Passengers
- Title
-
Passengers
- LC Subject
-
Painting
Acrylic painting
acrylic paint
acrylic painting (technique)
acrylic paintings (visual works)
painting (image-making)
paintings (visual works)
- Creator
-
O'Reilly, Julia
- Description
-
A very bold and colorfol acrylic painting of people walking down a street with shops on the left side, and a street with cars on the right side. The people seem to be all grouped together, sort of in the middle of the art piece as if they are waiting to cross the street.
Acrylic on canvas; 20 x 27 inches; replacement for stolen piece
The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is: Lane Arts. You may view their website at http://www.lanearts.org/
- View
-
full
- Location
-
Lawrence Hall >> Lane County >> Oregon >> United States
Lane County >> Oregon >> United States
- Street Address
-
1190 Franklin Street, Eugene Oregon
- Award Date
-
1989
- Identifier
-
1991_uo_lawrence-hall_15_a01
- Item Locator
-
OR:91-13
- Accession Number
-
1991_uo_lawrence-hall_15_a01
- Rights
-
In Copyright
- Dc Rights Holder
-
O'Reilly, Julia
- Type
-
Image
- Format
-
image/tiff
- Measurements
-
20 x 27 inches
- Material
-
Painting
acrylic on canvas
- Set
-
Oregon Percent for Art
- Primary Set
-
Oregon Percent for Art
- Relation
-
1991 University of Oregon Architecture & Allied Arts Lawrence Hall
1991_uo_lawrence-hall
- Has Version
-
slide; color
- Institution
-
Oregon Arts Commission
University of Oregon
- Note
-
An interactive campus map of the University of Oregon may be viewed at: http://map.uoregon.edu/
- Color Space
-
RGB
- Biographical Information
-
"This urban nightscape is one from a body of works that address, in a very direct way, some of the fabric of the urban experience: people knowing people, a sense of community; not knowing, a displacement of community; wanting to know; being seen; anonymity-not being seen; safety; danger; patterns and rhythms of all that movement-people walking, cars rolling, lights changing; that feeling of being in a moving vehicle and watching the world go by, perhaps asking ourselves if we are participants, creators, audience or passers-by?" O'Reilly, 1991