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Fine Arts

  • (Not Entirely) Black and White, by Nelson and Fried

    Show at the Eclipse Mill Gallery, North Adams, MA

    By: Astrid Hiemer - May 20th, 2023

    This exhibition in North Adams ends on May 29 and so we also introduce the Old Stone Mill Center in Adams, MA, on Rt. 8, outside of downtown, direction to S. Adams. Both are worth a visit!

  • This Unique Place: Paintings and Drawings of Jeff Weaver

    Stunning Exhibition at Cape Ann Museum

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 21st, 2023

    As a painter Jeff Weaver is a man for all seasons. Some of the most engaging works are winter scenes. It’s the Gloucester that tourists never see. He creates meticulous paintings of weathered, storm battered, Gloucester commercial and residential landmarks. The works document vintage images of a working port and fishing community undergoing a change to an economy based on tourism and a glut of generic condos.

  • Nor’easter: Paintings by Terry Ekasala, Rick Harlow, and Craig Stockwell

    At The Bundy Modern, Waitsfield VT

    By: Bundy - May 24th, 2023

    Most years, we in New England experience massive storms called Nor’easter’s. In the winter months these epic events usually stop everything for a few days while we dig our way out of snow drifts and wait for electricity to resume. As artists, we relish any reason to stop in our tracks, slow time, and experience stillness.

  • American Watercolors, 1880–1990: Into the Light

    Harvard Art Museums

    By: Harvard - Jun 05th, 2023

    This summer, the Harvard Art Museums present over 100 years of dazzling and imaginative artistry through the medium of watercolor. American Watercolors, 1880–1990: Into the Light showcases more than 100 watercolors by over 50 well-known and historically underrepresented artists selected from the museums’ deep and diverse holdings—a rare opportunity because of the light-sensitive nature of these works.

  • Rare Loan from Acropolis of Athens

    Kore on View at Museum of Fine Arts

    By: MFA - Jun 05th, 2023

    About 2,500 years ago, the Acropolis of Athens was filled with statues of young women, called korai. Raised on high bases, these dedicated offerings created a forest of shimmering marble women honoring the goddess Athena. One of the finest examples of these objects, known as Kore 670, which rarely leaves the Acropolis Museum, has traveled to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), where it is on view through January 8, 2024.

  • Pablo Picasso Died FiftyYears Ago

    Global Exhibitions and Critical Evaluations

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 06th, 2023

    Pablo Picasso was the most famous and influential artist of the 20th Century. The marking of fifty years from his death has created numerous global exhibitions. Critics have waded in with evaluations that acknowledge the work but deplore the man. Simply put it begs the question. Was Pablo Picasso and asshole?

  • Gallery NAGA’s 46th Season Concludes

    Rick Fox: From Feral Footing and Masako Kamiya: Kaleidoscope

    By: NAGA - Jun 06th, 2023

    Gallery NAGA’s 46th season concludes with an exhibition by two mid-career painters working in exuberant colors and venturesome compositions. Rick Fox: From Feral Footing and Masako Kamiya: Kaleidoscope are both on exhibition from June 9 through July 14. 

  • Rhiannon Giddens Curates Ojai. Part I

    Spiritual and Historic Journey

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 13th, 2023

    Rhiannon Giddens curated the Ojai Music Festival this year.   She often sings “I shall not be moved.”  And yet, in the strong force you feel in her wake, you know and feel she is moving and you are moved.  Giddens is fond of the double and triple entendre.  For four days we are sailing with her and we are also in her wake.

  • Edvard Munch Trembling Earth

    Clark Art Institute Exclusive American Venue

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 15th, 2023

    Trembling Earth features seventy-five objects, ranging from brilliantly hued landscapes and three stunning self-portraits, to an extensive selection of his innovative prints and drawings. The exhibition includes more than thirty works from MUNCH’s world-renowned collection, major pieces from other museums in the USA and Europe, and nearly forty paintings, prints, and drawings from private collections, many of which are rarely exhibited. The Clark is the only American venue for this stunning exhibition.

  • Susan Rennie Subverts the Male Gaze

    Artist's Work on View in Venice, California

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 16th, 2023

    Long before the Brooklyn Museum discovered the notorious Hannah Gadsby of "Nanette" and engaged her services as a curator of Pablo Picasso, Susan Rennie was gripped by the idea that art most often was created by the male gaze. 

  • Gabrielle Barzaghi at Gloucester's Matthew Swift Gallery

    Horse Opera Presents Large Pastel Drawings

    By: Matthew Swift - Jun 17th, 2023

    Gabrielle Barzaghi is one of the leading contemporary artists residing on Cape Ann. Horse Opera is Barzaghi's fourth solo exhibition at the Matthew Swift Gallery, and presents a significant new body of her work comprising more than a dozen drawings.

  • Out of Bounds: Japanese Women Artists in Fluxus

    At New York's Japan Society

    By: Japan - Jul 06th, 2023

    Near the 60th anniversary of the movement’s founding, this exhibition highlights the contributions of four pioneering Japanese artists—Shigeko Kubota (1937–2015), Yoko Ono (b. 1933), Takako Saito (b. 1929), and Mieko Shiomi (b. 1938)—and contextualizes their role within Fluxus and the broader artistic movements of the 1960s and beyond.  

  • Humane Ecology: Eight Positions

    Clark Art Institute

    By: Clark - Jul 07th, 2023

    Humane Ecology: Eight Positions, opening July 15, 2023 at the Clark Art Institute, features a group of eight contemporary artists who consider the intertwined natural and social dimensions of ecological relationships. The exhibition, which includes sculpture, sound installation, video, and plantings, is presented in indoor and outdoor spaces at the Clark

  • Provincetown's White Line Prints

    At the Museum of FIne Arts

    By: MFA - Jul 12th, 2023

    Drawing from the collection of the late Leslie and Johanna Garfield, this exhibition focuses on the work of six artists: Ada Gilmore Chaffee, Maud Hunt Squire, Ethel Mars, Mildred McMillen, Juliette Nichols, and B. J. O. Nordfeldt—the first pioneering group that came together in Provincetown to practice color woodblock printing.

  • Artist and Rastafarian Peter Dudek

    Publishing a Limited Edition Book

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 18th, 2023

    For the past 15 years artist Peter Dudek has been a part of a team of three that manage Bascom Lodge on Mount Greylock. Prior to that, with Maggie Mailer, he managed Storefront Artists Project in Pittsfield. It brought life to the moribund downtown. Recently we met to discuss a limited edition facsimile of a 1951 Met catalogue American Sculpture.

  • At the Precipice

    Design Museum of Chicago

    By: Nancy Bishop - Aug 04th, 2023

    The beauty of art and the tragedy of the climate crisis live side by side in a stunning new exhibit at the Design Museum of Chicago. Some 30 pieces ranging in size from framed art to wall-length tell the story of why we are “At the Precipice” in this record-breaking hot and stormy summer of 2023.

  • Margaret Swan Flow

    Ar Boston Sculptors

    By: Sculpture - Aug 04th, 2023

     Margaret Swan’s solo exhibition Flow investigates the duality of free-flowing forms versus structures of containment, choreographing an elegant dance between the two. The fluid, curving planes of her polychrome aluminum sculpture suggest movement, while contrasting latticed frameworks create tension and a sense of restraint. The final effect is that of water passing through nets or vessels—triumphantly finding its own way.

  • Tippet Rise Makes Music in Place

    The Montana Ranch Home to Concerts and Sculpture

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 09th, 2023

    Tippet Rise Art Center welcomes musicians and concertgoers for its eighth concert season, beginning August 18 and running through September 17. With more than 15 indoor and outdoor performances planned over five weekends, the season features a wide range of repertoire performed by artists who can be young trailblazers or legendary musicians. A highlight of this summer’s season is the debut of the new Wander series, which moves musicians and audiences between different works of art installed at the art center

  • Strong Women in Renaissance Italy

    Fall Exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts

    By: MFA - Aug 14th, 2023

    Strong Women in Renaissance Italy features approximately 100 works of art—sculpture, paintings, ceramics, textiles, illustrated books and prints—largely drawn from the MFA’s collection, alongside eight key loans from the British Library, the Dayton Art Institute, the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, the Jewish Museum, the Boston Athenaeum and a private collection. Women became artists, writers, poets, musicians and singers. They acted as patrons and commissioned works of art.

  • Kicking the Can of Drawing

    Hegel and Other Matters

    By: Martin Mugar - Aug 15th, 2023

    Recently, Jason Travers an artist in the Providence area and a former student from AIB sent me an image of the kind of “drawing” he sees in the asphalt fillings that are ubiquitous on New England roads: an effort to fill in the cracks formed on roads due to frost heaves. The cracks left unattended only speed up the deterioration of the road.

  • Berkshire Art Center’s 2023 Artists-In-Residence

    Exhibitions and Talks by Noah Beauregard and Kelly Potter

    By: BAC - Aug 22nd, 2023

    Berkshire Art Center’s 2023 Artists-In-Residence, Noah Beauregard and Kelly Potter, are celebrating the end of their residencies this summer with virtual artist talks and in-person exhibition openings at The Red Lion Inn and Chesterwood.  

  • A Visit to Tippet Rise, Part I

    Local is the Future of Music and Art

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 22nd, 2023

    Tippet Rise is the passionate expression of Cathy Halstead, a painter, and Peter Halstead, a polymath (poet, pianist, photographer, and novelist) who met when they were very young and have lived like two peas in a pod ever since.  Having assembled about 12,500 acres in southern Montana not far from Yellowstone National Park, they have taken cues from the natural surroundings to build concert halls, place site-specific architecture and sculptures and produce an annual summer music festival which is a model for the future.

  • Williamstown artist Jane Hudson

    Major Arcana Paintings and 22-card Tarot Deck

    By: Hudson - Aug 24th, 2023

    These paintings, inspired by the Major Arcana cards in the traditional Rider-Waite tarot deck, are also the inspiration for a Major Arcana-specific 22-card tarot deck released by Jane Hudson this summer with WIld Soul River.  

  • Remembering Dennis Hollingsworth

    About a Comment

    By: Martin Mugar - Aug 25th, 2023

    I have no idea what happened. I feel fortunate to have heard his opinions on the art world which were for the most part conservative in intent. He was commenting on Twitter on the ongoing struggle in Ukraine understanding the manipulation of the American Neo-Cons in perpetuating it. He had just started to take and interest in the notion of Monadology as it might apply to his work. Again, the irreducible 

  • A Visit to Tippet Rise. Part II

    A Special Staff for a Special Place

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 27th, 2023

    Pete Hinmon and Lindsey Hinmon are Co-Directors of Tippet Rise Art Center. They are warm and deeply thoughtful, qualities you find in everyone at this working ranch. Qualities clearly treasured by the Halsteads, the couple creating this special art venue. The Halsteads have a knack for picking people. 

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