Example sentences of "see [art] art [noun sg] [no cls] " in BNC.

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1 This definitively scotches a proposal which the previous Minister for the Arts , Tim Renton , had asked museum directors and the Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art to consider ( see The Art Newspaper No.11 , October 1991 , p.1 ) .
2 Philip Pouncey 's death at the age of eighty in 1990 ( see The Art Newspaper No.3 , December 1990 , p. 2 ) robbed Old Master drawings studies of its greatest connoisseur and one of its most valued personalities .
3 The Spanish government introduced government indemnity at the beginning of this year ( see The Art Newspaper No.15 , February 1992 , p.4 ) and agreed to undertake responsibility above Pta1 million ( £5,500 ; $11,000 ) of an indemnity claim .
4 ‘ Picasso et les choses ’ , the exhibition of Picasso 's still-life work curated by Jean Sutherland Boggs , opens at the Grand Palais at the beginning of this month ( 3 October-28 December ) , having already been shown in Cleveland and Philadelphia ( see The Art Newspaper No.15 , February 1992 , p.8 ) .
5 Jacques Walter , the former owner of van Gogh 's ‘ Jardin a Auvers ’ , auctioned last year for only FFr55 million after being classified an historic monument ( see The Art Newspaper No.24 , January 1993 , p20 ) , has taken out four law suits against the French State for compensation .
6 At the beginning of October , the museum will present exhibitions of Chagall 's murals for the Russian Theatre and ‘ The early works of Robert Rauschenberg ’ , a final leg to the tour organised by the Menil Foundation ( see The Art Newspaper No.18 , May 1992 , p.7 ) .
7 Colnaghi 's outstanding group of drawings previously shown in New York and including the newly-discovered Pontormo head ( see The Art Newspaper No.18 , May 1992 , p.19 ) makes a brief appearance at their London gallery from 1 to 10 July .
8 Instead , at a press briefing , he made it clear that he would be looking to private benefactors to come to the rescue in extreme cases , and pointing to the successful purchases of ‘ Portrait of a lady with a squirrel and a starling ’ by Holbein for the National Gallery ( see The Art Newspaper No. 16 , March 1992 , p.1 ) and Canaletto 's ‘ The Old Horse Guards , London , from St James 's Park ’ by Andrew Lloyd-Webber ( see The Art Newspaper No.19 June 1992 , p. 3 ) .
9 In the wake of recent scandals involving fake Giacometti and Rodin sculptures ( see The Art Newspaper No.19 , June 1992 , p.19 ) the official French union of bronze founders , the Syndicat Général des Fondeurs de France , has had talks with auctioneers and art gallery representatives to discuss means of combating forgery .
10 But his work has been a spectacular casualty of the realignment of the contemporary art market , aggravated by disputes about the ownership of his estate ( see The Art Newspaper No.19 , June 1992 , p.20 ) and concern over forgeries .
11 On 3 June last the painting was badly slashed in five places when it fell from the wall and caught on the scaffolding used by the restorers ( see The Art Newspaper No.20 , July-September 1992 , p.1 ) .
12 The expanded American chronology now incorporates the recent bequest of early Twentieth-century art from the Lowenthal Collection ( see The Art Newspaper No.20 , July-Sept. 1992 , p.4 ) .
13 Most of the works of art are owned by the Bayrisches Nationalmuseum which methodically distributes its wealth to new museums like this in Bavaria ( see The Art Newspaper No.13 , December 1991 , p.6 ) .
14 Considerable interest and debate surrounded his exhibitions at the ICA ( see The Art Newspaper No.13 , December 1991 , p.9 ) and the Saatchi Collection ( see The Art Newspaper No.16 , March 1992 , p.7 ) , where he installed ‘ The impossibility of death in the mind of someone living ’ , a fourteen-foot tiger shark suspended in formaldehyde solution in a steel and glass tank , and seven other sculptures .
15 It is the first occasion that Basquiat 's art will have been studied by an American institution and it comes at a time when David Ross , who replaced Thomas Armstrong as the Whitney 's director in bitter circumstances nearly two years ago , is under considerable pressure to ignite a new and visionary exhibition programme at the museum ( see The Art Newspaper No.6 , March 1991 , p.5 ) .
16 A major installation of Beuys , ‘ Arena ( where I would have got if I had been intelligent ) ’ , created in 1970–72 ( see The Art Newspaper No.16 , March 1992 , p.6 ) , remains on exhibition at the Dia Center for the Arts until mid-April , while the MoMA exhibition travels to the Museum of Contemporary Art , Los Angeles ( 30 May-15 August ) , the Philadelphia Museum of Art ( 10 October-2 January 1994 ) and the Art Institute of Chicago ( 15 February-25 April 1994 ) .
17 Tajan hoped to recuperate at least part of the FFr30 million by holding another auction in Tokyo last June ( see The Art Newspaper No.16 , March 1992 , p.18 ) .
18 On 31 March part I of the sale of Japanese swords and sword fittings from the collection of Dr Walter A. Compton ( see The Art Newspaper No.16 , March 1992 , p.17 ) proved a major success with 92% lots sold or 96% value sold , realizing $7,998,375 ( £4,623,338 ) ( including premium ) a world record total for any sale of Japanese art .
19 One draft directive the trade is worried about regards the return of cultural treasures unlawfully removed from another member state ( see The Art Newspaper No.16 , March 1992 , p.1 ) .
20 Considerable interest and debate surrounded his exhibitions at the ICA ( see The Art Newspaper No.13 , December 1991 , p.9 ) and the Saatchi Collection ( see The Art Newspaper No.16 , March 1992 , p.7 ) , where he installed ‘ The impossibility of death in the mind of someone living ’ , a fourteen-foot tiger shark suspended in formaldehyde solution in a steel and glass tank , and seven other sculptures .
21 Amid considerable publicity , Christie 's sold a group of sixty-six drawings from Holkham last July ( see The Art Newspaper No.10 , July-September 1991 , p.1 ) .
22 The chief officers of the Florentine Soprintendenza , Antonio Paolucci and Paolo Mazzoni , together with Emma Micheletti and Angelo Calvani , Paolo Cappelletti and Paolo D'Elia , charged last February with causing criminal damage to the national heritage by laying new paving in the Piazza della Signoria , have now been cleared on appeal ( see The Art Newspaper no.17 , April 1992 , p.15 ) .
23 The budding Academy sees itself as an alternative to established institutions such as Berlin 's Akademie der Künste whose ongoing merger of the West and East branches , beset by political wrangling , has alienated many artists ( see The Art Newspaper No.17 , April 1992 , p.3 ) .
24 The budding Academy sees itself as an alternative to established institutions such as Berlin 's Akademie der Künste whose ongoing merger of the West and East branches , beset by political wrangling , has alienated many artists ( see The Art Newspaper No.17 , April 1992 , p.3 ) .
25 When the Guggenheim Museum reopens on 28 June , Thomas Krens , its director , will have realised the first stage in his ambitious plan of expansion , seeking to establish new stations in North Adams , Massachusetts , Bilbao ( see The Art Newspaper No.17 , April 1992 , p.5 ) and Salzburg , and to enlarge The Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice .
26 Artists , selected by a jury , were guaranteed an income by the Dutch government , who agreed to purchase their works for a set amount each year ( see The Art Newspaper No.17 , April 1992 , p.2 ) .
27 A visit by Boris Yeltsin has brought an unexpected solution to the financial difficulties facing the Tretyakov Gallery ( see The Art Newspaper No.17 , April 1992 , p.5 ) .
28 The difficult search for a replacement for Bean after his retirement did not come up with a suitable candidate ( see The Art Newspaper No.17 , April 1992 , p.5 ) .
29 The boost from the province represents a complete about-face by the New Democratic Party , whose Culture and Communications Minister Karen Haslam had chided the gallery for its ‘ elitism ’ and imposed devastating cutbacks that forced the museum to lay off 244 employees and close for seven months last year ( see The Art Newspaper No.22 , November 1992 , p.7 and No.24 , January 1993 , p.8 ) .
30 In that particular case the judges pronounced in general on the right of free speech , but did not go so far as to appoint experts to ascertain whether the accused was right in his criticism or not ( see The Art Newspaper No.14 , January 1992 , p.1 ) .
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