Showing posts with label artforjoy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artforjoy. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

RGR Gallery exhibitions update below June 6, Colonia San Miguel Chapultepec , Ciudad, Mexico. I hope our blog reares if traveling can catch the opening.

Hi the works highlights below are edgy . Browse through the art to see what you think. 
UPCOMING EXHIBITION

SAVE THE DATE

Un cuerpo es una casa, un organismo, un templo, un contenedor, un mundo

Galería RGR presents Un cuerpo es una casa, un organismo, un templo, un contenedor, un mundo, a group exhibition curated by Fernanda Ramos Mena.

The exhibition returns to the idea of the body as a living organism: one that breathes, sweats, contracts, breaks apart, and expands through its contact with other presences and living systems. Moving between fragments of memory, ritual, animality, and spiritual connection, the works gathered in the exhibition approach the body not as something fixed or contained, but as a territory constantly exceeding its own limits.
Presenting works by:
Karina Aguilera Skvirsky | Galia Eibenschutz
Carmina Escobar | Magali Lara
Maria Laet | Natalia Mejía Murillo
Francisco Muñoz | Rebeca Ramírez
Soe Yu Nwe | Teruri Yamawaki
OPENING
SATURDAY, JUNE 6
12:00 PM

MORE DETAILS
 
FOLLOW US

GALERÍA RGR
Gral. Antonio León 48
Colonia San Miguel Chapultepec
Ciudad de México, 11850
México

galeria@rgrart.com

MX: +52 55 8434 7760
MX: +52 55 8434 7759#rgrgallery,#ineartmagazineblog.blogspot.com#sunstormfineartmagazine.com
#artforever#artforall#artforjoy#artforeveryone


Sunday, May 31, 2026

June perspectives at the Oklahoma Contemporary look like a good time to me!!!!

It. looks like June is a good time at  Oklahoma Contemporary from film fests, opening to educational classes.   See all info below. Enjoy June!!!

Sunflowers in the foreground of Oklahoma Contemporary building

What's new at Oklahoma Contemporary


People sit at deadCenter film booth

deadCenter Film Festival

We are excited to return as the festival hub for a second year!

June 10-14


Two children work on art project

Second Saturday: Mystery Art Lab

June 13 | 1-4 p.m. | Free


Two people interact with light installation

Chad Mount: Frequency and Perspective Opening Reception

June 25 | 5-8 p.m.


People stand in an art exhibition that contains projected light

Anthony McCall: Solid Light
Spanish-Language Gallery Tour

June 14 | 2-3 p.m. | Free


People stand in an art exhibition that contains projected light

Public Exhibition Tours

Every Saturday | 1 p.m. | Free


Child works on clay art project

Camp Contemporary

Summer camp spots remain for ages 5–6!

Art & Nature Explorers | Begins June 22
Big & Bright Ocean | Begins June 22
Art Play House! | Begins Aug. 3


Person drawing on tablet

Teen Intensive

Ages 13-15

Teen Intensive: Illustration | Begins July 6


Oil painting of oranges

Studio School

Summer Member Registration opens June 1
Summer Public Registration opens June 8


Children look at art

Announcing ARTS LAB: Summer Gallery Visits!

Community organizations are invited to explore art through guided gallery visits.


Interior of cafe

Quincy Bakery and Café

Enjoy artisanal sandwiches, fresh salads, pastries, coffee, and elevated dessert pairings. 


Child smiles for the camera

Help Support Our Mission

$50: Provides clay for two Veterans and Active-Duty Military Initiative Studio School students.

$100: Provides class materials for a school participating in an ARTS LAB Field Trip.

$350: Provides one Camp Contemporary scholarship


Thinking about membership? Members receive early registration and 10% off Studio School classes and Camp Contemporary, 15% off at Shop Contemporary and Quincy Bakery & Café, special merch, and VIP access to exhibition openings.  

Take advantage of our discounted membership rates through June 30:

  • Individual Membership: $40  (reg. $65)

  • Dual Membership: $75  (reg. $110)


Because of our supporters, we can serve our community with accessible art, engaging programs and free experiences. This is your arts center.

Interested in sponsoring an exhibition or public program? 
Contact development@okcontemp.org.

Images: Oklahoma Contemporary Arts Center. Photo by Ann Sherman | deadCenter Film Festival 2025 | Second Saturday project | Frequency and Perspective concept image courtesy of Chad Mount | Installation photography of Anthony McCall: Solid Light exhibition at Oklahoma Contemporary Arts Center, March 13-July 27, 2026. © Anthony McCall. Photo by Madi Rae Jones | Camp Contemporary: Clay Games | Camp Contemporary: Digital Character Design | Courtesy of Chris Brizzard | ARTS LAB gallery tour | Inside of Quincy Bakery and Café | Camp Contemporary: Jungle Creators

Oklahoma Contemporary logo (the words stacked and spelled out with vertical lines between each letter)

Learn more: okcontemp.org

Footer

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Catch Carol Feuerman: From LIne to Life Drawings from the 70's. at Qcc Art Gallery Opening May 28, 407 PM

 We have known Carol since the late 1970's. It great to see her early drawings. 

Carole Feuerman: From Line to Life 

Drawings from the 70s 


Opening Reception Tomorrow, Thursday 

May 28, 4 - 7 pm

QCC Art Gallery/ CUNY

220-05 56th Ave, Bayside, NY

Dr. Christine Mangino

President of Queensborough Community College 

cordially invites you to the opening reception.

Voice of The Body, Drawings From The 1960s, Palazzo Boneparte, Rome, Italy

These drawings from the 1970s mark the beginning of Carole Feuerman’s sustained exploration of the human figure, created at a moment when observation, discipline, and emotional inquiry converged. Alongside her intimate studies of the body, Feuerman was also working as a professional illustrator, producing drawings for publications including The New York Times. This dual practice sharpened her ability to move between expressive figuration and communicative clarity. Whether addressing the human form or responding to editorial context, drawing became her primary language for understanding structure, presence, and meaning. Each line is deliberate, revealing an artist deeply engaged in the act of seeing—seeking not only anatomical accuracy, but the inner life of the subject.

While studying at the School of Visual Arts, Feuerman supported herself through drawing and illustration commissions, developing a remarkable professional career alongside her fine art practice. During this period, she created illustrations and paintings for major publications and television networks, including The New York Times, ABC, and NBC, while also producing more than fifteen album covers. Among them were works for Alice Cooper and The Rolling Stones, whose imagery was later used in their tour books.



Presented alongside these drawings are three sculptures that extend this investigation into the medium of sculpture. Among them is a striking self-portrait: a super-realist depiction of the artist in the act of painting a sculpture of a tattooed bicycle leg. This work collapses the distance between subject and maker, offering a rare moment in which the artist becomes both observer and observed. In dialogue with the drawings, the sculptures reveal a continuous thread, an enduring pursuit of stillness, presence, and psychological depth, while underscoring how Feuerman’s early commitment to line ultimately evolved into a fully realised sculptural language.


Seen today, these early drawings feel remarkably contemporary. They reflect a fearless investigation of intimacy, femininity, and self-definition during a period of profound social change, while also foreshadowing the sculptural language that would later define her career.

RSVP for the Opening Reception to Faustino Quintanilla:

QCC Art Gallery Director

FQuintanilla@qcc.cuny.edu

Monkey Man | 1976 | 34 x 27 cm / 13 x 11 in | Ink and Paint on Board, 

Painted for the Rolling Stones