Event class: founded, group, member, became, artists, society, together, art, association, joined
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Events with high posterior probability
Frederick O'Neal | Among theater companies which he helped organize were Harlem's American Negro Theatre in 1940, which started the careers of Harry Belafonte, Ruby Dee, Sidney Poitier, among others. |
Klaus Blaum | In October 2004 Klaus Blaum became Project Leader of the'' Helmholtz Research Group for Young Investigators'' on'' Experiments with Stored and Cooled Ions'' at the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz. |
Kazimierz Kuratowski | In 1929, Kuratowski became a member of the Warsaw Scientific Society While Kuratowski associated with many of the scholars of the Lwów School of Mathematics, such as Stefan Banach and Stanislaw Ulam, and the circle of mathematicians based around the Scottish Café he kept close connections with Warsaw. |
Igor Novikov (painter) | Afterwards he founded with young colleagues the colony of artists'' Furmanny Lane'' in Moscow within the movement of Russian Soviet Nonconformist Art and was member of the group until the closure in 1991. |
Valentin Rasputin | An important point in Rasputin's early literary career was a young writers' seminar in September 1965 in Chita led by Vladimir Chivilikhin (Владимир Чивилихин), who encouraged the young writer's literary aspirations and recommended him for membership in the prestigious Union of Soviet Writers. |
Nicolae Xenopol | In 1898, he accepted an invitation from art patron Alexandru Bogdan-Piteşti, and joined the steering committee of his Ileana art society, which grouped independent painters reacting against academic art. |
Daniil Kharms | In 1928, Daniil Kharms founded the avant-garde collective OBERIU, or Union of Real Art. |
Genrikh Borovik | In 1962, Genrikh Borovik was accepted into the USSR Union of Writers at the Congress of Young Writers. |
Gabriele Reuter | She became acquainted with the organisation'' Free Stage'' in Berlin and the Friedrichshagener Circle and others including Gerhart Hauptmann, Otto Erich Hartleben, Ernst von Wolzogen and, through Mackay, the publisher Samuel Fischer, who, at the end of 1895, published her novel From a Good Family. |
Nina Veselova | Nina Veselova was a member of the Leningrad Union of Artists since 1950. |
Jean Arp | In 1920, as Hans Arp, along with Max Ernst, and the social activist Alfred Grünwald, he set up the Cologne Dada group. |
Martha Rosler | In 1989, in lieu of a solo exhibition at the Dia Art Foundation in New York City, Rosler organized the project'' If You Lived Here...'', in which over 50 artists, film - and video producers, photographers, architects, planners, homeless people, squatters, activist groups, and schoolchildren addressed contested living situations, architecture, planning, and utopian visions. |
Alexei Korzukhin | In 1870, he became a founding member of the art group The Wanderers. |
Daniel Podrzycki | In 1993 Podrzycki, together with several of his nearest colleagues established and headed the independent Free Working Union'' August - 80'' (Wolny Zwiazek Zawodowy'' Sierpien-80''). |
Viatcheslav Moshe Kantor | Kantor serves as the president of the Museum of Avant-Garde Mastery (MAGMA), founded in 2001 in Moscow on Kantor's initiative. |
Harry Graf Kessler | After moving to Berlin in 1893, he worked on the Art Nouveau journal PAN, which published literary work by, among others, Richard Dehmel, Theodor Fontane, Friedrich Nietzsche, Detlev von Liliencron, Julius Hart, Novalis, Paul Verlaine and Alfred Lichtwark. |
Mile Kokotov | He was a member of the Radio Club in Štip from 1977 and actively contributed to the spread of radio engineering, electronics and telecommunications among young people. |
Mischa Spoliansky | There Victor Hollaender and Werner Richard Heymann heard him and invited him to write and play for the literary cabaret'' Schall und Rauch'' in the basement of the Große Schauspielhaus, which Max Reinhardt had founded in 1919. |
Otto Dix | Dix was a contributor to the Neue Sachlichkeit exhibition in Mannheim in 1925, which featured works by George Grosz, Max Beckmann, Heinrich Maria Davringhausen, Karl Hubbuch, Rudolf Schlichter, Georg Scholz and many others. |
Bruno Zevi | Zevi participated in the influential International Architecture Symposium'' Mensch und Raum'' (Man and Space) at the Vienna University of Technology (Technische Universität Wien) in 1984, also attended by Justus Dahinden, Ernst Gisel, Jorge Glusberg, Otto Kapfinger, Frei Otto, Ionel Schein, Dennis Sharp, Paolo Soleri, and Pierre Vago. |
Ernst Fuchs (artist) | In 1958 he founded the Galerie Fuchs-Fischoff in Vienna to promote and support the younger painters of the Fantastic Realism school. |
G?nther Uecker | Uecker met the group ZERO with Heinz Mack and Otto Piene in 1960, artists who propagated a new beginning of art in opposition to the German Informel. |
Kristine Stiles | Active in the alternative art space movement during the punk era in San Francisco, Stiles performed, exhibited, and curated at JetWave (1980 -- 82), founded by artists Randy Hussong, Sabina Ott, Bruce Gluck, and Fredrica Drotos, and at Twin Palms, founded by Lynn Hershman Leeson and Steve Dolan. |
Aleksandra Ekster | In 1919 together with other avant-garde artists Kliment Red' ko and Nina Genke-Meller she decorated the streets and squares of Kiev and Odessa in abstract style for Revolution Festivities. |
Jesper H?m | In 1973, together with his wife Elsebeth Reingaard, he opened the Delta Art Cinema which later became known as the Delta Bio. |
Vadim Sidur | In 1957 he became a member of the Union of Artists of USSR. |
Esther Newport | When the Association began to split severely between art educators (including many teaching sisters and Newport herself) and those more interested in the philosophy of Catholic art (including Graham Carey), Newport left the organization in 1958 and founded the Salve Regina Conference. |
Rolf Gehlhaar | In 1969, together with Johannes Fritsch and David C. Johnson, he founded the Feedback Studio, Cologne, a new-music performance center and publishing house. |
Viktor Suslin | In November 1979 after several performances of his works in Paris, Cologne and Venice, Suslin was publicly denounced and blacklisted as one of the'' Khrennikov's Seven'' at the Sixth Congress of the Union of Soviet Composers for unapproved participation in some festivals of Soviet music in the West. |
Erich Walter Sternberg | In 1936 he helped Bronisław Huberman found the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra and promoted the Palestine chapter of the International Society for Contemporary Music. |
Edward Schroeder Prior | His involvement with The Clergy and Artists' Association of 1896, set up to improve the links between patron and producer, led directly to commissions for example for the lych gate at Methley Church. |
Nikolai Galakhov | In 1955 for a series landscapes of the Volga River he was admitted to the Leningrad Union of Soviet Artists. |
Osip Brik | He was also interested in photography and film :'' In 1918, Brik was a member of IZO Narkompros (Visual Arts Section of the People's Committee for Education)... Brik was especially close to Alexander Rodchenko and did much to make his photographic work known.'' |
Ronald C. Phillips | In 1973, marine botanist and seagrass taxonomist Cornelius den Hartog invited Prof. Phillips to join the first International Seagrass Workshop in Leiden, Netherlands along with many international seagrass experts with whom he worked throughout his career. |
Peter Behrens | In 1907, Behrens and ten other people (Hermann Muthesius, Theodor Fischer, Josef Hoffmann, Joseph Maria Olbrich, Bruno Paul, Richard Riemerschmid, Fritz Schumacher, among others), plus twelve companies, gathered to create the German Werkbund. |
David Shterenberg | In 1918 he had an exhibition with the group Jewish Society for the Furthering of the Arts together with Baranoff-Rossine, Altman, and Lissitzky, in Moscow. |
Joseph Goebbels | Under Goebbels auspices the participating members (e. g. Pierre Drieu La Rochelle and Robert Brasillach) founded the'' Europäische Schriftstellervereinigung'' (European Writers' League), officially in March 1942. |
Karl Popper | In 1947, Popper founded with Friedrich Hayek, Milton Friedman, Ludwig von Mises and others the Mont Pelerin Society to defend classical liberalism, in the spirit of the Open Society. |
Henri-Georges Adam | In 1936 he joined the Association of Revolutionary Writers and Artists, where he met painters, Alfred Manessier,, and Arpad Szenes. |
Gerd Ruge | In 1961, Ruge, together with Felix Rexhausen und Carola Stern, founded the German section of Amnesty International in Cologne. |
Gustav Klutsis | Klutsis is one of four artists with a claim to having invented the sub-genre of political photo montage in 1918 (along with the German Dadaists Hannah Höch and Raoul Hausmann, and the Russian El Lissitzky). |
Rudolf Hausner | In 1946 he founded a surrealist group together with Edgar Jené, Ernst Fuchs, Wolfgang Hutter and Fritz Janschka. |
Akira Kurosawa | To his aid came friends and famed directors Keisuke Kinoshita, Masaki Kobayashi and Kon Ichikawa, who together with Kurosawa established in July 1969 a production company called the Club of the Four Knights (Yonki no kai). |
Margaret Danner | In 1946, Danner founded Art Associates to gather and promote Chicago's black writers and poets. |
Natalia Goncharova | Goncharova was a member of the Der Blaue Reiter avant-garde group from its founding in 1911. |
Friedrich Siegmund-Schultze | At the World Churches Conference in Konstanz from 1 to 3 August 1914, just before the outbreak of war, he was secretary and co-founder of the'' Weltbundes für Freundschaftsarbeit der Kirchen'' and formed a pact with his fellow-delegate English Quaker Henry Hodgkin (meeting on the platform of the railway station at Cologne, they pledged to each other that,'' We are one in Christ and can never be at war'') that led to the formation of the Fellowship of Reconciliation and the International Fellowship of Reconciliation. |
Claire Hodgkins | - Paris''... Mastery, skill, elegance'' - LA LANTERNE, Brussels In 1974 she founded the Little Orchestra of Loma Linda University, a select group of musicians that included musicians, physicians, medical and dental students, and others in the medical professions. |
Alexander Nikolayevich Samokhvalov | Since 1932 Alexander Samokhvalov was a member of Leningrad Union of Artists. |
Heinz Mack | In 1967 together with Otto Piene he started a series of what were called Abendausstellungen (evening exhibitions) at their studio in Düsseldorf. |
Lev Shestov | In 1898 he entered a circle of prominent Russian intellectuals and artists which included Nikolai Berdyaev, Sergei Diaghilev, Dmitri Merezhkovsky and Vasily Rozanov. |
Shepard Fairey | In 2004, Fairey joined artists Robbie Conal and Mear One to create a series of'' anti-war, anti- Bush'' posters for a street art campaign called'' Be the Revolution'' for the art collective'' Post Gen''.'' |
Ben Allison | Allison served as the Artistic Director of the Collective from its inception until its dissolution in 2005. |
Jon Carter | In 2009 he became a member of the Rizla Invisible Players, an ever-changing collective of musicians and artists. |
Igor Spassky | As General Designer, he was the main designer of all of Rubin's projects since 1974, which according to Rubin's website include : Altogether, Spassky's projects have included 187 submarines (91 diesel-electric and 96 nuclear) that have been the core of the Soviet and Russian Navy. |
Wolfgang G. Schwanitz | After German reunification, he worked (1990 -- 95) at the Modern Orient Center -- founded by the Max Planck Society of Munich -- and published books on relations between Germany and the Middle East. |
Traian Demetrescu | Traian Demetrescu defended Constantin Dobrogeanu-Gherea in his polemic with Junimist leader Titu Maiorescu, and, after 1893, was among a group of younger socialists to mount a press campaign against Junimea (other people in the group included Dimitrie Anghel, Anton Bacalbaşa, Emil Fagure, Garabet Ibrăileanu, Raicu Ionescu-Rion, Sofia Nădejde, Henri Sanielevici, Constantin Stere, and Avram Steuerman-Rodion). |
Pepetela | Until 1969, Pepetela, Abranches, and other MPLA members worked together to document Angolan culture and society and publicize the MPLA's struggle. |
Filippo Addarii | Addarii began his career in 1999, organising contemporary art exhibitions to promote human rights as project manager of the Geneva-based NGO Art for the World, in partnership with multilateral organisations such as the UNHCR, WHO, and UNICEF. |
Solomon Nikritin | In 1922 he participated in the founding of the group, the Projectionists, together with Kliment Red' ko and Tishler among others. |
Julio Peris Brell | He entered to the new Circle of Fine Arts in 1912, after the overcoming in the organization of the split of a group of artists. |
Attila Szalay-Berzeviczy | In 2005, with fifteen companies that play a decisive role in the Hungarian economy and a group of a hundred successful managing directors, media experts, well-known public figures and famous sportsmen, he founded expressly non-political and non-profit civic organisation Budapest Olympics Movement (BOM). |
Hans Richter (artist) | Richter was co-founder, in 1919, of the Association of Revolutionary Artists ('' Artistes Radicaux'') at Zürich. |
Ren?-Yves Creston | In 1923, he was one of the founders with Jeanne Malivel and his wife Suzanne Creston, of Ar Seiz Breur (The Seven Brothers), which united dozens of Breton artists and designers in a movement to create a distinctive Breton avant-garde style. |
Carl Georg Heise | Heise initiated in 1929 one of the first photographic exhibitions, displaying photographs by Albert Renger-Patzsch, Emil Otto Hoppé, Hugo Erfurth and Wilhelm Castelli, then a young Lübeck photographer. |
Lesser Ury | In 1893 he joined the Munich Secession, one of the several Secession s formed by progressive artists in Germany and Austria in the last years of the 19th century. |
J. Alden Weir | Weir was also one of the founding members of'' The Ten'', a loosely-allied group of American artists dissatisfied with professional art organizations, who banded together in 1898 to exhibit their works as a stylistically unified group. |
Otto Erich Hartleben | Here he founded in 1903 the Halkyone Academy for the Pure Sciences, which included among its members Peter Behrens, Otto Julius Bierbaum, Franz Blei, Gerhart Hauptmann, Alfred Kubin, Emil Orlik and Ferdinand Pfohl, and which boasted just two rules :'' § 1. |
Peggy Guggenheim | Her interest in new art was instrumental in advancing the careers of several important modern artists including the American painters Jackson Pollock and William Congdon, the Austrian surrealist Wolfgang Paalen, the sound poet Ada Verdun Howell and the German painter Max Ernst, whom she married in December 1941. |
Oskar Panizza | Panizza became an avid member of the Gesellschaft für modernes Leben (Society for Modern Life), which Conrad founded in 1890 together with Detlev von Liliencron, Otto Julius Bierbaum, Julius Schaumberger, Hanns von Gumppenberger and Georg Schaumberg. |
Thomas Hauert | He participated in improvisation events like Movement Research Fall Festival 2008 and regularly improvises with musicians including Michel Debrulle, Chris Corsano and Barry Guy. |
Savva Mamontov | In 1870, Mamontov purchased the Abramtsevo estate, located north of Moscow, and founded there an artistic union which included most of the best Russian artist s of the beginning of 20th century, such as Konstantin Korovin, Rafail Levitsky, Mikhail Nesterov, Ilya Repin, Vasily Polenov, Valentin Serov, Mikhail Vrubel, the brothers Vasnetsov, sculptors Viktor Hartmann and Mark Antokolsky, as well as various others. |
Rick Sternbach | With four other artists, in 1981 Sternbach helped found the non-profit International Association of Astronomical Artists (IAAA), to arrange projects that promote and foster space art. |
Paul Davidson (producer) | In late 1912 the PAGU moved to Berlin and opened a studio in Berlin - Tempelhof (Davidson would also play an important role in the founding of the Babelsberg studios). |
Eliahu Gat | Gat was among the founders of the Group of Ten, which held its first exhibition in February 1951 at Beit HaOmanim in Tel Aviv, home of the Israeli Artists Association. |
Luis Zubillaga | As the founding member and artistic director of the Young Symphonic Orchestra (Orquesta Sinfonica Juvenil) at the University of La Plata, he organised the Second Meeting of Latin American Young Symphonic Orchestras, Critics and Composers, in 1985. |
Karl Bleibtreu | In 1890, together with Konrad Alberti, Bleibtreu founded the Deutsche Bühne (German Theatre) in Berlin, as a rival to the then important Freie Bühne (Open Theatre). |
Nick Bax | In 1990 Bax became a member of The Designers Republic (TDR) and helped to establish it as one of the most influential graphic design companies in the world. |
Emil Kirdorf | He was also a founding member of the Freie Ukraine (Free Ukraine) association, of the Kolonialverein (founded in 1882) and of the Flottenverein, a lobby in favour of extension of the Kaiserliche Marine against the British Navy. |
Vasily Golubev | In 1966 Vasily Golubev was admitted to the Leningrad Union of Artists. |
Luigi Frari | Luigi Frari was also the president of the Šibenik Theatre Society, which financed and built Šibenik `` Mazzoleni'' Theater in 1870, one of the oldest in Croatia. |
Maria Rudnitskaya | Maria Rudnitskaya was a member of the Leningrad Union of Artists since 1949. |
Uku Masing | Masing was a member of the influential group of Estonian poets brought together in 1938 by literary scholar Ants Oras who was greatly influenced by T. S. Eliot. |
Wolfgang Hollegha | In 1956, together with Josef Mikl, Markus Prachensky and Arnulf Rainer, he formed the'' Malergruppe St. Stephan''. |
Aliaksei Karpiuk | Since 1953 he was a member of the Association of Writers of the USSR. |
August Engelhardt | Coconut vision In the fall of 1899, Engelhardt joined the Jungborn ('' Fountain of Youth'') in the Harz mountains, Eckental, an association for wild living, which was founded by brothers Adolf Just and Rudolf Just and whose basic principles were vegetarianism and nudism. |
Guido von List | These supporters also included occultists such as Hugo Göring (editor of theosophical literature at Weimar), Harald Arjuna Grävell van Jostenoode (theosophical author at Heidelberg), Max Seiling (an esoteric pamphleteer and popular philosopher in Munich), and Paul Zillmann (editor of the Metaphysische Rundschau and master of an occult lodge in Berlin) List's influence continued to grow and attract distinctive members after the official founding of the society in 1908. |
Ben Allison | Allison continued his role as artistic director of the Jazz Composers Collective through 2005, when the members of the Collective decided that they had realized many of their initial goals and the organization was dissolved. |
Guido von List | The other organisation List was involved with was the Literarische Donaugesellschaft (Danubian Literary Society), which was founded by List and Fanny Wschiansky the year the Iduna was dissolved in 1893. |
Uwe Johnson | Returning to West Berlin in 1969, he became a member of the West German PEN Center and of the Akademie der Künste (Academy of the Arts). |
Elizabeth Catlett | In Mexico, she worked with the Taller de Gráfica Popular, (People's Graphic Arts Workshop), a group of printmakers organized in 1937 by Leopoldo Méndez, Raúl Anguiano, Luis Arenal, and Pablo O'Higgins and dedicated to using their art to promote social change. |
Vera Fischer (sculptor) | Since 1952, Fischer was a member of the Croatian Association of Artists. |
Evgeny Pozdniakov | Evgeny Pozdniakov was a member of the Leningrad Union of Artists since 1985. |
Harold Corsini | He joined the Photo League in 1938,'' the only free camera club in New York City'', whose members were socially concerned photographers. |
Hans G. Helms | From 1957 onwards he made his base in Cologne, where he worked together with the composer Gottfried Michael Koenig at the buildings of the Studios für Elektronische Musik at Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR). |
Boris Anisfeld | 1915 - Anisfeld becomes a member of the Jewish Society for the Encouragement of the Arts, and participates in a number of charitable auctions for the support of needy artists and other social groups. |
Hans Werner Meyer | Since April 2006 Meyer has been an honorary board member of the German actors' trade union Bundesverband der Film - und Fernsehschauspieler. |
Peter Brook | In 1970, with Micheline Rozan, Brook founded the International Centre for Theatre Research, a multinational company of actors, dancers, musicians and others which travelled widely in the Middle East and Africa in the early 1970s. |
Michele Maylender | Maylender was among the founders in 1893 of a literary circle, which became the largest Italian cultural venue in Fiume. |
Piotr Buchkin | Piotr Buchkin was a member of the Leningrad Union of Artists since 1932. |
Maur?cio Rocha e Silva | In 1948, with a group of fellow scientists, such as José Reis, Paulo Sawaya and Gastão Rosenfeld, he founded the Sociedade Brasileira para o Progresso da Ciência (SBPC - Brazilian Society of the Advancement of Science), similar in scope and philosophy to its British and American (AAAS) counterparts. |