Latest drawings news

Powerball drawings moving to Florida (The Altoona Herald-Mitchellville Index)

Powerball drawings will be moved to Florida in 2009 after 20 years in Iowa. Lottery officials say that moving the twice-weekly drawing was part of a deal to bring Florida into the multi-state game.

Powerball drawings moving to Florida (The Des Moines Register)

Powerball drawings will be moved to Florida in 2009 after 20 years in Iowa.

Powerball Drawings Head To Florida In 2009 (KCCI 8 Des Moines)

After 20 years in Iowa, the twice-weekly Powerball drawings will be leaving for Florida in 2009.

Exhibition Featuring Children's Drawings On Peace Opens In Turkish Capital (TurkishPress.com)

ANKARA - An exhibition opened in the Turkish Foreign Ministry HQ in capital Ankara on Thursday, featuring drawings on peace by children from Israel.

When Watercolor Came Into Its Own (New York Times)

A beautiful new show at the Yale Center for British Art brings together a collection of over 50,000 drawings, watercolors and other works on paper assembled over 15 years.

Christie's Opens Exhibition of 3 Rediscovered Drawings By Goya (Art Daily)

Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (1746-1828), The constable Lampinos stitched inside a dead horse, brush and brown wash, with scraping, 205 x 142 mm. Estimate: £600,000-£800,000. © Christie's Images Ltd. 2008.

Mandela moves to block sale of prison drawings (Mail and Guardian)

Nelson Mandela has instructed his lawyers to take legal action against a London gallery which is selling lithographs it says are signed by, and the work of, the former South African president.

Sid Garrison's work in colored pencil in Limn (San Francisco Chronicle)

San Franciscan Sid Garrison displays impressive staying power in his fourth show of drawings at Limn Gallery. Garrison works in colored pencil in a manner at once abstract, improvisational and subtly responsive to pressures of the wider culture. His medium...

Work from Illinois artists displayed as part of Tarble painting and drawing exhibition (Journal Gazette & Times-Courier)

The work of Illinois artists is the focus of an exhibition of paintings and drawings on view through Aug. 17 in the main galleries of the Tarble Arts Center, Eastern Illinois University. Admission is free and the public is invited.

New Peru school site sees busy days (La Salle News Tribune)

Inside a white trailer Wednesday at the construction site for Parkside Middle School in Peru, “Kazzy” Ksiazkiewicz leaned over a slanted table covered with reams of architectural drawings.


Drawing in metal transforms gallery (Seattle Post-Intelligencer)

Space is always the issue in Suyama Space, the Seattle art center disguised as an architect's waiting room. Big, raw and barnlike, it overpowers artists who fail to take its personality into account. Failures are rare, thanks to curator Beth Sellars.

Ceramic art at Isadore Gallery features beauty and whimsy from the animal kingdom (Lancaster Online)

Yoko Sekino-Bove's ceramic art is fully functional, though some might say the artist's intricate teacups, plates and jars

Art teacher Stegman is quite the artist himself (Crookston Daily Times)

For years, Gary Stegman, Crookston High School's art teacher, thought about how he could visually bring together his two majors, art and music education. Having solved that riddle, the creative juices are now flowing into what's likely to become a series of unique prints done by the artist.

Art Club notes Members to display work at Library Gallery during the summer months (Nipawin Journal)

Art Club notes: Members to display work at Library Gallery during the summer months By Dawn Gates Members of the Nipawin Art Club have been busy during May and June. Activities have included two regular meetings, putting up two separate month-long displays at the Library Gallery, hosting a drawing workshop, and planning for future events.

Show sees Fernand Leger as a progenitor of pop art (AP via Yahoo! News)

The "modest and little" Statue of Liberty, a gift from his country, did not impress Fernand Leger as he watched from the deck of a liner sailing into the inner harbor of New York Bay in 1931. But the artist was immediately fascinated by the sight of the Manhattan skyline, describing it in a French art magazine as "the most colossal spectacle in the world."

Art outside the frame: Two new installations push boundaries (Seattle Times)

Exhibitions at Bellevue Arts Museum and Suyama Space explore the spectrum of installation art. Works by Mandy Greer, and Carolyn Healy and John Phillips, are on display.

VOELZ CHANDLER: Mastering the art of navigating crowds (Rocky Mountain News)

The Cherry Creek Arts Festival has become as married to the Fourth of July in Denver as brats and beer.

Young at Art (Arizona Daily Star)

Experience art through photos and mixed media

Chaffee-Bradshaw art series (Abilene Reflector-Chronicle)

The Arts Council of Dickinson County has several openings for the 17th annual Chaffee/Bradshaw Summer Art classes. The classes are open to students who will be in the fourth through 12th grade in the fall of 2008.

Art show features best of the West (Calgary Sun)

An 11-ft. bronze moose is one of the more unusual items at this Stampede's Western Showcase art exhibit -- but there are many other unique and beautiful things to see.


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