Example sentences of "with works [prep] " in BNC.

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1 As part of the Guild of St George it was intended to be a means of bringing craftsmen into contact with works of art , especially of the Middle Ages , early Italian Renaissance and Gothic revival , and with objects of natural beauty .
2 The exhibition continues into twentieth-century painting with works of Futurism , the Cubist-Futurist Russians , American Cubism , Precisionism represented by Charles Demuth and Charles Sheeler and thence on through the various transformations that the art of this century has seen .
3 This scheme , open to all forms of misuse and fraudulent practices , was eventually stopped in 1984 , but not before several huge stores spread around the country were filled to bursting point with works of art for which there was no destination , no demand and no adequate storage facilities .
4 William Thompson provided moral and economic justification while Richard Carlile 's Everywoman 's Book was in 1826 the first devoted to contraception , advocating those methods propounded by Place , and similar advocacy came with works of Robert Dale Owen and Charles Knowlton .
5 The last of the finals was on Saturday night ( after a luncheon at the Rivercrest Country Club ) , with works of Chopin , Brahms and Rachmaninov that we had come to know and love ; and there must have been 700 people at the Forth Worth Club party afterwards .
6 In particular there are highly illuminating comparisons of the sons of the E♭ prelude and fugue with works of Hurlebusch which Bach is known to have possessed .
7 Zen stood there in the elegant and spacious sitting room , listening to the insistent voices of the glass and steel coffee table supporting a spray of glossy magazines , the pouchy leather furniture over which a huge lamp on a curved stainless-steel pole craned like a vulture , the silver plates and the crystal bowls , the discreetly modern canvases , the shelves lined with works of literature , the expensive antiques , the handwoven rugs on the gleaming parquet floor , the baby grand piano with a Mozart sonata Iying open on the stand , the fireplace piled high with logs .
8 THE VISUAL richness of Philip Prowse 's stage for his adaptation of Oscar Wilde 's novel is such as to make it the theatrical equivalent of one of those packed galleries in the Louvre , so pell mell with works of art that the task is to know where to fix the eye .
9 Unlike previous years the majority of sales were at the cheapest end of the price range , between £100 and £500 with works at the top price of £1,750 harder to shift .
10 Later , as James machinator , he was involved with works at Ruthin and Denbigh .
11 Appointed in March 1379 one of the king 's master carpenters , in 1380 he was charged with works at Leeds Castle , Kent , though he continued at Rochester until 1387 .
12 Entitled ‘ Kandinsky kleine Freuden-Aquarelle und Zeichnungen ’ ( Kandinsky 's small pleasures-watercolours and drawings ) , the exhibition covers the years 1910–1944 , the years during which his involvement with works on paper was most intense , and therefore presents much information in the catalogue not yet published by Dr Barnett .
13 Orchard was one of the most distinguished architects of his time and seems throughout to have dealt with works in Oxford and the neighbourhood .
14 Classic Print portfolios ; Indian Travel Collection ( designed by stonemason Tom Clark while in India ) ; The Art Nouveau Range ( illustrated with works from the Museum of Decorative Arts in Prague ) and the Feasts and Festivals Book ( compiled by Tom Jaine , editor of the Good Food Guide )
15 At the major theatres — the King 's , the Little Theatre in the Haymarket , Covent Garden and Drury Lane — audiences could enjoy the best of contemporary Italian opera , together with works by British composers like Arne , Hook and Dibdin .
16 Like Oxford 's Morse , his beat is a beautiful cultural city — Florence , where museums burst with works by old masters like Michelangelo , Botticelli and Leonardo Da Vinci .
17 Concentrating on the modern and contemporary prints : Lumley Cazalet will be showing prints by Frink , Marini , Picasso ( from the ‘ 156 ’ series ) , and works by contemporary printmakers ; Paul McCarron 's stand includes an impression of Whistler 's ‘ Weary ’ at $20,000 ; Lott and Gerrish are showing 200 British woodcuts as well as wood-engravings by Gibbings and Edward Calvert ; Marlborough Graphics have Paula Rego 's latest ‘ Peter Pan ’ suite , Bill Jacklin 's ‘ Coney Island Suite ’ and new work by Ken Kiff ; Jeffrey Kaplow of Proofs Ltd is showing ‘ Luce Myres de Face ’ by Lautrec ( W.121 ) , a rare proof printed in sanguine , priced at £20,000 , together with works by Redon , Munch and others ; Waddington Graphics are devoting most of their space to their own publications — Dine , Motherwell , Hamilton , Blake and Hodgkin — but will have some prints by Picasso and Goya ; Pratt Contemporary Art will again be showing works by Ana Maria Pacheco whose prints have attracted much attention at past fairs , together with new etchings and monotypes by Susan Adams , Denise Walker and Julian Grater .
18 On a more practical level Structure in Sculpture by Daniel Schodek covers the technical aspects of structure in sculpture , illustrating balance and geometry and the structural characteristics of different materials with works by Rodin , Calder , Serra and Christo .
19 The exhibition displays the as yet unwritten history of painting in the two Germanies , combining as it does abstract expressionists like H.Bachmayer , H.Prem and H.Sturm from the Munich ‘ Herzogstraße ’ group with works by C.Claus , G.Kozik , M.Morgner and S.Volmer from Chemnitz in Saxony .
20 The Peter Scott Gallery will be re-opening in January with works by Paula Rego , the National Gallery 's first associate artist in 1990 , whose paintings inspired by the Renaissance collections now decorate its restaurant in the Sainsbury Wing , and Nicola Hicks , whose vigorous unsentimental depictions of animals are justly renowned .
21 Mr Dayton has given the Institute many of its finest oils , by Manet ( ‘ The Smoker ’ , 1866 ) , Matisse ( ‘ Pensées de Pascal ’ , 1924 ) , Nicolas Mignard ( ‘ Venus and Adonis ’ , circa 1650 ) and van Goyen ( a riverscape at Utrecht , 1648 ) , along with works by Kandinsky , Kirchner , Bonnard and Mondrian .
22 Froment & Putman is also showing a group of artists , with works by Pep Agut , Anne-Marie Jugnet , Marin Kasimir , Joseph Kosuth , John McCracken , Didier Marcel and James Turrel .
23 Scher 's installations will also appear at Rudolf Zwirner during June and July , along with works by Pettibon , Pruit-Early , J. Shaw and Titus .
24 ‘ Another particularly odious corruption is the scholar who sets himself up as a unique authority on a certain painter , with the specific knowledge that , in cornering the market , his opinion will be essential for anyone dealing with works by that artist .
25 His first major painting is generally acknowledged to be ‘ Three studies for figures at the base of a Crucifixion ’ shown at the Lefevre Gallery , London , in a mixed show with works by Moore and Sutherland .
26 Back in the centre of town , an installation by Julia Scher , with works by Pettibon , Pruit & Early , Jim Shaw and Titus is to be seen at Rudolf Zwirner ; next door , Galerie Reckermann has drawings and sculptures by Ulrich Rückriem , along with ‘ Fragments of Memory Photography and Travel ’ at Heidi Reckermann Photographie upstairs .
27 This year , our sculpture exhibition opened with works by some very well-known artists David Mach , Antony Gormley , Richard Long , for instance but also lesser known artists of great merit like Nina Saunders , Diane Maclean , Richard Bray , Michael Archer .
28 At the end of April , Sotheby 's and Christie 's had their best sales in Melbourne since 1989 totalling A$ 3.5 million ( £1.5 million ; $2.7 million ) and A$1.5 million ( £652,000 ; $1.16 million ) respectively with works by Bunny , Russell Drysdale , Boyd and W.B. Gould all doing well .
29 Encouraged by a major project entitled ‘ Wien in Berlin ’ , abandoned for the time being , Thomas Schulter and the Austrian Helmut Federle have agreed to stage an exhibition of paintings and drawings in August , with works by Sol Le Witt completing the show .
30 Sylvana Lorenz combines mystery and humour in an exhibition entitled ‘ Tableaux volés ’ ( Stolen paintings ) , the results of an investigation by Frank Perrin , with works by Duplo , Farrel , Gambier , Petzet , Robert , Rockenschaub , Samore , Staehle , Sturtevant and Zobernig .
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