Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Antonio_Prieto_(artist)> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 35 of
35
with 100 triples per page.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) abstract "Antonio \"Tony\" Prieto (1912-1967) was a ceramic artist and art professor at Mills College, Oakland, California. He was instrumental in developing an important ceramics collection for the Mills College Art Museum. He was born in Yaldepenas, Spain on August 23, 1912 and died in Oakland on March 11, 1967.Prieto immigrated to the United States as a child in 1916. After studying at Alfred University he began to teach ceramics at California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland (now California College of the Arts) in 1946. At the time, F. Carlton Ball was teaching ceramics at Mills College. When he left Mills, Prieto succeeded him.While teaching at Mills College from 1950 to 1967, Prieto compiled a personal collection of ceramic art, including works by Robert Arneson, Viola Frey, Henry Varnum Poor, Peter Voulkos, and Marguerite Wildenhain. After Prieto’s death, artists contributed more works to a memorial collection, bringing the total to over 400 works. In 1970, the Prieto family donated the collection to the college. An Antonio Prieto Gallery was created adjacent to the Tea Shop at Mills, and the collection was exhibited there for several years.In 2004 the artist's sons, Esteban, Mark, Peter, and Paco Prieto, and his widow Eunice Damron donated his papers to the Archives of American Art as part of the Nanette L. Laitman Documentation Project for Craft and Decorative Arts in America.Robert Arneson studied with Prieto and mentioned him numerous times in his oral history interview in the Archives of American Art.".
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageExternalLink transcript.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageID "40358775".
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageLength "2064".
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageOutDegree "14".
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageRevisionID "687290033".
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink Alfred_University.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink Archives_of_American_Art.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink California_College_of_the_Arts.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink Category:1912_births.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink Category:1967_deaths.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_ceramists.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Artists_from_California.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink Henry_Varnum_Poor.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink Marguerite_Wildenhain.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink Mills_College.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink Oakland,_California.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink Peter_Voulkos.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Arneson.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLink Viola_Frey.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Antonio Prieto (artist)".
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) subject Category:1912_births.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) subject Category:1967_deaths.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) subject Category:American_ceramists.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) subject Category:Artists_from_California.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) hypernym Artist.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) type Person.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) comment "Antonio \"Tony\" Prieto (1912-1967) was a ceramic artist and art professor at Mills College, Oakland, California. He was instrumental in developing an important ceramics collection for the Mills College Art Museum. He was born in Yaldepenas, Spain on August 23, 1912 and died in Oakland on March 11, 1967.Prieto immigrated to the United States as a child in 1916.".
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) label "Antonio Prieto (artist)".
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) sameAs Q16203172.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) sameAs m.0wymnv6.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) sameAs Q16203172.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) wasDerivedFrom Antonio_Prieto_(artist)?oldid=687290033.
- Antonio_Prieto_(artist) isPrimaryTopicOf Antonio_Prieto_(artist).