All posts tagged: Thierry Lamare

Art Documenting History: Intersecting complex histories with art

By Dr Ian Bethell-Bennett. Art is a well-known document of history.  All types of creative expression chronicle the moment they depict.  Portraits, much like those on display in Museo Nacional del Prado in Madrid are examples of this, especially the Goyas, for example.  This column chooses to focus on the interlocking of art and history: “Art History,” its learning and teaching.  So much happens in this somewhat fraught intersection between art and history, especially in a country like ours, where scant attention is paid to culture, except for its commodification and consumption.

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Lamare’s Frame Building Workshop brings a crowd: Hands on experience at the NAGB

By Katrina Cartwright.  As a part of his retrospective “Love, Loss and Life,” artist Thierry Lamare hosted a frame-building workshop at the National Art Gallery of the Bahamas (NAGB) on May 20, 2017. In just over three hours, he generously shared techniques that he has used to build driftwood frames for his paintings over the years. More than thirteen people from diverse backgrounds and varying degrees of experience were in attendance. Artists, art enthusiasts, craftspersons and a few do-it-yourselfers came seeking to acquire a new skill, build on existing knowledge or satisfy their curiosity.

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