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Rosemary Cove | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | American |
Education | Parsons |
Known for | Sculptor |
Awards | Ford Foundation Grant, National Endowment for the Arts, New York State Council for the Arts Grant |
Rosemary Cove is an American sculptor. She was born on January 11, 1936, in New York City. [1]
Rosemary Cove is best known for her work with Corten Steel, clay and wax. She also creates painting and collage. Her subject is primarily the female form. Cove has received a Ford Foundation Grant, National Endowment for the Arts Residency Grant, New York State Council for the Arts Grant, and National Endowment for the Arts Invitational Residency. [2] In 2005, the Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens held a major retrospective of Rosemary Cove’s sculpture and collage.
Rosemary Cove lives and works in New York City.
Joan Murray is an American poet, writer, playwright and editor. She is best known for her narrative poems, particularly her book-length novel-in-verse, Queen of the Mist; her collection Looking for the Parade which won the National Poetry Series Open Competition, and her New and Selected Poems volume, Swimming for the Ark, which was chosen as the inaugural volume in White Pine Press's Distinguished Poets Series.
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Susanna Heller was a painter, who lived and worked in Brooklyn, New York. Born in New York City and raised in Montreal, she studied art in Halifax, Nova Scotia. She was a landed immigrant in Canada until 2006. She exhibits her work regularly in New York and in Toronto. She is known equally in Canada and the United States for her contributions to contemporary art as a painter. Her work is most well known for depictions of cities, primarily New York City.
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Rosemary Mayer (1943–2014) was an American visual artist who was closely associated with the feminist art movement and the conceptual art movement of the 1970s. She was a founding member of A.I.R. gallery, the first all-female artists cooperative gallery in the United States.
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