Kate Clark (other)
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Kate Clark (other)
Kate Clark may refer to: * Kate Clark (archaeologist), museum director and archaeologist * Kate Clark (artist), Seattle-based artist * Kate Clark (sculptor) New York-based sculptor * Kate Clark (journalist), British journalist * Kate Clark (writer) (1847–1926), New Zealand children's writer, poet, artist and community worker * Kate Freeman Clark (1875–1957), American painter * Kate Upson Clark (1851–1935), American writer * Kiti Karaka Rīwai Kiti Karaka Rīwai (12 September 1870 – 21 January 1927) (also known as Kiti Karaka, Catherine Clark, Kate Clark, Kitty Clark, Kiti Karaka Te Ao Ahitana, or Kiti Ashton) was a New Zealand tribal leader. She was born in Ruapuke Island, Southlan ...
(1870–1927), New Zealand tribal leader {{hndis, Clark, Kate ...
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Kate Clark (archaeologist)
Kate Clark is an Industrial archaeology, industrial archaeologist who has worked in museums and heritage in Australia and the UK. She has a special interest in concepts of value and heritage and has published widely on industrial archaeology, heritage and sustainable development, buildings archaeology, Cultural landscape, cultural landscapes, and public policy for heritage. She introduced to the UK the idea of values based thinking and prior understanding (informed conservation) in the conservation of landscapes, buildings and sites. Education She was educated at the University of Cambridge where she graduated with an MA in Archaeology and Anthropology in 1981. Career and research Clark is a museum director and archaeologist. She was elected a List of fellows of the Society of Antiquaries of London, Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London in 2000. Clark was Director of Sydney Living Museums between 2008 and 2013 and the CEO of Cadw from 2014. Before that, she also worked ...
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Kate Clark (artist)
Kate Clark (born 1987) is an American artist who works across public art, studio art, and installation. Her public art has focused on the coexistence of life forms in locations such as tree trunks and city blocks through installations, experiential storytelling, urban studies, ethnography, and collaboration with communities including archaeologists and landscape designers. Her work explores the evolving interpretations of old objects and their meanings. Early life Clark grew up in Anacortes, Washington. Through her parents receiving Fulbright Teaching grants as High School teachers, her family lived in Istanbul, Turkey in 1994-1995, and Brno, Czech Republic in 2003-2004, and was exposed to folklore and archaeological sites that informed her interest in local history and storytelling. While in Brno she studied at the Luzanky School of Art and the Studio Lavka photography studio. Education Clark went to Evergreen State College for a BA in Studio Arts, studying abroad at The Pont ...
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Kate Clark (sculptor)
Kate Clark is a New York-based sculptor, residing and working in Brooklyn. Her work synthesizes human faces with the bodies of animals. Clark's preferred medium is animal hide. Mary Logan Barmeyer says Clark's work is "meant to make you think twice about what it means to be human, and furthermore, what it means to be animal." Writer Monica Ramirez-Montagut says Clark's works "reclaim storytelling and vintage techniques as strategies to address contemporary discourses on welfare, the environment, and female struggles." Education and early career Kate Clark comes from a background in arts, with her father being a painter. Kate's art of choice was also painting; she did not get into sculpting until college. In 1994, Kate Clark graduated from Cornell University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Sculpture. She went on to obtain a Master of Fine Arts degree from Cranbrook Academy of Art in 2001. Kate began her work by creating a piece called ''How Are You?'', which was featured in the Foru ...
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Kate Clark (journalist)
Kate Clark is a British journalist. She was based in Kabul, Afghanistan in 1999 as a foreign correspondent. On March 14, 2001, the Taliban ordered her expelled. At that time, she was the only western reporter based full-time in Afghanistan. Her expulsion was seen as a reaction to her reports on the Taliban's destruction of the Buddhist statues at Bamiyan. The Committee to Protect Journalists condemned the Taliban's expulsion of Clark. It said that since there is no independent domestic press in Afghanistan many Afghans relied on the short-wave broadcasts the BBC transmitted in Dari and Pashto. Clark continued to report on Afghanistan, from outside its borders, and returned to Kabul on 15 November 2001, after the Taliban retreat. In September 2002, Clark was able to interview Wakil Muttawakil, the former Taliban Foreign Minister. He told her that he had first heard rumors that Al-Qaeda was planning a large sneak attack in the continental United States, and that he immediatel ...
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Kate Clark (writer)
Kate Emma McCosh Clark (; 15 May 1847 – 30 November 1926) was a New Zealand children's writer, poet, artist and community worker. She wrote and illustrated an early New Zealand children's book, ''A Southern Cross Fairy Tale'', which was published in London in 1891. Her other works included ''Persephone and other Poems'' (1894) and ''Maori Tales and Legends'' (1896). Early life and marriage Clark was born at Ipswich, Suffolk, England, in 1847, to Susan Bonner and her husband, Henry Woolnough, an architect. She studied art and lived in London, earning a living by undertaking research for writers, often at the British Museum. On 8 April 1875 she married James Clark, an Auckland businessman, in Melbourne. Two days later, on a Saturday, the Auckland premises of Archibald Clark and Sons were closed to give employees the opportunity to celebrate the wedding. She had five children while they lived in Auckland, and their first son was born on 28 December 1875. From 1880 to 1883 he ...
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Kate Freeman Clark
Kate Freeman Clark (September 3, 1875 – March 3, 1957) was an American painter born in Holly Springs, Mississippi. Clark was the daughter of Edward Clark, an attorney in Vicksburg, Mississippi, and Cary Freeman Clark, whose great-uncle was Edward Cary Walthall. An only child, she was named for her grandmother, and was called "Little Kate" to distinguish her from "Mama Kate". Soon after her birth her father purchased a plantation which would later become the centerpiece of the town of Cary, named for his wife. Kate and her mother summered in Holly Springs, where the air was considered cleaner than along the Mississippi Delta, and Edward would write his daughter long letters during these absences. Edward Clark died of pneumonia in 1885, soon after being named assistant to L. Q. C. Lamar, Edward Walthall's former law partner who had been named Grover Cleveland's Secretary of the Interior. At his death Kate and her mother moved to Freeman Place in Holly Springs, which had been t ...
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Kate Upson Clark
Catherine Pickens Upson Clark (February 22, 1851 – February 18, 1935) was an American writer. She wrote articles for ''Godey's Lady's Book'', ''Atlantic Monthly'', ''Christian Herald'', and ''Harper's Magazine''. She was an editor of the ''Springfield Republican'', '' Good Cheer Magazine'', and later the ''New York Evening Post''. She published several books, short stories, and one novel. Biography She was born in Camden, Alabama in 1851 to Edwin Upson and Priscilla Maxwell. She was raised in Charlemont, Massachusetts and she graduated from Wheaton Female Seminary in Norton, Massachusetts in 1869. In 1874 she married Edward Perkins Clark, and they had three sons, Charles Upson Clark Charles Upson Clark (January 14, 1875 – September 29, 1960) was a professor of history at Columbia University. He discovered the Barberini Codex, the earliest Aztec writings on herbal medicines extant. Biography Clark was born in Springfield, ..., John Kirkland Clark and George Maxwell Clark. ...
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