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Recent Gallery Exhibition
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Recent
Azoth Gallery Exhibition
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"Crazy
Quilt: the Human Condition"
artworks by Al Coyote Weiner
Artist
Reception: Saturday, October 8, 2011, 5:00
- 9:00 PM
Bridgeport Art Trail, November 11-13, 2:00
- 11:00 PM
The
NEST Art Center
Johnes Ruta, associate curator
Music presentations
Joseph Higgins, tonal keyboard
Warren Bloom, guitar & voice
Exhibition:
October 8 -November 13, 2011
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"Confetti"
acrylics on canvas, 24"w x 30"h
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"As
an artist," Coyote writes, "I view
life, nature, and the human condition as a
crazy-quilt of interpretation and artistic
choice. Some things, as superficial as a mouse
entering an aperture, or the forces of nature
determining our ultimate fate, are both integral
to our journey.
"Irony,
joy, love, and humor are some of the elements
of the human trial. Hopefully, my aesthetic
will broaden the viewers' perspective and
enhance the freedom of choice.My wish is to
employ my particular voice, and to achieve
art that is fearless and uncompromising."
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"Only
the Dead Survive" acrylics on canvas,
24"w x 30"h
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Actor,
singer, writer, professor, and artist, Al
Coyote Weiner has been involved in the art
and entertainment world for over thirty years,
from New York to Florida, and England. In
the 60s, he landed several minor acting
roles, and secured a place with Lee Strasberg,
a prominent acting coach, for lessons and
advice.
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"Voyeurs"
acrylics on canvas, 30"w x 40"h
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Living
in Coconut Grove, FL, he wrote and published
his poetry, and then returned to the University
of Bridgeport to study literature and writing.
He furthered his studies in Europe after a
Fulbright Scholarship offer for studies in
India and Africa, earning his MACW in Creative
Writing at Antioch International University,
in Oxford and London, England. He creative
work includes copywriting, songwriting, voice-overs,
freelance articles, and screenwriting. His
one-act play was accepted for production at
the National Theater of Australia. He studied
as a playwright at Yale Drama School, and
served as an adjunct professor of Film Studies
at Housatonic Community College. He has completed
two albums of original, contemporary music.
Weiner
has had 10 one-man shows, participated in
group exhibitions, and been accepted for numerous
juried shows.
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The
New Haven Free Public Library Gallery
133 Elm Street (Lower Level) New Haven, CT 06510
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Michael
Morand has been in New Haven since about
10,214 days ago.
He gets around and has been on stage, in front
of the cameras or at the
microphone more than a few times in a variety
of roles as an alderman,
activist, chamber of commerce chair, library
board member, and university
representative.
Once
in a while, though, hes behind the camera.
This show at the New Haven Free Public Library
offers a selection of some of the shots hes
taken in recent years as part of his ongoing,
deeply rooted affection for the Elm City.
@MimoCT :: btc expresses Michaels fundamental
belief that there is no better place to be,
to live, to learn and to grow than our beloved
community of New Haven.
One
savvy photographer and cultural critic, Christopher
Brownfield, has said previously of Michaels
photography: "His work possesses a consistent
use of creative focusing and indifference
to compositional convention that evoke a sense
of surrealism and spontaneity." Maybe.
It certainly has a consistent commitment to
celebrating the many facets of the marvelous
mosaic that is our hometown.
In
the words of Harry Caudill, emblazoned at
the entrance of the public library Whitesburg,
Kentucky, one of Michaels favorite places
beyond our own borders, Come look for
yourself.
Exhibition:
September 29 to October 14, 2011
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Azoth
Gallery Recent Exhibition |
The
Circus of Life
an Exhibition of Acrylic Artworks
by Hugo Lara, artist of Ecuador
New
Haven Free Public Library Gallery
133 Elm Street (Lower Level) New Haven, CT
Artist
Reception: Tuesday, August 16, 2011, 5:00
- 7:00 PM
Exhibition:
August 10 -August 19, 2011
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Through
arrangement with the Minister Consul General
of Ecuador in Connecticut, the Gallery of
the New Haven Free Public Library is proud
to present the work of the artist Hugo Lara.
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Hugo Lara was born in Guayaquil, Ecuador
in 1949, and lives in Playas. He
explains that his work is indebted to the
anxieties experienced through the historic
study of the path of his ancestors, their
ethnic origins and activities as common men,
artists or politicians, in particular moments
of their lives.
This
information as a building element of his work
can be traced back to the year 1965, when
his creation of a mature work of art, at the
age of sixteen, combined with his personal
anxieties of wanting to fix the world -- whether
through a philosophical approach or by his
direct participation in activities, some of
which to him would not be compatible with
the identity of a free thinker.
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"The
Circus of the Life" is an explosion of
visual irony, a graphic testimony that cannot
be relegated in Ecuadorian art history, and
is the product of the artist's daily struggle
for 46 years in his artistic task. It's narrative
conclusions are based on the humanistic knowledge
of a society being degenerated in time, and
represents, with the simple scenes of small
characters, an intention to maintain equilibrium,
or to maintain a position on the rustic rough
but brilliant surface of a world with rock
in its interior. This is accomplished by the
content that each human being can give the
world when becoming a good architect of their
life. Hugo Lara presents scenes of characters
falling, and holding on to a thin cord as
an umbilical that maintains a united society
full of color. Each character shares that
permanent competence of capacities or influences
in this great circus. In a world in which
"all of us are actors," we each
assume the role that we have accepted by our
capacities or limitations.
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Carnival
of Allegory
Dry Pastels & Paintings by
Magda
Mraz
New
Haven Free Public Library Gallery
133 Elm Street (Lower Level) New Haven,
CT
Artist
Reception: Saturday, June 12, 2010,
2:00 - 4:00 PM
Exhibition: June 3 to August 13, 2010
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Birth
of a Soul - pastels -
35" x 57"
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Magda
Mraz' artwork is a spiritual quest into
the purpose of our existence and the nature
of consciousness. Her works develop the
contrast between the disintegrating environment
of public places and the focused figures
of young people facing the viewer. The
transient reality of existence is brought
to focus in painted and sculpted figures
who attempt to escape the limitations
of their physical boundaries. The artists
search for freedom and stability has been
underscored by her youth spent under the
totalitarian regime in former Czechoslovakia.
Now a more profound search for liberation
is taking place in her artwork.
"Our
physical world seems to be founded on
a preexisting blueprint which enables
constant change and restructuring,"
Mraz writes. This observation contemplates
the masks of many indigenous cultures,
created centuries ago, which retain
the fresh vitality of captured expressions.
By converting part of a face into human
features, Mraz creates the mysterious
shamans, whose facial expressions
were based on timeless human arche-types."
"The
cycle of the carnival represents the
allegory of human journey from the bondage
to the carnal aspect of our existence
to the spiritual liberation and an enlarged
compassion including all of creation.
The cycle suggests the possibility of
a renewal through the conquest of our
negative qualities or outworn structures.
"The
cosmic geometry underlying all matter
in the universe is demonstrated by the
numerical sequence of seven developmental
stages of human consciousness. The allegories
in this new series resonates from the
Egyptian creation myth to the stories
of human origin on a global scale. Each
painting is based on the geometric pattern
and symbolism of the numbers one to
seven. which are revealed in the developmental
patterns of various cultures. We become
aware of the deep and universal interconnectedness
of all things physical and spiritual,
and their ongoing evolution."
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Azoth
Gallery Recent Exhibition
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The
Rapture of Art
Paintings
by Jesse Guillen
New
Haven Free Public Library Gallery
133 Elm Street (Lower Level) New Haven, CT
Artist
Reception: Saturday, October 24, 2009, 2:30 -
4:30 PM
Exhibition: October
3 to October 30, 2009
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"The
DNA of Antiquity" by Jesse Guillen,
acrylic on canvas, 72"w x 48"h
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"Woman
in Sensuous Rapture" by Jesse
Guillen,
acrylic & beeswax on canvas, 47 1/2"w
x 35 1/2"h
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"Our
Experienced Struggles"
Paintings by John
Favret
New
Haven Free Public Library Gallery
133 Elm Street (Lower Level) New Haven, CT
Artist
Reception: Saturday, September 18, 2010, 2:00
- 4:00 PM
Exhibition: August
19 to October 12, 2010
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Veniero's
- by John Favret - acrylics on canvas, 24"w
x 30"h
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Human
forms; experienced struggles; unusual vantage
points & distorted spaces; images that are
conjured from
memory and imagination; the viewer as participant
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"The
human form has been a dominant feature of my work
for many years," writes John Favret. "I
am interested in the struggles we experience in
our lives and how one situation can be viewed or
interpreted in different ways. I try to create a
sense of tension through an unusual vantage point
or a distortion of space, and often introducing
subtle humorous elements. I am influenced by expressionism
for its emotional energy and ability to describe
the struggles and excitement of living. My goal
is to work life-size. I try to surround the viewer
with the images, so they can be fully engaged by
the content of the pieces and the richness of the
surface."
Mr. Favret has been Associate Professor of Graphic
Design at Housatonic University (HU) in Bridgeport,CT
since 1999, and is presently Coordinator of the
Art Program there. He holds an M.F.A. from Texas
A&M Commerce, a B.F.A. from Bridgewater State
College, and a Certification in Computer Graphics
from Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), where
he was also an Instructor from 1998 to 2003.
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Many
of Favret's pieces are derived from his life experiences.
His narratives are told through images that are
conjured from his memory and imagination.
Using a large format for his ideas
allows the viewer to experience each narrative
as a participant. His most recent work experiments
with constructions using wood, plaster, paint,
and miscellaneous objects, exploring ways to work
off his canvases three dimensionally in a series
using doorways as a metaphorical transition.
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Hitchhike
- by John Favret - acrylics on canvas,
48"w x 60"h |
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Favret
has had solo and two-person shows at the Bert
Chernow Gallery at HU, the 30/30 Park Gallery
in 2004, and at The Paul Mellon Art Center at
Choate, Wallingford in 2002, and at the York Square
Gallery, New Haven, in 1995 (with this curator).
He has been in important group exhibitions at
the Slater Museum, RISD, the Hygienic Art Center
in New London, and other venues. He lives in Uncasville,
CT.
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McSorley's
-by John Favret - acrylics on canvas, 24"w
x 30"h
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Azoth
Gallery Recent Exhibition |
The
World of Paradoxes
Paintings by
Lisie
S. Orjuela
New
Haven Free Public Library Gallery
133 Elm Street (Lower Level) New Haven, CT
Artist
Reception: Saturday, April 24, 2010, 2:00 - 4:00
PM
Exhibition: March
15 to April 30, 2010 |
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flowershells
and honeycombs
2007, oil on canvas, 60"w x 63"h
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"The
world of paradoxes, of struggles, and contradictions
within the soul, spirit, psyche, and mind engages
my attention. My paintings weave thoughts, feelings,
and experiences, exploring and creating a sense
of disruption, disconnection, abstraction which
is justaposed with continuity, fluidity, connections."
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(un)rooting
- by Lisie Orjuela - 2006,
triptych, oil on canvas, 62x62
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Orjuela's
paintings are created with multiple layers of paint,
visual textures, rich earthy colors, as well as
human and animal forms. The figures tend to be a
central part in most of the work, dissolving and
coming out of the surrounding ground, interacting
with it, |
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Forgotten
Futures / Persisting Pasts:
The New Haven Waterfront across Four Centuries
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Artists'
Reception: Saturday, December 10, 2 to
4 PM
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Art
& Historical Photography by the Yale
Department of American Studies
Guest Curator: Matthew Frye Jacobson,
Professor of History, Yale University
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The
New Haven Free Public Library Gallery
133 Elm Street (Lower Level) New Haven,
CT 06510
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Bathers
at Lighthouse Point Beach, New Haven,
CT, c. 1915 (Photo: T.S. Bronson)
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The
life of a city is forged in the uncertain
spaces where economics and power meet diverse
peoples visions of better ways to
live. Forgotten Futures evokes
some big ideas that failed to carry the
day in New Haven; Persisting Pasts
takes notice of how the citys earlier
lives as port city and factory town still
remain visible in the landscape today. As
an act of civic remembering, this exhibit
invites you to look at the city with fresh
eyes, to ponder its unrealized futures,
to notice anew the markers of its deep and
conflicted history, and to give voice to
your own dreams and to your understanding
of the city as you find it. |
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Harbor
Redevelopment Planning Committee Maurice
Emile Henri Rotival papers, 1944-1963
(inclusive)
Manuscripts & Archives, Yale University
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Guest
curators:
Matthew
Frye Jacobson - Professor of American
Studies, Yale University
Taylor Jardno
Kurt Karandy
Yukimi Masui
Kate Peisker
Daniel Pizarro
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Oyster
Workers, New Haven c. 1920
(Henry Gordon Sweet Collection, 1866-1976.
New Haven Museum)
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Exhibition:
December 1 - 30, 2011
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Azoth
Gallery Recent Exhibition |
Listening
to Light and Color:
Water Works by Deborah Curtis and
Sooky Maniquant
New
Haven Free Public Library Gallery
133 Elm Street (Lower Level) New Haven,
CT
Artist
Reception: Saturday, October 29, 2:00-4:00
PM
Guest
Curator: Poet Richard Harteis
Sponsored by the William Meredith Foundation
The
William Meredith Foundation and the Azoth
Gallery present a two-person exhibit of
artworks by Connecticut artist Deborah
Curtis and French artist Sooky Maniquant
at the New Haven Public Library Gallery.
Exhibition:
October 15 - November 30, 2011
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Deborah
Curtis: "Pathway to the Water - Harkness"
14 x 18 Pastel on Pastel board
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Deborah
Curtis
Deborah
Curtis has combined her interests in
science, technology and the visual arts.
She graduated from Northeastern University
with a Bachelor of Science in Fine Arts
through a joint program at The Art Institute
of Boston. She was employed at Retina
Associates in Boston for more than eight
years as an ophthalmic photographer
and associate media manager. "Being
employed in medical and defense media/photography
has helped me create my fine art and
photographs. My Professional Medical
Photography skills delegate how I produce
art to market."
"My
palette can be organic, using limited
two/three primary/complimentary color
choices," writes Deborah. "I
also explore the primary hues and only
blend its compliment for shadows and
rendering edges giving the art piece
a dreamy like effect not normally found
in reality. In either depiction, I like
to simplify my art to its baseline and
work outward.
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Deborah
Curtis: "Around the Misty Bend - Harkness"
32" x 42" oil on linen canvas |
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"I
love using technology to capture what
I find unusual and beautiful, which expedites
the exploratory process for my creative
statements. I enjoy nature as an infinite
timeless array of light reflected upon
mass, air and liquid igniting emotion
through ones mind, body and spirit. Art
to me is the sum expression of passion
combining all these things in harmony,
a marriage between the study of life and
the media of technology. Most of her current
works are in series.
Since
the 1980s, Deborah has exhibited her art
work in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and
Connecticut. She has painted en plein
air, and has often attracted media attention
while rendering exteriors of Connecticut
resorts, inns and sunsets along the Connecticut
and Rhode Island shorelines. Deborah has
taught a myriad of workshops: abstract,
figures, animal portraits in pastels and
mixed media collage in New London at Granite
Street Gallery, Studio 33, and art classes
in Norwich at Art Works, which featured
a retrospective of her works in 2010.
In 2009, she had a solo show of 18 portraits
of women. She also teaches in private
homes/studios and is commissioned for
photography and art work.
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Deborah
Curtis: Contiguous Wave
Harkness 11 x 14 Oil on linen
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Commentary
by Richard Harteis:
In
a remarkable series of dramatic monologs
entitled HAZARD THE PAINTER, the poet
William Meredith traces the life of his
"imaginary playmate," an artist
saddled with all the accouterments of
middle class life in America: house, car,
wife, in-laws, children, and cat. In one
poem, Hazard notes,
"The
cat is taking notes against
his
own household. He watches.
Hazard
would like once to see
things
with the cats eyes, flat.
It
seems to me in Deborah Curtis paintings
that she has mastered the vision of Hazards
cat. Like the canvases of Milton Avery,
they are stripped of all unnecessary detail,
landscapes reduced their purest essence,
Platonic images if you wish, of ocean-ness,
of what it really means to walk the beach
alone on a summers day. While the
work is clearly representational, it focuses
on color relations and is not overly concerned
with creating the illusion of depth as
is most conventional painting. Like Avery
or Matisse, such stripping away takes
courage for one living in what is perhaps
the countrys foremost bastion of
landscape painters. The Lyme tradition
runs deep as a deer tick after gardening
in southeastern Connecticut. If you want
photo realism or perfect impressionist
landscapes, this is the place to shop.
Some may find her work radical for being
too abstract; some lovers of Abstract
Expressionism may find it too representational.
What is clear is that Curtis has developed
her own unique voice which is always the
mark of a serious poet or artist. In another
HAZARD poem, the painter spends an afternoon
skydiving and reflects:
The
colors of autumn
are becoming audible through the haze.
It does not matter that the great masters
could
see this without flight, while
dull
Hazard must be taken up and dropped.
He
see it.
Curtis
sees it too, and "hears" color
like a master which is why her work sings
to us so beautifully.
For
a painter, I would image water would be
one of the most difficult subjects to
capture, even more than light, or perhaps
because of it. Light captured in a drop
of water, or an ice crystal, or a breaking
wave is as evanescent as a summers
breeze. And natural light is central to
her painting, which is why Ms. Curtis
works so often en plein air. This harmony
of light and color, particularly as it
applies to water and seascape marks her
as one of the regions finest new talents
whose work we celebrate. If only Hazard
and William were here today to enjoy it
with us.
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Sooky
Maniquant
Sooky
Maniquant was born in Vietnam in 1934
and brought up in the South Pacific. She
studied in Paris, and traveled through
the world, using every occasion to deepen
her knowledge of Océanian, European,
African, Asiatic, and most particularly
of Japanese civilizations. Very early,
she makes the choice to live, more often
as not, on the Luberon, her sacred
mountain, where she feels nearer
to the vivid forces of Nature.
Maniquant
first met William Meredith in Paris and
Avignon when William was invited to participate
in the Avignon festival. In the piece
"After William Meredith," the
Meredith poems are presented in both his
original English and a French translation,
juxtaposing the text with images rendered
by Sooky Maniquant. "After William
Meredith" places artwork and poems
side by side, allowing the viewer to experience
Meredith's work from two different perspectives:
Meredith's verses and Maniquant's striking
visual interpretations:
In 2002: Exposition "round in water,
magic Circles" were variations on
20 poems of William Meredith and Richard
Harteis at the European Center of Poetry
of Avignon. In 2006 at the Lyman Allyn
Museum in New London CT : "AFTER
WILLIAM MEREDITH" Spiral Forces were
graphic connivances of Sooky Maniquant
on poems by W.Meredith and R.Harteis.
"It is the universe seized in its
innermost transformation which is revealed,
but remains surprising, by static as these
chalk cliffs, boiling under the midday
sun, terrorized by the heat and silence,
dully crackling on the limit of exploding,
a stilled furnace overflowing onto the
whole space of canvas in a thick wave
.
World in distress, but held back by the
artists hand on the brim of emptiness
Solidified
by the appearance, sealed into its vibrations,
calm and taut as a mummified monster of
a dormant weapon. ~Paul-Louis Rossi
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Sooky
Maniquant "Air Heroes" 24"
x 36" silkscreen print on paper
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Sooky
Maniquants main preoccupation is
to find in the mysterious existence of
each ones interior life (thing or
being), and to translate this magic by
her work, therefore suggesting, particularly
for the works of 1963-1969, incomparable
energy of volcanoes, beyond the canvas
of the painted artwork. But reality complicates
itself with the parallax time-space
thus perpetual movement of
which the artist will approach the research
of expression more precisely in her collages
from 1969. 1974, first tapestry: this
material, treated in a very personal way,
with its contours conceived in the mass
of the work, enables her to pursue further
in her researches: the continuity of the
material, the heat and sphere of the surface,
the vibrations of colours where the blacks
and whites quiver, continue to express
anxiety faced with the mystery of life.
~Henry Galy-Carles
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Sooky
Maniquant "In the Middle of a Long
Friendship" 24" x 36" silkscreen
print on paper |
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"But,"
Richard Harteis writes, "the mystery
of life is also the one of death, of suffering,
of horror, and for Sooky is an obsession.
As from 1994 she often combines this with
poetry, in opposition to wars. She puts
together stucco, which proclaims her despair,
in long kit form installations. In 2001,
she returned to photography as a means
of expression."
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Sooky
Maniquant "Tiger at the Water"
24" x 36" silkscreen print
on paper
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The
New Haven Free Public Library Gallery
133 Elm Street (Lower Level) New Haven,
CT 06510 |
Michael
Morand has been in New Haven since
about 10,214 days ago.
He gets around and has been on stage,
in front of the cameras or at the
microphone more than a few times in
a variety of roles as an alderman,
activist, chamber of commerce chair,
library board member, and university
representative.
Once
in a while, though, hes behind
the camera. This show at the New
Haven Free Public Library offers
a selection of some of the shots
hes taken in recent years
as part of his ongoing, deeply rooted
affection for the Elm City. @MimoCT
:: btc expresses Michaels
fundamental belief that there is
no better place to be, to live,
to learn and to grow than our beloved
community of New Haven.
One
savvy photographer and cultural
critic, Christopher Brownfield,
has said previously of Michaels
photography: "His work possesses
a consistent use of creative focusing
and indifference to compositional
convention that evoke a sense of
surrealism and spontaneity."
Maybe. It certainly has a consistent
commitment to celebrating the many
facets of the marvelous mosaic that
is our hometown.
In
the words of Harry Caudill, emblazoned
at the entrance of the public library
Whitesburg, Kentucky, one of Michaels
favorite places beyond our own borders,
Come look for yourself.
Exhibition:
September 29 to October 14, 2011
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HOLOCAUST
-- NEVER FORGET, NEVER AGAIN
A
Holocaust Memorial Exhibition
Hammered-Lead Sculptures by
DANA BALDWIN NAUMANN
at GALLERY RIVAA
527 Main Street ROOSEVELT
ISLAND
New York City, NY 10044
Artist
Reception: Saturday, July 11, 2009
6-9 PM
Exhibition:
July 11 to August 7, 2009
New
Haven Free Public Library Gallery
133 Elm Street (Lower Level) New
Haven, CT
Artist
Reception:
Tuesday, September 20, 2011 5-7
PM
Exhibition:
September 6 - 27, 2011
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"Deportation"
by Dana Naumann, hammered lead,
wood and wire, wall sculpture,
30" x 30", 30 lbs.
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"Never
Forget, Never Again"
by
Dana Naumann,
hammered lead sculpture, 12"
x 12", 30 lbs.
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The
Edwards Street Artists' Collective
of New Haven
Patricia Ames |
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Claudine Burns-Smith |
Phillip Chambers |
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Roberta Chambers
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Francine Curto |
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Carole Dubielle
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Joseph Higgins
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Linda Horning |
Bob
Keating |
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Cathy
Valley |
Rita Valley
CONNECTICUT
HOSPICE
100 Double Beach
Road
Branford, CT 06405
OPENING RECEPTION: SEPTEMBER 15,
2011,
6:00 - 8:00 pm
Exhibition:
September 15-October 28, 2011
Art Director: Katherine Blossom
Guest
curator: Johnes Ruta azothgallery@comcast.net
Contact: Joseph Higgins: 203.996.5185
"Sending
Home the Slates"
An exhibition of
paintings * print-making sculpture
installations & music *
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Special Guest DJ: Chris Stabile*
Please click here for accompanying
music
composed by Chris Stabile
HAGAMAN MEMORIAL LIBRARY
227 Main Street East Haven, CT
OPENING
RECEPTION: APRIL 5, 2011,
5:30 - 8:00 pm
Exhibition: April
1 - 30, 2011
OPENING
RECEPTION: APRIL 10, 2010,
5:30 - 8:00 pm
Exhibition: April
10 - 30, 2010
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"Bad
Dog" oil on canvas,
by Patricia Ames
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"Untitled
2" acrylics on canvas,
by Merilee Pritchard
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"The
Future of Painting"
Paintings by 4 young artists of
Palette Art Studio, Cheshire, CT
Guest Curator: Natasha
Piskunova, teacher
http://paletteartstudio.com/
(203) 272-5370
New
Haven Free Public Library Gallery
133 Elm Street New Haven, CT
Artists' Reception:
Wednesday, June 24, 5:30-7:30
Exhibition: June 18 -July 21, 2009
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"Composition
with Three Pears"
by Eve Wiener
(age 15)
oil on canvas, 2008
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"Among
the Branches"
by Yekaterina Satanina
oils on canvas, 2009, age 16.
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Azoth
Gallery Past Exhibitions
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Azoth
Gallery Past Exhibitions
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Tearing
Silk
Silkscreens by Miguel Trelles
New
Haven Free Public Library Gallery
June 9 -August 8, 2011
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Ceramics -- Two Views
sculptures by
Nancy C. Hayes
and
Ben Westbrock
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February
17 - March 30, 2011
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"Memories
of Folks
In Transit"
sculpture & paintings by
Tom Scippa
January 6 - February 16, 2011 |
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The Way it Used to Be --And Now
paintings by
Herb Rogoff
December 3 -
29, 2010
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How
I Got Here
Paintings and Collages by
Dr.
Felix Bronner
November 2-December 11, 2009 |
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The
Family Spirit of Art: Three
Generations
A Memorial Exhibition for
Phillip
Foxx (1915-2008)
with family members.
Guest Curator: Suzan Shutan
September 8 - October 7, 2009 |
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Centuries
of Inspiration
A Memorial Exhibition for
Jules
L. Szemanczky
(1926-2008)
(art teacher in New Haven high-schools 1950-1985)
May 14 - June 17, 2009
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INNER
FEELINGS /
INNER THOUGHTS
Premier Exhibition of Paintings
by Sculptor
Dana Baldwin Naumann
March 5 - April 8, 2009
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THE
COLORS OF FAMILY LOVE
Paintings and Portraits by
Chris O. Ferguson
February 3 -
March 4, 2009 |
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"A
Family Matter"
artworks by three
European Masters:
Stoimen Stoilov,
Diana Stoilova,
& Margarita Voinova
Oct.16 - Nov.29,
2008 |
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URBAN
VERTIGO
artworks by
Mounira Gareeva Stott
Sept.15
-Oct.16, 2008
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FREE
A/C
Artworks by
Kim Mikenis & Tony "Baloney" Juliano
June 20 - August 1, 2008
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Faith
Heels:
THE HALLELUJAH GANG
artworks
by Elisa Vegliante
May 24 - June 20,
2008 |
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I
Paint
paintings
by Ronald
J.Sloan
April 19 - May 23,
2008 |
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Luminosity
and Depths
paintings
by Valeriu Boborelu
November
18 - December 30, 2006
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Metamorphosis
oil paintings by
Lorraine A. Agri
December
10, 2005 - January 19, 2005
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The
Sublime Symbolism of Buddhist Thanka Paintings
Exhibition in association with
LUCKY THANKA GALLERY
Kathmandu, Nepal
October 17 to December 8, 2005
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Mental
Images
oil paintings by
CONSTANTINE GEDAL
September
1 to October 12, 2005
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