Bruno David Gallery: Friday, 7 September 2007
Bruno David Gallery
JOAN HALL: FROM WHENCE WE CAME
CARMON COLANGELO: Pharmland Series
ELEANOR DUBINSKY: Short Forms
Opening Reception. Friday, September 7 from 6 to 9 pm
(Exhibition: September 7 – October 6, 2007)
HOURS: 10 AM to 5 PM Wednesday through Saturday, and by appointment.
Bruno David Gallery is pleased to announce the exhibit JOAN HALL: FROM WHENCE WE CAME in the main gallery, featuring large-scale, sculptural prints that are thickly layered with handmade paper, pulp, and printing ink. The process of addition and subtraction, cutting out shapes and painting with paper creates a deep and complex surface that reveals new images as we look deeper into the work, as though the viewer is diving through the surface of the ocean. Implicit natural phenomena, such as water, wind, currents, and waves not only show the artist’s long fascination with the sea, but also portray the permeability of human beings’ basic structure from part to whole; we are of and by the sea.
In the Project Room, the internationally known printmaker Carmon Colangelo will show
thirteen small prints from his recent printing projects. Layered with both traditional and digital prints, delicate line drawings, and collages, his work is enriched with the transition between each mark and layer. Colangelo’s work uses serial images to explore memory and private space through collages and hybrid images. Pharmland continues to play on influences of science in absurd narratives based on musings in the artist’ studio.
In the New Media Room, multidisciplinary New York based artist Eleanor Dubinsky presents a series of short video works that zoom in on details of ordinary life to reveal moments of accidental beauty. Humorous, visceral, and personal, the works draw on Dubinsky’s choreographic sensibility and are playfully crafted studies seeking meaning in the everyday moods and moments that often pass us by.
JOAN HALL: FROM WHENCE WE CAME
CARMON COLANGELO: Pharmland Series
ELEANOR DUBINSKY: Short Forms
Opening Reception. Friday, September 7 from 6 to 9 pm
(Exhibition: September 7 – October 6, 2007)
HOURS: 10 AM to 5 PM Wednesday through Saturday, and by appointment.
Bruno David Gallery is pleased to announce the exhibit JOAN HALL: FROM WHENCE WE CAME in the main gallery, featuring large-scale, sculptural prints that are thickly layered with handmade paper, pulp, and printing ink. The process of addition and subtraction, cutting out shapes and painting with paper creates a deep and complex surface that reveals new images as we look deeper into the work, as though the viewer is diving through the surface of the ocean. Implicit natural phenomena, such as water, wind, currents, and waves not only show the artist’s long fascination with the sea, but also portray the permeability of human beings’ basic structure from part to whole; we are of and by the sea.
In the Project Room, the internationally known printmaker Carmon Colangelo will show
thirteen small prints from his recent printing projects. Layered with both traditional and digital prints, delicate line drawings, and collages, his work is enriched with the transition between each mark and layer. Colangelo’s work uses serial images to explore memory and private space through collages and hybrid images. Pharmland continues to play on influences of science in absurd narratives based on musings in the artist’ studio.
In the New Media Room, multidisciplinary New York based artist Eleanor Dubinsky presents a series of short video works that zoom in on details of ordinary life to reveal moments of accidental beauty. Humorous, visceral, and personal, the works draw on Dubinsky’s choreographic sensibility and are playfully crafted studies seeking meaning in the everyday moods and moments that often pass us by.
Bruno David Gallery
3721 Washington Boulevard (in Grand Center
St. Louis, MO 63108
1-314-531-3030
info@brunodavidgallery.com
www.brunodavidgallery.com
3721 Washington Boulevard (in Grand Center
St. Louis, MO 63108
1-314-531-3030
info@brunodavidgallery.com
www.brunodavidgallery.com
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home