Entertainment & Arts
Review: Louise Nevelson breaks free from the grid at L&M Arts
April 4, 2013
Louise Nevelson, who turned scavenged balusters, bedposts and odd bits of wood into masterpieces of modern sculpture, died Sunday night.
April 18, 1988
New York artist Louise Nevelson is best remembered for sculptures constructed of cast-aside wood, the pieces aligned vertically as if reaching for the sky.
Feb. 16, 2018
Louise Nevelson, whose eccentric and flamboyant persona became as well known as the aristocratic and elegant wooden sculptures that will be her more lasting legacy, died Sunday, it was learned Monday.
April 19, 1988
Louise Nevelson, who died Sunday, looked like a Gypsy ballerina with her great soulful doe eyes swathed in mink lashes, head turbaned, ears bangled with baubles the size of Ping-Pong balls.
April 20, 1988
“I’m a woman of great action. I don’t sit down and dream. I’d rather move a mountain.”
June 21, 1985
The occasional self-portrait aside, art about artists can be dangerous territory, dramatically speaking.
Sept. 25, 1997
World & Nation
“I don’t think that anybody was thinking at the time they were mounted that there was going to be an earthquake.”
Oct. 7, 1987
How photographer Pedro E. Guerrero created a career by basically hanging around
Oct. 9, 2005
* “Mother’s Pub Outing”--Grace Robertson’s 1954 photograph taken in England is part of “Classic Images for the Holidays” starting Saturday at the Peter Fetterman Gallery, Santa Monica. * Anders A--New three-dimensional paintings and installations by the Swedish artist opens Friday at the Highways Gallery in Santa Monica. * Louise Nevelson--Figurative drawings and ceramic sculptures from the 1930s and ‘40s by the artist will be on display beginning Saturday at the Bobbie Greenfield Gallery.
Dec. 3, 1998