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Photos from Chelsea Galleries Friday, January 8

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Photos from Glittering Generalities at RSG, Brook [...]

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How Did You Do That? A Sculptors Inc. Exhibition [...]

Looking down on Chelsea from a rooftop vantage point… Gorgeous and cold, and so much going on. Took a walk to a few Chelsea galleries to have a peek at current shows.

At Mixed Greens, Howard Fonda “Squonk’s Tears”
531 W. 26th Street


At James Cohan Gallery, “Demons, Yarns, & Tales,” Tapestries by Contemporary Artists
James Cohan Gallery is pleased to present the exhibition Demons, Yarns & Tales featuring hand-woven tapestries created by thirteen internationally renowned artists, including avaf, Peter Blake, Gary Hume, Jaime Gili, Francesca Lowe, Beatriz Milhazes, Paul Noble, Grayson Perry, Shahzia Sikander, Fred Tomaselli, Gavin Turk, Julie Verhoeven, and Kara Walker. The exhibition was created by the London-based art organization, Banners of Persuasion, who commissioned each artist to design a tapestry, a medium foreign to his or her usual practice.












I stopped keeping track of where we were for a bit … in an art coma I guess…




… until we got to the Stephen Haller Gallery, where Nobu Fukui’s ‘mixed media on panel’ paintings really knocked my socks off. Gorgeous, frenetic, a bit ridiculous, and dense.









I fell in love with ‘Anna Jóelsdóttir, priest chews velvet haddock : A painting installation’ at Stefan Stux Gallery, too.











And last was an interactive, very full and overwhelming installation of image and text, complete with hundreds of framed sketchbooks in vitrines by Jay Schmidt and David Dunlap called “The Living Breathing Thing” at CUE Art Foundation.



Bye bye, New York. Lots of good art, but I am still glad I live in Baltimore.
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An Enchanted Evening at the Creative Alliance in Photos by E. Brady Robinson

On Saturday April 27, the Creative Alliance hosted their signature gala event: The Marquee Ball, Baltimore’s costume party to end all costume parties.

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.

Reading

Photos from Chelsea Galleries Friday, January 8

Previous Story

Photos from Glittering Generalities at RSG, Brook [...]

Next Story

How Did You Do That? A Sculptors Inc. Exhibition [...]

Looking down on Chelsea from a rooftop vantage point… Gorgeous and cold, and so much going on. Took a walk to a few Chelsea galleries to have a peek at current shows.

At Mixed Greens, Howard Fonda “Squonk’s Tears”
531 W. 26th Street


At James Cohan Gallery, “Demons, Yarns, & Tales,” Tapestries by Contemporary Artists
James Cohan Gallery is pleased to present the exhibition Demons, Yarns & Tales featuring hand-woven tapestries created by thirteen internationally renowned artists, including avaf, Peter Blake, Gary Hume, Jaime Gili, Francesca Lowe, Beatriz Milhazes, Paul Noble, Grayson Perry, Shahzia Sikander, Fred Tomaselli, Gavin Turk, Julie Verhoeven, and Kara Walker. The exhibition was created by the London-based art organization, Banners of Persuasion, who commissioned each artist to design a tapestry, a medium foreign to his or her usual practice.












I stopped keeping track of where we were for a bit … in an art coma I guess…




… until we got to the Stephen Haller Gallery, where Nobu Fukui’s ‘mixed media on panel’ paintings really knocked my socks off. Gorgeous, frenetic, a bit ridiculous, and dense.









I fell in love with ‘Anna Jóelsdóttir, priest chews velvet haddock : A painting installation’ at Stefan Stux Gallery, too.











And last was an interactive, very full and overwhelming installation of image and text, complete with hundreds of framed sketchbooks in vitrines by Jay Schmidt and David Dunlap called “The Living Breathing Thing” at CUE Art Foundation.



Bye bye, New York. Lots of good art, but I am still glad I live in Baltimore.
Related Stories
Exhibits at Baltimore Jewelry Center, Clayworks, Peale, and CPM

Stories conjured in plastic, clay and wood: 4 art exhibits mix meaning and material

An Enchanted Evening at the Creative Alliance in Photos by E. Brady Robinson

On Saturday April 27, the Creative Alliance hosted their signature gala event: The Marquee Ball, Baltimore’s costume party to end all costume parties.

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.