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・ Sylvie Giry Rousset
・ Sylvie Goulard
・ Sylvie Goy-Chavent
・ Sylvia Pankhurst
・ Sylvia Park
・ Sylvia Park Railway Station
・ Sylvia Pasquel
・ Sylvia Payne
・ Sylvia Pedlar
・ Sylvia Perez
・ Sylvia Peters
・ Sylvia Pinel
・ Sylvia Plachy
・ Sylvia Plath
・ Sylvia Plath effect
Sylvia Plimack Mangold
・ Sylvia Plischke
・ Sylvia Poggioli
・ Sylvia Pogorzelski
・ Sylvia Porter
・ Sylvia Pressler
・ Sylvia Rafael
・ Sylvia Ratonel
・ Sylvia Ratonel (album)
・ Sylvia Rexach
・ Sylvia Rhone
・ Sylvia Richardson
・ Sylvia Rimm
・ Sylvia Rivera
・ Sylvia Rivera Law Project


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Sylvia Plimack Mangold : ウィキペディア英語版
Sylvia Plimack Mangold
Sylvia Plimack Mangold (born September 18, 1938) is an American artist, painter, printmaker, and pastelist. She is known for her representational depictions of interiors and landscapes.
==Life and career==
Plimack Mangold was born Sylvia Plimack in New York City, the daughter of Ethel, an office administrator, and Maurice Plimack, an accountant and businessman.〔(The paintings of Sylvia Plimack Mangold ), Albright-Knox Art Gallery (1994), page 115〕〔(Sylvia Plimack Mangold - works on paper, 1968-1991 ), Davison Art Center, University of Michigan. Museum of Art (1992), page 7〕〔http://www.brooklynrail.org/2009/12/art/sylvia-plimack-mangold-with-john-yau〕 She grew up in Queens, and attended the High School of Music and Art in Manhattan, after high school she was accepted into the program at Cooper Union in 1956. She continued her studies at Yale University and graduated with a B.F.A. in 1961. In the same year she married Yale classmate and fellow painter Robert Mangold.
After studying at Yale with William Bailey and others, Plimack Mangold worked as a representational painter. Her paintings in the early 1960s were paintings of floors, walls and corners, compositions where mirror images were also introduced, making the space more complex. In the 1970s she added trompe l'oeil elements such as metal rulers and masking tape along the borders of the images. In the 1980s she introduced the images of the landscape to the canvas affixed by the image of masking tape. Eventually, the landscape image filled the entire canvas and focused on individual trees, their branches cropped so as to create the spaces between the limbs and branches of the trees. All the landscape paintings are done from observation. Even as the subject matter of Plimack Mangold's paintings has shifted, her work has always been based in perceptual realism, inviting viewers to observe from up close and mirroring her own process of observation.
Mangold received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1975. Her work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Neuberger Museum of Art at the State University of New York at Purchase, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut, and is represented in the aforementioned museums in Boston, Hartford, and the Brooklyn Museum of Art.
She is the mother of film director and screenwriter James Mangold, and a musician Andrew Mangold.

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