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1986 MarvArt Designs Center Ring Clowns Marble Firefighter Fireman -Henry Wilson

$ 36.95

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Finish: Painted
  • Collection: Does Not Apply
  • Number in Pack: 1
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Condition: Used
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Department: Adults
  • Year Manufactured: 1986
  • Theme: Firefighting & Rescue
  • Color: Multicolor
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Room: Any Room
  • California Prop 65 Warning: no
  • Occasion: All Occasions
  • Artist: Henry Wilson
  • Time Period Manufactured: 1980-1989
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Features: Does Not Apply
  • Type: Figurine
  • Style: 1980s
  • Pattern: Does Not Apply
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Year: 1986
  • Franchise: Clown
  • Brand: Creative
  • Modified Item: No
  • Material: Marble
  • Subject: Clown
  • Character: Clown Firefighter

    Description

    1986 MarvArt Designs Center Ring Clowns Marble Firefighter Fireman  by Henry Wilson
    Get this Great gift for your firefighter or emergency responder for a special occasion. Absolutely great piece of art!
    Fred Wilson is renowned for his interdisciplinary practice that challenges assumptions of history, culture, race, and conventions of display. By reframing objects and cultural symbols, he alters traditional interpretations, encouraging viewers to reconsider social and historical narratives.
    Wilson’s early work was directed at marginalized histories, exploring how models of categorization, collecting, and display exemplify fraught ideologies and power relations inscribed into the fabric of institutions. His groundbreaking and historically significant exhibition
    Mining the Museum
    (1992) at the Maryland Historical Society, radically altered the landscape of museum exhibition narratives. As interventions, or “mining,” of the museum’s archive, Wilson re-presented its materials to make visible hidden structures built into the museum system, and American Society as a whole.
    At the onset of the twenty-first century, Wilson began to place more focus on his object-based work. In collaboration with the prominent American glass blower Dante Marioni, he began producing his first glass artworks in 2001—ambiguous black-colored forms that assert a multifaceted political undercurrent. “The color black represents African American people because it’s been placed on us as a representation,” Wilson says. “Of course, the color black—the absence of light—really has nothing to do with African Americans. But there’s a whole other layer of meaning.”
    Pace Gallery congratulated
    Fred Wilson
    on being elected to The American Academy of Arts & Sciences. Founded in 1780 by John Adams, John Hancock, and others who believed the new republic should honor exceptionally accomplished individuals and engage them in advancing the public good, the Academy continues to dedicate itself to recognizing excellence and relying on expertise – both of which seem more important than ever.
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