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Tony Price (artist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tony Price (1937–2000) was a junk artist, painter, sculptor,[1] self-styled "Atomic Artist" and outspoken anti-nuclear activist.

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Transcription

Early life

Price was a born in Brooklyn, New York, along with his twin brother, Ted, and sister Carolyn to Thomas Edward Price and Katherine.[2] After he finished high school he spent some time in the Marine Corps. After he was discharged in 1960, he traveled extensively, before arriving in Santa Fe in 1965.[1]

Nuclear art

After visiting Los Alamos National Laboratory in 1967 and discovering their salvage yard, he began to create utilitarian objects such as chairs and tables and musical instruments, especially wind chimes and gongs, out of their discarded scraps.[3] He later moved on to creating sculptures, and his most famous works are a group of primitive-inspired masks created out of scrap metal, many of them based on Hopi kachinas.[4] In 1983 filmmakers Glen Silber and Claudia Vianello completed a documentary on price titled "Atomic Artist"[5] that aired nationally on PBS in 1986. In September 1986, Price was given a solo exhibition in the New Mexico Governor's Gallery at the state capitol.[6] The New Mexico Museum of Art organized a major retrospective in 2004 that traveled to the United Nations in 2005.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b The Newburgh-Beacon Evening News Art depicts a nuclear nightmare April 14, 1987. Retrieved August 2011
  2. ^ Tony Price Atomic Art. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Museum of New Mexico. 2004. p. 12.
  3. ^ Law, Lisa (2000). Flashing on the Sixties : Photographs by Lisa Law. Burbank, CA: Squarebooks. p. 132. ISBN 0916290816.
  4. ^ Tony Price Atomic Art. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Museum of New Mexico. 2004. p. 29.
  5. ^ Atomic Artist. OCLC. OCLC 11622259. Retrieved December 15, 2015 – via Worldcat.
  6. ^ Potance, Rebecca. "Guide to the Governor's Gallery Collection" (PDF). New Mexico Museum of Art. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
  7. ^ "SWORDS INTO PLOWSHARES/TONY PRICE: ATOMIC ART EXHIBITION OF SCULPTURES OPENS AT UN HEADQUARTERS ON 5 MAY". United Nations. Retrieved December 15, 2015.

External links


This page was last edited on 3 September 2023, at 15:13
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