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Fine Arts

  • Mary Hrbacek at NY’s Creon Gallery

    Entwined Depicts the Forest Primeval

    By: Edward Rubin - Apr 13th, 2011

    Though Entwined covers a scant 4 years, Mary Hrbacek, has been traveling the world taking photographs, and making charcoal drawings and painting of trees that have shed their leaves and exposed their so-called bones. The artist has worked in Asia and Europe, as well as Brooklyn, and New York’s Central Park, for over ten years. The work ios on view at New York's off the beaten path Creon Gallery through April 30.

  • Boston is Happening in April

    International Art Conference and Two Film Festivals

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Apr 04th, 2011

    BFA recently previewed the conference on International Opportunities in the Arts, which TransCultural Exchange is presenting from April 7 - 10. Then, the International Film Festival will be held from April 15 - 24 (BIFF) and the Independent Film Festival (IFF) will follow at the end of the month, from April 24 - May 4.

  • Thimphu, Bhutan Art Exhibition

    An Auspicious Opening

    By: Zeren Earls - Mar 29th, 2011

    The Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan hosted an exhibition of fine art from ten countries on the occasion of their beloved King's birthday, while honoring International Mother Language Day and Language Martyr's Day of Bangladesh

  • Monograph: Otto Piene by Ante Glibota

    Book Launch at Duesseldorf City Hall

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Mar 19th, 2011

    It has taken longer than I recall, twenty-three years, for a major publication to be presented in Duesseldorf, Germany. The book was printed in Italy with 3000 exquisite illustrations; many photographs were never published before. The text is bilingual, English and German, and includes thirty-seven essays by internationally renowned art historians, art theorists and artists. These, of course, are in addition to Glibota and Piene's essays. The book is presented in 756 pages.

  • Hancock Shaker Village Launches Season

    Susan Merrill Exhibit Opens April 10

    By: Shaker - Mar 17th, 2011

    Hancock Shaker Village kicks off its 2011 season with a painting exhibition titled “Black & White Barnyard” by Stockbridge-based artist Susan Merrill. The exhibition will run during “Baby Animals on the Shaker Farm” April 16 through May 8 from noon to 4pm daily in the Poultry House. It will feature paintings of animals with black and white markings from the Village and surrounding local farms.

  • Katharina Grosse at Mass Moca

    One Floor Up More Highly

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 15th, 2011

    The Berlin based artist, Katharina Grosse, has created an enormous, psychedelic, arctic landscape, One Floor Up More Highly. It will remain on view in the vast Building Five of Mass MoCA in North Adams, Mass. through October. While spectacular to look at we wonder what it's all about.

  • Joyce Melander-Dayton at June Kelly Gallery

    Extravagant Constructions

    By: Edward Rubin - Mar 15th, 2011

    The title of Santa Fe based artist Joyce Melander-Dayton’s exhibition at the June Kelly Gallery, through March 29, in New York City reads Extravagant Constructions. It’s an apt title, especially when you are standing up close and studying the artist’s intricately bejeweled craftsmanship and her use of materials and patterning. Think Faberge Egg or the Gobelin Tapestries.

  • 2011 International Opportunities in the Arts

    Transcultural Exchange - 3rd Boston Conference

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Mar 15th, 2011

    Appropriately titled: ‘The Interconnected World’ the conference will be held from April 7 – 10. Mary Sherman, the TransCultural Exchange director, again will bring together global speakers and participants in a chock-full four day long conference. Interactive panel discussions, exhibitions, music events, book and poetry readings, portfolio reviews, workshops demystifying subjects and much more will offer new opportunities in the US and world-wide organizations at an ever greater event.

  • Richard Rand of the Clark Art Institute

    Curator Discusses Improving a Great Collection

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 14th, 2011

    For its size the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute is regarded as one of the finest and best endowed regional museums. Now in another phase of expansion, the Clark is also endowing positions and selling a Renoir for $15 million. The sale of a "redundant' Renoir, as chief curator, Richard Rand describes it, will be use for yet to be determined acquisitions. In a depressed art market, it is an opportune time to have cash on hand.

  • Clark Art Institute Aso O. Tavitian Collection

    Eye to Eye European Paintings 1450-1850

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 11th, 2011

    Aso O. Tavitian, a trustee of the Clark Art Institute and resident of New York and Stockbridge only started to collect Old Master portraits in the past several years. A selection of his acquisitions are included in the fascinating exhibition Eye to Eye European Paintings 1450-1850 which is on view through March 27.

  • Edward Gorey At Boston Athenaeum

    Draftsman of the Amusing Dark Side

    By: Mark Favermann - Mar 05th, 2011

    The Boston Athenaeum is currently exhibiting an exhibition of the elegant but somehow amusingly sinister works of writer/artist Edward Gorey. A deft draftsman of both line and word, Gorey's works are American originals created by an eccentric individual that gave both delight and dread with pen and ink.

  • Student Art Exhibition at Mass MoCA

    Moves to Eclipse Mill Gallery March 12 to 27

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 04th, 2011

    The first annual Berkshire student art exhibition was held last night at Mass MoCA. It was a fun event with awards and cash prizes followed by snacks and live music. The exhibition moved to the Eclipse Mill Gallery in North Adams from March 12 to 27. There will be a panel discussion and reception at the Eclipse Mill Gallery on March 19.

  • Nari Ward Exhibition at Mass MoCA

    Sub Mirage Lignum

    By: MoCA - Mar 02nd, 2011

    Artist Nari Ward will create a massive new exhibition comprising several interconnected works and encompassing an entire floor of MASS MoCA. Visitors can experience the new show, titled Sub Mirage Lignum, as both a large-scale environment and as a series of smaller yet connected spaces. Ward's dramatic sculptural installations are composed of material systematically collected from the neighborhoods where he lives and works or is personally connected to

  • Kate McNamara Appointed to Boston University Art Gallery

    Will Serves as Director and Chief Curator

    By: Ariel Petrova - Mar 01st, 2011

    Kate McNamara has been appointed to the position of director and chief curator of the Boston University Art Gallery. She has experience curating at MoMA PS1 (Long Island City, NY), Cleopatra's (Brooklyn, NY), Ramapo College (Ramapo, NY).

  • Pinta: The 2010 Modern & Contemporary Latin American Art Show

    Riding the Crest of the Latin American Art Wave

    By: Edward Rubin - Feb 27th, 2011

    It was only a few years ago, 2007 to be exact, that ‘The Pinta People’ taking a big gamble took the art world by surprise by mounting the world’s first international Latin American Modern & Contemporary Art Show at the Metropolitan Pavilion in New York City. With 35 international galleries and countless Hispanic artists from the United States, Spain, Mexico, Central and South America, showing their works, the fair was an immediate hit.

  • Dawn and Bill Guild at 'Tunnel City Gallery'

    Two Artists Exhibit in a Busy Environment

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Feb 27th, 2011

    A frequent question is: Where to show? Artists look for places to exhibit their work. To be represented by a gallery is at best a gallery that actually sells your work. But, it is also prestigious to be 'a gallery artist.’ The Guilds belong to NAACO, a Coop Gallery in North Adams, and currently show in several rooms at ‘Tunnel City Coffee’ in Williamstown, until the end of April.

  • Clark Art Institute to Sell a Renoir

    Femme cueillant des Fleurs One of Museum's 33 Renoirs

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 25th, 2011

    The Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Mass. is offering for sale at TEFAF Maastricht, the world’s most influential art and antiques fair one of its 33 paintings by the French Impressionist master, Pierre-Auguste Renoir. Femme cueillant des Fleurs (Woman picking flowers) depicts Camille Monet, the first wife of Renoir’s fellow Impressionist Claude Monet, who died tragically young. The important painting, estimated to be worth $15 million, has rarely been hung in the museum in recent decades.

  • Graphic Radicals: World War Three Illustrated

    Exhibitions at New York's Exit Art

    By: Adam Zucker - Feb 09th, 2011

    Two shows at Exit Art take on burdening contemporary issues. Graphic Radicals: World War Three Illustrated focuses on a wide range of themes in social justice, politics, peace, and unity while Fracking: Art and Activism Against the Drill focuses on environmental issues.

  • The RISD Museum Announces 2011 Spring Schedule

    Architecture, Art and Design Exhibitions

    By: Mark Favermann - Feb 09th, 2011

    PROVIDENCE, RI - The RISD Museum announced its new schedule of exhibitions for 2011. The shows will nclude Cocktail Culture, the major spring show, Building Blocks, examining the relationships between architecture and art, highlights from the Museum's extensive collection of 17th-century French etcher and engraver Jacques Callot, and Pre-Retroscope VI, British artist Conrad Shawcross' exploration of Brooklyn's Gowanus Canal.

  • Dhaka-Kathmandu Fine Art Fusion 2010

    Curator Rafique Sulayman

    By: Rafique Sulayman - Feb 04th, 2011

    Berkshire Fine Arts.com introduces Rafique Sulayman, who will open an exhibition; 'Celebrating International Mother Language Day...' on February 11 in Thimphu, Bhutan. Artists from ten countries world-wide will participate and one of the sponsors is the Embassy of Bangladesh in Thimphu. Here, Sulayman, who is based in Dhaka, Bangladesh, writes about his 2010 exhibition of art fusion.

  • Hermann Nitsch at Mike Weiss Gallery

    Vienna Actionist Plans New York Event

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 31st, 2011

    The rituals of the Vienna Actionist, Hermann Nitsch, often entailed slaughtered animals, their blood and entrails, nude bodies and music which he composed. He is planning a major event in New York with the Mike Weiss Gallery.

  • M.C. Escher at the Berkshire Museum

    A Maze Ing

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 26th, 2011

    During the opening weekend of M.C. Escher: Seeing the Unseen the Berkshire Museum was packed. With school vacations and ski season it is likely that the museum will be mobbed with families from now until May 22. As this large selection of work demonstrates Escher was a master and genius but in a class by himself. In the populist museum there is a crowd pleasing companion exhibition Henry Klimowicz: Constructs.

  • Eight Exhibitions at Williams

    Yale Collaborates with WCMA

    By: Williams - Jan 25th, 2011

    The Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) announces the themes of each of the eight exhibitions that are opening this spring as part of the museum’s massive reinstallation project entitled Reflections on a Museum. This project is an opportunity to re-discover WCMA and what makes it unique: its commitment to raising questions about the function and meaning of art across time and cultures and the role of museums in shaping understandings of art.

  • AICA-USA Announces Awards

    Cooper Union Event March 14

    By: AICA - Jan 24th, 2011

    The AICA-USA awards ceremony, which has been held annually for more than 25 years, will take place at the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art on March 14 2011 at 6 PM. Awards will be presented by a group of distinguished artists and curators. Elizabeth C. Baker will be honored with a special Award for Distinguished Contribution to the Field of Criticism. Museum curators, artists and critics from around the country are expected to attend.

  • MC Escher: Seeing the Unseen.

    Berkshire Museum to May 22

    By: Bob Fowler - Jan 21st, 2011

    Berkshire Museum's winter exhibition, a major show of the work of one of the 20th century’s most popular artists, MC Escher: Seeing the Unseen. This world premiere experience, conceived and curated by Berkshire Museum, offers a fresh perspective on an iconic artist, one who innovatively brought together graphic design, fine art, and an interest in natural history that makes him an excellent subject for a one-artist exhibition at Berkshire Museum.

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