Reading

“Earth: In It, Of It” opens at Loyola College’s Julio Gallery, Curated by Deborah Bedwell

Previous Story

“In Home: In Response” Review by Eile [...]

Next Story

Out of Order at MD Art Place

Photobucket
Dichotomy of Dirt by Margaret Boozer

EARTH: In It, On It, Of It is an exhibition at Julio Gallery at Loyola College, March 1-31, that has as its theme an artistic and environmental mapping of the planet, using ceramic artists’ understanding and conception of Earth’s fragility as curatorial focus.

Visual artists can be interpreters of human experience, chroniclers of the familiar made extraordinary by translating a shared experience into a singular, tangible object. At this time in our history as a people, there is finally a growing and widespread awareness of the compelling experience of a vanishing planet – global warming, air pollution, and an overall deterioration of the balance and ecological systems that sustain life.

Ceramic artists, in particular, are affected by the state of the planet, as we make our art from the stuff of its surface. There are elements in the work of the selected artists that make the intangible qualities of the love, knowledge, and understanding of Earth tangible. Whether the pieces celebrate elements of the vanishing landscape or whether it maps the points of its locus, I am hoping that the exhibition, EARTH: In It, On It, Of It will raise public awareness of work in clay and artists’ concern for shared existence on our planet.

-Deborah Bedwell, Curator

Photobucket
Hidden River by John Williams

Exhibiting Artists: Josh Copus / Ann Hazels –MD / Gary Schlappal – MD / Alice Yutzy – MD / Matthew Hyleck – MD / Shoji Satake –WV / Myung Rye Kim – MD / John Williams – PA / Margaret Boozer – DC

Related Stories
Baltimore art news updates from independent & regional media

Giulietta Pinna's treasure trove, MDFF screenings, René Treviño's must-see exhibition, Remington and Hampden festival redux's, Doomsday Poe Read-a-thon, Open Works and Coppin State's new partnership–with reporting from Baltimore Banner, Fishbowl, Brew, and other independent news sources

Orange Grove Dance's new performance, executed by human dancers and choreographed with Artificial Intelligence (AI), in review.

A&I, which launched on Friday, April 19th at The Voxel in Baltimore, combines experimental dance, ambient soundscapes, minimalist stage design, and innovative lighting techniques with a high-tech concept.

The best weekly art openings, events, and calls for entry happening in Baltimore and surrounding areas.

25th Maryland Film Fest, Cindy of Arc at Baltimore Theatre Project, Sherry Insley at Cotyledon Arts, Asia North opening event, Baltimore Crankie Festival, AVAM's Kinetic Sculpture Race -- PLUS SOLOS 2025 call for proposals at MOCA Arlington and more opportunities for exhibits and residencies!

This year the MdFF will emphasize emerging filmmakers and technologies, with an emphasis on local and global impact