Saturday, July 26, 2014

norte maar

Norte Maar

Norte Maar, Fete de Danse, 2014, Strand Theater, Strand Center for the Arts, Plattsburgh

Two nights only!
Friday & Saturday, August 1 & 2 at 7:30pm

Strand Center for the Arts
25 Brinkerhoff Street
Plattsburgh



Fete de Danse 2014 will feature:

New York City / London, UK

Known for bridging classical and modern idioms, Gleich Dances has been the featured company since inception of Fete de Danse in 2004. The company is the vehicle for the creative, collaborative, and educational work of choreographer, teacher and director Julia K. Gleich and has presented in New York City and throughout the United States and Europe. A renowned ballet choreographer and instructor, Ms. Gleich is currently lecturer at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance, London, and the Head of Choreography at London Studio Centre. Ms. Gleich’s choreographic residencies have included: Brooklyn Ballet, Burklyn Ballet Theatre, VT, University of Northern Colorado, CO, Island Moving Company, RI, University of California-Irvine, CA, Dancer’s Workshop, WY, and recently Norte Maar, Rouses Point/Plattsburgh, NY, among others.
Photo: Lucas Chilczuk>
Norte Maar, Gleich Dances, Fete de Danse, Strand Center for the Arts, Strand Theater, Plattsburgh

MADBoots Dance Co.
New York City

Noted for their awesome atheletism and contemporary blend of theater, drama, and dance, MADBoots was co-founded in August 2011 by Jonathan Campbell (Juilliard ’10) & Austin Diaz (N.Y.U. Tisch ’11). The Company has been presented at festivals such as the Alto Jonio Dance Festival (Italy), Springboard Danse(Montreal), David Parker’s Soaking WET, Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival Inside/Out SeriesTOES for Dance (Toronto) & DANCENOW Joe’s Pub Dance Festival (2012 Challenge Winner). Dance Magazine featured the company in their Vital Signs segment in December 2013. The 92nd Street Y presented MADboots as part of their inaugural Dig Dance: Weekend Series in December 2013, and Jacob’s Pillow granted the company a Creative Development Residency in February 2014. MADboots is looking forward to performing at Socrates Sculpture Park, NYC as part of Norte Maar’s Dance at Socrates in August 2014.
Photo by Nir Arieli>
Norte Maar, MADBoots, Fete de Danse, Plattsburgh, 2014, Strand Center for the Arts, Strand Theater

Racoco Productions
New York City

Under the artistic direction of Rachel Cohen, Racoco Productions creates theatrical experiences that combine movement, the visual arts, burlesque, cinematic styles, everyday objects, and musical composition. Movement phrases and traditional forms translate textures of emotion, transporting audiences through the looking glass to where the ordinary is iconic, the mundane mysterious, and the silly sacred. Recently, Racoco has created idiosyncratic explorations of interactions between the human body and inanimate materials—e.g., clay, flour, taffy, paper, chewing gum—collaborating with composers and visual artists to blur the boundaries between the real and the imaginary.
Norte Maar, Racoco Productions, Fete de Danse, Plattsburgh, Strand Center for the Arts, Strand Theater
Norte Maar, Fete de Danse, Strand Theater, Plattsburgh

Norte Maar for Collaborative Projects in the Arts
83 Wyckoff Avenue, #1B, Brooklyn, NY 11237
646-361-8512 | nortemaar.org
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Galleria d'Arte Maggiore




Galleria d'Arte
              Maggiore
         Francesco Pignatelli. Alchimie contemporanee -
                Galleria d'Arte Maggiore

FRANCESCO PIGNATELLI
Contemporary Alchemies


in our Gallery till September 30th

Francesco Pignatelli exhibits for the first time in Bologna. Working on the photographic reproduction with the aid of various manipulations, the artist forces the viewer to reconsider and revise elements already assimilated into his memory, which can be familiar cityscapes, Renaissance paintings or arcadian forests. In a constant reinterpretation and transformation of known figurative languages, the artist tries to reveal their depth freeing them from worn-out meanings and then arousing in the viewer the need for a new confrontation.




Giorgio de Chirico - Giappone

GIORGIO DE CHIRICO
De la Metafisica à la Neo Metafisica


itinerant exhibition in Japan from June to December 2014

IWATE Museum of ArtJune 21 - August 22, 2014
HAMAMATSU City Museum: August 30 - October 19, 2014
PANASONIC Shiodome Museum, Tokyo: October 25- December 26, 2014

104 masterpieces by De Chirico are exhibited, coming from the collection of Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris (donated by Isabella de Chirico), from some private collections in Europe and Japan, and on loan from Galleria d'Arte Maggiore in Bologna. 

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THE CONTEMPORARY AUSTIN PRESENTS A LARGE-SCALE SOLO EXHIBITION OF ARTIST DO HO SUH FOR FALL 2014





Do Ho Suh, 348 West 22nd Street, Apt. A, New York, NY 10011, USA, 2012. Polyester fabric and stainless steel tube. 271 2/3 x 169 3/10 x 96 1/2 inches. Edition of 3. Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York and Hong Kong.



THE CONTEMPORARY AUSTIN PRESENTS A LARGE-SCALE SOLO EXHIBITION OF ARTIST DO HO SUH FOR FALL 2014 
   

Do Ho Suh - September 20, 2014 - January 11, 2015

The Contemporary Austin - Jones Center, 700 Congress Ave., Austin, TX
The Contemporary Austin Laguna Gloria, 3809 West 35th Street, Austin, TX



JULY 25, 2014, AUSTIN, TEXAS - Renowned Korean-born sculptor and installation artist Do Ho Suh will present his first major solo exhibition in the US in more than a decade at The Contemporary Austinfrom September 20, 2014, through January 11, 2015. An influential artist operating within a distinctly twenty-first-century global mode, Suh crafts evocative and visually stunning works that reflect ideas of home, identity, and personal space. The exhibition at The Contemporary Austin encompasses the museum's two distinct sites and includes both existing works and newly fabricated pieces from several of Do Ho Suh's discrete but related bodies of work. Large-scale sculptures, installations, and works on paper will be on view at The Contemporary Austin - Jones Center at 700 Congress Avenue and at the museum's Betty and Edward Marcus Sculpture Park at Laguna Gloria, 3809 West 35th Street in Austin, Texas. More information can be found at thecontemporaryaustin.org.

Do Ho Suh's work draws on the artist's personal experiences growing up in Seoul, South Korea, studying art in the US, and moving homes several times over the course of his life. He now lives a global and "nomadic" existence, with homes in New York, London, and Seoul, and an exhibition schedule that reflects this, taking him all over the world. Inspired by his personal history and biography, the artist's sculptures and installations reveal a range of powerful themes, including notions of public versus private space, global identity, memory, and displacement. At the same time, Suh's works strike viewers with their delicate monumentality, subtle beauty, and intricate construction techniques. This distinctive combination of technical skill, striking visual appeal, and universal resonance has led to both critical and public success for the artist.

"As I seek to bring a new breadth and depth of international contemporary art to the city of Austin, I could not ignore the significance of Do Ho Suh," said Louis Grachos, Ernest and Sarah Butler Executive Director of The Contemporary Austin. "His poetic works resonate with individuals from across the globe. With a population that has always been identified by its creative class, it makes sense that Austin should host one of the most highly respected and critically acclaimed artists working today. I believe that our city will both inspire and find inspiration from Do Ho Suh."

Do Ho Suh added, "The Contemporary Austin offers me a unique opportunity to show my work across two spaces-both inside and out. I can share a body of work that deals with home, displacement, personal space, interpersonal space, and public space, and can articulate these ideas in completely different settings. I have been making fabric homes that I have been adding to over time and this particular series is now concluded, so The Contemporary Austin is the first opportunity I have had to share this addition to my New York home. You can't always show a new work in any space as all the conditions have to be right, but the Jones Center at The Contemporary Austin has provided me with this, which I'm excited about. It is also a particular pleasure to work with Louis Grachos again, and I am grateful for his support."

DO HO SUH AT THE CONTEMPORARY AUSTIN - JONES CENTER
The Do Ho Suh exhibition will transform The Contemporary Austin's downtown site into two very different spaces showcasing related works. The museum's upstairs gallery will be a brightly lit area containing large-scale installations that replicate the artist's apartment spaces from a single building in New York City, created in swaths of luminously colored polyester fabric held together by a subtly incorporated stainless steel armature. Three combined installations--Apartment A, 348 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011, USA (2011-2012), Corridor and Staircase, 348 West 22nd Street New York, NY 10011, USA (2011-2012), and Unit 2, 348 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011, USA (2014)--encourage the public to wander through an ephemeral, dreamlike representation of a piece of the artist's personal history, rendered in blocks of translucent color that at once conceal and reveal the details articulated within. A long, salmon-colored corridor connects to a bright red stairway suspended from the ceiling. A veil of blue walls contains a kitchen, bathroom, and living spaces with details including window moldings and interior fixtures. And in Unit 2, the artist's latest and final work in the series--newly fabricated and never before exhibited to the public--yellow walls describe additional rooms, which the artist has added to his New York apartment and that served alternately as his studio space and living quarters.

"In his 348 West 22nd Street series, Do Ho Suh invites viewers to travel on a literal and psychological journey through these vast and mysterious passages," said Heather Pesanti, Senior Curator at The Contemporary Austin. "Along the way, he addresses notions of globalism, nomadism, immigration, and 'home' that will resonate with audiences who have come to accept a more 'nomadic' lifestyle as the current norm, while they recall issues of immigration that are at the forefront of recent political commentary."

In contrast to the airy and bright space upstairs, the lower gallery at the Jones Center will include dark, intimate chambers punctuated by glowing light boxes containing works from the artist's Specimen Series (2013). These pieces replicate appliances and fixtures in exacting detail and, like the larger installations upstairs, are constructed entirely out of polyester fabric over a stainless steel framework. For instance, in Specimen Series: Corridor, Radiator, 348 West 22nd Street, APT. New York, NY 10011(2013), exterior elements such as the precise ridges of a control valve are rendered with meticulous realism. At the same time, the ghostly translucency of the crimson-colored fabric comprising the sculpture lends a delicate, otherworldly air to what would otherwise be a heavy cast iron fixture.

The installation at The Contemporary Austin - Jones Center will also include a range of large- and small-scale thread, watercolor, and pencil drawings, along with videos and a model from Do Ho Suh's 2012 work Secret Garden-1.

DO HO SUH AT THE CONTEMPORARY AUSTIN - LAGUNA GLORIA
At The Contemporary Austin's Betty and Edward Marcus Sculpture Park at Laguna Gloria, Do Ho Suh will re-create the kinetic installation Net-Work (2010-2014), first created for the Setouchi International Art Festival in Japan. Reconfigured and refabricated by the artist for this unique site along Lake Austin, Net-Work recalls the fishing nets the artist observed stretched across the shoreline in Japanese seaside villages. Upon closer inspection, however, viewers will find that this "fishing net" comprises thousands of delicately fashioned gold and silver human figures, joined at the hands and feet to create a seamless, tightly woven whole that shimmers in the wind and sun.

In speaking about his work in WSJ. Magazine, Suh explained, "Everything starts from an idea of personal space--what is the dimension of personal space. What makes a person a person, and when does a person become a group? What is interpersonal space-space between people?"

DO HO SUH BIOGRAPHY
Born in Seoul, South Korea, in 1962, Do Ho Suh currently lives and works in London, New York City, and Seoul. Suh received Bachelor of Fine Arts and Master of Fine Arts degrees in Oriental Painting from Seoul National University before moving to the United States, where he received a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design (1994) and an MFA from Yale University (1997).

Suh's recent solo exhibitions and projects include Home within Home within Home within Home within Home, National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul (2013); Do Ho Suh: Perfect Home, 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa, Japan (2012-2013); In Between, Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, Hiroshima(2012); Fallen Star, Stuart Collection, University of San Diego, California (2012); and Home within Home, Leeum, Samsung Museum of Art, Seoul (2012). The artist represented Korea at the 2001 Venice Biennale.

The artist's work is included in museum collections worldwide, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York City; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles; the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Tate Modern, London; the Leeum, Samsung Museum of Art and Artsonje Center, Seoul; the Museum of Contemporary Art and Mori Art Museum, Tokyo; and the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa, Japan, among many others. In 2013, Suh was named WSJ. Magazine's Art Innovator of the Year.

EXHIBITION SUPPORT
Support for this exhibition comes from Korean Air, Agnes Gund, the Moody Foundation, and the Linda Pace Foundation, with additional museum support from Oxford Commercial, Pedernales Cellars, and Vinson & Elkins LLP. This project is funded and supported in part by a grant from the Texas Commission on the Arts and in part by the City of Austin Economic Growth & Redevelopment Services Office/Cultural Arts Division, believing an investment in the Arts is an investment in Austin's future. Visit Austin at NowPlayingAustin.com.

THE CONTEMPORARY AUSTIN
The Contemporary Austin reflects the spectrum of contemporary art through exhibitions, commissions, education, and the collection. The museum has two distinct yet complementary locations, the Jones Center in downtown Austin at 700 Congress Avenue, and Laguna Gloria, a twelve-acre site on Lake Austin at 3809 W. 35th Street, which is home to the Driscoll Villa, the Art School, and the Betty and Edward Marcus Sculpture Park at Laguna Gloria.

# # #

Do Ho Suh, Specimen Series: Corridor, Radiator, 348 West 22nd Street, APT. New York, NY 10011, 2013. Polyester fabric and stainless steel wire. 48 3/5 x 37 1/3 x 17 1/3 inches. Edition of 3. Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York and Hong Kong. Do Ho Suh, Net-Work, 2010. Gold and chrome plating with polyurethane coating on ABS plastic and nylon fishing net. Dimensions variable. Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York and Hong Kong. 
Do Ho Suh, Specimen Series: Toilet, 348 West 22nd Street, APT. New York, NY 10011, USA, 2013. Polyester fabric and stainless steel wire. 44 1/10 x 33 1/10 x 38 inches. Edition of 3. Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York and Hong Kong. 


 

IMAGE CREDITS:


  1. Do Ho Suh, 348 West 22nd Street, Apt. A, New York, NY 10011, USA, 2012. Polyester fabric and stainless steel tube. 271 2/3 x 169 3/10 x 96 1/2 inches. Edition of 3. Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York and Hong Kong.
  2. Do Ho Suh, Specimen Series: Corridor, Radiator, 348 West 22nd Street, APT. New York, NY 10011, 2013. Polyester fabric and stainless steel wire. 48 3/5 x 37 1/3 x 17 1/3 inches. Edition of 3. Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York and Hong Kong.
  3. Do Ho Suh, Net-Work, 2010. Gold and chrome plating with polyurethane coating on ABS plastic and nylon fishing net. Dimensions variable. Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York and Hong Kong. 
  4. Do Ho Suh, Specimen Series: Toilet, 348 West 22nd Street, APT. New York, NY 10011, USA, 2013. Polyester fabric and stainless steel wire. 44 1/10 x 33 1/10 x 38 inches. Edition of 3. Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York and Hong Kong.
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THE DOG **PRESS DAY & FINAL PRESS SCREENING**


THE DOG
**PRESS DAY & FINAL PRESS SCREENING**
 
“Surprisingly sad portrait of a sexually liberated man held captive by his past, forever chasing and trying to rewrite his own legend ”
-- Variety
"The best documentary about a human being ever made"
-- Next Projection
“Live every day as if it's your last and whoever doesn't like it can go fuck themselves and a rubber duck”
-- The Dog
Lover. Husband. Soldier.
Activist. Mama's Boy.
Bank Robber. 

Presents
The story behind the man that inspired Al Pacino's legendary role in 
the Oscar®-Nominated Dog Day Afternoon. 
 
**WORLD PREMIERE: TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 2013**
**NEW YORK PREMIERE: THE 51ST NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL**
**EUROPEAN PREMIERE: 64TH BERIN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL**
PRESS SCREENING
(Magno Review, 729 Seventh Avenue, 2nd Floor, NYC)
Monday, July 28th @ 6:00PM
 
PRESS DAY
Directors Allison Berg & Frank Keraudren
Location: TBD
Wendesday, July 30th
*All interviews must be approved
 
In Theaters August 8th and On-Demand August 15th!
 
​** A SCREENING LINK IS ALSO AVAILABLE.  PLEASE REACH OUT WITH YOUR INTEREST.**​
​* * *​
Coming of age in the 1960s, John Wojtowicz' libido was unrestrained even by the libertine standards of the era, with multiple wives and lovers, both women and men. In August 1972, he attempted to rob a Brooklyn bank to finance his lover's sex-reassignment surgery, resulting in a fourteen-hour hostage situation that was broadcast live on television. Three years later, John was portrayed by Al Pacino as “Sonny,” and his crime immortalized in one of the most iconic New York movies of all time, Dog Day Afternoon. The film had a profound influence on Wojtowicz (who pronounced his name "Woto-wits"), and when he emerged from a six-year prison sentence, he was known by his self-imposed nickname: "The Dog."

Drawing upon extraordinary archival footage, the film shuffles between the 1970s and the 2000s. Touching upon the sexual revolution of the 1970s, we gain a first-hand perspective on New York's historical gay liberation movement in which Wojtowicz played an active role. In later footage, he remains a subversive force, backed by the unconditional love and headstrong wit of his mother Terry. The hows and whys of the bank robbery are recounted in gripping detail by Wojtowicz and various eyewitnesses, and don’t necessarily always align with one another.
Directors Allison Berg & Frank Keraudren began filming The Dog in 2002, and their long-term dedication pays off in this unforgettable portrait capturing all of the subject's complexity. John is, by turns, lovable, maniacal, heroic, and self-destructive. To call him larger than life feels like an understatement. Passionate and profane, The Dog makes no apologies for being who he is: "Live every day as if it's your last and whoever doesn't like it can go fuck themselves and a rubber duck." 
*  *  *

Directed by: Allison Berg and Frank Keraudren
Running Time: 101 Minutes
Distributor: Drafthouse Films
Theatrical Release For NY & LA: August 8th
VOD: August 15th

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Vi auguriamo una felice estate - We wish you happy summer holidays

 
 Vi auguriamo una felice estate  - We wish you happy summer holidays


 Luigi Ghirri, Lido di Volano, 1985, 32 x 47,5 cm 

Chiusura estiva - Summer break

Galleria Repetto
Acqui Terme: 01/08 - 02/09
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Tuesday, July 22, 2014

JOSH SIMPSON





 JOSH SIMPSON
Josh Simpson Contemporary Glass

 "Along with the natural world, my motivation comes directly from the material itself. Glass is an alchemic blend of sand and metallic oxides combined with extraordinary, blinding heat. The result is a material that flows and drips like honey."

                         
Inhabited Vase VTHI 
Large Planet Detail
Large Planet Detail pwmd-017409-2
Inhabited Glass vthi_108409w
Small Planet pwlgr-040909




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Joseph Gross Gallery presents: The Map Is Not The Territory


Joseph Gross Gallery presents:

The Map Is Not The Territory

Ted Lawson (collaboration with Shelter Serra), Orbis Descriptio, 2014, CNC milled & dyed MDF, Wood, 55”x84”

Ted Lawson

A Solo Exhibition

Exhibition Dates: September 11-October 4, 2014
Opening Reception: September 11th | 6-9 PM


July 21, 2014 (New York, NY) – Joseph Gross Gallery is pleased to announce its inaugural exhibition, The Map is Not the Territory, featuring various sculpture and new media works by Brooklyn based artist, Ted Lawson. Joseph Gross Gallery is a contemporary art space located in the Chelsea art district of New York founded by Joseph Gross of ArtNowNY and located in the former ArtNowNY space at 548 W 28th Street, 2nd Floor. There will be an opening reception to celebrate the artist as well as the gallery launch onSeptember 11th from 6:00 to 9:00 PM.

For the occasion of his first solo show at Joseph Gross Gallery, Lawson will début a new series of work consisting of three dimensional wall mounted pieces and freestanding sculptures milled from MDF (a wood fiber based material commonly used in commercial fabrication), brass plate etchings, and three large scale drawings rendered in the artist’s own blood fed intravenously to a CNC (computer numerical control) machine using computer technology akin to a 3D printer.

In the show’s title, The Map is Not the Territory, Lawson references a quote by the 20th century Polish philosopher and scientist, Alfred Korzybski, who pioneered the theory of general semantics that explained human experience as limited by biology and language. This concept serves as a unifying theme to the work in The Map is Not the Territory, which draws imagery from sources ranging from the Hubble telescope (Carina Nebula and Moon) and Renaissance cartography (Orbis Descriptio, produced in collaboration with Shelter Serra) to self-portraiture (Ghost in the Machine), in an overall exploration of the philosopher’s dictum that the abstract representation of something, and our reaction to it, is not the thing itself.

The nature of Lawson’s practice pushes the boundaries between realism and abstraction, producing works with the polish of high-end manufacturing, but with the allowance for chance operations through the machine’s algorithmic autonomy; telltale reminders of the ‘hand’ of the artist. Combining computer programming with fine art, industrial-scale production techniques akin to Koons’s or Murakami’s studio practices, Lawson writes the thousands of lines of code that direct the robotic arm of the CNC machine doing the drawing and carving of his works, resulting in symbiotic spectacles that might be interpreted as both commodities and concepts.

These man and machine ‘collaborations’ are most poignant in Lawson’s blood drawings. Documented in a short video capturing the artist literally spilling blood for his work, fed to the machine through an IV over hours at a time, the act ultimately challenges the preconception that an artist whose practice utilizes computers and coding is somehow more removed from his work than an artist using graphite or paint.

Employing the philosophy of Korzybski, Lawson is able to mount a nuanced exploration of human experience in the physical world, and the role art and technology play in our classification and understanding of it. Drawing examples from the earliest Western explorers’ attempts to map the global sphere with his 3D rendering of a 1511 world map, to physical reproductions of photographic images taken light-years away through modern-day space exploration, Lawson weaves together the narratives and symbols that create an abstraction of reality that we call human consciousness.

About the Artist
Ted Lawson, b. 1970 in Boston, Mass., received his BFA in Sculpture from Philadelphia University of the Arts in 1993, where he was awarded “Outstanding Student Achievement” at the International Sculpture Center. He has exhibited at the Scope and Wynwood art fairs, Miami, FL; Art Hamptons, New York; and in solo exhibitions as the Emmanuel Fremin Gallery, New York, NY. Ted has been an invited guest speaker and critic at Parsons University and Cornell University. Works by Ted Lawson are held in international private collections in Europe, Russia and the US, and he has received several large-scale commissions, including the recent completion of a sculptural installation for digital entrepreneur Sean Parker. Lawson lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.

About Joseph Gross Gallery
Joseph Gross Gallery represents a stable of contemporary artists who exemplify the gallery’s commitment to pioneering genres and mediums. Located in the Chelsea art district of New York City, the gallery is the second New York space founded by Joseph Gross, a dealer working in both primary and secondary markets since 2005 who also founded ArtNowSF in San Francisco in 2005 and ArtNowNY in Chelsea in 2012. Joseph Gross is known for curating exhibitions that challenge convention and bring the most cutting edge images and ideas by today’s most exciting contemporary artists to the fore.

Location and Contact
548 W 28th Street 2nd Floor
New York, NY 10001
(p) 646.535.6528 | info@josephgrossgallery.com 

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adam disbrow

"Self Portrait VI - IMMRTL" 
72 x 60 - Original On Canvas - Adam Drisbow
Oil Stick, Acrylic, Aerosol, Gold Leaf, Charcoal Rubbing
adam disbrow

emerging artist



Alexander Salazar Fine Art
1040 7th Avenue
San Diego, CA 92037
By Appointment Only

Website - 
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14 Paintings Now On Exhibit at
Alexander Salazar Fine Art

Prices 
Range  $1,600 to $15,000



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