'Miralda' art exhibition

'Miralda' art exhibition


Madrid, Spain (ES)
Palacio de Velázquez, or Velázquez Palace (sometimes referred to as Palacio de Exposiciones) is an exhibition hall located in Buen Retiro Park, Madrid, Spain. Originally known as the Palacio de la Minería, it was built in 1881-3 for the Exposición Nacional de Minería by architect Ricardo Velázquez Bosco, engineer Alberto Palacio, and ceramist Daniel Zuloaga.

Antoni Miralda (Terrassa, Spain, 1942) is a Catalan multidisciplinary artist. Since the 1960s, he has experimented with photography, film, sculpture, collages, posters, furniture, and wall painting. In the early 1960s, he studied at the School of Engineering of Terrassa and the Centre Sèvres, Paris. In 1964, moved on to the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London. Years later, he traveled to Paris and New York City. In 1978, he was awarded a scholarship by the Juan March Institute to attend the Center for Advanced Visual Studies at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Further grants were received in 1981, from the Joint Committee Scholarship for Cultural Affairs, and in 1984, from the Council on the Arts. His early works have distinctly political overtones, that of an objective pacifist. In 1972, he began using mixed media. He is cited as "one of a large number of artists who divided their time between New York and Spain in the 1980s."
Palacio de Velázquez, or Velázquez Palace (sometimes referred to as Palacio de Exposiciones) is an exhibition hall located in Buen Retiro Park, Madrid, Spain. Originally known as the Palacio de la Minería, it was built in 1881-3 for the Exposición Nacional de Minería by architect Ricardo Velázquez Bosco, engineer Alberto Palacio, and ceramist Daniel Zuloaga.

Antoni Miralda (Terrassa, Spain, 1942) is a Catalan multidisciplinary artist. Since the 1960s, he has experimented with photography, film, sculpture, collages, posters, furniture, and wall painting. In the early 1960s, he studied at the School of Engineering of Terrassa and the Centre Sèvres, Paris. In 1964, moved on to the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London. Years later, he traveled to Paris and New York City. In 1978, he was awarded a scholarship by the Juan March Institute to attend the Center for Advanced Visual Studies at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Further grants were received in 1981, from the Joint Committee Scholarship for Cultural Affairs, and in 1984, from the Council on the Arts. His early works have distinctly political overtones, that of an objective pacifist. In 1972, he began using mixed media. He is cited as "one of a large number of artists who divided their time between New York and Spain in the 1980s."
View in Google Earth Art - Sculpture
Links: en.wikipedia.org
By: kjfitz

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