User talk:Okhereitgoes

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Welcome!

Hello, Okhereitgoes, and welcome to Wikipedia! Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are some pages that you might find helpful:

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If you need help, check out Wikipedia:Questions, ask me on my talk page, or place {{helpme}} on your talk page and ask your question there. Again, welcome!

BencherliteTalk 00:36, 11 November 2011 (UTC)[reply]

The article Thomas Lamprecht has been proposed for deletion because, under Wikipedia policy, all newly created biographies of living persons must have at least one reference to a reliable source that directly supports material in the article.

If you created the article, please don't be offended. Instead, consider improving the article. For help on inserting references, see Referencing for beginners, or ask at the help desk. Once you have provided at least one reliable source, you may remove the {{prod blp}} tag. Please do not remove the tag unless the article is sourced. If you cannot provide such a source within ten days, the article may be deleted, but you can request that it be undeleted when you are ready to add one. ukexpat (talk) 14:17, 11 November 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Help[edit]

Please ask a question. ~ Matthewrbowker Talk to me 19:25, 18 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

I am still not clear what a reliable source is? There is a link to an article, does there need to be more? Something like this below?

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY:

  • 1976 Jeane Siegel, 10 from S.V.A., Artforum, June
  • 1978 Tim Page, Model Citizens, New York Rocker, November
  • 1979 Roy Trakin, Tomek Lamprecht and Model Citizens, Soho Weekly News, January
Carnegie Hall, Stagebill, Model Citizens, March
John Rockwell, Model Citizens, The New York Times, September 11, 1979
  • 1980 Michael Shore, Music Picks, Hurrah, Soho Weekly News, January 31
Tim Page, Thriving On a Riff , Soho Weekly News, April 23
John Rockwell, 2 Yous, The New York Times, July 20
Tim Page, Avant Garde Alive, Unstuck in Time, Soho Weekly News, September 10
  • 1981 Merle Ginsberg, Radical Departure, Soho Weekly News, April 8
  • 1983 Spleen, Tomek, VPRO, Holland, July
Spleen, Tomek Lamprecht, VPRO, Holland, September
Richard Singer, Tomek, OP (The “S” Issue), October
  • 1984 M.C., Made in N.Y., Domus, September, 1984
Katherine Ludwig, Hearing Aids, NY Talk, December 12
Reviews, Albums Recommended, Billboard, December 15
  • 1992 K. Godowski, Exhibition at PAAS, New Daily News, NY, May 9-10
  • 1993 Matthew Klein, All The Enigmas In The World, Exhibition Catalog, June
  • 1995 Robert Morgan, Beatific Culture, Cover Magazine, November, 1995
  • 1995 Sean Mooney, National Arts Club Contemporary Annual, 1995, Art Speak,
  • 2009 Haris Purnomo at CoCA Seattle, C Arts Magazine

Thank you!

I've moved this to the bottom; use the 'New section' tab in the upper row between 'Edit' and 'View history' to automatically place it at the bottom where it belongs (except some project pages which specify alphabetically or at the top). To answer your question, yes, those seem to be reliable sources for music information and interviews. Those that are available online should be linked, although if a site is blacklisted, any edit attempting to link to it will not go through. I sepated your references, and they should be cited inline to show which material each is directly supporting. See Wikipedia:Referencing for beginners. Dru of Id (talk) 21:08, 18 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

This one:<ref>{{cite web |url= http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F20B15FF3D5C12728DDDA80994D1405B898BF1D3 |title= Rock: Model Citizens |author= Rockwell, John |authorlink= John Rockwell |date= September 11, 1979 |work= [[The New York Times]] |page= C7 |accessdate= May 18, 2012}}</ref>

Becomes:[1]

  1. ^ Rockwell, John (September 11, 1979). "Rock: Model Citizens". The New York Times. p. C7. Retrieved May 18, 2012.

Dru of Id (talk) 21:40, 18 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Help[edit]

Is the below better? I did upload a new page but it was titled Tomek lamprecht which is wrong. I would like to resubmit the page below under the article title 'Thomas Lamprecht'

Just move the article to the new title otherwise we have conflicts.—cyberpower ChatOffline 02:20, 20 June 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I redirected Tomek to Thomas, in the future, please move the page instead of creating the same article twice under different names. See Help:Moving for details. Thanks, Mark Arsten (talk) 17:56, 20 June 2012 (UTC)[reply]

[[Help me}} Thank you for redirecting Tomek to Thomas, I'll make sure to move the page next time! Question is it live, because I don't see it when I type in 'Thomas Lamprecht'?

Help[edit]

Please tell me why the page 'Thomas Lamprecht' is only searchable in Wikipedia, but does not come up in Goggle or any other search engine? thanks!

Help[edit]

Please tell me why 'Thomas Lamprecht' is not live?

The article is live, but each search engine takes varying amount of time to update their search index, usually no more than a week. Changes to articles are normally shown within the hour once indexed. Dru of Id (talk) 19:59, 21 June 2012 (UTC)[reply]

THOMAS “TOMEK” LAMPRECHT[edit]

Thomas Lamprecht is an artist whose work focuses on confluence of language, visual images and music. Lamprecht’s involvements spanned through the art world, business and academic arenas where he lead creative groups at international branding and marketing firms, taught art and advertising, curated shows and produced fine art, music and writing.

Background and education[edit]

Thomas, [“Tomek”—nickname of the Polish Tomasz] Stefan Stanisław Lamprecht was born in Warsaw, Poland—the only child of two architects. He attended school in UK and lived intermittently in Warsaw, London and Famagusta, Cyprus and became American Citizen in 1975. Lamprecht began to study painting in 1969 at the Warsaw’s Academy of Fine Arts under the wing of the renowned Polish painter Aleksander Kobzdej. In 1973 he came to New York and entered the School of Visual Arts where he studied with Joseph Kosuth, Donald Nice[1], Larry Zox and other prominent New York artists. After graduating with B.F.A. degree he continued to Columbia University, Graduate School of the Arts[2], where he received his M.F.A. degree in painting and PHD candidacy in philosophy in 1978. While there, he started producing work in non-traditional media that sparked controversy among some conservative graduate faculty. Saved from disciplinary expulsion by the school’s chairman and supporter late Stefan Sharff, Lamprecht was awarded an unprecedented opportunity to choose his own graduate advisors from among the pool of New York art world. He chose the artists whose work he was interested in at the time; Richard Artschwager, Ronald Bladen and Les Levine and the school hired them for the assignment.

Life and Art[edit]

Primarily a painter, Lamprecht has produced and presented work in many different media that include two-dimensional art, art performance, sculpture, music composition and recordings, installations, film/video and computer art. His work has been shown in a variety of major venues throughout U.S. and Europe. Lamprecht also wrote art criticism and lectured on art theory. After being based in New York for three decades, in August 2000 Lamprecht moved to San Francisco to start and develop the West Coast operations for Grey eMarketing, a division of Grey Global Group (WPP). Serving international needs of Fortune 300 clients, Lamprecht headed integrated creative teams on both coasts driving strategic creative and tactical concept development on branding, advertising and marketing. He directed global campaigns for such clients as; Adobe, Oracle, HP/Compaq, Sun Microsystems Gateway Computers, McAfee and others. His work produced many industry’s top awards.

In 2006 Lamprecht assumed creative leadership at the Hacker Group[3], the West Coast division of DraftFCB (IPG). In subsequent 4+ years he helped transform the company from an unknown and creatively undistinguished production driven company into the biggest integrated agency in Puget Sound area and the biggest west coast division of DraftFCB.

In August 2009 Lamprecht, along with his partner Kristina Müller-Eberhard, started the creative firm Plume21, LLC[4]. Based in Seattle, the firm specializes in branding, advertising, marketing and multidisciplinary creative consultancy. It also has a gallery focused on showcasing the highest quality of creative vision by international artists[5] in all media.

Art and performance[edit]

Lamprecht’s art has been shown in many major art venues that include: Kunsthalle, Basel, Switzerland; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Holland; Carnegie Hall, NY, Kitchen, NY; OK Harris Gallery, New York; 112 Green Street Gallery[6], New York and others.

Music[edit]

Aside from showing his art in exhibition and alternate art spaces, Lamprecht has performed his music throughout numerous New York clubs and venues from CBGB’s through Cotton Club to Carnegie Hall, Franklin Furnace, as well as prominent venues in Europe that included Basel Art Fair, Mazzo, Amsterdam, New Morning, Geneva among others. In 1978 while collaborating with a group of friends from his MFA program at Columbia on an art performance project, he released his first record, Model Citizens[7]., produced by John Cale. Subsequent to Model Citizens Lamprecht created media performance projects including the collaboration with Gloria Richards, 2 Yous[8]. and Before Religion with the violin virtuoso Michael Galasso and dancer Frank Conversano. During the early/middle 80’s, Lamprecht released solo recordings of his music including the albums “TOMEK”[9] and “Love & Hate”[10]. Through the 90’s he continued to compose and record ‘Musical Poems’ that were produced only for narrowcast distribution.

Teaching[edit]

Lamprecht has served on the faculty at the Parsons School of Design, NY, Baruch College of the City University of New York, Savannah College of Art and Design, Savannah, GA, Academy of Art University, San Francisco, Breda School of Art and Design, Holland and others.

Curating[edit]

In 1994 Lamprecht created an annual retrospective exhibition, the Contemporary Annual[11], that was hosted and largely funded by the National Arts Club in New York. The current relevancy of the show, that rivaled the Whitney Biannual in scope while including international artists, was enhanced through it being curated not by professional curators but by a different appointed artist each year. The Contemporary Annual has been established as a nonprofit, 501(c) organization.

Advertising[edit]

Active in the design and advertising industries, Lamprecht held executive posts as a creative and marketing lead at several major Madison Avenue agencies and ran his own Manhattan based design firm specializing in hi-end, photography books. Some of the notable titles include; Visions: Fifty Years of the United Nations (Hearst), The Art of Collecting: Victor and Sally Gantz (Christie’s, NY) and The Encyclopedia of Photography (Simon & Schuster). Lamprecht’s firm also produced and distributed several independent artists’ books. The agencies where Thomas held key creative positions included Bates Worldwide, NY; Siegel & Gale, NY; Wunderman Cato Johnson, NY and others. The accounts included; Time Inc., Citibank, AT&T, Dom Perignon, Sauza Tequila, Philip Morris, Abrams, Hearst Publications, Penguin Books, City of New York and New York Post among many others. He arrived in San Francisco in 2000 to open a division of Grey Global Group (WPP). In 3 years the division became the fastest growing within GGG. The clients included such companies as Oracle, Adobe, Sun, HP and others. In 2006 Lamprecht moved to Seattle to help grow creative capabilities of DraftFCB division, Hacker Group. By 2010 the agency was named the biggest in the Puget Sound region. As of 2010 Lamprecht is co-heading his creative firm Plume21[12].

Personal[edit]

Lamprecht married Alexandra Godfrey in 1982 (later divorced) and fathered two children; son Emil Tomasz Lamprecht and Daughter Zofia Maria Lamprecht. In 2003 he married his present wife and creative partner Kristina Müller-Eberhard.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Don Nice; Inspired by the Hudson, a Painter Captures Its Many Views", New York Times, 10 Deember 2000.
  2. ^ "Colombia University, Graduate School of the Arts".
  3. ^ "Thomas Lamprecht Joins the Hacker Group as Vice President", Seattle, 2 May 2006.
  4. ^ "Plume21 Opens Doors in Downtown Seattle", Seattle, 5 April 2011.
  5. ^ "Currently Hanging: Bayonet Babies by Harris Purnomo", Seattle, 4 August 2011.
  6. ^ Fiore, Jessamyn. '112 Greene St', Radius Books.
  7. ^ Rockwell, John. "Model Citizens", New York Times, 11 September 1979.
  8. ^ Rockwell, John. "3 Model Citizens Spin-Offs", New York Times, 7 June 1980.
  9. ^ "Tomek", ATL Productions, 1983.
  10. ^ "Love & Hate", ATL Records, 198.
  11. ^ "Contemporary, Annual: Intimacy", National Arts Club, New York, April 1994.
  12. ^ "Plume21 Opens Doors in Downtown Seattle", Seattle, 5 April 2011.

Other references[edit]

Jeane Siegel, 10 from S.V.A., Artforum, June 1976
Tim Page, Model Citizens, New York Rocker, November 1978
Roy Trakin, Tomek Lamprecht and Model Citizens, Soho Weekly News, January 1978
Carnegie Hall, Stagebill, Model Citizens, March 1979
Michael Shore, Music Picks, Hurrah, Soho Weekly News, January 31, 1980
Tim Page, Thriving On a Riff , Soho Weekly News, April 23, 1980
John Rockwell, 2 Yous, The New York Times, July 20, 1980
Tim Page, Avant Garde Alive, Unstuck in Time, Soho Weekly News, September 10, 1980
Merle Ginsberg, Radical Departure, Soho Weekly News, April 8, 1981
Spleen, Tomek, VPRO, Holland, July, 1983
Spleen, Tomek Lamprecht, VPRO, Holland, September, 1983
Richard Singer, Tomek, OP (The “S” Issue), October, 1983
M.C., Made in N.Y., Domus, September, 1984

External Links[edit]

Plume21 site: http://www.plume21.com
Thomas Lamprecht site: http://www.thomaslamprecht.com
MODEL CITIZENS's Blurbs: http://www.myspace.com/modelcitizens1978
Model Citizens, Shift The Blame: http://miyf.wordpress.com/2008/06/17/model-citizens-shift-the-blame/
Chuck Wansley: http://www.strictlysinatranow.com/chuckbio.html
Poles in America: http://www.poles.org/db/l_names/Lamprecht_TS.html
Haris Purnomo at COCA, Seattle by Thomas S. Lamprecht http://www.c-artsmag.com/betac-artsmag/index.php/articles/view/107

Nomination of Thomas Lamprecht for deletion[edit]

A discussion is taking place as to whether the article Thomas Lamprecht is suitable for inclusion in Wikipedia according to Wikipedia's policies and guidelines or whether it should be deleted.

The article will be discussed at Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Thomas Lamprecht until a consensus is reached, and anyone, including you, is welcome to contribute to the discussion. The nomination will explain the policies and guidelines which are of concern. The discussion focuses on high-quality evidence and our policies and guidelines.

Users may edit the article during the discussion, including to improve the article to address concerns raised in the discussion. However, do not remove the article-for-deletion notice from the top of the article. ThatMontrealIP (talk) 15:10, 15 September 2018 (UTC)[reply]