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EXHIBITIONS BY YEAR

Dream/Reality/Dream

26 September to 28 November 1977

View on MoMA


MoMA Staff

Curator

Artists

Ivan Le Lorraine Albright
American, 1897–1983
19 exhibitions
Hans Bellmer
German, 1902–1975
17 exhibitions
Victor Brauner
Romanian, 1903–1966
10 exhibitions
Harry Callahan
American, 1912–1999
35 exhibitions
Linda Connor
American, born 1944
3 exhibitions
Joseph Cornell
American, 1903–1972
22 exhibitions
Salvador Dalí
Spanish, 1904–1989
59 exhibitions
Paul Delvaux
Belgian, 1897–1994
22 exhibitions
Jean Dubuffet
French, 1901–1985
76 exhibitions
James Ensor
Belgian, 1860–1949
34 exhibitions
Max Ernst
French, born Germany. 1891–1976
92 exhibitions
Bennett Hall
1 exhibition
Debora Hunter
1 exhibition
Jirí Kolár
Czech, 1914–2002
1 exhibition
Les Krims
American
3 exhibitions
Louis Lanzano
American, born 1947
1 exhibition
André Masson
French, 1896–1987
71 exhibitions
Roberto Matta
Chilean, 1911–2002
45 exhibitions
Duane Michals
American, born 1932
12 exhibitions
Erich Munch
1 exhibition
Bea Nettles
American, born 1946
3 exhibitions
Claes Oldenburg
69 exhibitions
Robin Page
British, born 1932
1 exhibition
Douglas Prince
American, born 1943
4 exhibitions
Odilon Redon
French, 1840–1916
78 exhibitions
Felicien Joseph Victor Rops
Belgian, 1833–1898
3 exhibitions
Henri Rousseau
French, 1844–1910
49 exhibitions
Lucas Samaras
American, born Greece 1936
26 exhibitions
Kurt Seligmann
American, 1900–1962
19 exhibitions
Yves Tanguy
American, born France. 1900–1955
53 exhibitions
George A. Tice
American, born 1938
8 exhibitions
Arthur Tress
1 exhibition
Jerry Uelsmann
American, born 1934
17 exhibitions

New York Times Review of the exhibition

PUBLISHED

4 September 1977

Arts and Leisure Guide; Of Special Interest

By Edited Ann BARRY

One to See Lamont Johnson's film "One on One" recently opened and is now playing around town in the wake of generally good reviews. Concerned with a high school basketball star's confrontation with the highpressure, big-business world of supposedly amateur athletics, the film, which might have become a cliche, instead gives an audience plenty of action--including a terrific basketball game as a finale--and, according to Vincent Canby, "characters of unexpected backbone." (See Film)

New York Times • page 78 • 7,166 words