Category Archives: Art in Philadelphia

Art in Philadelphia

light beings @ The Coffee Bar

While you’re visiting Center City this weekend to celebrate Memorial Day consider dropping in the Coffee Bar @ 17th & Locust to see DoN‘s show of photographs titled “light beings” presented by The Center for Emerging Visual Artists – their gallery @ 15th & Locust is uber-cool.  And Bonte’s Waffle Cafe’ @ 17th & Sansom is hosting Photographic Society of Philadelphia‘s solo artist show of Alan Richter photos.  The Photo Society & CFEVA both tirelessly promote photography as an art form and Philly photographers as artists with on-going shows and promotion; without organizations like these the Philly art scene is a much tougher field to navigate.  And somehow photography and coffee just go great together.

DoN Brewer light beings @ The Coffee Bar presented by The Center for Emerging Visual Artists

light being (JRR Tolkien), digital photograph by DoN Brewer @ The Coffee Bar, 17th & Locust in The Radisson Warwick Hotel through the end of July 2010.

A Show of Hands @ Salon des Amis

Robin Hotchkiss A Show of Hands @ Salon des Amis

Robin Hotchkiss, To The Opera, oil on wood @ A Show of Hands, Salon des Amis in Malvern.

A Show of Hands @ Salon des Amis

Robin Hotchkiss organized the theme show about hands, the quirky gallery near Valley Forge has a broad array of art by Philly regional artists.  Divine & To the Opera, oil on wood by Robin Hotchkiss – the sculpted ceramic hands are by Markels Roberts.

A Show of Hands @ Salon des Amis

Robin Hotchkiss, From the Past, oil over antique painting, Ellen Benson, Springtime Divas, mixed media and Ann Keech, found object assemblage @ Salon des Amis.

A Show of Hands @ Salon des Amis

Alden Cole, Magic Hans, oil on canvas @ A Show of Hands at Salon des Amis.

The Sunday afternoon opening drew Shoshka, Alden & DoN out to the tiny gallery on the hillside near Valley Forge to see A Show of Hands at Salon des Amis, a themed group art show of art focusing on hands – drawings, paintings, photos, sculptures, jewelry, hats…each artists’ unique approach expands and illuminates how important the image of hands are in popular culture.

 

Photos by DoNBrewerMultimedia.

Light & Despair @ Twenty-Two Gallery – Valerie Carroll & Adrienne Jenkins

Valorie Carroll @ Twenty-Two Gallery

Valorie Carroll @ Twenty-Two Gallery

Valerie Carroll, Spot @ Twenty-Two Gallery.

Valerie Carroll‘s animistic portraits of cats & dogs practically growl with aggression, daring DoN to stare down scary faces like monsters in a dream.  Sometimes when DoN looks into KaTy the ArT DoGs eyes he feels a connection with her like some extrasensory perception mind meld is happening, Carroll’s paintings tap into that same vibe.  Carroll’s animal portraits are classic mise en scene animal portraits yet brutalist and difficult like a great punk rock song.

Valerie Carroll @ Twenty-Two Gallery

Valorie Carroll @ Twenty-Two Gallery

Valerie Carroll, Rub-a-Dub, A Man in a Tub, oil on canvas.

Valerie Carroll explained how she first got this impression of the bathing man while out West but finished the painting back East.  The painting pulses with emotion, the man’s facial expression roils with desperation, the luxury of a bath too sad to believe, a beard grown wild, a rusted basin a momentary respite from the New Great Depression.

Valorie Carroll @ Twenty-Two Gallery

Valorie Carroll @ Twenty-Two Gallery

Valerie CarrollMan in a Pink Shirt, oil on canvas.  Light & Despair @ Twenty-Two Gallery.

Adrienne Jenkins @ Twenty-Two Gallery

Adrienne Jenkins @ Twenty-Two Gallery

Adrienne Jenkins, Jamie, oil on canvas @ Twenty-Two Gallery.

Shawn Murray, Twenty-Two Gallery’s mastermind, warned Adrienne Jenkins that portraits are a hard sell but her paintings of twenty-somethings reveal such a current state of being for young people – harried, a bit grim, self absorbed like characters from a William Faulkner novel set in the future – that it makes DoN glad she ignored his advice, the portraits are so painterly they don’t read as so specific.

Diane Podolski @ Gallery Twenty-Two

Twenty-Two Gallery’s co-curator , Diane Podolsky, has the balls to mix up impressionist still life paintings with stylized portraits and crazed pet paintings & makes it work like some museum show of the history of modern art; paintings just never go out of style.

Valorie Carroll & Adrienne Jenkins @ Twenty-Two Gallery

Valerie Carroll & Adrienne Jenkins at the opening of their show, Light and Despair @ Twenty-Two Gallery during West Center City’s Second Friday art crawl.  The two artists paint together at Wayne Art Center , sharing studio space and creating a kind of cross-pollination of painting styles.  With 25 or so paintings, this is a big show for two artists but Adrienne Jenkins is preparing for her solo show next year for the same space; the two artists have joined the artist collective and you can meet them this Sunday afternoon at Twenty-Two Gallery, 236 South 22nd Street.

 

 

Photos by DoNBrewerPhotography.

Tetsugo Hyakutake – Wind Challenge Exhibition #3 @ Fleisher Art Memorial

Tetsugo Hyakutake - Wind Challenge Exhibition #3

Tetsugo Hyakutake

Tetsugo Hyakutake @ Fleisher Art Memorial’s Wind Challenge #3.

When DoN first walked into the gallery he thought, “that’s a picture I wish I’d taken.”  The glowing industrial plants looks just like the one on I95 on the way to Trenton but Hyakutake shot most of the photos in Japan.  Many of the photos have a very Philadelphia vibe, especially the panoramic prints of bridges & highways and industrial sights, the effect is disorienting like you could be anywhere in the world.

Tetsugo Hyakutake - Wind Challenge Exhibition #3

Tetsugo Hyakutake is returning to Japan this Summer after a very successful career in professional photography in NYC & Philly’s Gallery 339 on Pine Street.  Tetsugo captures the aggressive industrialization of the Asian landscape with stunning prints displayed in a variety of styles, the prints hanging like scrolls on metal rods are very cool & contemporary, the transfixingly intense detail of the landscapes is lucid, clear and transporting.

Tetsugo Hyakutake - Wind Challenge Exhibition #3

Tetsugo Hyakutake @ Wind Challenge #3, Fleisher Art Memorial.

 

Photos by DoNBrewerPhotography.

Listening In & Eye Charts on Broad @ UArts

Justin Rubick @ UArts

Listening In, Brittany Papale @ UArts, Broad & Pine Streets.

Nostalgia simply oozes from the dual pay phones installed outside UArts, harking back to the late days of public access to affordable communications.  DoN recalls the uproar when a 3 minute local call jumped from a dime to 25 cents – now, public phones are rare, cell phones so pervasive that young people can’t imagine a wired world with huge, magnificent switches manned by teams of technicians opening and closing connections.  Listening In allows you to eves-drop on private conversations in a very public setting.  “Stop phonin’, stop phonin’, I don’t wanna think anymore – I got my head & my heart on the dancefloor.”  Lady Gaga.

Justin Rubick @ UArts

My piece consists of two eye charts arranged in a V, with one facing north and the other south.  Since the eye chart always corresponds to a certain distance from which to view it, I have not only blown up the eye chart 10X but scaled up the optimal viewing distance proportionally.

Justin Rubich, artist.

Sculpture @ UArts

The continuing series of sculptures presented in the niches of the temple @ Pine & Broad Streets is always a nice surprise with thoughtful, contemporary installations casually placed right out on the street which really forces the artist to think about the environment of the sculpture.  The quest to be creative yet use materials that the artist won’t be totally devastated if something is damaged has resulted in works made from plastic milk crates, wire & broken glass, cellophane…so far the only damage DoN has noticed has been weather related.  Philly LoVeS ArT!!!