“Mass MoCA — a revelation round every corner,” Financial Times

The brilliant Louisiana artist Dawn DeDeaux pays homage to Rauschenberg, and to our frail and damaged planet, by assembling charred wood and evocative bric-a-brac (“an alligator-skin book of Longfellow poems”, a “tape measure stuck on 1”). And even as she forages for relics of our time on Earth, she imagines the fashions of space travel in intricate, wall-sized digital drawings.

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John T. Scott: His Legacy

The Arthur Roger Gallery is pleased to present John T. Scott: His Legacy, an exhibition of works by the late John T. Scott. The exhibition will be on view at Arthur Roger Gallery, located at 432 Julia Street, from August 5 – September 23, 2017. The gallery will host an opening on Saturday, August 5 from 6-9pm, in conjunction with White Linen Night.

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R.I.P. Bruce A. Davenport, Jr. | Artwork by Dapper Bruce Lafitte

dapper bruce lafitte

The Arthur Roger Gallery is pleased to present R.I.P. Bruce A. Davenport, Jr. | Artwork by Dapper Bruce Lafitte. The exhibition will be on view at Arthur Roger@434, located at 434 Julia Street, from August 5 – September 23, 2017. The gallery will host an opening, with the artist in attendance, on Saturday, August 5 from 6-9pm, in conjunction with White Linen Night.

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“Arthur Roger Gift Adds Several Works by African American Artists to the NOMA Collection,” The New Orleans Tribune

Arthur Roger has donated 80 works of art from his personal collection to the New Orleans Museum of Art. This stunning gift to the community is made even more important by the breadth of the backgrounds of the artists whose works he has shown and represented at his gallery, Arthur Roger Gallery. He was a pioneer in showing contemporary art by local artists, women artists, and African American artists when other galleries had not begun showing any of these.

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“Perspectives: Jacqueline Bishop,” Country Roads Magazine

Dozens of pairs of scavenged baby shoes line the shelves in Jacqueline Bishop’s New Orleans studio. Collected by the artist from the streets of cities in America and of third-world countries, each pair of shoes serves as a tiny canvas, upon which the artist has painted exquisite portraits of flora and fauna—orchids, honeyeaters—that have vanished from their native range as the tide of human civilization rolls on.

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