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January 2017 Exhibition Openings
January 2017 Exhibition Openings Dawn DeDeaux: I’ve Seen the Future and It Was Yesterday Read More and Eli Hansen: The wrong way home.
Greg Gorman: As I See It
Exhibition Dates: January 10 – February 28, 2004 Location: 432 Julia Street, New Orleans, LA 70130 Opening Reception: Saturday, January 10, 6– 8 pm Gallery Hours: Monday – Saturday 10:00 am – 5:00 pm The Arthur Roger Gallery is presenting “As I See It,” an exhibit of photographs by Greg Gorman from January 10th through…
“Review: All You Need Know,” Gambit
Initially, Nicole Charbonnet’s spectrally painted compositions with repeating patterns suggest the empty “zombie formalism” favored by Wall Street investors in recent years, but look again and microecosystems of words and images emerge from obscurity beneath painterly washes in works that utilize time like a tone or color.
Gene Koss
June 1984 Exhibition at Arthur Roger Gallery
“Lin Emery’s gorgeous robots rule Arthur Roger gallery,” The Times-Picayune
Lin Emery’s suite of new works at Arthur Roger Gallery through April 25 confirms her position as New Orleans’ premier sculptor. For decades, Emery, who was born in 1928, has gifted us with gorgeous, glinting mechanical sculptures that are so exquisitely balanced that they bob and wave in ballet-like motion with every breeze.
“Artist draws on outdoor beauty, mystery,” Palm Beach Daily News
John Alexander was puzzling over orchids on a recent morning in the Eaton Fine Art sculpture garden in West Palm Beach.
“Installation art and towering text combine in the Appleton’s new exhibit ‘Faith & the Devil,'” Ocala
In the eons since written language was developed, its art typically was words: poetry, essays, plays and so forth.
“Review: Prospect.3 at the Contemporary Arts Center,” Gambit
Welcome to the world! There is a National Geographic quality about much of Prospect.3, which offers many windows on the far corners of the planet.
“2 Years, 1,242 Drawings. Step Inside This Obsessive Artist’s Brain.” GOOD Magazine
In 2012, virtuosic sculpture and video artist James Drake decided to do something totally new for him: Draw every single day for two years.