Saturday, May 25, 2013

Language of the Landscape: Regional Painting of the Hamptons: Saturday, May 25, 2013 6-9pm On View through June 23


<!-- Facebook sharing information tags Language of the Landscape: Regional Paintings of the Hamptons


Language of the Landscape: Regional Painting of the Hamptons



karyn mannix contemporary


karyn mannix contemporary's Inaugaural Show
@ Hampton Hang Gallery


Vernacular

 Language of the Landscape 
Regional Paintings of the Hamptons

Ralph Carpentier
Carly Haffner
Scott Hewett
Mary Laspia
Dalton Portella
Doug Reina

Opening Reception: Memorial Day Weekend
Saturday, May 25, 2013
6-9pm


On View through June 23
Gallery Hours: Fridays & Saturdays 6-9pm or by appointment 516 318 0000

Click on artists image to view gallery.
Located at 688 Montauk Highway, Water Mill NY
(behind Suki Zuki & Sara Nightingale Gallery)


Carly Haffner

Snow Cloud
8"x 8"
Acrylic on Wood Panel

Dalton Portella
Itacare'
48" x 48"
Oil on Canvas

Mary Laspia

Evening Reflection
24" x 24"
Oil on Canvas

Scott Hewett

Moored Boat
30" x 30"
Oil on Canvas

Ralph Carpentier

Winter Dusk
28" x 35"
Oil on Linen

Doug Reina

Ditch Plains
16" x 20"
Oil on Canvas



facebook| forward to a friend 
Copyright © *2013 *karynmannixcontemporary, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
karynmannix@optonline.net

-->

Today, Shelter Island 1-4PM Sylvester Manor House














SPRING OPEN HOUSE
May 25th from 1:00pm - 4:00pm
at Sylvester Manor Educational Farm, 80 North Ferry Road, Shelter Island
  


Our Annual Spring Open House will include: 
  • A pop-up of our popular farmstand selling lettuce heads, salad and cooking greens, radishes and assorted seedlings
  • A kids crafts and activities table with leaf rubbings and outdoor scavenger hunts lead by our summer youth program instructors 
All are welcome!  To help us prepare for the event, please let us know if you're attending by replying to Melissa at mmundy@sylvestermanor.org or 
631.749.0626.  We hope to see you there!
Join Our Volunteer Force!


Volunteers get to enjoy our concerts, readings, film screenings, special events, and more and help to make the varied programming at Sylvester Manor possible. CLICK HERE to see opportunities for volunteering and to sign up now. We can't wait to to see you at our next event!


Daria Deshuk for Hampton Fine Art: HALSEY MCKAY GALLERY , TONE POEM June 1 - 18 | Opening reception for the artists Saturday, June 1, 6-8 pm N. DASH, ELIAS HANSEN, MATT KENNY, ROSY KEYSER, ADAM MARNIE



HALSEY MCKAY GALLERY



TONE POEM  June 1 - 18 | Opening reception for the artists Saturday, June 1, 6-8 pm
N. DASH, ELIAS HANSEN, MATT KENNY, ROSY KEYSER, ADAM MARNIE

HALSEY MCKAY is pleased to present Tone Poem, a group show featuring five artists that will occupy both floors of the gallery. The exhibiton introduces itself with seemingly humble materials–weathered wood, lacerated sheetrock, plastic bags, sawdust and adobe ground are all utilized as starting points. Between the hands of this group, these familiar components undergo varying acts of sublte restraint and active intervention. A variety of possibilities emerge from the materials themselves and to the potentials of painting, printmaking and sculpture. Seemingly unrelated objects begin to reveal similar appreciation and understanding of these artists’ worlds and rituals. An undercurrent of inventiveness, economy of means and commitment to hands-on approaches shines through. The tinkering of human presence abounds creating a splintered and ethereal narrative–at once plausible, eerie and at peace.


Image: Adam Marnie

As an ensemble, these five artists evoke moments of angst and meditation that float through the spaces of the gallery in a grittily elegant dance. Matt Kenny skews the ubiquitous black plastic bags of New York’s bodegas by tenderly and laboriously inking their thin film and running it through an etching press. The resulting fascimiles appear simultaneously photo-realistic and arcanely abstract–elevating and keenly reflecting the spirit of their origins into ghostly indexes.

With similar sleight of hand, Elias Hansen’s seemingly repurposed, cast-off glass pieces are actually meticulously hand-blown works that the artist marries with rawly wired LED lights and salvaged wood from the forrests surrounding his upstate studio. A birch chair glows from the floor while illuminated beakers commune on the walls.

Rosy Keyser also sources the woods and fields of upstate New York for her paintings’ material. Thrust into the picture plane, imprints and remnants of beer cans, corrugated steel, sawdust, tarps, oil paint, enamel, and canvas form rythmic gestures. Made without a press Keyser’s mono-printing process is blind to her as she works and each iteration moves away from its original visage. On their own terms, Keyser’s paintings are imbued with a materialist spirituality that leaves a myriad of sensory impressions.

The fusion of place, touch and material is further evidenced in N. Dash’s linen, jute, indigo and adobe works. While she intentionally explores the means by which information and bodily expression can be embedded into her hand-painted materials, the works themselves speak a language of specific sites and experiences. Her restrained palette, and earthy grounds emote arid atmospheres which move at the desert’s pace.

Similarly monochromatic, though unaltered or digitally output in highly saturated red, Adam Marnie’s works return us to the city’s speed and aggresion. Using industrial printing and construction materials and intervening in the gallery walls themselves, Marnie frames acts of violence. In opposition to motivations of their Minimalist predecesors, Marnie’s works act as a constructed theatre in which to explore the tension between the artifice of presentation and the truth of action. A wall-sized piece of sheet rock is punctured by a single fist and trapped with its rubble in a frame marred by the flooding of Hurricane Sandy. Upstairs, flickering light creeps in through pockmarked holes and incisions in a piece that brandishes the immediacy of its marks rather than the slow-time of decay.

N. Dash holds a BA from New York University and her MFA from Columbia University. She has had solo shows with Untitled, NY as well as a two-person exhibition alongside William Anstasi at Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery, NY. Group exhibitions include, Abstract Everyday / Everyday Abstract, Curated by Matthew Higgs, James Cohan Gallery, NY; Ghosts Before Breakfast, White Flag Projects, St. Louis; and Painting Expanded at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, NY. She has been featured and reviewed in Modern Painters and TimeOut New York. She lives and works in New York and New Mexico. N. Dash is represented by Untitled, NY.

Elias Hansen has had solo exhibitons with Maccarone, NY; Jonathan Viner, London; The Fireplace Project, East Hampton; The Company, LA as well as two-person collaborations with Oscar Tuazon at Maccarone; Parc Saint Leger and Balice Hertling, Paris. He has participated in recent group exhibitions at Peres Projects, LA; The Station, Miami;  A Pallazo, Brescia, Italy; Galleria Suzy Shamma, Milano, Italy, Western Bridge, Seattle and Palais De Tokyo, Paris. Hansen has been an artist in residence at the Museum of Glass in Tacoma, WA and the University of Ohio in Columbus. His work has been reviewed and written about in the New York Times, Artforum, Art in America, Art Review and The LA Times among others. Hansen is represented by Maccarone in New York and Anat Egbi in Los Angeles.

Matt Kenny holds a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design. He has had solo exhibitons with Karma and Derek Eller, NY and was recently included in Water Feature, curated by Lizzie Wright and Shaun Krupa at Wildlife, Brooklyn, NY. A Real Bronx Cheer, Kenny’s collaboration with Dan Colen and Ron Delsner was recently published by Fulton Ryder. Feelings of Control, a monograph of Kenny’s works was published in 2011 by Karma. Kenny and photographs of his library were a feature of Ari Marcoupolous’ Area 51 Series. He lives and works in New York CIty.

Rosy Keyser was born in Baltimore, MD and now lives and works between Brooklyn and Medusa, NY. Keyser received her BFA from Cornell University and her MFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She has had several solo exhibitons with Peter Blum, NY and her work has been included in the following group shows: Painter Painter at Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN, curated by Eric Crosby and Bartholomew Ryan; Pink Caviar at Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebæk, Denmark; Immaterial at Ballroom Marfa, TX, curated by Fairfax Dorn; Stubborn Materials at Peter Blum Chelsea, New York, NY; Her work is included in permanent collections such as the Louisiana Museum, Denmark, the Zabludowicz Collection, London, UK, and the Maxine and Stuart Frankel Foundation, Bloomfield Hills, MI. Keyser is represented by Peter Blum in New York.

Adam Marnie was born in Minneapolis and now lives and works in New York. He received his BFA in Painting from Rhode Island School of Design in 2001, and his MFA in Sculpture from Bard College in 2012. Solo exhibitions have been with Derek Eller Gallery, NY and his work has been included in recent group shows such as Photography Is, Higher Pictures, New York; Haley Mellin / Olivier Mosset [and Back Room], Untitled, New York; and The Perpetual Dialogue, Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York. The follow-up to SH T, Night Gallery, Los Angeles (a collaborative project with Dawn Cerny and Tuomas Korpijaakko), SH T II was held at Know More Games, Brooklyn, NY in April 2013. He is represented by Derek Eller Gallery, New York.

Please contact info@halseymckay.com for further information.
HALSEY MCKAY GALLERY | 79 Newtown Lane | East Hampton | New York | 11937 | 631.604.5770

Friday, May 24, 2013

James Turrell Opens at the Guggenheim Museum in June


NEW YORK, NY James Turrell, the eminent American artist’s first solo exhibition in a New York museum since 1980. The exhibition features a major new site-specific work, Aten Reign (2013), which represents one of the most dramatic transformations of the museum ever conceived—reimagining the rotunda of Frank Lloyd Wright’s iconic building as one of Turrell’s luminous and immersive Skyspaces. Opening on the summer solstice, the installation will fill the museum’s central void with shifting natural and artificial light and intense, modulating color, creating a dynamic perceptual experience that exposes the materiality of light. Including select early works in addition to the monumental new installation, James Turrell considers the dominant themes explored by the artist for nearly fifty years, focusing on his investigations of perception, light, color, and space and the critical role of site-specificity in his practice.
— From June 21 to September 25, 2013, the Guggenheim Museum presents

James Turrell is one of three concurrent, independently curated presentations of the artist’s work in summer 2013. Together, the exhibitions at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art celebrate Turrell's groundbreaking career and form a three-part retrospective across the country.  

James Turrell is curated by Carmen Giménez, Stephen and Nan Swid Curator of Twentieth-Century Art, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and Nat Trotman, Associate Curator, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. 

The New-York Historical Society will present AIDS in New York: The First Five Years, on view from June 7 through September 15, 2013,













New-York Historical Society
170 Central Park West
(between 76th & 77th Streets)

The New-York Historical Society will present AIDS in New York: The First Five Years, on view from June 7 through September 15, 2013, chronicling the early history of the AIDS epidemic in New York City—from the first rumors in 1981 of a “gay plague” through the ensuing period of intense activism, clinical research, and political struggle.

With a wealth of materials drawn from New-York Historical’s archives as well as the archives of the New York Public Library, New York University, and the National Archive of LGBT History, the exhibition will use artifacts including clinicians’ notes, journal entries, diaries, letters, audio and video clips, posters, photographs, pamphlets, and newspapers to revisit the impact of the epidemic on personal lives and public culture in New York City and the nation. 

A companion exhibition, Children With AIDS: 1990-2000, also opening June 7th, will feature twenty black-and-white photographs by Claire Yaffa from her collection The Changing Face of Children with AIDS.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Los lirios del jardín: STEALING BASE: Cuba at Bat @ The 8th Floor, NY

Los lirios del jardín: STEALING BASE: Cuba at Bat @ The 8th Floor, NY: Arles del Río, Untitled from the series Esperando que caigan las cosas del cielo o Deporte nacional , 2012. Oil on cardboard. 55 x 74..

Arles del Río, Untitled from the series Esperando que caigan las cosas del cielo o Deporte nacional, 2012. Oil on cardboard. 55 x 74.8 inches.
Arles del Río, Untitled from the series Esperando que caigan las cosas del cielo o Deporte nacional, 2012. Oil on cardboard. 55 x 74.8 inches.
Stealing Base: Cuba at Bat
Curated by Rachel Weingeist and Orlando Hernández
June 6th – September 6th 2013
The 8th Floor
www.the8thfloor.org 
Tuesday and Thursday 11 – 6 pm; Wednesday 12 – 7 pm and by appointment.

Hamptons Fine Art


Sunday, May 19, 2013

Bill Brandt Photos , 1940's , thru June 6th

 

South Carolina: Piccolo Spoleto, Artists Receptions May 24-June 9th

   



     
  
       
  
    
  

   
  
     
  

    


     

Tales Transposed: A Celebration of Imagination

Curated by Eleanor Smythe, this whimsical exhibition features work by Lillian Trettin, Judy Mooney, and Nathan Durfee. Mounted as a part of the 2013 Piccolo Spoleto Festival, Tales Transposed explores stories and settings drawn from literature, history, and pure fantasy- bringing together paper collage inspired by the writings of Flannery O' Connor, small-scale interpretations of Gullah vernacular architecture rendered in clay, and a series of paintings centered around one dog in search of his identity and a sense of belonging.
Admission: Free. May 18-June 30. Festival hours: daily from 10am-6pm; after festival hours (June 11-30): Tues.-Fri. 10am-6pm; Sat.-Sun. 12-5pm
Opening Reception: May 18 from 5-7pmArtist lectures: Nathan Durfee onMay 26 at 3pm; Judy Mooney on June 9 at 3pm; Lillian Trettin on June 23 at 3pm. City Gallery at Waterfront Park, 34 Prioleau St.

Cheryl Baskins Butler Invitational: The Birds of Desire
Featuring this year's Piccolo Spoleto Spotlight Concerts Poster Artist, this exhibit is a compilation of recent paintings, drawings and collages combining bold bird silhouettes with abstract shapes and color fields. These works examine such human conditions as distraction, doubt, aspersion, comfort, desire and attachment. They invite individual reflections and collective dialogs, and show there is more to be gleaned from a bird feeder than just sunflower seeds.
Admission: Free. May 24-June 28; Festival Hours: May 24-June 910am-2pm. After Festival Hours: Mon.-Fri.; 10am-5pmOpening Reception: May 19 5pm-7pmDrawing Room, Dock Street Theatre, 135 Church St.

Sweet

Presented by Artist on Fire, this multi-media exhibition is celebrating the good things in life. Twelve artists expound on this theme through works in photography, film, painting, poetry, sculpture installation, and mixed media. Artists featured in this exhibition are Alex Radin, Kimberly (Kimmie) Krauk, Amelia (Mimi) Whaley, Melanie Spinks, Bethany Jaenicke, Jacquelyn Hiott, Hilary Siber, Karen DeLoach, Jan Placko, Helena Rutan, Elianna (Ellie) Radin, Sara Radin, and Volcanoes in the Kitchen. Artist on Fire is an organization founded by Alex and Sara Radin aiming to see more opportunities for artists to fully express themselves in order to be a voice of positivity and change through the creative arts. Their goal is to inspire people to dream, to see the beauty that is around them, and to be a voice of hope, truth and life. 
Citadel Square Baptist Church, 328 Meeting St. Admission: Free.  May 24-June7; Mon.-Fri., 11am-6pm.  Opening Reception: May 23 from 5-8pm.

Works By Andrea Stanislav
Redux Contemporary Art Center presents an exhibition featuring the acute awareness of tension and offers a series of elegant yet challenging reflections on the limits and failures of the utopic imagination. Reflection is a key word in this exhibition, as it serves to indicate both the means and the ends of Andrea Stanislav's artistic endeavors.  
Admission: Free.
May 22-July 6; Tues.-Thurs., 10am-6pm; Fri., 12-7pm; Sat., 12-5pmOpening Reception: May 24 from 5:30-8:30pmRedux Contemporary Art Center, 136 St. Philip St.

The Art of Recovery
The South Carolina Department of Mental Health presents this very unique exhibit featuring artwork by individuals living with mental illnesses. Unveiled in 2001, this program aims to showcase the talents of those receiving services and the role that art can play in the recovery process. "The Art of Recovery" seeks not only to empower clients, but also educate the public about, and dispel the stigma associated with mental illness.
Admission: Free.
May 24-June 911am-7pmOpening Reception: May 25 from 4-7pm.Circular Congregational Church, 150 Meeting St.

Artwork By Christian Thee

In keeping with its tradition as the oldest cultural institution in the South, the Charleston Library Society is proud to showcase one of South Carolina's finest artists - Christian Thee - whose iconic poster design captured the spirit of the first Spoleto Festival USA in 1977. Thirty-six years later, the Library Society is honored to host a remarkable exhibition by Mr. Thee who is an accomplished magician, renowned stage designer, an endlessly creative scenic artist, and a leading practitioner of trompe l'oeil or "deceives the eye" art & design. Mr. Thee's exceptional eye for detail, vast imagination, and playful spirit is evident in his work as it delights, surprises, or even shocks the viewer.
Admission: Free.
May 24-June 8; Mon.-Fri., 9:30am-5:30pm; Sat., 9:30am-2pmOpening Reception: May 25 from 4-7pm.The Charleston Library Society, 164 King St.

Ethereal Edges: Lowcountry Coastlines In Batik

 The first-ever Piccolo Spoleto Invitational Exhibition at The Citadel, featuring an installation of large-scale silk batiks by celebrated local artist Mary Edna Fraser. The meditative dye-resist process of batik allows her to translate the sinuous lines of familiar locales (including The Citadel itself) into lengthy swaths of richly colored silks that float overhead, suspended, from the cathedral ceiling of the venue. A companion series of didactic photographs, tools, and batik materials documents the process of how these works were created, from inspiration to completion.
Admission: Free.
May 24-June 9; Daily from 10am-5pmOpening Reception: May 30, 5:30-7:30pmDaniel Library, The Citadel, 171 Moultrie St.

Outdoor Crafts Fair
Artists and artisans from across the U.S. present artwork in various media.
Tickets: $3 Adults; Free for Children/Seniors; $1 Adults on Sun. May 24-26May 31-June 2; Fri.-Sat.:10am-6pm; Sun.: 11am-5pm; Wragg Square, Meeting and Charlotte Sts.

Piccolo Spoleto 29th Annual Juried Art Exhibition

Coordinated by the Charleston Artist Guild and sponsored by the City of Charleston Office of Cultural Affairs, this exhibition will showcase works of South Carolina artists. This year's jurors are Jonathan Clancy (painting/ 2D) and Stacy L. Pearsall (photography).
Admission: Free.
2 from 5-7pm. Charleston Visitor Center, 375 Meeting St. May 24-June 7; Daily from 8:30am-5pm
Awards Reception: June 2, 5pm-7pm

Piccolo Spoleto Outdoor Art Exhibition
Award-winning South Carolina artists display their works at Marion Square, with free demonstrations each day.
Admission: Free.
May 24-June 8; Mon.-Thurs. from 10am-5pm, Fri.-Sun.: 10am-6pm. Marion Square, Meeting, King and Calhoun Sts.

Yo Art Project
In partnership with the Charleston County Public Library and the Piccolo Spoleto Festival, this exhibition features thirty new and exciting posters and photos by kids between the ages of 7-15 from Title One Schools. These posters and photos will illustrate the children's individual creativity as well as an insight into their community.Admission: Free. May 1-June 10; Mon.-Thurs., 9am-8pm; Fri.-Sat., 9am-6pm; Sun.,2-5pm. Charleston County Public Main Library, 68 Calhoun St.   

Phillips Latin American Auction. Mat 23-4th

Phillips Latin America Reception 20 May 6-8pm



DAMIÁN ORTEGA Auto construcción, caja de velocidades, 2005  Estimate $60,000-80,000



RECEPTION 20 MAY 2013 6-8PM
RSVP rsvplatin@phillips.com

AUCTION  23 MAY 4PM
VIEWING  18-23 MAY

View Catalogue