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  1. Birnbaum (English: Pear tree) is a painting by Gustav Klimt from his Golden phase. This painting was painted in 1903, and today is housed in the Busch-Reisinger Museum, one of the Harvard Art Museums. [1] Klimt finished this painting during his stay in Litzlberg on Lake Attersee.

  2. Dara Birnbaums pioneering video, media, and installation work has, over the past four decades, addressed the ideological and the aesthetic character of mass media imagery and has been considered fundamental to our understanding the history of media art.

  3. 15 de abr. de 2024 · última actualización. 15-04-2024. Nacida en 1946 en Nueva York, ciudad en la que vive y trabaja, Birnbaum se formó en arquitectura y urbanismo en el Carnegie Institute of Technology y en el San Francisco Art Institute. En 1976, se graduó en vídeo y edición electrónica en la New School for Social Research de Nueva York.

  4. www.moma.org › artists › 34389Dara Birnbaum | MoMA

    Dara Birnbaum (born 1946) is an American video and installation artist. Birnbaum entered the nascent field of video art in the mid-to-late 1970s challenging the gendered biases of the period and television’s ever-growing presence within the American household.

  5. Artist: Dara Birnbaum (American, born 1946) Date: 1978–79. Medium: Single-channel digital video transferred from video tape, color, sound, 5 min., 50 sec. Classification: Variable Media. Credit Line: Purchase, Henry Nias Foundation Inc. Gift, 2023. Accession Number: 2023.23.

  6. curamagazine.com › digital › dara-birnbaumDara Birnbaum — CURA.

    Curated by Barbara London, with Valentino Catricalà and Eva Fabbris, the exhibition offers different perspectives to understand the distinguished career of Dara Birnbaum (New York, 1946), an artist who consistently has challenged the precepts of art and mass media.

  7. 20 de ago. de 2022 · Beginning in the 1970s, Dara Birnbaums trailblazing video, media, and installation work has addressed the ideological and aesthetic character of mass media imagery and has been considered fundamental to our understanding of the history of media art.