Dawn DeDeaux
"Pattern: The Order of Chaos" brings together works created by DeDeaux just prior to Katrina which were destroyed and are now recreated together with post-Katrina works. Read More
"Pattern: The Order of Chaos" brings together works created by DeDeaux just prior to Katrina which were destroyed and are now recreated together with post-Katrina works. Read More
The exhibition includes paintings, sculptures and a special late wall sculpture by the artist. Several of Ida Kohlmeyer’s works in the commemorative exhibition have never been exhibited before. Read More
The Arthur Roger Gallery is pleased to present "New Urban Vistas," an exhibition of contemporary photographs whose ambitious, large scale color photographs focus on urban centers in North and South America, Europe and Asia. Read More
The Arthur Roger Gallery is pleased to present "Closer," an exhibition of mixed media paintings on canvas and paper by New Orleans artist Allison Stewart. Read More
Bourgeois chose "Disparate Situation" as the title for his exhibition because juxtaposition and clashing between elements kept becoming manifest in the collages. Read More
In “Unwatchable” John Waters reveals that he’s no longer satisfied to sit at home shooting stills from movies he screens on his television monitor. Waters has now gone both high tech and high style to lampoon, beguile and surprise, always with a satirical edge all his own. Read More
Srdjan Loncar creates a witty yet sophisticated combination of sculpture and photography. His work is concerned with the reproduction of known actual objects that are natural and organic, political, historical, domestic and mundane. A Read More
Srdjan Loncar creates a witty yet sophisticated combination of sculpture and photography. His work is concerned with the reproduction of known actual objects that are natural and organic, political, historical, domestic and mundane. Read More
Mark Flood's paintings are sumptuous compositions which incorporate painted images of tattered and torn lace set against backgrounds of bold saturated colors. Read More
Charbonnet uses stereotypical images of America as a way of exploring our past and present perceptions of ourselves and others, as well as our identity as members of a society and as citizens of a country that now seems to be in transition and in the process of redefining its values, agenda and role in relationships. Read More