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Untitled (Smiling Woman) Nellie Mae Rowe transformed a Sara Lee poundcake lid into a canvas for a brightly colored drawing of a smiling woman with bright, orange-yellow skin, outlined in green and black against a pastel blue crayon background.
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Untitled collage From 1964 to 2000, Evans made daily collages in a bound notebook. These collages often include ephemera picked up in the street near his Lower East Side apartment. In this collage, evans has composed an psychedelic gold white and black pattern around a label featuring the logo of ASG (American Saint Gobain), a US based glass manufacturer established in 1959. The label reads “ASG Creative Ideas in Glass, LUSTRAGLASS, Single Strength, B, Made in U.S.A.”
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Bel Air Trilogy, 2000–2011 Three minimal, highly polished stainless steel rod sculptures within three meticulously restored 1955 Chevrolet Bel Air automobiles with minor customizations by the artist. Highly popular because of its crisp, clean design and classic lines, this renowned model often featured a signature two-tone color scheme; The three cars exhibited in the sculpture group are a matched set, each painted in “Gypsy Red” and “Shoreline Beige” presenting a juxtaposition between classic car culture and austere, geometric forms.
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The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations' Millennium General Assembly The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations' Millennium General Assembly is a complex work of art consisting of approximately 180 individual pieces created by James Hampton over a period of fourteen years. Hampton made the array based on several religious visions that prompted him to prepare for Christ's return to earth.
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Untitled, 1968–1969 This work is made from declassified industrial resin which became available to artists in Southern California during the postwar period. This translucent object is an early breakthrough work of the California Light and Space Movement of which the artist was the only female member.
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Untitled (to the "innovator" of Wheeling Peachblow) Flavin began working with commercially available fluorescent light tubes in 1963 which were manufactured by Leviton Manufacturing Co. This light sculpture derives its palette from Wheeling Peachblow, a type of Victorian art glass manufactured by Hobbs, Brockunier & Co. in Wheeling, West Virginia, that shades from yellow to deep red, producing a delicate peach color in between.