Thursday, August 25, 2022

Steven Zevitas Gallery GERALD EUHON SHEFFIELD II: melancholy satire closing reception Saturday, August 27th from 5-7 pm. The artist will be present.

STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY


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YOU'RE INVITED:


GERALD EUHON SHEFFIELD II:

melancholy satire


Please join us for a closing reception Saturday, August 27th from 5-7 pm. The artist will be present. 


Steven Zevitas Gallery is pleased to present melancholy satire, an exhibition of new paintings by Gerald Euhon Sheffield II. The exhibition will run from July 15 – August 27, 2022 with a closing reception on Saturday, August 27 from 5:00 – 8 pm.

 

Each work presented in melancholy satire belongs to a larger ongoing series entitled fable for introverts in which Sheffield reflects on a 2019 Fulbright trip to the Uzbekistan-Afghanistan border and his subsequent return to the United States. An avid researcher and Army veteran, Sheffield extends his experiences and findings into a visual language where research, personal anecdotes, book titles, the effects and structures of racial epithets, American folklore, domesticated animals, and playful figures of speech intermingle. Amongst this cultural chaos, Sheffield provides intentional, intimate moments of rest and introspection.

 

The smallest painting in the exhibition, a yellow bird, a yellow bill, sat upon my window sill!, depicts a brightly colored bird hopping through an open window on a sunny day. The bird looks directly at the viewer, ready to eat a piece of bread at the bottom of the frame. What first appears as an innocuous domestic scene starts to become more insidious as we notice a string tied around the morsel. What once appeared as a gift has turned into a trap as these playful markers build to a darker dialogue. The title of this painting sounds like an upbeat song, but comes from a US Army cadence sung by soldiers marching in basic training and speaks to a loss of innocence in boredom during war: A yellow bird, / With a yellow bill, / Sat upon / My window sill! / I lured him in, / With a piece of bread, / And then I smashed, / his fucking head! / I scooped him up, / In a dixie cup, / And then I drank, / That fucker up! / The moral of, / This story goes, / To get some head, / You need some bread!

 

While melancholy satire points to sadness submerged beneath the guise of humor, we find respite in Sheffield’s open strokes and his willingness to address weighted themes through the lens of his domestic life. A flower blooms in darkness, a woman appears triumphant atop her horse, and hands brush in an intimate moment.

Please email liz@stevensevitasgallery.com with questions or inquiries.

Gerald Euhon Sheffield II is an artist and educator living and working in Massachusetts and New York. His studio practice is based in critical and site-specific research, painting and sculpture, and fluid dialogues between art, design, and public discourse. Sheffield’s professional background consists of a diversity of institutions and collaborations across borders. He served in the United States Army for eight years as a Visual Communications and Military Intelligence Public Affairs specialist in Paraguay, Guatemala, Brazil, and Kuwait. He deployed to Iraq from 2007-2008, working alongside Iraqi civilians and community leaders during the Iraqi Reconstruction campaign. He received a BFA in Fine Arts from the School of Visual Arts, and an MFA in Painting/Printmaking from Yale University. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including the United States Armed Forces Meritorious Service Medal, the Alice Kimball English Traveling Fellowship, and JUNCTURE Human Rights Research and Travel Fellowship in South Africa. He recently completed a Fulbright Research Grant in Samarkand and Tashkent, Uzbekistan - researching the Islamic architecture of the Silk Road and its influence on the tolerance and diversity of Central Asian Muslim society. He is a 2022-2023 National Endowment of the Humanities Fellow. He currently teaches Foundation Drawing at The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in New York City, and Structural Drawing at The University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth. Sheffield is working on a long-term book collaboration with Afghan-American poet and scholar, Zahra Saed, regarding the travels of Harlem Renaissance poet - Langston Hughes and his travels to Soviet Central Asia.

STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY

450 Harrison Ave., Suite #47

Boston, MA 02118

617 778 5265 x22


@stevenzevitasgallery

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Sundaram Tagore Gallery, exhibits "A Moment to Consider," September 8–October 8. Works by ANILA QUAYYUM AGHA.

Please join Sundaram and Anila Quayyum Agha for a dazzling, immersive experience at the Chelsea gallery during the opening of A Moment to Consider, on view September 8–October 8.
 
Work by the award-winning Pakistani-American artist, who was recently profiled in The New York Times, has been the subject of eight solo museum shows since 2019. More than a dozen more museum exhibitions are slated. 

For this exhibition, Agha reimagines ornamental patterns from history in metal, resin and paper using traditional and contemporary techniques of craft. The work—which includes a large-scale light installation that envelops viewers in light and shadow—pays homage to artists and craftspeople who historically have gone unrecognized and unnamed despite the importance of their artistic output. This is Agha’s first solo exhibition at Sundaram Tagore Chelsea. 
EXPLORE THE EXHIBITION

ABOUT ANILA QUAYYUM AGHA

Anila Quayyum Agha works in a cross-disciplinary fashion with mixed media. She is internationally recognized for her award-winning large-scale light installations that use light and pattern to create immersive shared experiences and inclusive spaces. “In a world where difference and divergence dominate most conversations about the intersection of cultures, my artwork explores the harmonies without ignoring the shadows, ambiguities and dark spaces between them,” she says.
 
Major awards include the 2019 Painters and Sculptors Grant from the Joan Mitchell Foundation and the 2021 SARF (Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship). In 2019, Agha’s work was included in She Persists at the Venice Biennale. 

Born in Lahore, Pakistan, 1965 | Lives and works in Augusta, Georgia, and Indianapolis, Indiana.
CONTACT US

SUNDARAM TAGORE CHELSEA

542 West 26th Street, New York, NY 10001
212 677 4520 • gallery@sundaramtagore.com
Artwork pictured, from top:
Paradise (Mughal Gardens/Patterned Cube) II, 2022, resin, 47 x 47 inches/119.4 x 119.4 cm
Stealing Beauty (Steel Garden – After Durer’s A Great Piece of Turf) (detail), 2022, mirrored stainless steel, 60 x 150 inches/152.4 x 381 cm
A Beautiful Despair, 2022, lacquered steel and halogen bulb, 60 x 60 x 60 inches/152.4 x 152.4 x 152.4 cm
Circle the Kaaba (Silver and Gold), 2021, embroidery and beads on paper, 30 x 30 inches/76.2 x 76.2 cm. 
Photo by Stefan Jennings courtesy of University of New Mexico Museum of Art
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46th Annual Hampton Classic Horse Show Opening Day – Sunday, August 28


THE HAMPTON CLASSIC

Hampton Classic Horse Show, Inc. • PO Box 3013  Bridgehampton, NY 11932-3013

631-537-3177 • 631-537-5443 (FAX) • info@hamptonclassic.com  hamptonclassic.com  

Photo, Jamie Forbes© Past competition Jumper























WHAT:                    

46th Annual Hampton Classic Horse Show

Opening Day – Sunday, August 28

 

WHEN:                    

The Hampton Classic runs Sunday, August 28 – Sunday, September 4

8:00 am – 5:00 pm (Except Monday, August 29 starts at 10:00 a.m.)          

 

WHERE:                  

240 Snake Hollow Road

Bridgehampton, NY 11932


FEATURES:             


The Hampton Classic is one of the world’s most prestigious horse shows and features competitors at every level from young children in leadline to Olympic, World, and World Cup Champions. The Classic also has competitions for riders with disabilities. The Hampton Classic features more than 200 classes in six show rings, the Agneta Currey Boutique Garden with more than 70 vendors, and a wide selection of dining options, all on its world-class 60-acre show grounds.


The Hampton Classic is famous not only for its world-class equestrian competition, but also for its celebrity sightings throughout the week. Among those who have attended in recent years are many A-listers including Jennifer Lopez, Bruce Springsteen and Patti Scialfa, Billy Joel, Jon Bon Jovi, Jimmy Fallon, Jerry Seinfeld, Mariska Hargitay, Bobby Flay, Brooke Shields, Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos, Sofia Vergara, Ashley and Mary-Kate Olsen, Julianne Moore and Michael Bloomberg.

Opening Day – Sunday, August 28, features Leadline classes with children aged 2-7 dressed like Grand Prix riders and mounted on horses or ponies. The leadline classes, judged by three-time Olympic medalist Joe Fargis, are followed by Opening Day Ceremonies, the $30,000 Jumper Challenge and $10,000 Marders Local Hunter Derby. Local hunter classes, including the Miller & Associates Local Junior hunter division, Guaranteed Rate Local Hunter Non-Professional division and Health Rover Local Amateur-Owner division take place as well as Children’s (including the Knox School High Children’s Equitation) and Adult Equitation classes.

Further details are available on the show’s website at www.hamptonclassic.com.

  


Photo, Jamie Forbes©, Past Competition Jumper


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Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Listen to Vic Forbes conversation on What does freedom and justice mean to you? How are they reflected in your daily life!


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Philadelphia Museum of Fine Art exhibition "Discover Matisse" tickets are on Sale Now Opens Oct. 20

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Philadelphia Museum of Art
 
Colorful painting of a woman in a blue dress
 
Matisse in the 1930s

Tickets on Sale Now
Opens Oct. 20

Discover a decade of exploration, innovation, and renewal in the work of
acclaimed artist Henri Matisse. 

This major exhibition tells the story of Matisse as he worked his way through a long creative block at the beginning of the 1930s. Sparked by a commission to decorate the main gallery of the Barnes Foundation, Matisse entered a decade of renewed artistic exploration that forever changed his approach to easel painting. 

See it at the exhibition's only U.S. venue: The Philadelphia Museum of Art. 
 

Buy Now
 
Photo of visitors under gold statue of Diana the Huntress in the Museum's Great Stair Hall
 

Free for Members 

No reservations required for museum Members. Enjoy a year’s worth of free admission, discounted guest tickets, exclusive members-only events, and more.

Explore Membership
 
 

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Matisse in the 1930s is organized by the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Musée de l’Orangerie, Paris, and the Musée Matisse Nice.

 
L'O Musée de l’Orangerie
Musée Matisse
 

In Philadelphia, the exhibition is made possible by the Annenberg Foundation Fund for Major Exhibitions, The Pierre and Tana Matisse Foundation, The Women’s Committee of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Gloria and Jack Drosdick Fund for Special Exhibitions, the Harriet and Ronald Lassin Fund for Special Exhibitions, the Jill and Sheldon Bonovitz Fund for Exhibitions, Mr. and Mrs. William C. Buck, Mr. and Mrs. Christopher H. Gadsden, Mrs. Henry F. Harris, Independence Blue Cross, the Robert Lehman Foundation, The Leslie Miller and Richard Worley Foundation, Barbara A. Podell and Mark G. Singer, Katie and Tony Schaeffer, Robbi and Bruce Toll, Constance and Sankey Williams, and other generous donors.

Support for the accompanying publication was provided by The Davenport Family Foundation and The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation.

Promotional support has been provided by PHLCVB and Visit Philadelphia.

Matisse in the 1930s is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities.

Woman in Blue, 1937, by Henri Matisse (Philadelphia Museum of Art: Gift of Mrs. John Wintersteen, 1956-23-1) © 2022 Succession H. Matisse/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

 

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