David FeBland
David FeBland is an artist who paints urban landscapes. He has studios in Arizona and in New York City, in the United States.[1] His work has elements of Social Realism, and invites comparison to that of the Ashcan School,[2][3] or to the photographs of Robert Frank or Garry Winogrand.[4]
David FeBland | |
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Known for | painting |
Website | davidfebland |
Reception
A New York Times review in 1996 described his fish-eye view of the interior of a New York City taxi as "a model of bravura painting".[5] A Washington Post review in 2001 noted that "David FeBland continues to paint manic Manhattan streetscapes that remind us why we love New York and hate it, too."[6]
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gollark: Just put them in a numismatic dynamo for some amount of power dependent on material.
gollark: In this modpack coins have intrinsic value.
gollark: I imagine if we ended up trying to actually charge each other for power use it would get annoyingly complicated.
gollark: Well, you can measure it, by rightclicking a duct.
References
- Mark Jenkins (13 April 2018). In the galleries: Images in 'Weather the Storm' are both reassuring and ominous. Washington Post. Accessed April 2018.
- McCabe, Bret (24–31 May 2000). "City Lights – David FeBland at Valley House". The Dallas Met.
- Elizabeth Forst (September 2000). The Observable World. American Artist, September 2000, page 22. (subscription required).
- Joe Shannon (February 2000). David FeBland at Fraser. Art In America 88 (2): 134. (subscription required).
- William Zimmer (6 October 1996). From the National Academy, an Exhibition for Fairfield. The New York Times. Accessed April 2018.
- Dawson, Jessica (7 June 2001). "Painted from Memories". The Washington Post. Retrieved 21 December 2018.
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