Thursday, July 23, 2015

A place to Go if your in Georgia: Sandy Springs Festival



Sandy Springs Festival
at Heritage Green 
   AFFPS Sandy Springs PIX for CTA 2013
 
A Celebration of Community and Tradition 

Call to Artists

What:  Sandy Springs Festival
 
Where: Heritage Sandy Springs, 6075 Sandy Springs Circle, Sandy Springs, GA 30328
 
When:  September 19-20, 2015

NOTEWORTHY:
 
*30th Year
 
*Application Deadline: July 24, 2015
 
*Limited to 120 fine art and fine crafts booths
 
*Present your art to an affluent, art savvy clientele
 
*Extensive Marketing through paid advertising, media sponsorship and editorial publicity
 
*Drive up loading and unloading - event is held on the street.


The 30th Annual Sandy Springs Festival returns to the heart of Sandy Springs this September offering two exciting days of fine art, live music, cultural performances, a pet parade, Chalk Walk Art Competition, 10K and 5K race, children's programming, classic rides, gourmet and festival food options, and much more. 

Each year, over 30,000 attendees gather at Heritage Green to shop the street-lined booths with more than 600 artists, crafters and vendors, and enjoy good times with music, food and fun. Come join us over the weekend at one of the largest community festivals in the area.

The Sandy Springs Festival is the largest fundraiser for Heritage Sandy Springs, a non-profit organization that operates Heritage Green, the four-acre city park in the heart of Sandy Springs. Founded in 1985 to oversee the preservation of the original "sandy springs" and the restoration of the Williams-Payne House, Heritage Sandy Springs presents a year round calendar of educational, cultural and heritage programs and events for the community. Located in the center of the Sandy Springs business district, the site also includes green space gardens with a gazebo bandstand, the Heritage Sandy Springs Museum, the Sandy Springs Society Entertainment Lawn, a Research Library and Archive, and meeting venues including Heritage Hall.
 
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS:
Deadline: July 24, 2015

Notification: July 31, 2015
Accept Invitation and Purchase Deadline: August 31, 2015

FEES
Application fee: $25 ($35 for mail-in)
Standard booth fee: $250 (Up to 120 total exhibition booths)
Double booth fee: $500 (Limited availability)
Booth size: 10' x 10' or greater
Corner upgrade: $75 (limited availability) 
Electricity: $50 (limited availability)



To download an application or find out more information, visithttp://sandyspringsfestival.com/images/pdf/2015%20ssf%20artists%20market%20mail-in%20application.pdf. Application also available at  
   
This event is hosted by AFFPS and is organized by artists for artists.

 
This call to artists is brought to you as a service of The Art Festival Newsletter,
the nation's only quarterly newsletter dedicated to the success of art festival artists.
Please visit us at:  www.theartfestivalnewsletter.com

We invite you to visit the incredible homepage for artists:  www.Art-Linx.com

Searching for festivals? Visit www.theartfestivaldirectory.com
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Get your MoJo running: The Antarctic Art Contest deadline until Oct. 1 for artwork. Try it you may like it.

The Antarctic Art Contest is extending its deadline until Oct. 1 for artwork that explores and interprets Antarctic research and science.

Anna McKee made this etching, "Firn Ocean," in 2011 with inspiration from an ice core drilled from the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. Photo by Nancy Hines.
Photo by Nancy Hines
Anna McKee made this etching, "Firn Ocean," in 2011, with inspiration from an ice core drilled from the West Antarctic Ice Sheet.

 Winning artwork will travel from Alaska to Antarctica in exhibits at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, the National Science Foundation and research sites in Antarctica. An online gallery will show winning and honorable mention artwork.

The free contest will accept entries through its website, www.waisartcontest.org. The art contest helps people explore how art and science rely on observation and interpretation of the world. The subject of the art contest is an ice core that engineers and scientists drilled from the center of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. Scientists are examining the ice core to make new observations and generate new ideas about the last 100,000 years of climate history. The drilling of the core left behind a 11,160-foot borehole into which scientists lower scientific equipment that collects data on the ice sheet.

Individuals or groups can take part in the contest. They may enter in one of five divisions: elementary school, secondary school, undergraduate, community or professional artist. Artwork can be in a variety of formats, including visual, written and multimedia. The website also contains a lesson plan that teachers can use with their students.
A team of researchers and educators known as “Velvet Ice” is sponsoring the contest. One of the researchers, glaciologist Erin Pettit from UAF's College of Natural Science and Mathematics, studies the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and its ice crystal structures through the use of  acoustic, optic and other instruments lowered into into the borehole.
Photo by Nancy Hines
Anna McKee made this etching, "Firn Ocean," in 2011, with inspiration from an ice core drilled from the West Antarctic Ice Sheet.
ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Erin Pettit, UAF assistant professor of geophysics, ecpettit@alaska.edu
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Donald Ellis Gallery at Frieze Masters October 14 - 18, 2015 Stand F18 installs an interesting and provocative exhibition. Well done!!!


Donald Ellis Gallery at Frieze Masters
October 14 - 18, 2015
Stand F18
 
Mask, Yup'ik Kuskokwim River, Alaska, ca. 1880 wood, pigments, vegetal fibers, 11 1/4" w
ex collection: Enrico Donati

New York, NY, July 14, 2015 - Spanning 2,000 years, Donald Ellis Gallery will present an unprecedented exhibit of exceptional museum quality selections of prehistoric and historic Eskimo and Native American art from Alaska and the Great Plains at Frieze Masters.

The exhibit will feature approximately 75 works of prehistoric Eskimo ivories (200 BC - 1700 AD) from the Bill and Carol Wolf Collection of ancient ivories from the Bering Sea. Objects of extraordinary aesthetic and cultural significance will also include over a dozen Yup'ik masks (19th or early 20th century), one of the most highly expressive Eskimo art forms, and a major source of inspiration for many leading Surrealist artists and writers. Reflecting the finest examples of the great Native American graphic art tradition, an extensive range of 50 Plains Indian ledger drawings, from the period 1875 to  1895, will also be presented in this important exhibition.                                                                                                                                                      
Mask, Yup'ik Kuskokwim River, Alaska, late 19th
centurywood, pigments, feathers, hide, vegetal fibers, 9 1/2" h
ex collection: Robert Lebel

Yup'ik Masks and the Surrealists
Beginning in the 1930's, Yup'ik masks' conceptual nature and focus on dream-based imagery became a source of inspiration for Surrealists including André Breton, Enrico Donati, Max Ernst, and Roberto Matta. Their infatuation with Native North American art increased during their exile in New York in the 1940's, and continued throughout the history of the movement.

Highlights among the 19th- or early 20th- century Eskimo ceremonial art on exhibit will include Yup'ik masks once owned by Enrico Donati and Robert Lebel.  One of the two Donati masks from the Kuskokwim River, Alaska, dating from the late 19th century, displays a powerful form encompassing a moon-shaped carved face, animated by outstretched hands embracing two circular hoops. Equally striking, the highly expressive Lebel mask, in the shape of a seabird accented by a crown of feathers, is also from the Kuskokwim River. Originally acquired by the noted trader and field collector Adams Hollis Twitchell, both masks were purchased in New York from the antiquarian Julius Carlebach, who bought them from the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation. 

Masks collected by Twitchell in this region during his time in Alaska (1905 - 1915) are considered to be among the most elaborate and important known surviving examples of their kind.

Yup'ik masks were introduced to Europe in 1935, as part of the first "Exposition de masques et d'ivoires anciens de l'Alaska et de la côte nord ouest de l'Amérique," organized by art dealer and collector Charles Ratton. Ratton played a key role in expanding the Surrealists' knowledge of Eskimo pieces - enabling them through exchanges to live intimately with these works. Marking the first time Eskimo masks were presented in a Surrealist exhibition, Ratton's 1936 "Exposition surréaliste d'objets" presented five masks, including one acquired by Breton, alongside Surrealist and Cubist works, ready-mades, found objects, object poems, and objects from Oceania and the Americas from Ratton's collection. From then on, Yup'ik masks were authoritatively declared as belonging to the category of the Surrealist object.
                                    
While in exile in New York during WW II, Breton, Donati, Max Ernst, Robert Lebel, Roberto Matta, and Wolfgang Paalen sought out Yup'ik masks in museums and curio shops. In 1941, Ernst came upon Julius Carlebach's antiques shop, which offered many Yup'ik masks, and returned there frequently with Breton, Donati, Lebel, and others.  

In his essay for the accompanying exhibit catalogue, Colin Browne writes, "I think the Surrealists rather liked the air of antiquity, the idea that the masks somehow represented the 'childhood of the human race.' At the same time, they found the masks convincingly sophisticated, proving that humans were clearly more sophisticated before the curse of civilization."

Upon returning to France, many Surrealists loaned their masks along with other Northwest Coast works of art to the exhibition, "Le Masque," at Musée Guimet in 1959. More than half of the 19 Alaskan masks presented came from the New York collections of Breton, Lebel, Georges Duthuit (Matisse's son in law), and Isabelle Waldberg.

 Female Figure, Okvik, Bearing Sea Alaska, 200 BC -100AD
 marine mamal ivory, 3 7/8" h

Prehistoric Eskimo Carved Ivories
Ancient ivories from the Bering Strait on exhibit at the gallery will range from
utilitarian, to intimate and sacred objects depicting human faces and figures, animal beings, and spirits of the sea and sky. Many feature ancient tribal imagery and complex, possibly shamanistic, engravings. These exquisite objects acquired from the Bill and Carol Wolf Collection include pieces once owned by other notable collectors such as Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan, and Edmund Carpenter and Adelaide de Menil, among others. There will be works of art from periods ranging from Okvik (200 BC - 100 AD), Old Bering Sea (100 - 500 AD), Punuk (500 - 1200 AD), and Thule (1200 - 1700 AD).

Exhibit highlights from this collection will include an Okvik Female Figure, from the Bering Sea, articulated by a high brow ridge, elongated nose, low-placed mouth, and engraved torso. Exceedingly rare in Okvik sculpture, a pair of carefully rendered legs and feet completes the piece. Modeled with great precision, no known examples approach this level of subtle expression. Among the most highly venerated utilitarian objects on exhibit is a Pail Handle, from the Old Bering Sea III period, comprised of ten animal effigies, with engraved designs on the top and side beautifully accentuating the elaborately sculpted form.

According to Bill Wolf, "The creators of these objects emerged as great conceptual artists who spoke a common visual language. We came to appreciate the relationships between form, function, reason and belief that were addressed so deftly in every piece."

"Sun Dance Painting," Lakota Sioux, North or South Dakota, ca.1890 pigment on muslin, 24" h × 66" w 
Exhibited: "The Plains Indians: Artists of Earth and Sky," Musée du quai Branly (Spring 2014)
                                                                                                                      
Art of the Plains Indians

Most recently, Plains Indian artistry including muslin paintings and ledger drawings have received major international acclaim through the travelling museum exhibition, "The Plains Indians: Artists of Earth and Sky," co-organized by Musée du quai Branly, Paris, which welcomed over 200,000 visitors when on view there. A large-scale painted muslin previously on loan for this ground-breaking exhibition is one of the gallery's highlights at Parcours. This extraordinary drawing vividly depicts the most sacred of Plains Indians rituals, the Sun Dance. Highlights among the extensive range of ledger drawings by Arapaho, Cheyenne, Crow and Lakota Sioux artists on offer will include four important Southern Cheyenne ledger drawings attributed to the important artist Howling Wolf. His work also formed part of this important museum survey show, which ended at the Metropolitan Museum of Art this past May.

Art from the Arctic: Masks and Ivories Exhibit Catalogue

In conjunction with Donald Ellis Gallery's 40th anniversary, a fully illustrated, 256-page catalogue, Art from the Arctic: Masks and Ivories, will feature 125 works of art in full color.This catalogue will present new research on the objects in this exhibit featuring essays by noted Surrealist scholars Dawn Ades, Colin Browne, and Marie Mauzé. The catalogue will also include a complete description and inventory of Yup'ik masks handled by the gallery since its inception. Edited by Donald Ellis, co-published by Donald Ellis and Black Dog Press. Pub. date: September 1, 2015. Price: $65.00US
About Donald Ellis Gallery

Donald Ellis, president and founder of Donald Ellis Gallery Ltd., is widely considered the foremost dealer in the field of historical Native American art. Established in 1976, Donald Ellis Gallery is currently celebrating its 40th year of serving private collectors, corporations, and museums in the United States, Canada and Europe. Ellis was responsible for acquiring at auction in 2006, and then securing the return to Canada, of a major portion of the famed Dundas Collection of Native America art. The gallery specializes in the art of the Inuit, Northwest Coast, and Eastern Woodlands cultures. Museums clients include: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY; Louvre, Abu Dhabi, UAE; National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, ON; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA; Nelson-Atkins Museum, Kansas City, MO, and Musée de quai Branly, Paris, France, among many others.

A recognized authority in his field, Donald Ellis has been a regularly featured appraiser of Native American art on the PBS Antiques Roadshow and has also appeared on the BBC and CBC Antiques Roadshows.

Donald Ellis Gallery exhibits annually at many prestigious art fairs, including Frieze Masters, London, and Parcours des Mondes, Paris, as well as curates special exhibitions in commercial gallery settings. Each year, the gallery publishes a highly anticipated, fully illustrated, color catalogue. For more information, please visit http://www.donaldellisgallery.com.

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In Munich check out Galerie Thomas


Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Jenn Singer Gallery : Please join us tonight from 6-8pm for the opening of Modern Summer: AbEx+,

Please join us tonight from 6-8pm for the opening of Modern Summer: AbEx+, presenting works on canvas & paper by influential Abstract Expressionists, hand selected from an important private collection in New York City.

Bright raw colors, rough edges and spontaneity define the seven paintings on view by established modern artists including Paul Jenkins, Syd Soloman, Robert Natkin and Stanley William Hayter – all who have enjoyed prominent exhibition histories and whose works are held in the permanent collections of top institutions including MoMA, the Guggenheim, the Whitney and the Tate. With a focus on pieces from the 1970s & 80s, the exhibition succinctly captures the power, uniqueness and historical import of these post-war modern artists working at the height of their careers.
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Tripoli Gallery Southampton , Touch Thoughts, an exhibition of new works by Darius Yektai, August 6 - 24, 2015 Opening reception: Thursday, August 6, 6 - 8 pm



Darius Yektai: Touch Thoughts 

August 6 - 24, 2015
Opening reception: Thursday, August 6, 6 - 8 pm 

Southampton, NY  Tripoli Gallery Southampton is pleased to present Touch Thoughts, an exhibition of new works by Darius Yektai, marking the artist’s fourth solo show with the gallery. It will be on view at 30A Jobs Lane, Southampton, NY, from August 6th through August 24th 2015, with an opening reception on Thursday, August 6th, from 6 to 8 pm.

Each touch, a brushstroke of thick oil paint or a groove carved into wood, is the physical manifestation of a thought. The thought can be deeply premeditated or spontaneous, yet it comes from the same source—the artist’s mind. In Yektai’s creative process, touch is revealed in various forms, exposing different moments, moods and thoughts. The touch, in varying levels of forcefulness, allows for expression of the internal—made up of the multidimensional layers of consciousness. The finished artwork claims the next step—relaying these thoughts to the viewer and completing the circuit.

This exhibition seeks to demonstrate the range of Yektai’s recent work as he blurs the lines between painting and sculpture. Gestural and expressive, his explorations in oil, concrete, wood, resin and other materials, go beyond traditional modes of painting while simultaneously paying homage to his art-historical predecessors.
 
Darius Yektai studied at Occidental College in Los Angeles, graduated from American University in Paris with a Bachelor of Arts in Art History and went on to study painting at San Diego State University. His work has been exhibited extensively in New York and on the East End of Long Island—including a solo show at Guild Hall, Darius Yektai: Survey 2000  2003, in 2003. Solo exhibitions at Tripoli Gallery includeNot Everyone Gets a Unicorn, 2010, On Country Ground, 2013, and Two Weeks in Umbria, 2014. He was awarded “Best in Show” at the Guild Hall Museum Annual Members Show in 2002, “Best Sculpture” in 2008, and “Best Representational Work” in 2010. Most recently, Yektai’s self portraits were included inSelfies & Portraits of the East End at The Museum at Guild Hall, East Hampton, June 20 – July 26, 2015. His work is in international private and public collections. Darius Yektai lives and works in Sag Harbor, New York. 

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This is very unusual Worth the look/ This Labor Day, September 7, MOTHER'S RIGHT—a conceptual installation and performance piece by Michelle Hartney






MOTHER'S RIGHT Performance + Installation
September 7 at Richard J. Daley Center, Chicago


  
Chicago, IL (July 22, 2015) - This Labor Day, September 7, MOTHER'S RIGHTa conceptual installation and performance piece by Michelle Hartney—will take place at the Richard J. Daley Center in Chicago, IL. As an ongoing project, MOTHER'S RIGHT addresses the United States' high rates of maternal mortality, postpartum PTSD, and obstetric abuse.

For the performance, Hartney is sewing 1,200 hospital gowns—one for every mother who died in childbirth in America in 2013. The folded gowns represent not only the 1,200 women who died during childbirth, but also the women who have suffered abuse at the hands of obstetricians and nurses, and for the increasing number of women who are being diagnosed with postpartum PTSD after giving birth. Each gown is hand silk-screened with the artist's drawings of the plant derivatives from the drugs that have been used on laboring women for the past 150 years, composed to resemble traditional hospital gown fabric. In preparation, Hartney will host a 'Sew-In' at her Chicago studio to create a portion of the gowns and to foster the community of men and women who are helping to raise awareness for this important human rights issue. In addition, Hartney has created a limited edition run of framed, 6 x 6 inch tondos—circular works of art—featuring the unique silk-screened fabric used throughout the project. The sale of these tondos will contribute additional funding for future iterations of the MOTHER'S RIGHTperformance, which will aim to engage more artistic and cultural venues in 2016. 

In the Labor Day performance, several pairs of women will stand facing one other, folding the handmade gowns into triangles—similar to the way the American flag is folded at the funeral of a solider. The traditional flag-folding ceremony includes twelve symbolic folds, with the ninth fold symbolizing womanhood. These custom-made hospital gowns have been cut to a length where the fabric stops on the ninth fold.

  

According to the World Health Organization, since 1995, the maternal mortality rate in the U.S. has increased 250%—and is ranked at the top of all developed countries globally. In 2013, eight countries reported an increase in maternal mortality rates: Afghanistan, Belize, El Salvador, Guinea-Bissau, Greece, Seychelles, South Sudan, and the United States. The United States spends three times more money on childbirth than Great Britain, yet our maternal mortality rate is over three times higher. Among these numbers, African American women are four times more likely to die during childbirth in the U.S. than Caucasian women. MOTHER'S RIGHT seeks to bring awareness to these issues and to some of the basic human rights that are being violated on a daily basis in the United States.

DATE + TIME
Monday, September 7, 12-2pm


LOCATION
Richard J. Daley Center
50 West Washington Street
Chicago, IL 60602


RSVP To The Event Here
 

ABOUT MICHELLE HARTNEY

Michelle Hartney is a Chicago-based artist whose work addresses a broad range of topics—from women’s health issues, to the concept of heroes, love, and the cosmos. She works in a variety of materials, including fiber, wood, found objects, and most recently, performance. Her interest in using art to address social issues began during her graduate studies at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she was an Albert Schweitzer Fellow.

CONTACTS
AKArt Advisory
Amy Kisch, Founder + CEO: 
amy@AKArt.com
Lizzie Jones, Director: lizzie@AKArt.com
Alexandra Wagle: Special Projects + Events Manager: alexandra@AKArt.com
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Stephen Albair: Private Views, Hidden Reflections September 17, 2015 – October 29, 2015


Stephen Albair: Private Views, Hidden ReflectionsSeptember 17, 2015 – October 29, 2015Opening Reception: Thursday, September 17, 6:00–8:00pm


The Beginning Anticipates the End_low res.jpg
The Beginning Anticipates the End, 2014
Archival Pigment Print

The Dryansky Gallery is pleased to present Private Views, Hidden Reflections, an exhibition of images from San Francisco-based narrative photographer Stephen Albair. Albair, born in 1942, is a long-time resident of San Francisco and an internationally exhibiting artist. Private Views, Hidden Reflections will mark Albair’s first solo exhibition in San Francisco in ten years, featuring a selection of his works from the last decade that present complex and provocative scenes incorporating an astute sense of wit. The exhibition will be on view from September 17 through October 29, 2015 with an opening reception on Thursday, September 17, 2015 between 6 and 8 pm. The artist will be in attendance.

In what can be called a variation on tableau or narrative photography because of the emphasis of mise en scène, Albair goes through a creative process—often drawing from autobiographical sources—resulting in imagery that stirs up memory, nostalgia, irony and the enduring trilogy of human emotions: love, loss and longing.

Albair captures carefully assembled scenes with a simple 1970 Nikon 35-mm camera in the midday light of his living room window. This room, which doubles as a studio, serves as the center for Albair’s creative practice where the construction of signature sets or stages are made. It typically takes about 1–3 months to produce a single image,  with the majority of the time spent building the intricate, elaborate scenes, before they are photographed on film. The scene is then broken down to make room for the next tableau. Albair explains:

These works are more about process than the photograph, and are closely associated with sculpture, painting and the materials used. I make a conscious effort to amuse the viewer by presenting situations that, ripe for ironic humor, merge with the viewer’s own complex notions about the images. I attempt to refine my work where it presents a paradox: toys within a world that playfully exposes the surreal nature of reality and emphasizes what is real—not realistic.

In his piece titled “How Dare You Not Be Me!” Albair builds an evocative parent-child domestic scene, carefully assembling collected miniature figurines, discarded toys and other small found objects, as well as his own hand-crafted narrative objet d’art, placing them within a richly saturated backdrop of both flat and patterned surfaces. In Night Journey, a loot laden row boat is seen moored against the backdrop of a vintage postcard of a richly lit Golden Gate Bridge at dusk. Found driftwood completes the scene offering a suggestive narrative of a landing or departure gone awry.

While semi-autobiographical in nature, echoing the artist’s challenges, successes and failures within life’s ambiguities, the works in Private Views, Hidden Reflections cut across cultural and generational boundaries. Albair’s found objects are like words in a poem, charged with innocence and grace. Despite the seeming simplicity of his tools, methodology and execution, Albair’s unique mise en scène of found objects proves itself to be a most compelling method to communicate the deepest realms of human emotion and experience.

Stephen Albair currently teaches Art History and Design at Las Positas College. In the past decade he exhibited locally at Rayko Photo Gallery, Bolinas Museum, Garage Gallery, and Pro Arts Gallery and internationally at RMA Institute, Thavibu Gallery and Kathmandu Photo Gallery in Bangkok, Thailand. He has held academic or lecture positions with a number of institutions such as: The New School in New York City, Parsons School of Design, Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, Columbia University, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and Texas A&M University. In addition he exhibited his narrative jewelry and metal work at numerous galleries including the American Crafts Museum in New York, the Smithsonian Institution’s Renwick Gallery, and the La Mama Galleria in New York City.

The Dryansky Gallery opened its doors in Fall 2014 to create a vibrant impact on San Francisco’s art scene. With a unique approach to the way artwork is exhibited and encountered, the gallery offers a fresh and thoughtfully curated program of emerging and mid-career artists from around the world who are working across all mediums, with an emphasis on 21st century photography. The family-run gallery, with its extensive international network and lifelong devotion to the arts, creates an environment of discovery and conversation for its patrons through openings, artist talks, cultural events, multidisciplinary discourse and a critical engagement with the artists’ work.www.thedryansky.com

Gallery Hours:
Wednesday – Saturday 11am – 5pmSunday 12 – 5pm

Gallery Location and Contact:
2120 Union Street, San Francisco, CA 94123
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Five piecs Gallery: Exhibition Opening: Michal Czinege - Amber Fields

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Exhibition Opening: Michal Czinege - Amber Fields

The series of paintings is based on multi-layered manipulation of images of various origin. Even though it is possible to recognize human figures or landscapes in the paintings, it is not essential. Be it an aquarelle, a photograph of a shop window or an accidental spot of colour, each image source is examined and scrutinized equally. The manipulation, or rather gradual generating of an image occurs when it passes from analogue to digital. Generating an image is now a balancing act between two approaches of imaging: the uncontrollable, gradual destruction of a physical image due to the processual properties of its material (ink, paper) or the not so predictable technique of inkjet monoprints on one hand, and the work performed in CMYK and RGB colour spaces of the meticulous image editing programs on the other. One might say that each painting’s DNA has thus been mapped individually. The DNA of primeval life forms, often preserved in amber, freely associates with the name of the series, Amber Fields.
Michal Czinege - 1. Amber Fields 1  acrylic on canvas  30x25 cm  2015
 
Michal Czinege - 2. Amber Fields 2  acrylic on canvas  30x25 cm  2015
 
Michal Czinege - 3. Amber Fields 3  acrylic on canvas  30x25 cm  2015
Michal Czinege - 4. Amber Fields 4  acrylic on canvas  30x25 cm  2015
 
Michal Czinege - 5. Amber Fields 5  acrylic on canvas  30x25 cm  2015
 
Michal Czinege - 6. Amber Fields 6  acrylic on canvas  30x25 cm  2015
Michal Czinege - 7. Amber Fields 7  acrylic on canvas  30x25 cm  2015
 
Michal Czinege - 8. Amber Fields 8  acrylic on canvas  30x25 cm  2015
 
Michal Czinege - 9. Amber Fields 9  acrylic on canvas  30x25 cm  2015
The paintings of Michal Czinege (1980, Bratislava/Slovakia) are a somewhat unusual analysis of visual perception. At the beginning of a painting, he photographs interesting segments of reality, the camera representing an extension of his vision and mind. Then comes the analytical phase. Using a computer, he transforms, re-forms, de-forms and informs the individual shots until eventually arriving at configurations of things and figures interesting enough to show them in a new light. This preparatory process is followed by the actual act of painting. No, not a mere mechanical transformation of the computer product onto the canvas. It is a creative process. Basically, the analytical experimenting on the computer produces an initial sketch, forming the basis of the complete picture.
Michal Czinege has graduated as Master of Arts in Painting from the Academy of Fine Arts and Design in Bratislava under Prof. Ivan Csudai. His work has been shown in many exhibitions across Europe. He lives and works in Bratislava/Slovakia. © Peter Michalovic
5 Pieces Gallery is pleased to show these outstanding new paintings by Slovakian artist Michal Czinege. The exhibition will run at www.5piecesgallery.com from today until August 15 2015. 10% off for 5 Pieces Gallery members.
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Private Sale: Casey McKee

In this month's private sale, we are offering our members 20% off on all works byCasey McKee. Just enter the code M9712 at checkout to get the special members-only discount. The code is valid until August 15 2015.
Casey McKee - Study 4709
About the artists:
Casey McKee’s (1976, Phoenix/USA) process is a combination of photography and painting. First creating the photograph, then printing it onto a surface by use of a photographic emulsion, McKee spends the majority of time working with oil paint to bring out the desired expression in his works. To experience the works in person is to realize the depth, layers and subtlety created with the fusion of oil paint with photographic emulsion. The final work is neither a photograph, nor a painting but something directly in between with qualities of both. Casey McKee has exhibited his work throughout much of the United States and Europe. In addition, Mr. McKee’s work has been exhibited and collected by several major public and private museums. He now resides in Berlin, Germany.
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For press inquires or questions, please contact us. We are looking forward to hear from you! And thanks for sharing, commenting and liking our work!
Yours faithfully,
Dennis Sebastian Ammann
Gallery Director 5 Pieces Gallery
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