Modernism at the Corcoran
As soon as I get back East I will have a review of the show, meanwhile, enjoy the video.
Courtesy of 205 Lavinia Street, Videos for Artists/Galleries/Events.
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Modernism at the Corcoran
As soon as I get back East I will have a review of the show, meanwhile, enjoy the video.
Wanna go to an Arlington, VA opening on Thursday?
The Ellipse Art Center’s "Hand Pulled," is a Juried Mid Atlantic Print Show that was selected by Joan Boudreau, the Curator of the Graphic Arts Collection, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution.
The opening reception is Thursday, April 5, from 6 - 9 pm, and there’s a Juror's Talk on April 19, 7 - 9 pm. The exhibition runs through Saturday, May 26, 2007.
Wanna go to a Delaware opening this coming Thursday night?
"Tapestries of a Higher Plane," by Mid Atlantic Art News contributor William Anderson opens this coming Thursday, April 5, 2007 at 205 Lavinia Street Gallery in Milton, Delaware, with an opening reception from at 5-8 pm.
On exhibition are images brought to Delaware from Maine by William Anderson. The interesting aspect of these images are their tuetonic size, as many are over 8 feet square, and are not framed, but hanging like tapestries.
The artist is an accomplished image-maker since the early seventies, who has been printing on a large Giclée printer since 2000. For more info call the gallery at 302-684-3379.
Imagine all the people
Who would have crowded the Hirshhorn Museum's Sculpture Garden on the National Mall had they known ahead of time that today, between 2:30 and 2:45pm, Yoko Ono dedicated a "Wish Tree for Washington D.C." in the Hirshhorn Museum’s Sculpture Garden as part of "Yoko Ono: Imagine Peace.”
According to the press release (sent out a few days ago):
This ongoing series, which she began in the 1990s, encourages the public to become participants in the art making process by inviting visitors to write wishes on paper and tie them to the tree. The dedication will begin with Ono tying the first wish onto the Hirshhorn’s tree. Ono will exhibit 10 trees around Washington, D.C., for the 2007 Cherry Blossom Festival.The dedication was open to the press, but not to the public (unless I imagine, a tourist or two happened to be there and someone shouted “Hey there’s that lady who broke up the Beatles”).
Modernism at the Corcoran
Provided that I can work out the software bugs from Google and Blogger, later today I should have a video walkthrough of the Modernism exhibition at the Corcoran Gallery of Art led by the Corcoran's director Paul Greenhalgh.
This will be the first of many videos that Mid Atlantic Art News will be doing in collaboration with our newest contributor: William Anderson of BB's Video Press and 205 Lavinia Gallery.
Look for future videos on gallery and museum openings, discussions with curators, artists' interviews, etc.
Tuss on Women’s Work at Nevin Kelly Gallery
By Katie Tuss
Six distinctly talented women younger than 30 have come to the forefront via Nevin Kelly’s current group painting exhibition Women’s Work. Nevin Kelly Deputy Director and the show’s curator Julia Morelli teamed up with five local female artists to create a show of varied sensibilities and styles, yet linked by a woman’s unique touch.
The five young artists include Abbe McGray, Laurel Hausler, Mary Chiaramonte, Molly Brose, and Jenny Davis — who is the youngest in the group at 18. Together they are eloquent, and yet a bit bashful, but all insistent that although they are women, gender does not have to be the central focus of their work.
The artists explained that gender enhances and enriches but certainly does not inhibit them in the larger art arena. “I was thinking about the show in terms of being women’s art, not necessarily feminist art or girly art, but possessing a sense of femininity in the work,” said Morelli.
Some of the artists had never met one another, and the work was created separately.
Brose’s work waxes nostalgic about family, friendships, and significant others in two groups of five paintings with titles all beginning with the directive ‘keep.’
Go listen to Zoe
The super talented Philly photogstar Zoe Strauss’ latest project is the 10-year long I-95 Project, an annual installation underneath I-95 in South Philadelphia. Strauss received a Pew Fellowship in the Arts in 2005, and her work was featured in the 2006 Whitney Biennial in New York.
From April 13 through May 4, 2007, her work will be featured in Gallery 1401 at the University of the Arts, in an exhibition entitled “If You Break the Skin,” co-sponsored by the Equality Forum. But, and more importantly, today, April 2, at 1pm at the CBS Auditorium of the University of the Arts, Zoe will be giving a lecture on her photography as part of the Paradigm Lecture series.
Oh yea; the lecture is free and open to the public.