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Fine Arts

  • Illuminati at Eclipse Mill Gallery

    An Energized Exhibition in North Adams

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 03rd, 2009

    The theatrical lighting designer, Julie Seitel, has curated the exhiition "Illuminati" at the Eclipse Mill Gallery in North Adams, Mass. The switched on theme includes the light artists: Brian Jewett, Marjorie Minkin, John Powell and Richard Harrington as well as Seitel's pieces. It is one of the best shows of the Berkshire summer season.

  • Dan Rose's Secret Century

    Multi Venue Exhibition at Greylock Arts in Adams

    By: Richard Harrington - Jul 26th, 2009

    The artist Richard Harrington worked with Dan Rose in a multi venue exhibition in Adams. It was installed at Greylock Arts, in the artist's studio a few doors down on Summer Street as well as in a vacant store window. This is Harrington's essay on the project.

  • Eclipse Mill Opens Illuminati on July 31

    Exhibition Focuses on Light As a Medium

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 14th, 2009

    Julie Seitel, a theatrical lighting designer, while working on a show at Williams College began to rethink some of the "practicals" as works of art. She has asked the artists; Richard Harrington, Brian Jewett, Marjorie Minkin and John Powell to join her in a light themed exhibition "Illuminati" which opens at the Eclipse Mill Gallery on July 31.

  • Glynis Bell in Underneath the Lintel

    Glen Berger Play at Barrington Stage Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 13th, 2009

    After a lapse of more than a hundred years a badly battered book is slipped through a slot in the door into the overnight return bin of a Dutch library. This launches a quest by The Librarian to track down the identity of the mysterious borrower known only as A. What follows is brilliantly acted by Glynis Bell in an over the top play by Glen Berger.

  • Bret Slater's: Five Colored Flag Machine Gallery

    Makeshift Paradise in Ossining, New York

    By: Adam Zucker - Jul 06th, 2009

    In these uncertain economic times where some galleries are starting to fold, Bret Slater has created a serious commercial gallery in the most unlikely of places.

  • James Ensor at the Museum of Modern Art

    Belgian Painter Evokes Fantasy Expressionism

    By: Adam Zucker - Jul 06th, 2009

    James Ensor was Belgium's greatest modern painter. MoMA treats us to a diverse look at a unique master painter. A rare chance to encounter the works in depth. With its fantasy mix of macabre elements he anticipated Expressioniam and Surrealism. His work continues to be an influence for young figurative/ exprssionst painters.

  • DownStreet 09 in North Adams

    An Increase to 27 Venues for Second Season

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 29th, 2009

    When Mass MoCA opened a decade ago artists migrated to North Adams attracted by large, cheap loft spaces. For the second season that growing arts community is trying to revitalize the business district through a city wide project known as DownStreet. Artists hope that their commitment and sweat equity will start to pay off.

  • Dorothy Robinson at Slate Gallery

    Continental Drift On View in Brooklyn

    By: Adam Zucker - Jun 29th, 2009

    Dorothy Robinson's second solo show at the Slate Gallery presents a revelation in landscape painting. They are a powerful metaphor for the human condition. The paintings are grandiose and beautiful as well as haunting and destructive.

  • Venice Biennale 2009

    Bruce Nauman Wins the Golden Lion

    By: Ben Klein - Jun 28th, 2009

    In his first visit to Venice the Canadian artist and critic, Ben Klein, offers highlights of the vast Venice Biennale 2009. Mostly he was riveted by the work of the American artist Bruce Nauman.

  • Allen M. Hart's Metamorphosis

    At the Upstream Gallery in Dobbs Ferry, New York

    By: Adam Zucker - Jun 16th, 2009

    Allen M. Hart has expressed his life through painting for over six decades. The new figurative work is even more intense and emotional. His work is surveyed in a one man show at the Upstream Gallery in Dobbs Ferry, New York.

  • Artists' Choice at Lohin Geduld Gallery

    Chelsea Gallery Features Peer Selections

    By: Adam Zucker - Jun 16th, 2009

    A commercial gallery in the heart of Chelsea brings us a democratic change of pace in the role of exhibition selection. A number of the Lohin Geduld artists are showing their own works and inviting others to participate. This has resulted in a lively and eclectic exhibition.

  • Nielsen Gallery Surprise Inventory Exhibition

    Final Show on Boston's Newbury Street

    By: Shawn Hill - Jun 14th, 2009

    Nielsen Gallery stages a benefit for the Danforth Museum, before Nina Nielsen and John Baker begin a one-year sabbatical. AS one of the oldest and most prestigious contemporary galleries in Boston its absence on Newbury Street is palpable.

  • Color and Form: The Language of Abstract Art

    Berkshire Museum Exhibition Through November 1

    By: Ariel Petrova - Jun 13th, 2009

    The Artist A.E. Gallatin collected and organized the Museum of Living Art at New York University. When the museum closed in 1943 Gallatin donated a number of works to the Berkshire Museum. They form the core of this exhibition focused on American Abstract Art.

  • The Golden Age of Dutch Seascapes at Peabody Essex Museum

    Salem Exhibition Explores Colonial Power

    By: Shawn Hill - Jun 10th, 2009

    An expansive show of large and small Dutch seascapes from the 17th century, organized into five informative thematic sections. Art patronage was fueled by wealth in trade with Dutch colonies during the Golden Age.

  • Portland Museum of Art 2009 Biennial

    The Maine Event

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 09th, 2009

    During some time in a Maine cottage by the beach we took a day trip to view the Portland Museum of Art's 2009 Biennial. The jurors, Elizabeth Burke, Dan Graham and Denise Markonish selected 17 artists from 970 applicants.

  • Lichtenstein in Process

    At the Katonah Museum of Art

    By: Adam Zucker - Jun 08th, 2009

    The precise canvases of Pop Artist Roy Lichtenstein appear effortless. A wonderful exhibition takes a look at the artist's rigorous process that will change the way you view his work. This show originated in Europe where it was presented at several museums before its American debut at the Katonah Museum of Art.

  • Francis Bacon: A Centenary Retrospective

    At The Metropolitan Museum of Art

    By: Adam Zucker - Jun 08th, 2009

    Love him or hate him, Francis Bacon was one of the most compelling artists of the 20th century. This is the first major retrospective in 20 years devoted to the painter. The Metropolitan Museum of Art hosts this seminal exhibition through August 16.

  • Salt of the Earth at Montserrat College of Art Gallery

    Six Curators Each Select One Artist

    By: Shawn Hill - Jun 07th, 2009

    Curator Leonie Bradbury has invited six of her colleagues to pick one artist each to reflect the theme "salt of the earth." What does it mean today? The resultant exhibition proves to be provocative and insightful as well as refreshingly eclectic.

  • Yoko Ono - Charlotte Moorman - Nam June Paik

    John and Yoko Montreal Exhibition Inspires Connections

    By: Astrid Hiemer - May 27th, 2009

    Remembering two of the great 20th Century Avant-Garde Artists, now deceased, and Yoko Ono, very much alive, and presenting important work in the 21st Century.

  • The Pictures Generation: 1974-1984

    Metropolitan Museum of Art Exhibition

    By: Adam Zucker - May 26th, 2009

    A breath of fresh air for the Metropolitan Museum of Art. This is a generational show that focuses on a close group of avant-garde artists who combined ideas and imagery.

  • The Second Annual Berkshire Salon 2009

    Launching the Season for the Eclipse Mill Gallery

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 24th, 2009

    Julie Seitel, a lighting designer for the Williams College Theatre Department did a fabulous job curating and installing the Second Annual Berkshire Salon. The survey of work by 55 artists launches the season for the North Adams based Eclipse Mill Gallery.

  • North Adams Launches Arts Season

    DownStreet Returns With Double Last Year's Programming

    By: Bob Fowler - May 19th, 2009

    Last year MCLA and the City of North Adams combined to turn vacant downtown stores into the seasonal galleries called Down Street. The programming has been expanded to include 27 museums and galleries. The fun begins on Memorial Day Weekend with the Berkshire Salon at the Eclipse Mill Gallery and the 10th Anniversary Ball at Mass MoCA. Let the games begin.

  • Open Culture in the Biennale de Montreal

    The Bilingual Flavor of This Event

    By: Ben Klein - May 16th, 2009

    The Montreal based artist/ critic, Ben Klein, offers another opinion of the experimental latest version of the 12 year old series of Biennials in Montreal. With its bilingual culture and European flavor he argues that this project and its ambience is unique and could not be staged in this manner in any other North American city.

  • The Generational: Younger Than Jesus

    The New Museum's Signature Triennial

    By: Adam Zucker - May 11th, 2009

    The first installment of the New Museum's signature triennial brings together fifty artists from twenty five countries all under the age of thirty-three. Talking about my generation.

  • Imagine: The Peace Ballad of John and Yoko

    Free Exhibition Through June 21 at Montreal Museum of Fine Arts

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 10th, 2009

    From May 26 through June 2, 1969, the newlyweds, John Lennon and Yoko Ono staged a Bed-in for Peace at the Saint Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal. Now 40 years on the occasion is celebrated with an amazing free exhibition at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. Visitors are invited to bring cameras and pose playing John's famous white piano. The lively special exhibition will not travel. Understandably it is drawing mobs on a daily basis. Don't miss this incredible celebration.

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