Friday, November 20, 2020

Rose Squared Art Shows formed a new partnership

Announcing our Partnership &
Fall 2021 Rose Squared Art Shows now open on ZAPP
We were pleased to announce our partnership with Robin Markowitz of Art-Linx and Rose Squared Productions, Inc. over a month ago. The shows are now called Rose Squared Art Shows and are open for applications on Zapp. 

We are a partnership for 2021. In 2022, Robin will be producing the shows. Under Robin’s leadership, the shows will continue with the same ethical approach, quality, and support of exhibitors’ needs. We will always be “on call” if a need arises. With our age and some health issues impacted by stress, this is the best way for us to proceed and insure that the business we created 39 years ago continues in the manner in which we have always strived.

Both the exhibitors and public have enjoyed our shows in the beautiful county parks and we wanted a way for them to continue into the future. This partnership and then hand-off will insure that. 

We are always available to be contacted with questions and hope you and your family have a safe and healthy Thanksgiving and Holiday Season.

Warm Regards - Janet, Howard & Robin 
APPLY TODAY ON ZAPP
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If you have questions please feel free to contact us

Robin Markowitz

Janet and Howard Rose 
3rosesquareartshows#fineartmagazine#artfun

Thursday, November 19, 2020

Catch Papay Solomon, at the Steven Zevitas Gallery See the write up in the Boston Globe!



PAPAY SOLOMON in The Boston Globe

EXTENDED DATES: October 2 - December 12, 2020

Thank you to Cate McQuaid and The Boston Globe for a beautiful review of Papay Solomon's current exhibition, Nightmares Americana





PAPAY SOLOMON, As a Heart Attack, Portrait of Natalie Ruth - Ghana, first generation, 2020
oil and pastel on linen, 45 x 80 inches


"Portraiture is a study in identity. Subjects compose themselves to encounter the painter, the viewer, and the world. What do you share of yourself, what do you withhold? What will be seen? What will be safe?

For such a young artist, Solomon is a terrific painter, with an unerring sense of light, color, and texture. His subjects pop against flat monochromes. The luminous pink ground in "As a Heart Attack, Portrait of Natalie Ruth - Ghana, First Generation" looks siphoned from twilight. This woman is already radiant; the pink surrounding her hints at some otherworldly power..."

-- Cate McQuaid, The Boston Globe


Please respond to this email to book an appointment to view the exhibition. Masks required, social distancing guidelines will be enforced. 

For additional information or visual material, please contact the gallery at 617-778-5265 or by email at info@stevenzevitasgallery.com.
#stevenzevitas#fineartmagazine#papaysolomon
Steven Zevitas Gallery
450 Harrison Avenue #47
Boston, MA 02118
617-778-5265 x22
Website / Email / Facebook / Twitter

Catch Lacy McKinney at the Everson Museum November 14, 2020 - January, 24, 2021



IN NEWLY LAUNCHED EXHIBITION ARTIST LACEY MCKINNEY FLIPS TRADITIONAL PORTRAITURE GENRE ON ITS HEAD


SYRACUSE, NY (November 19, 2020): The Everson Museum of Art’s latest exhibition titled, Reconfiguration, opened this past Saturday, November 14 and will be on view through January 24, 2022. Reconfiguration showcases 24 works by emerging artist Lacey McKinney whose work combines traditional painting and collage.

Born in Oswego, NY, McKinney graduated from SUNY Oswego with a BFA and MA. She earned her MFA in Painting and Drawing from SUNY New Paltz. She is currently a full-time faculty at Finger Lakes Community College in Canandaigua, NY and lives and works in Liverpool, NY.

McKinney has said that her studio practice is, “centered on exploring embodiment, feminist theory, and how women are represented in images.” In her portraits of women and depictions of the female body, McKinney explores the power of images to construct—and subvert—identity. Using sourced images from mass media and history books, as well as her own photographs, McKinney disassembles the originals into their parts and then reassembles brand new images. The process of creating a new composite image allows McKinney to explore new conceptual and compositional possibilities that inform the final work.

Like the collages, McKinney’s portrait paintings are influenced by the work of women artists. Color Field pioneer Helen Frankenthaler’s famed staining technique and feminist figurative painter Joan Semmel’s subversion of the male gaze inform many of McKinney’s works. At the same time, McKinney challenges the history of the portraiture genre, questioning how much information can be gleaned from a single portrait. By merging multiple faces into one composition, McKinney makes visible the shifting nature of identity

In a 2019 interview with Elizabeth Delaney for McColl Center for Art + Innovation McKinney explained, “As a contemporary artist, I take previously dismissed narratives and re-position them as foregrounded visual amalgamations. I am interested in expressing complexity, movement, and heterogeneous visual representations, thereby expanding convention to the benefit of all, especially those who could start to see themselves reflected more often.”

For more information visit www.everson.org
ABOUT THE EVERSON MUSEUM OF ART
The Everson Museum of Art, whose roots extend to 1897, is internationally recognized for its extensive and significant collection of ceramics, its pioneering art video collection and its distinctive structural design by the noted architect I.M. Pei.

The operation of the Everson Museum of Art is made possible with funding from the Dorothy and Marshall M. Reisman Foundation, the County of Onondaga administered by CNY Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature, the Richard Mather Fund, the Everson Board of Trustees, and Everson Members’ Council.

STAY CONNECTED
EVERSON MUSEUM OF ART MISSION STATEMENT

Through dynamic and meaningful encounters with modern and contemporary American art, the Everson Museum of Art engages diverse communities, inspires curiosity and lifelong learning, and contributes to a more vital and inclusive society.
The Everson Museum of Art | 401 Harrison StreetSyracuse, NY 13202
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Tuesday, November 17, 2020

National Museum of Women in the Arts ! Soyna Clark March 3, 2021. Time flies when you're having art fun!

National Museum of Women in the Arts 

First survey of artist Sonya Clark’s 25-year career features nearly 100 works that address race, visibility and Blackness  

Afro-Abe_PR.jpg
 

WASHINGTONBeginning March 3, 2021, the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) presents Sonya Clark: Tatter, Bristle, and Mend, a mid-career survey exhibition of works by textile and social practice artist Sonya Clark. Throughout her 25-year career, Clark has become renowned for her application of fiber art techniques to human hair, combs, currency, hair salon chairs and other everyday materials to explore the social and cultural impacts of the African Diaspora. The exhibition features nearly 100 works that reflect the breadth and depth of the artist’s practice. Illuminating the central themes of Clark’s art—including heritage, labor, language and visibility—the show aims to reveal Clark’s radical ability to combine an intensity of handwork and subject matter with an economy of form. Sonya Clark: Tatter, Bristle, and Mend is open through May 31, 2021.

“This timely exhibition affirms Clark’s prowess as both maker and visionary,” said NMWA Deputy Director for Art, Programs and Public Engagement/Chief Curator Kathryn Wat. “She uses concept, process and participation rather than didactic imagery to reflect questions and truths back to us.”

Clark describes “mining” common objects, particularly those bound to identity and power, because “they have the mysterious ability to reflect or absorb us.” The artist transmutes these objects through the application of a vast range of fiber-based processes: weaving, folding, braiding, trimming, pulling, rubbing, twisting, pressing, snipping, dyeing, tying or stacking her diverse source materials. By stitching black thread cornrows and Bantu knots onto flags, rolling human hair into necklaces, or stringing a violin bow with a dreadlock, she reasserts the Black presence in histories from which it has been pointedly omitted. 

For example, Clark’s Afro Abe II (2010)—a five-dollar bill embellished with black threads that form an Afro for President Abraham Lincoln—is witty, poignant and provocative. The stitched intervention induces a sharp, penetrating moment of recognition and connection and infuses the currency with new, layered meaning. Clark’s use of currency-as-canvas evokes personal, cultural and historical associations with money, including freedom, self-determination and property ownership. As Clark observes, “It’s crowning the emancipator with the hair most associated with Black liberation and black power,” simultaneously embodying the historical absence of Black political agency as well as the promise of it. That liminality—the creation of objects that simultaneously denote humankind’s capacity to suppress as well as persevere—is the formidable essence of Clark’s practice.

#sonyaclark#fineartmagazine#artfun

Catch Galerie Bessiers Art Contemporain, artist of the week Jackson Patterson!

The artist of the week 
Jackson Patterson

Smooth landing into Jackson Patterson's creation available here
Ile des Impressionnistes
3 Rue du Bac 78400 Chatou

Vendredi de 14h30 à 19h
Samedi de 14h30 à 18h
Dimanche de 15h à 18h

www.bessieres-art-contemporain.com
galerie@bessieres-art-contemporain.com
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