Petrit Halilaj on the Met rooftop with his sculptural installation “Abetare.”Credit...Vincent Tullo for The New York Times Supported by By Jason Farago When the Kosovar artist Petrit Halilaj ...
The latest of them, “Petrit Halilaj, Abetare,” which opens on Tuesday, is one of the airiest looking so far. Indeed, drawing — or skywriting — rather than sculpture is what I’d call this ...
April 29 (UPI) --An artistic installation of twisted metal mimicking children's scribbles, by Kosovar artist Petrit Halilaj, was unveiled Monday at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art's rooftop ...
This latest iteration of his extensive “Abetare” project, first shown in 2015, is based on extensive research, comprising around 3,000 doodles he found on classroom desks both at his former ...
The exhibition, titled Abetare, is on view through October 27; it's included with general admission. RECOMMENDED: The best outdoor art in NYC this spring The artist, Petrit Halilaj, was born in ...
The exhibition, titled Abetare, is on view through October 27; it's included with general admission. The artist, Petrit Halilaj, was born in war-torn Kosovo in 1986 and had to flee his home during ...
Halilaj said the metal sculptures in his sprawling installation of Abetare, which is the name of the book he used to learn the alphabet, are based on children's doodles and drawings he found on ...
Halilaj said the metal sculptures in his sprawling installation of Abetare, which is the name of the book he used to learn the alphabet, are based on children's doodles and drawings he found on school ...