Thursday, October 11, 2012

Buy Artexpo Miami Tix Now & Get Preview Party Passes


   

Don't Miss Art Week Miami
  Home | Location & Hours | Booth Packages | Exhibitor Registration | Attend | Hotel & Travel | Contact Us  
  It’s on! Tickets are now available for Artexpo Miami & Miami SOLO —to be held December 5-9 amidst the city’s powerhouse art fairs in Midtown Miami. This year, we’re hosting 75 of the world’s leading art publishers and dealers, with thousands of exciting new works to choose from. Art Week Miami is the place to be in early December, and Artexpo Miami will be in the center of the action.

Trade Attendees: Register Online & Get in FREE
Gallery owners, art dealers, designers, architects and other trade professionals are welcome to register online for free admission to Artexpo Miami. Please note: there will not be trade registration at the show. You must pre-register online for free admission.

General Admission: Purchase Tickets Now & Get FREE Preview Party Passes
Be among the first to walk the aisles of Artexpo Miami + Miami SOLO 2012! Until October 31st, buy a General Admission ticket and receive a free pass to our Preview Party on December 4th—a $50 value! Meet the artists, enjoy light fare and cocktails, and explore this year’s array of fine art before the show begins. Get tickets now.

About Artexpo Miami + Miami SOLO
Artexpo Miami is the Miami edition of the iconic Artexpo—the world’s largest fine art trade show for nearly 35 years. Artexpo returns to Miami this year with a juried selection of fine art from an international slate of established artists and galleries. Our Miami SOLO pavilion will host new and exciting works from some of the industry’s most talented, up-and-coming artists.

We look forward to hosting you in Miami this December!

-The Artexpo Team



 
 
Miami [SOLO]
Reserve Your Booth
Artexpo New York
Artexpo New York
Art Business News
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Call to Artists - Special Opportunity | Miami is Calling You

SCOPE Basel

Where will YOU be when the heavy hitters of the art world
are in Miami this December?
SCOPE Art Show, Artists Wanted and See // Exhibition invite you to join the 3rd annual Art Takes Miami 2012, an international search for creative talent, skill and vision that will present one visionary in an exclusive, featured booth at SCOPE Art Show during the hottest art event of the year.



Miami is Calling You. Click Here to Participate
The Final Entry Deadline is October 30, 2012 11:59pm ET

More artists will be exhibited than ever before with the 1,001 Artists Project, presenting select artists in a special display at SCOPE Miami 2012.








The Grand Prize Selected Artist Will Receive:


$10,000 Cash
Includes a $5,000 production allowance for SCOPE Miami and a $5,000 cash grant

Presentation in an Exclusive Booth at SCOPE Miami 2012
You and your work will be presented alongside the top players in the art world, showcasing your talent to galleries, buyers, critics and curators from all over the globe.

A Luxurious Miami Getaway
Accommodations at the luxurious Delano Hotel in the center of the action in South Beach

International Exposure
Press + publicity to hundreds of thousands of viewers promoting your exhibition at SCOPE

Plus, special prizes for:
The People's Choice and Category Awards, along with special features, inclusion in the 1,001 Artists Project, and Art Takes Miami Limited Edition Catalog. Learn more >>





The Grand Prize Jurors:








With over 50 art fairs spanning more than a decade, SCOPE has solidified its position as the premier showcase for international emerging contemporary art. Renowned for presenting the most innovative galleries, artists and curators, SCOPE Art Shows in Miami, Basel, New York, London and the Hamptons have garnered extensive critical acclaim, with sales of over $300 million and attendance of over 500,000 visitors. Want a piece of it? Click here >>



Call to Artists - Indian Wells Arts Festival


Indian Wells Arts Festival 

   

Call to Artists

WHAT: The 11th Annual Indian Wells Arts Festival

WHERE: The Indian Wells Tennis Garden, Indian Wells, CA
     

WHEN:   Friday, Saturday and Sunday
            April 5 - 7, 2013  
            Show hours:  10:00 am to 5:00 pm (Gates close at 4:00 pm)

           
NOTEWORTHY:



*Limited to 200 juried artists  

*Wide variety of work within 13 categories
  
*Located in the heart of the Palm Springs Desert Resorts Communities; Estimated attendance: 10,000  
  
*Spectacular venue surrounded by mountain vistas; on the grass and sidewalk lined plaza of the state-of-the art tennis stadium, home of the PNP Parribas Tennis Tournament
  
*Gated venue with overnight security
  
*Convenient on-site artist parking; convenient free and valet customer parking
  
*Spectacular cool and comfortable Artist Hospitality Suite in the stadium with TV, free Wi-Fi, private restrooms
  
*Complimentary coffee  throughout the day plus fruit, veggies, pastries and snack time twice a day
  
*Booth sitters and volunteers available via cell phone request
  
*Drive-up registration (no need to get out of your vehicle)
  
*Scheduled and organized load-in the day before; convenient drive up to assigned area
  
*Ribbons awarded in over 20 Mediums
  
*Major advertising and promotion including billboards, newspapers, magazines, tv, radio, social media, direct mail, rack card distribution
  
*Artist discount offering customers a two-for-one admission via postcard and email blast
  
*Art show appropriate live music creating synergy and ambiance
  
*30-LUV Team (artists who have sales in the top 30%) and ribbon winners automatically accepted in the following festival
  
*Reduced hotel rates
  
The 11th Annual INDIAN WELLS ARTS FESTIVAL --- where Art is a Happening! - is a juried and judged event uniquely showcasing the fine art and quality craft of 200 contemporary and traditional artists. You will be provided the promotional opportunity to meet with an audience of serious buyers and collectors at a premier venue located in the heart of the Palm Springs Desert Resorts Communities.

We have fabulous location surrounded by mountain vistas on the grass and sidewalk lined plaza of a $75 million dollar state-of-the-art stadium, home of the BNP Paribas Tennis Tournament. We boast convenient artist and customer parking, overnight security, artist hospitality and easy access. With both an aggressive online and traditional marketing campaign, professional experience and a strong reputation, the Indian Wells Arts Festival seeks out and brings together a wide variety of high quality artists to delight our audience of residents and tourists alike.

The creative synergy of working artists, local sponsors, exhibitors and non-profit partners creates a color-filled artisan village vibrant with activity. Everyone loves to watch the on-site demonstrations including glass blowing, painting, weaving, large scale stone sculpturing, larger-than-life mural painting, sand sculpture, wood carving and pottery throwing.  
  
A Gourmet Market Place offers gourmet specialties, while sidewalk chalk drawing, children's activities, wine tasting, live musical entertainment and refreshment are ongoing throughout the day. "Sunday Eggs + Champagne in the Garden" brunch menu is available until noon.
  
With a celebrated reputation for its quality and wide variety of fine art and quality craft, artists travel from throughout the country to participate.   The Indian Wells Arts Festival has been ranked one of the "100 Best Fine Art Shows in the country" by Sunshine Artist magazine and "Best of the Best" by Palm Springs Life magazine. Approximately 9,000 guests enjoyed the festival with reported art sales of $600,000.00.

Indian Wells is located 17 miles east of Palm Springs and is a two hour drive from the Los Angeles and San Diego areas. The City of Indian Wells is home to "internationally recognized sporting and cultural events, world-class resorts, restaurants, championship golf courses and tennis courts."

The Palm Springs Desert Resort Communities are constantly changing. Sleepy desert towns have become year round residential and tourist economies. 

NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS:  

First Deadline:  October 13, 2012 ($35 Jury Fee)
  
Second Deadline: January 5, 2012 ($50 Jury Fee; 60 spaces reserved for this deadline)  

Notification:  November 13, 2012 (First Deadline Applicants); January 22, 2013 (Second Deadline Applicants)  

Booth fee due:  January 15, 2012

Apply at: 
 

For more information please visit http://www.indianwellsartsfestival.com
  
If you need additional help:  
Just email us at
or call or fax Production Office at 760-346-0042

Opening Reception - bau 94 Tom Holmes


BAU logo rusty
161 Main Street, Beacon, NY 12508 
bauinfo@optonline.net      www.baugallery.com 
 (845) 440-7584   

gallery hours Saturday and Sunday 12-6pm
bau 94  
Tom Holmes 



Opening Reception 

This Saturday 

October 13th 6-9 pm 
bau Gallery
161 Main Street
Beacon, NY

______________________________________________________________


bau 94   Beacon Artist Union presents
Tom Holmes

Tom Holmes..... lost in translation, Ice portraits, stone and steel.

Tom Holmes winter portrait
Tom Holmes opens at bau October 13th. He will be showing the ice portraits of winter 2011-2012. Faces of the lost, found and missing that crept into the winter frost to reveal their presence. The ice portraits of time frozen, stopped and dammed. The people of his past, present and future. The Blue Man of winter. 


Stone and steel will be featured as a single monumental piece, delineating the space between the frozen and thawed. The living and the received. The fundamental question of who we are in relation to the truth. Searching for what is and not imagined. The hard space of time..... lost in translation.



_______________________________________________________________

Opening Reception October 13th 6-9 pm
October 13th thru November 4th
Gallery Hours Saturdays and Sundays 12-6pm

bau gallery is open 12 to 6pm, Saturdays and Sundays, or by appointment.  


For more information, go to baugallery.com.




Beacon Artist Union
161 Main Street
Beacon, NY




Oana Lauric - Reflective Radiance

Oana Lauric: Reflective Radiance
October 13 - November 8, 2012

Exhibition Now on View -Dialogues Between Art & Design


Phillips de Pury & Company

NEW YORK



EXHIBITION NOW ON VIEW

MOSS: DIALOGUES BETWEEN ART & DESIGN

Phillips de Pury & Company 
Moss: Dialogues Between Art & Design Now On View

ALBERTO GIACOMETTI  Unique Torse de femme, conceived 1932, cast 1948-1949  Estimate $2,000,000-3,000,000




AUCTION  16 October  11am
Viewing  6-15 October

450 Park Avenue New York





View Lots


View Catalogue




Contact Us | Sale Information






Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Dellorco Fine Art - Beverly Hills Affaire in the Garden

Save the Date:
Oct. 20-21
Beverly Hills
Affaire in the Garden
Santa Monica Blvd.
(between Crescent and Canon Dr.)

 

Dellorco Fine Art
1218A S. Westlake Blvd.
Westlake Village, CA 91361

chris@dellorcoart.com 


to view art:
www.dellorcofineart.com

Opening Reception - Space Invaders



 Please join us for the reception of 
 SPACE INVADERS

Wednesday, October 17, 6-8:00 pm 

Kim Beck, Diana Cooper, Abigail DeVille, Dahlia Elsayed, Franklin Evans, Gandalf Gavan, DeWitt Godfrey, Rachel Hayes, Lisa Kellner, Nicola Lopez, 
Rita MacDonald, Robert Melee and Erik Hanson, Sheila Pepe, Mariah Robertson, Cordy Ryman, Carol Salmanson, Heeseop Yoon and Halley Zien 


Space Invaders, organized by guest curator Karin Bravin, features the work of eighteen artists who make use of the unique spaces at Lehman College - both inside the galleries and outside the building. Using the walls, the ceiling, the floor, or the balcony above the atrium, works appear to grow out of the structure, hang down, wrap around, or peer out from under. Working with a specific location in mind, the space becomes the artist's canvas. The outcome can be organic and free flowing, expressive and thought provoking. These site-specific installations will include floor-bound works arranged in sprawling configurations that appear to be organically inspired. Some of the artists use large sculptures that skillfully appropriate both indoor and outdoor spaces. Others use bits of material that might have once intersected with someone's life creating an expanding cultural collage, and some create installations that cascade from a ceiling or stretch from inside to outside. Each artist will inhabit the space differently, taking cues from the distinctive architecture - Lehman College Art Gallery is located in a building designed by Marcel Breuer in 1960.

Upon approaching the gallery from the center of the campus, the viewer will encounter Rachel Hayes' boldly colored fabric installation. Light and wind affect the piece as it is viewed from both indoors and outdoors. On the Goulden Avenue side of the campus viewers will find Dahila Elsayed's series of text-based flags. These festive, poetic, and suggestive visual markers metaphorically call to attention aspects of the campus with which one might not be familiar. DeWitt Godfrey's monumental steel tubes sit under an overpass, nestled between concrete walls. Kim Beck's work will lead us from the outside to inside with vinyl decals of commonly overlooked weeds that grow out of cracks and up walls.  

Inside, in the gallery lobby, Sheila Pepe will dress the atrium with a degree of craft and decoration that likely was never intended for Marcel Breuer's cast concrete; Rita MacDonald's large-scale wall drawing plays up the roundness of the foyer's walls with an image of a pattern caught in a spinning motion. Carol Salmanson's Hercules Lite, made of transparent green plexiglass, will mimic the shape of the building's massive support columns, emphasizing contrasting feelings of weightlessness and ephemerality.

In the galleries, Diana Cooper will combine fragmented photographs with three-dimensional elements, abstracted, but projecting an inherent sense of oppressive systems, networks, circuitry and surveillance. Heeseop Yoon's installation of black masking tape on Mylar will play with positive and negative space, void and solid, transforming the space into a busy network of lines that not only slows down the process of seeing and drawing but also suspends the viewer's gaze. Franklin Evans' work will explode the boundaries of painting with such disparate elements as books, sound recordings, sculpture, painting, artist's materials, digital images, drawing, and process residue. Abigail DeVille will transform the small video room using found and inherited domestic objects that make a connection to her personal universe and the one at large. Cordy Ryman's Rafter Web Scrapwall will be a sprawling 30 foot wall installation of recycled remains from a previous installation of painted wood pieces; Mariah Robertson will create a cascading floor to ceiling installation of unique photographs that are the result of darkroom experimentation.  Lisa Kellner uses the language of diseased cellular activity to make large-scale installations. She hand forms, paints and sews together thousands of organic, bulbous shapes out of silk organza. Nicola Lopez will create an installation using woodblock printed Mylar that will transform a portion of the space's sloping ceiling. Robert Melee's marbleized imitation wood and drop ceiling panels will cover a space that channels and explores the distinct, yet inter-related psychologies of the suburban home. His installation will include the paintings of fellow artist Erik Hanson. Gandalf Gavan's neon and mirrored wall installation will alter the viewer's perception of the exhibition space, and Halley Zien will make use of a hidden gallery kitchen that will be invaded by hundreds of her collaged and psychologically expressive characters.


October 2, 2012 - January 9, 2013 


Gallery Hours: Tuesday to Saturday from 10 am to 4 pm

For more Information about Lehman College Art Gallery
visitwww.lehman.edu/gallery
 


Our exhibitions and programs are made possible with the generous support from: The Institute of Museum and Library Services; The New York City Council through G. Oliver Koppell, Joel Rivera, and the Bronx Delegation; New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature; The New York City Department of Cultural Affairs; Lily Auchincloss Foundation, Inc.; The Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation; The Cowles Charitable Trust; Jarvis and Constance Doctorow Family Foundation; IBM; JDAF Arts Foundation; Edith and Herbert Lehman Foundation; The New Yankee Stadium Community Benefits Fund; and United Way of New York City.  

Reception refreshments generously donated by Cabot Creamery.

Reminder: Deadline for Members' Exhibition 2012 is October 22!


banner

Attention Art League of Long Island Members: 
Members Exhibition 2012 logo final  



All Art League members are welcome to submit one original work of art in 2D and 3D work in any medium (except video and installation art) to exhibit in our 
57th Annual Members' Exhibition.  
collage artwork
Award of Excellence Winners of 2011's 56th Annual Members' Exhibition:
Clockwise from top left:  Raymond Rothaug, Back Road, black & white photograph; Iris Kelmenson, Monday Morning, oil painting; Sylvia Harnick, Edited Visions 11 & 19, acrylic and photo transfer; Carole Scinta, Setauket Barn, pastel; Denise Kasof, Brillo & Steel Wool Scouring Pads,Stone Lithography - Edition: 1/7; Celeste Mauro, Coastward, watercolor collage
 

Not a member? Join today, and you too can participate in the show. 

Part I (last name A-L):  November 4 - November 25
Reception:  Sunday, November 4, 3-5pm

Part II (last name M-Z):  December 9 - December 30
Reception:   Sunday, December 9, 3-5pm

Exhibition Juror is Judith Levy, Director of Gallery North
  
Deadline is October 22! 

 Download prospectus here.


..........................................
The Art League of Long Island | 107 East Deer Park Rd | Dix Hills NY 11746 

631.462.5400 | www.artleagueli.org
   

Call to Artists - Mount Dora Arts Festival

Mount Dora Arts Festival 

   

 
Call to Artists

WHAT:  The 38th Annual Mount Dora Arts Festival

WHERE: Historic Downtown, Mount Dora, Florida      

WHEN:    February 2nd and 3rd, 2013    
              Saturday and Sunday 10:00 am to 5:00 pm
           
NOTEWORTHY:

*Limited to 295 juried artists

*Event is publicized on TV, radio, newspaper, magazines and social media with a package valued at $180,000

*Awards To artists,$21,000 Total: Best of Show,  $5,000; Judges Choice - 2D, $1,500; Judges Choice - 3D, $1,500; Wendy Alderman Award, $250; Our Community Award, $1,000; 12 Awards of Excellence - 2D, $500; 12 Awards of Excellence - 3D, $500. 

*Jury fee $30.

*Booth fees begin at $300.

*Artist amenities: Hospitality room with continental breakfast, drinks and snacks, booth sitting

*Reconfigured categories this year: Clay, Digital Art, Fiber, Glass, Jewelry, Metalwork, Mixed Media - 2D, Mixed Media- 3D, Painting, Photography, Printmaking & Drawing, Sculpture, Watercolor, Wood  

*Website: www.mountdoracenterforthearts.org

Mount Dora Center for the Arts celebrates 38 years of bringing fine art and artists to historic Mount Dora Florida. This hugely popular show draws upwards of 250, 000 people to the scenic town located on Lake Dora in Central Florida, 40 minutes from downtown Orlando. Proceeds from this festival provide educational programs, exhibits and other activities produced by the Art Center

NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS:

Now Accepting Application

Deadline: October 22, 2012

Notification:   November 9, 2012

Fees due: December 15, 2012

Apply at www.zapplication.org from July 1, 2012 to October 22, 2012

 

Call to Artists - Artisphere 2012

Artisphere
arts.culture.life

Artisphere 2013 Festival
Call to Artists


WHAT: Fine Art and Fine Craft Event

 
WHERE: Downtown Greenville, SC

WHEN:
Friday, May 10 - Sunday, May 12            

NOTEWORTHY:  
 
*120 participating artists  
 
*Increased cash awards totaling $12,500 
 
*Purchase Awards Program average of $15,000 each year  
 
*Convenient set-up, free artist parking, and 24-hour security
   
*600 volunteers

*Booth sitters

*Complimentary food & beverages in conveniently located Artist Hospitality tent

*Reduced hotel rates   
 

Now in its ninth year, the top ranking Artisphere festival is an annual three-day event that gives arts patrons the rare opportunity to meet exhibiting artists while purchasing original works of art.  A supportive, art-loving community, beautiful setting, and over 600 volunteers make the Artisphere festival an enjoyable experience for 120 exhibiting artists and the public alike.  Renowned artist hospitality includes complimentary food and beverages, convenient set up, parking, security, booth sitters, and reduced hotel rates.  Artisphere is a 501(c)(3) non-profit art organization.  Proceeds are used to produce the annual arts festival and are distributed back to local non-profit arts organizations as part of Artisphere's Volunteer Arts Partnership Program. 

NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR THE 2013 FESTIVAL:

DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION:  October 18, 2012 on  www.zapplication.org  

For more information and a downloadable paper application visit:  www.artisphere.us 

CONTACT:              
Liz Rundorff Smith
Program Director
Artisphere
liz@greenvillearts.com

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Fran Shalom Paintings - John Davis Gallery

Fran Shalom
Paintings


On Thursday, October 11th, there will be a group of exhibitions for the Main Galleries, Sculpture Garden and Carriage House.  The gallery will have eight solo exhibitions of painting, sculpture and Installation. The work will be on display through November 4th with a reception for the artists on Saturday, October 13th from 6:00 until 8:00 p.m. 

Main Galleries:
Fran Shalom
Paintings
         
         
"Abstract Paintings
Oil on Wood
Color and Form
Playfully Modern"
Fran Shalom
2012
Sculpture Garden
Andrew Dunnill

Andrew Dunnill's exhibition has been extended for another month.
"Essentially abstract my sculptures employ metaphor to evoke the poetry of an object with many associations. They grow out of drawing and an intuitive response to material, form and space. I imbue the sculptures with an intimate, human and monumental scale in an attempt to emphasize the subject matter and heighten spatial awareness. In this body of work I am exploring the inherent qualities that wood has to offer as a material to influence my sculptural language and sensibility."

Andrew Dunnill
            2012
Project Space
Dionisio Cortes and Letitia Ortega Cortes
The Swing, 2012
A two-person in-situ installation by Leticia Ortega and Dionisio Cortes for John Davis Gallery
Rope, wood plank, dry trees, video projection, screen, speakers
Dimensions variable
 "The pumping of a swing is almost a magical process. There is no external agent driving it higher; the driving is entirely internal. It seems to defy the laws of physics. Of course it is also magical as an experience as pointed out by Robert Louis Stevenson in his Child's Garden of Verses:
The Swing
How do you like to go up in a swing
Up in the air so blue?
Oh, I do think it the pleasantest thing
Ever a child can do!
Up in the air and over the wall,
Till I can see so wide,
Rivers and trees and cattle
and all Over the countryside
Till I look down on the garden green
Down on the roof so brown
Up in the air I go flying again,
Up in the air and down!

While there is not much information as to determine when the first person tied a seat to a rope and swung back and forth like a pendulum (there are images of swings and riders on pottery from Ancient Greece), we know the swing is one of the world’s most recognized recreational contraptions.
It seems that by the late 1700s, children in the United States had developed the art of hanging rope and wood plank swings from trees to get their daily dose of adrenaline. Most agree that the concept of swinging is the natural byproduct of youngsters having fun on barn ropes and pulleys. These moved out to the swimming hole where a well-placed rope in an overhanging tree was enough to keep the kids busy for hours.
As the digital world continues to expand into more and more areas of our lives, a profound human need to experience and/or re-experience the real and physical has also arisen. Our current installation is presented as a sort of livable diorama, a hand-built construction depicting a made-up environment. This proposed alternative vision of landscape invites and tempts the visitor to create and/or re-create the magical process of swinging within a re-imagined reality."
            Dionisio Cortes & Leticia Ortega Cortes
            2012

First Floor Carriage House
Bruce Gagnier

Bruce Gagnier's exhibition is extended for a second month.

"Working from the inside out, as a modeler, I have tested the image of the figure, sometimes too severely, relying on the method of the sketch, while also being very aware that the norms of the past criticize me. Made up of many parts recovered from memory, my image of the figure comes from other times and places but which single time or place exactly I don’t know. I would like to think that, as they emerge and meet with the terms of the space around them, they express their own inner life on the surface of their bodies and that this is the meaning of what might appear to some as distortion. It is important to point out that distortions in the figure can lead one to legitimate, real definitions of experience such as will, faith, and desire.
        The turmoil of modeling in clay leaves its own record of itself behind, and this determines much of the final look and feel of the figures as people in the flesh.  One hopes that the turmoil is dedicated to the equation of deciphering the relation between the inner life and its relation to the world and that it does not stray into aesthetics, particularly those bound to the surface.  I feel that, as the figures emerge from the clay they become involved with their own ideas about themselves. Their image and its potential for solidification come into conflict with my own desire for revelation.    I think most of my figures, as I imagine they would want to be, would prefer to be classical in every way but they know themselves, as I get to know them, and our situation does not allow this as a legitimate solution.  While acknowledging their imperfections, they also must fend off the pressures of the world to conform to readymade identities.  As for anatomy I learn it over again for each figure and must remember the parts as necessary to the action and adapted to the character performance of each actor.  Any thoughts I might have had at the beginning disappear as they find themselves as a personage and push me aside. I have always thought that if I make a good figure, then I will have made a sculpture. The figure is the first and the important thing.
         The figure in contrapposto can assume many positions. The difficulty is finding a pose that does not repeat or form a quote around the content of another time, particularly that of beauty or idealism. It is important that they are experiential. There is not much space to park oneself in the subject of the single figure. One feels surrounded by great solutions. There is no escape through exaggeration and caricature because it too is cliché. Irony in relation to one’s own seriousness is useful.  The most important aspect of the human figure is that it can move and specifically that in the process of finding itself, it does move and more to the point, in and out of meanings. My forms employ the rather de-accessioned method of hill and valleys. The valleys are especially important because, although they interrupt the solidity,   they bring space into play across the surface of the form and help put the people as sculpture at a distance from us. . These are provisional people, each one trying to arrest the process as I have described it at a moment which will help the next figure better engage the problems I have tried to outline."
Bruce Gagnier
            2012

Second Floor Carriage House
Cynthia Carlson
Portraits

"This exhibit has selections from two different bodies of work twenty years apart.  Both are portraits.  Both have a starting point with an obvious personal attachment to subject matter, as well as a more naturalistic approach than most other previous works. Within a fifty year period of making art, my evolution has often been non-linear stylistically. A retrospective might resemble a large group show."
            Cynthia Carlson
            2012

Second Floor Carriage House
Carrie Waldman
The Idea of Sight


"These paintings are inspired by the idea that images are products of the mind.  Looking is practice for seeing. The brain creates the image, weaving together optical signals and a wealth of stored information and experience.       Attention builds beauty."
Carrie Waldman
2012




Third Floor Carriage House
Lois Dickson
Deconstruct

"I am interested in the flow of the organic forms juxtaposed against the underpinned
geometry of the picture plane, the interplay of the curve against the straight.
Engaged with an unusual landscape or an unexpected image from the natural world, I
explore the possibilities generated for my work. The resulting paintings and drawings
have been deconstructed and reconstructed over days or years.”
Lois Dickson
2012

Fourth Floor Carriage House:
McWillie Chambers

“I have no obvious explanation for my life-long fascination with ships.  I did not grow up around a port, no one in my family was associated with shipping or the sea, nor have I ever traveled on an ocean-going ship.   None of these facts have prevented me from avidly studying the passenger ships of the last century and the people brought together by this kind of travel.   The present group of paintings of famous ships is recent evidence of my curiosity."  
McWillie Chambers
2012
“Today a rude brief recitative,
Of ships sailing the seas, each with
Its special flag or ship-signal,
Of unnamed heroes in the ships- of
Waves spreading and spreading
Far as the eye can reach,
Of dashing spray, and the winds
Piping and blowing,
And out of these a chant for the
Sailors of all nations,
Fitful, like a surge.
“Song for All Seas, All Ships”,  Walt Whitman

Gallery hours are Thursday through Monday, 10:00 till 5:00 p.m.  For further information about the gallery, the artists and upcoming exhibition, visit

    362 1/2 Warren Street  Hudson, NY 12534
or contact John Davis directly at 518.828.5907 or via e-mail:  art@johndavisgallery.com.