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Between April and July 2023 the gallery presented Artist Rooms, a touring exhibition featuring the Yorkshire-born artist Martin Creed, who filled the main gallery of the Mercer with over a thousand balls of different sizes. [26] [27] Between 2023 and 2024, Kate Bentley had a solo exhibition of paintings at The Mercer. [28]
The Martin scale is an older version of color scale commonly used in physical anthropology to establish more or less precisely the eye color of an individual. It was created by the anthropologist Rudolf Martin in the first half of the 20th century. Later he improved this scale with cooperation of Bruno K. Schultz, leading to the Martin-Schultz ...
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Martin Payne, main character in the Martin TV series; Max Payne, a video game series Max Payne, the first game in the series; Max Payne (character), the series' eponymous character; Max Payne, 2008 film based on the series; Payne, 1999 US TV show patterned after Fawlty Towers; Payne, a boss in the 2010 first-person action game Red Steel 2
Larry Gagosian opened his first gallery in Los Angeles in 1980, [1] showing the work of young contemporary artists such as Eric Fischl and Jean-Michel Basquiat. The business expanded from Los Angeles to New York: In 1989, a new, spacious gallery opened on the Upper East Side of Manhattan at 980 Madison Avenue, with the inaugural exhibition "The Maps of Jasper Johns".
Michigan portal; This redirect is within the scope of WikiProject Michigan, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of the U.S. state of MichiganWikiProject Michigan
Martin-Schultz scale. The Martin–Schultz scale is a standard color scale commonly used in physical anthropology to establish more or less precisely the eye color of an individual; it was created by the anthropologists Rudolf Martin and Bruno K Schultz in the first half of the 20th century.