Photobucket DREAMERS can dream
RSS | Archive | Random | E-mail

About

Get to know DREAMERS right here...

Next Show

WE ARE IN THE STUDIO WORKING ON OUR SECOND RELEASE due out Summer 10. Say word!
>

Buy DREAMERS on iTunes

DREAMERS iTunes

DREAMERS related links

DREAMERS myspace
DREAMERS youtube
DREAMERS iLike
DREAMERS facebook

We are DREAMERS

Ryan Walker
Ken Cain
Travis Hunter
Chad Schmidt
Brian Franklin

DREAMERS debut full length

Photobucket

CONTACT DREAMERS

DREAMERS
P.O. Box 353
Hollywood, CA 90078
dreamerscandream@gmail.com
26 January 10
OH GOD, OH GOD TIMMMMMMMBER!
A significant Pablo Picasso painting was damaged after a woman attending art class lost her balance, fell into “The Actor” and tore it, The Metropolitan Museum of Art said.The unusually large canvas, measuring 77.25 by 45.38 inches (196 by 115cm), sustained a vertical tear of about six inches (15cm) in the lower right-hand corner in the accident on Friday.The museum, located on the eastern edge of New York’s Central Park, did not elaborate on why the woman fell.But The Met said the damage did not impact the “focal point of the composition” and that it should be repaired in the coming weeks ahead of a major Picasso retrospective featuring some 250 works at the museum opening on April 27.Repair work should be “unobtrusive,” it added.Painted in the winter of 1904-1905, the work hails from Picasso’s critical Rose Period, when the artist shifted from the downbeat tones of his Blue Period to warmer, more romantic hues.The period also hints at Picasso’s later embrace of abstraction with his signature cubist style.Donated to The Met by automobile heiress Thelma Chrysler Foy in 1952, “The Actor” features an acrobat striking a dramatic pose against an abstract backdrop. It was painted on a used canvas that already contained a painting.

OH GOD, OH GOD TIMMMMMMMBER!

A significant Pablo Picasso painting was damaged after a woman attending art class lost her balance, fell into “The Actor” and tore it, The Metropolitan Museum of Art said.

The unusually large canvas, measuring 77.25 by 45.38 inches (196 by 115cm), sustained a vertical tear of about six inches (15cm) in the lower right-hand corner in the accident on Friday.

The museum, located on the eastern edge of New York’s Central Park, did not elaborate on why the woman fell.

But The Met said the damage did not impact the “focal point of the composition” and that it should be repaired in the coming weeks ahead of a major Picasso retrospective featuring some 250 works at the museum opening on April 27.

Repair work should be “unobtrusive,” it added.

Painted in the winter of 1904-1905, the work hails from Picasso’s critical Rose Period, when the artist shifted from the downbeat tones of his Blue Period to warmer, more romantic hues.

The period also hints at Picasso’s later embrace of abstraction with his signature cubist style.

Donated to The Met by automobile heiress Thelma Chrysler Foy in 1952, “The Actor” features an acrobat striking a dramatic pose against an abstract backdrop. It was painted on a used canvas that already contained a painting.

Themed by Hunson. Originally by Josh