Yuki Kimura, post-disembodiment series
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Japanese artist Yuki Kimura’s installations, in which photographic images also function as sculptural objects, prompt us to investigate the material world through its artifacts.
Yuki Kimura (b. 1971)
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Yuki Kimura was born in 1971 in Kyoto, Japan where she continues to live and work.
1990.186 Edward C. Moore, Coffeepot
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
In the early 1870s, Tiffany & Co.'s chief designer Edward C.
Contemporary Art at the Dallas Museum of Art
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
From its establishment in 1903 as the Dallas Art Association, one of the Museum’s missions has been to collect and exhibit the work of living artists.
Maki Tamura, _Untitled Scroll #17_
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Embodying a broad range of influences, including Japanese woodblock and ukiyo-e prints, Indonesian hand-printed textiles and batik, East and Southeast Asian painting, and 19th- and 20th-century Japanese and Western children's books, Maki Tamura's Untitled Scroll #17 interweaves watercolor painting and linoleum print on mulberry paper attached to linen.
Gilding (Metalwork)
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Process involving the surface application of gold or another metal in the form of leaf, powder applied directly to the surface, powder mixed with a binder, electroplating, or other forms to approximate the effect of solid or inlaid metal.
The process of covering paintings, sculptures, or architectural deco
Wood & Hughes (1845-1899)
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
In 1833, silversmiths Jacob Wood and Joseph Hughes left the firm of William Gale, Sr. eventually forming their own firm, aptly named Wood & Hughes.
1988.43.1, J.R. Wendt & Co, Tea and coffee service, coffeepot
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
With its bold, geometric forms and classical engraved and cast ornaments, this J.R.
1988.43.2, J.R. Wendt & Co, Tea and coffee service, teapot
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
With its bold, geometric forms and classical engraved and cast ornaments, this J.R. Wendt teapot, part of a tea and coffee service, balances modernism and revivalism, themes that often competed for dominance in 19th-century design.
1988.43.4.A-B, J.R. Wendt & Co, Tea and coffee service, sugar bowl
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
With its bold, geometric forms and classical engraved and cast ornaments, this J.R. Wendt sugar bowl, part of a tea and coffee service, balances modernism and revivalism, themes that often competed for dominance in 19th-century design.