User:Athaenara/Studio: Difference between revisions
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[[Dorothy Miller]] |
[[Dorothy Miller]] [[Dorothy C. Miller]] [[Dorothy Canning Miller]] |
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'''Dorothy Canning Miller |
'''Dorothy Canning Miller''' ([[6 February]] [[1904]], [[Hopedale, Massachusetts]] — [[11 July]] [[2003]], [[Greenwich Village]]) |
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Graduated from [[Smith College]] in 1925 |
Graduated from [[Smith College]] in 1925 |
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# [[Bradley Walker Tomlin]] |
# [[Bradley Walker Tomlin]] |
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# [[Thomas Wilfred]] |
# [[Thomas Wilfred]] |
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;Books |
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* 1972: ''Americans 1942-1963 (Six Group Exhibitions).'' [[New York City]]: [[Museum of Modern Art]]. ISBN 0-40501-581-X. |
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* 1981: ''The Nelson A. Rockefeller Collection.'' With Lee Boltin and William Slattery Lieberman. [[Manchester (town), Vermont|Manchester, Vermont]]: Hudson Hills Press. ISBN 0-93392-024-5. |
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* 1983: ''Edward Hicks: His Peaceable Kingdoms and Other Paintings.'' With Eleanor Price Mather. [[Newark, Delaware]]: [[University of Delaware]] Press. ISBN 0-87413-208-8. |
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<ref name="RoobObitArtInAmerica">{{cite web |url= http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1248/is_9_91/ai_108278515 |title= Dorothy C. Miller 1904-2003 - Front Page - Obituary |author= Rona Roob |work= [[Art in America]] |date= September 2003 |quote= Although she organized many exhibitions for the museum, Miller was best known for a remarkable series of six shows devoted to contemporary U.S. art, bearing titles such as "Fourteen Americans" or "Sixteen Americans." Held periodically from 1942 through 1963, these exhibitions introduced to the American museum public a total of 90 artists, among them Mark Rothko, Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline, Clyfford Still, Isamu Noguchi, Morris Graves, Ad Reinhardt, Louise Nevelson, Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Frank Stella, Lee Bontecou, Claes Oldenburg, Marisol, Ellsworth Kelly and James Rosenquist. Miller's shows were distinguished by a special format. Eschewing the usual large group show in which dozens of artists are each represented by one or two works, Miller limited her choices so that each artist was given a separate small gallery. Her influential "New American Painting" toured Europe in 1958-59 and firmly established the Abstract Expressionist artists abroad. }}</ref> |
<ref name="RoobObitArtInAmerica">{{cite web |url= http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1248/is_9_91/ai_108278515 |title= Dorothy C. Miller 1904-2003 - Front Page - Obituary |author= Rona Roob |work= [[Art in America]] |date= September 2003 |quote= Although she organized many exhibitions for the museum, Miller was best known for a remarkable series of six shows devoted to contemporary U.S. art, bearing titles such as "Fourteen Americans" or "Sixteen Americans." Held periodically from 1942 through 1963, these exhibitions introduced to the American museum public a total of 90 artists, among them Mark Rothko, Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline, Clyfford Still, Isamu Noguchi, Morris Graves, Ad Reinhardt, Louise Nevelson, Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Frank Stella, Lee Bontecou, Claes Oldenburg, Marisol, Ellsworth Kelly and James Rosenquist. Miller's shows were distinguished by a special format. Eschewing the usual large group show in which dozens of artists are each represented by one or two works, Miller limited her choices so that each artist was given a separate small gallery. Her influential "New American Painting" toured Europe in 1958-59 and firmly established the Abstract Expressionist artists abroad. }}</ref> |
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MillerPapersArchivesMoMA |
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<ref name="MillerPapersArchivesMoMA">{{cite web |url= http://moma.org/research/archives/EAD/dcmillerf.html |title= Dorothy C. Miller Papers |work= [[Museum of Modern Art]] Archives |publisher= Processed 1989 and revised 1993 by Rachel Wild and Rona Roob. Revised 1996 and 1998 by Michelle Elligott |quote= }}</ref> |
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{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
Revision as of 00:50, 10 January 2008
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Disposable
Studio A
Artists
Citations
Curators
Explorers
Historians
Impresarios
Inventors
Neighborhoods
Photographers
Structures
Studio D
Articles for deletion
- 3-step AFD procedure simplified
1. Add AFD template to Article: subst {{Afd}} (use {{afdx}} if article has been nominated before) at top of page
- {{subst:afd}}
- Edit summary: Nominated for deletion: see Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Article.
2. Create AFD page: click "this article's entry" link in template (result of step 1) and subst {{Afd2}}
- {{subst:afd2 | pg=Article | cat=CategoryLetterCode | text=ExplanatoryText }} ~~~~
- Edit summary: Creating deletion discussion page for Article.
3. List on Articles for deletion/Log/Today: subst {{Afd3}} at bottom of page
- {{subst:afd3 | pg=Article}}
- Edit summary: Adding Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Article.
Proposed deletion
Transwiki'd to Wikibooks
Transwiki'd to Wiktionary
Candidates for speedy deletion
Criteria for speedy deletion — see also: Why was my page deleted?
WP:CSD#A1 no context
WP:CSD#A2 non-English language version of article on another Wikimedia project
WP:CSD#A3 no content
WP:CSD#A5 transwiki'd
WP:CSD#A7 no indication of notability
WP:CSD#G1 patent nonsense
WP:CSD#G2 test page
WP:CSD#G3 pure vandalism
WP:CSD#G4 re-creation of deleted page
WP:CSD#G5 created by banned user while banned
WP:CSD#G6 non-controversial housekeeping/maintenance
WP:CSD#G7 speedy request by only editor
WP:CSD#G8 talk page of non-existent article
WP:CSD#G9 office actions
WP:CSD#G11 blatant advertising
WP:CSD#G12 blatant copyright violation
WP:CSD#R1 Redirect to nonexistent page
WP:CSD#T1 template which is divisive and inflammatory
WP:CSD#T2 template which blatantly misrepresents policy
WP:CSD#U1 user request for deletion of own user page/subpage
WP:CSD#U2 non-existent user
WP:CSD#U3 non-free galleries in userspace
Images and media for deletion
Deletion review
Studio Q
Studio W
Blocking policy
Protection policy
Boxes
3D
Basic
Div
Quote
Gallery reserve
Souvenirs
- Found on Talk:Glenn Gould:
- “Some day Wikipedia should implement a meritocratic system of elitism so that qualified
people can write articles and not have them watered down by the mediocre tastes of the
self-congratulatory npr crowd. — 216.254.17.226 07:41, 20 October 2005 (UTC)”
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