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Topic: Kay Sage


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  Kay Sage - Search Results - MSN Encarta
Kay Sage - Search Results - MSN Encarta
Sage, Kay (1898-1963), American painter, known for eerie, uninhabited landscapes.
Sage, common name for a large genus of about 900 species of flowering plants of wide distribution.
encarta.msn.com /Kay_Sage.html   (123 words)

  
 ArtsNet Minnesota: Inner Worlds: Kay Sage
It is understandable that Sage's artwork expressed a split between two worlds--reality and fantasy--when we consider her early life experiences.
In On the Contrary the shelter structure is shown in sharp detail and placed in an unreal or dreamlike landscape.
Sage studied in Rome during a time when classical drawing was taught.
www.artsconnected.org /artsnetmn/inner/sage.html   (257 words)

  
 ipedia.com: Yves Tanguy Article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
In 1938, after seeing the work of fellow artist Kay Sage, Tanguy began a relationship with her that would eventually lead to his second marriage.
Sage and Tanguy were married in Reno, Nevada on August 17, 1940.
Preserved until Sage's death in 1963, his ashes were scattered by his friend Pierre Matisse on the beach at Douarnenez in his beloved Brittany, together with those of his wife.
www.ipedia.com /yves_tanguy.html   (476 words)

  
 Kay Sage
Born in Albany, Sage attended art classes in Washington, but it was not until 1918 when she went to live in Rome that she began to study art seriously.
She began painting in the Surrealist style, influenced by the works by DeChirico, Dali and Tanguy, whom she married in 1940.
By the early 1940s, Sage had moved away from biomorphism and established her own vocabulary of "sharp, spiny forms," covered by rigid draperies, sometimes suggesting figurative shapes beneath.
www.albanyinstitute.org /collections/Painting/Sage.htm   (93 words)

  
 Mattatuck Museum - Calendar   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Kay Sage (1898-1963) was one of only a few women artists involved with the Surrealist movement.
Following Sage’s death in 1963, the paintings in her estate were disbursed to museums throughout the country.
The Mattatuck Museum in Waterbury, Conn., where Sage had been a member of the Fine Arts Committee, received many of her personal effects as well as representative examples of her Surrealist paintings and drawings, constructions and early work, and works by Tanguy and their friends.
www.mattatuckmuseum.org /calendar   (727 words)

  
 Kay Sage Online
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A House of Her Own: Kay Sage, Solitary Surrealist
All images and text on this Kay Sage page are copyright 2007 by John Malyon/Artcyclopedia, unless otherwise noted.
www.artcyclopedia.com /artists/sage_kay.html   (213 words)

  
 Kay Sage (1898 - 1963) Artwork Images, Exhibitions, Reviews
Kay Sage was born into a wealthy family and spent the majority of her life in Italy.
After Tanguy’s sudden death in 1955, Sage became mentally ill and committed suicide in 1963.
Kay Sage - Tomorrow, For Example 1951 oil on canvas National Museum of Women in the Arts American
www.wwar.com /masters/s/sage-kay.html   (860 words)

  
 Kay Sage (1898 - 1963) Artwork Images, Exhibitions, Reviews
Davies work explores movement of the performing body and film, distilling the everyday to suggest undercurrents of desire, isolation and joy.
Once home to artist Georgia O’Keeffe, Ghost Ranch is over 22,000 acres of sand and sage, plains and mesas, clouds and shadows.
First explorers and trappers, then settlers and immigrants were drawn to the lands and opportunities for a new life in the American West, said Elizabeth Broun, director of the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
wwar.com /masters/s/sage-kay.html   (860 words)

  
 Mattatuck Museum - Community   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Guest, curator of the Kay Sage exhibit, will examine the life and career of Surrealist Kay Sage, as revealed by the artworks and personal items donated to the museum following her death.
Smith, museum consultant, will discuss the creative circle of artists who took refuge in the northwest hills of CT. On the eve of the Second World War, a creative circle of artists took refuge in farmhouses in Middlebury, Woodbury, Southbury, Roxbury and Sherman, Connecticut.
Internationally recognized as avant guarde leaders in European art centers, the Connecticut group included Alexander Calder, Yves Tanguy and his wife Kay Sage, Arshile Gorky, Hans Richter and Naum Gabo.
www.mattatuckmuseum.org /calendar/programs.htm   (796 words)

  
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