Monthly Archives: March 2013
“Pain, Healing, Relics,” – Review of Troy Dugas and Stephanie Patton March 2013 Exhibitions
The eight minutes video is a painful, shocking start to Stephanie Patton’s show Private Practice at the Arthur Roger Gallery in New Orleans. The Shape of Relics from Troy Dugas occupies the other side of the gallery and assembles a large number of pieces organized by themes, resulting in a colorful display.
Troy Dugas: The Shape of Relics
Exhibition Dates: March 2 – April 20, 2013 Opening Reception: Saturday, March 2 from 6–8 pm Gallery Location: 432 Julia Street, New Orleans, LA 70130 Hours: Tuesday–Saturday, 10 am–5 pm…
Stephanie Patton: Private Practice
Exhibition Dates: March 2 – April 20, 2013 Opening Reception: Saturday, March 2 from 6–8 pm Gallery Location: 434 Julia Street, New Orleans, LA 70130 Hours: Tuesday–Saturday, 10 am–5 pm Contact…
KRVS Interview: Artists Stephanie Patton and Troy Dugas talk about opening show in New Orleans at the Arthur Roger Gallery
KRVS Interview: Artists Stephanie Patton and Troy Dugas talk about opening show in New Orleans at the Arthur Roger Gallery
Troy Dugas: The Shape of Relics
Installation images from Troy Dugas: The Shape of Relics – March 2013 Exhibition at Arthur Roger Gallery.
Stephanie Patton: Private Practice
Installation images from Stephanie Patton: Private Practice – March 2013 Exhibition at Arthur Roger@434.
Holton Rower: New Orleans Art Review – Winter 2012
Welcome to the witty, whimsical world of Holton Rower’s Love Heals where dynamically asymmetric compositions composed of concentric, cruciform waves of color with sometimes wacky and delightfully zany names as simple as Birthday Apple and Ontological Relief and as enigmatic as Too Many Zippers Till Being Naked Just Plain Saved Time and Ice Packs And Advil Sure Help But Emotional Calm Is A Deeper Remedy with dimensions ranging from a minimum of fifty-eight inches in one dimension by a maximum of one hundred forty-four inches in another and one and one fourth to eleven and one half inches in depth.
Deborah Luster: New Orleans Art Review – Winter 2012
Send It On Down is an exhibition of photographs by Deborah Luster related to The Lost Roads Project: A Walk-In Book of Arkansas and The Rosesucker Retablos from the nineteen nineties that rewards the viewer with the sense of having that firm grasp on reality that characterizes the best straight photography and the intellectual satisfaction that comes from technical mastery of the medium and the artist’s sense of design. Although obviously posed and composed, Luster’s photographs have an elusive quality that challenges one’s ability to stay focused on the photographs themselves and their subjects and not to wander into the miasma of interpretation. Like the work of predecessor southern photographers Walker Evans, Eudora Welty, and Thomas Eggleston, Luster’s work evidences a world hitherto unknown to the typical viewer for whom the photographs are surrogate experience in the best tradition of documentary photography. The clarity of the artist’s vision leads one to trust the integrity of the photographer and the photograph, finding interest in what the subjects would consider as ordinary and everyday, an interest that makes the ordinary and everyday something special.
Rob Wynne: New Orleans Art Review – Winter 2012
When art is word and word is art, what does it signify, where does meaning lie, or need there be meaning at all? Quiver is an exhibition of ambiguous works accessible through multiple interpretations. Words and phrases are as if written on the walls like graffiti written by someone who does not have control of her medium, who may not understand the implications of the words and phrases that are written, floating signifiers existing sans explicit or implicit semantic context, art objects as well as ideas.