Gene Koss
Exhibition Dates: November 7 – 28, 1998 Opening Reception: Saturday, November 7 from 6–8 pm Gallery Location: 432 Julia Street, New Orleans, LA 70130 Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10am – 5pm…
Exhibition Dates: November 7 – 28, 1998 Opening Reception: Saturday, November 7 from 6–8 pm Gallery Location: 432 Julia Street, New Orleans, LA 70130 Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10am – 5pm…
For close to 10 years now, James Barsness has been making a name for himself as a creator of highly detailed, unusually complex and often frankly sexual art. His often tongue-in-cheek portrayals of physical appetite, merged with a masterful appreciation of materials, which here included ballpoint pen and acrylic on paper collaged onto canvas, make him an artist of accomplished idiosyncrasy.
Exhibition Dates: August 1 – September 19, 1998 Gallery Location: 434 Julia Street, New Orleans, LA 70130 Hours: Monday–Saturday, 10 am–5 pm Contact Info: 504.522.1999; arthurrogergallery.com The Arthur Roger Gallery…
Anything goes in today’s art world – and frequently the first thing to go are the distinctions between painting, sculpture, architecture and other traditional disciplines. The resulting cross-breeds are tagged with the vague label of “installation art”, and encompass works whose only shared purpose is the attempt to create a total, theatrical environment from the sanitized spaces of the contemporary gallery.
To fix someone in memory has always been the purpose of portraiture. But how does portraiture figure in a culture that likes its images fast, cheap and disposable, as ours does?
Nature is a master of multiples, manifesting her prowess with seemingly endless rounds of encore performances. A tree’s bounty of leaves, flowers and fruits not only conveys a sense of well being, but ensures future survival.
LOUISIANA’S PENCHANT FOR easy money and good times trickles down to the melodrama of its citizenry in Francis Pavy’s metal cutout images at Arthur Roger Gallery. These paintings deftly illustrate the ever-increasing urban- and suburbanization of Acadiana.
Clyde Connell, who became a full-time artist only in her 60’s and who was known for totemic sculptures, imposing wall reliefs and runelike drawings, died on May 2 in a hospital in Shreveport, La. She was 97 and lived in Lake Bastineau in northwestern Louisiana.