Museum of Art.
Douglas Brinkley was appointed the New-York Historical Society’s first presidential historian.
The Meadows School of the Arts at SMU announced new faculty appointments, including the Roberto Conduru as professor of Art History.
Loring Randolph was appointed the Frieze art fair’s artistic director of the Americas.
Former Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Carlos Picón was appointed director of Colnaghi’s new New York gallery.
The Studio Museum in Harlem unveiled the first renderings for its new building.
Canada’s first-ever National Holocaust Monument was opened in Ottawa.
The American Museum of Natural History announced a $14.5 million renovation of the Hall of Northwest Coast Indians.
Architecture firm Yamasaki will reopen under the leadership of Robert Szantner, a longtime employee of the late architect Minoru Yamasaki (1912–1986). Szantner teamed up with fellow employees to purchase the firm’s intellectual property out of receivership.
Two museums dedicated to Yves Saint Laurent (1936–2008) will open in Paris and Marrakech next month.
Accolades
The Corning Museum of Glass selected Karen LaMonte for its 2018 Specialty Glass Artist-in-Residence.
The Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago and the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University were awarded the inaugural Sotheby’s Prize.
Obituaries
The July 1977 issue of Famous Monsters of Filmland, with a cover by Basil Gogos (via Flickr/Toho Scope)
Marc Balakjian (1938–2017), artist.
Katherine M. Bonniwell (1947–2017), Life magazine publisher.
Derek Bourgeois (1941–2017), composer.
Charles Bradley (1948–2017), soul singer and songwriter.
Robert Delpire (1926–2017), editor, curator, and gallery owner.
Ritha Devi (1924–2017), Indian classical dancer and teacher.
Basil Gogos (1929–2017), artist. Best known for his portraits of movie monsters and villains.
Billy Hatton (1941–2017), guitarist and singer. Founding member of the Fourmost.
Hugh Hefner (1926–2017), publisher and founder of Playboy.
Marian Horosko (1925–2017), ballet dancer and historian.
Albert Innaurato (1947–2017), playwright.
John Jack (1933–2017), jazz producer and promoter.
Myrna Lamb (1930–2017), feminist playwright.
Vann Molyvann (1926–2017), architect.
Zuzana Ruzickova (1927–2017), harpsichordist and Holocaust survivor.
David Shepherd (1931–2017), artist and wildlife conservationist.
Albert Speer Jr. (1934–2017), architect. Son of Nazi architect Albert Speer.
Pete Turner (1934–2017), photographer.
The post Art Movements appeared first on Hyperallergic.
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