Tag Archives: DoNArTNeWs

Timeless Rajasthan

Timeless Rajasthan. Journey Through India

Timeless Rajasthan. Journey Through India, Award Winning Photography by Linda Hollinger

Opening Reception Tuesday, January 28, 2014, 6:30 – 8:30pm. Ameriprise Financial Hansen Warner Gallery, 6 South Main Street, Medford, NJ 08055

Linda Hollinger traded her paints and brushes for film and the camera. Her images include a wide range of subject matter, sports, nature and landscape. However, she is drawn to strong faces with a story to tell. Her passion is to travel the world and capture everyday people absorbed in their daily lives. Most rewarding for her is freezing that moment in time capturing life’s moments through the lens.

We are excited to have Linda release her collection of over 50 images for the first time at the Hansen Warner Gallery here in Medford. Individual images from this collection have already won numerous local and international awards over the past year including the Best of Show in the 41st Robert Ransley Juried Art Exhibit, and both Gold and Silver in the DVCCC Photo Travel international competition sponsored by the Photographic Society of America. She was also published in the June 2013, PSA Journal for Picture of the Month.”

RSVP: Patricia Worley patriciaworley@aol.com

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Joyce Kozloff

Joyce Kozloff, Cradles to Conquests

Joyce Kozloff, Rocking the Cradle, 2003, cradle with acrylic, 56 x 27 x 30 1/2 inches,

Cradles to Conquests at Rowan University Art Gallery, January 21st through March 15th, 2014. Rowan University Art Gallery is located on the lower level of Westby Hall on the university campus, Route 322 in Glassboro, NJ.

GLASSBORO, NJ – Joyce Kozloff, a New Jersey native and a major figure in both the Pattern and Decoration and the Feminist art movements of the 1970s, debuts her solo exhibition in New Jersey at Rowan University Art Gallery. Running from January 21 through March 15, the exhibition is welcomed with a gallery talk by the artist and reception on Wednesday, January 29th at 5:00 pm.

Cradles to Conquests: Mapping American Military History is a selection of Kozloff’s work completed between 2000 and 2010 that reference imagined and historical military events.

The works utilize collage, cartography and mapping as a narrative extension of Joyce’s decorative arts sensibilities and her work as a feminist and anti-war activist.  Ironically, Kozloff’s mapping series makes use of a practice once widely viewed as “gender-specific” —appliqué, weaving, pattern, decorative — to challenge and question the authority of a patriarchal, militaristic culture.

Curated by gallery director Mary Salvante, the works selected for this exhibition focuses directly on maps and imagery that dramatize the emergence of the US through the lens of its military engagements and exploits in the name of expansion and national interests.  The exhibition features several of Kozloff’s iconic pieces such as Targets, a walk in globe that utilizes official tactical pilotage charts in which to depicts all of the US bombing sites around the world since 1945, Boys Art Series, which collages innocent, youthful drawing done by the artist’s son with nautical maps, and Rocking the Cradle, a larger than life size baby cradle with a map of Mesopotamia, the seat of cultivation, and to this day a very sensitive location politically.

Joyce Kozloff began to focus on public art in 1979. She expanded the scale of her installations and the accessibility of her art to reach a wider audience and, since the early 1990s, has been utilizing mapping as a device for expressing her interests in history, culture, politics and the decorative and popular arts. She has had solo exhibitions at the DC Moore Gallery in New York; Trout Gallery at Dickinson College in Pennsylvania; Spazio Thetis in Venice, Italy; and Regina Gouger Miller Gallery of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. Her work has been included in group exhibitions at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA, National Museum of Women in the Arts, MoMA P.S.1, Vancouver Art Gallery and The Jewish Museum in New York. Recently, her work was included in the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art’s The Map as Art.

 The works included in the exhibition are courtesy of the artist and DC Moore Gallery and several private collectors.

This program is made possible in part by funds from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts.

Admission to the gallery, lecture and reception is free and open to the public. Regular gallery hours are Monday – Friday, 10 am to 5 pm (with extended hours on Wednesdays to 7 pm); and Saturday, 12 to 5 pm. For more information, call 856-256-4521 or visit www.rowan.edu/artgallery.

Thank you to Mary Salvante for this DoNArTNeWs blog post.

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Franklin Commons

Art Gallery at Franklin Commons

Art Gallery at Franklin Commons, 400 Franklin Avenue, Phoenixville, PA, “New Perspectives” Exhibition, Saturday, January 25, 2014, 1:00 – 4:00pm.

“Join us for the Grand Opening of the Art Gallery at Franklin Commons in Phoenixville, PA! Located just ½ mile from downtown Phoenixville. The “New Perspectives” exhibition will be held on January 25, 2014 from 1:00 – 4:00pm. Take on a new perspective of photographs, sculptures and paintings by talented local artists! Don’t miss our first exhibition in support of the local arts!” – Katie Naber

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Robert Straight

Robert Straight: Strategy and Structure

P-509, 2013, 60″ x 56″  acrylic, fabric, paper, wood panel

Strategy and Structure: The Work of Robert StraightOld College Gallery, University of Delaware18 East Main St. Newark, DE 19716. February 12- June 29, 2014, Opening Reception, Thursday February 20, 5:00-7:00 PM. Gallery Hours Wednesday -Sunday 12:00 – 5:00 pm, Thursday – 12:00 – 8:00 pm

“This exhibition, offers the opportunity to experience the evolution of the artist’s increasingly complex architecture of abstract forms, in works from the early 1970s to the present. Robert Straight will offer a brief talk and walk-through of the exhibition on Saturday, June 7, 2- 2:45 pm. http://robertstraight.com

Robert StraightProfessor, University of Delaware

painter@udel.edu

www.robertstraight.com

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MNFbeL5VRvE

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fz4X4p40S4k

http://geoform.net/interviews/an-interview-with-artist-robert-straight/

DoNArTNeWs: Robert Straight at Schmidt/Dean Gallery

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Plastic Club

Sam Park, Plastic Club New Members

Sam Park, August Moon Hwatu Card, oil, $2200.00, Plastic Club New Members 2014

Hwa-tu is the Korean version of the Japanese playing card game Hanafuda (花札?) are playing cards of Japanese origin that are used to play a number of games. The name literally translates as “flower cards.”[1][2] The name also refers to games played with those cards. There are twelve suits, representing months. Each is designated a flower, and each suit has four cards. Typically, each suit will have two normal cards and two special cards. The point values could be considered unnecessary and arbitrary, as the most popular games only concern themselves with certain combinations of taken cards.” – wikipedia

Sam Park‘s painting is large, the limited palette and geometric composition richly layered with oil paint and symbolism. The artist uses the symbolism of the card game to reflect on the idea of being a new player in an established group. Sam created this painting for the Plastic Club New Members 2014 show, he explained to me a few weeks ago how he was looking forward to adding the final symbol after developing the surface of the painting. The cosmological composition is more than geometry, it speaks about light and the combination of clues toward realization. Park is also a realist painter, his self portrait in oils in the Tea Room is sensual and sensitive.

Elke H. Muller, Plastic Club New Members

Elke H. Muller, Bicycle, photograph, $85.00, Plastic Club New Members 2014

To become a member of the Plastic Club the artist has to be known by several members and present three artworks to be reviewed by the membership committee. At the Plastic Club the art of photography is held in high regard with a contemporary esthetic towards image making. Bicycle by Elke H. Muller is a complex composition with information rich shapes and planes. The vivid cyan blue print is artisanal and thought provoking, the composition is a deceptively simple descriptive urban landscape. This photo was made with tungsten film in daylight, hence the blue color.

Lauren Reed, Plastic Club New Members 2014

Lauren Reed, Colors of the Sky, watercolor & ink, $60.00, Plastic Club New Members 2014

Colors of the Sky seems influenced by photography with the repeated patterns but the mix of watercolor and ink uses the natural fractals of the media to create a cosmic landscape. Like watching the night sky fade through the trees, the paintings have an animated relationship as they each speak about precious moments of nature.

Janice Balson, Plastic Club New Members 2014

Janice Balson, Rising Tide, oil, $485.00,  Plastic Club New Members 2014

Janice Balson, Plastic Club New Members 2014

Janice Balson, River Walk, oil, $485.00, Plastic Club New Members 2014

Janice Balson’sRiver Walk is a meditative and atmospheric landscape that looks a lot like Forbidden Drive along the Wissahickon River to me. The sense of solitude in nature and the solid painting style creates a grounded perspective with a subtle depth of field and informative liquid-y paint strokes. The hues of color offer so much data towards the narrative of the scene, there is a sense of temperature, the sun on your face, creating a familiar sensation of being outdoors in Winter, walking the path.

Plastic Club New Members 2014

Roberta Gross, Vessels of Light, pastel, $1000.00, Glenn Benge, March on 6th Street, July 4, 2012, digital pigment print, $250.00, Louise Vinueza, Sun Sets, oil, $450.00,  Plastic Club New Members 2014 through January 24th, 2014 at 247 South Camac Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107

The Plastic Club New Members 2014 includes twenty-two new member artists with 71 works of art spread throughout the galleries of the Plastic Club. New member committer chair Michael Guinn has introduced the Philadelphia arts community to wonderful artistic talents and terrific personalities, the more the merrier.

I personally am so grateful for the acceptance, camaraderie and inspiration the Plastic Club provides to me and the arts community. The outstanding art shows, informative salons, artist’s workshops, eclectic movie nights, delightful dinners, parties, barbeques and cocktail parties all make for an inclusive and supportive yet expressive environment for an aspiring artist.

Thank you so much to Cythia Arkin, Susan Stromquist, Bob Jackson, Alan Klawans, Mike Guinn, the board of the  Plastic Club and the many enthusiastic volunteers for keeping the organization strong, resilient and relevant to the contemporary art scene. There may be an artistic renaissance happening in Philadelphia now, but the Plastic Club is the third oldest art club in the USA (established in 1897) and has been exhibiting contemporary art by Philadelphia regional artists all along.

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