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Fine Arts

  • What's So Funny at Eclipse Mill Gallery

    North Adams Exhibition Explores Humor in Art

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 10th, 2008

    This exhibition presents the work of eight artists who are dead serious about the issues they deal with but with an enormous sense of humor. With this project it is quite alright to have a few laughs.

  • Andrew Klass Exhibits at Cup and Saucer in North Adams

    First One Man Show by Williamstown Artist

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 09th, 2008

    Several months ago we met Andrew Klass when he was the youngest exhibitor in the "Berkshire Salon" at the Eclipse Mill Gallery. This is how first one man show at the popular Cup and Saucer in downtown North Adams. It is a short walk from the campus of MCLA where he is enrolled as a fine arts major.

  • Abraham Obama Morphes Art and Politics

    Ephemeral Public Art in a Time of Angst

    By: Mark Favermann - Aug 17th, 2008

    A provocative public art piece has been making visual and media waves since its installation around July 4th. This ephemeral 100 foot mural by agi-pop artist Ron English morphes the faces of Abraham Lincoln and Barack Obama. Commissioned as part of a political art exhibit at the Boston Gallery XIV, this temporary piece is a layered work reaching far beyond simple art and politics.

  • Pennie Brantley and Robert Morgan at Eclipse Mill Gallery

    Realist Painters Exhibit in North Adams

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 05th, 2008

    The images rendered by the realist painters Pennie Brantley and Robert Morgan reflect their extensive travel in Europe and South America. Their work remains on view at the Eclipse Mill Gallery in North Adams through September 1.

  • The Boston Ten at Ferrin Gallery

    Group Show Curated by the Artist Morgan Bulkeley

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 21st, 2008

    The Berkshire based artist has invited a group of his former Boston associates to join him in an exhibition at Ferrin Gallery in Pittsfield.

  • Poet Gerard Malanga Celebrates Andy Warhol's Birthday

    Andy Is 80!

    By: Gerard Malanga - Jul 15th, 2008

    Andy Warhol was born in Pittsburgh on August 6, 1928 and died in New York at 6:31 AM, on February 22, 1987. His friend and long term collaborator, the poet, photographer and archivist, Gerard Malanga (Born March 20, 1943) reflects on Andy.

  • Remembering Bruce Conner, 1933-2008

    A Leading Artist of His Generation

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 13th, 2008

    The obituaries compare the artist Bruce Conner to such contemporary masters as Rauschenberg and Warhol. The fact that Conner was not more widely recognized was largely a result of his high standards and contempt for the art world. Recalling how he was a major influence on my career as an artist, writer and critic.

  • Eclipse Mill Gallery Features Off the Wall

    Also at Eclipse: Ralph Brill Gallery Opens Nude and Naked Over the Fourth of July in North Adams

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 28th, 2008

    The Eclipse Mill in North Adams includes the Eclipse Mill Gallery which has just opened its second show of the season "Off the Wall: Art of the Eclipse in the Third Dimension." There is also the Ralph Brill Gallery which is about to open "Nude & Naked" and River Hill Pottery which is participating in "Off the Wall." Visitors to the gallery also enjoy browsing through books offered by bookseller Grover Askins. There's a lot to take in with one stop on the way to and from Mass MoCA.

  • Revitalizing North Adams

    Old and New Galleries Spark High Energy

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 25th, 2008

    For too many years it has been dead in downtown North Adams in the shadow of Mass MoCA. Visitors to that museum did not spill over to depressed Main Street. But that may change as there is now a map guiding visitors to some dozen or so arts venues. It is creating a real buzz for Northern Berkshire County.

  • DAK'ART - Afrique: Mirroir? 2008

    The Eighth Biennial in Dakar, Senegal

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Jun 22nd, 2008

    Recently Senegal hosted its 8th biennial "DAK'ART" which included 36 artists from 13 African nations. The biennial also invited global artists to participate in some 120 venues and events.

  • A Man of La Mancha: Realist Antonio Lopez Garcia Featured at the Museum of Fine Arts

    Celebration of Spanish Art Includes El Greco to Velasquez Art during the Reign of Philip III

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 21st, 2008

    The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston is currently celebrating masterpieces of Spanish Art. In addition to a survey of Old Masters there is a reprospective of the major living Spanish realist Antonio Lopez Garcia. It is the first such survey by a major American museum. Nine of the 55 works by this artists are drawn from the permanent collection of the MFA.

  • Boston Galleries Shuffle the Deck

    Shake Rattle and Roll on Newbury Street and SOWA

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 17th, 2008

    A number of leases have expired for galleries on Newbury Street and the South End. This has led to more than the usual turmoil and change in the always difficult Boston art market. While regional dealers struggle there are reports on a boom in the $25 billion international art market.

  • Holographer Harriet Casdin-Silver Remembered

    Gallery NAGA Presents a Memorial Exhibition

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 15th, 2008

    Before she passed away at 83, last March, the artist had already arranged for two exhibitions at Gallery NAGA. The current "Harriet Casdin-Silver: Self Portraits" has proved to be a memorial to the world renowned holographer. Recently there was a gathering of friends, artists and family to share memories of the leading fine art holographer of her generation.

  • Anish Kapoor: Past, Present, Future at ICA

    World Class Sculpture Show Raises the Boston Bar

    By: Mark Favermann - Jun 06th, 2008

    When the spectacular new Institute of Contemporary Art building opened in 2006, a question arose: Would the art be as great as the building? The Anish Kapoor sculpture exhibit answers with a resounding Yes. This is a must see exhibit.

  • The Andy Warhol Museum on His 80th Birthday

    Moving the Factory to Pittsburgh

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 02nd, 2008

    Andy Warhol was born Andrew Warhola in Pittsburgh on August 6, 1928. After studying at Carnegie he and Phillip Pearlstein took off for New York. Now Andy, who died in 1987, is back home with his own Factory/ Museum. But do the stars which Andy so loved every shine on Pittsburgh? Much has happened in the Warhol industry since he died 21 years ago. Had he lived Andy would soon turn 80.

  • Being There: A Geocoded Landscape

    Exhibition at Greylock Arts in Adams

    By: Marianne Petit - May 26th, 2008

    Now in its second season Greylock Arts in Adams specializes in new media and conceptual projects. Its co director, Marianne Petit, discusses the latest exhibition.

  • Michael Beatty at Barbara Krakow Gallery

    Sculpture Featured on Boston's Newbury Street

    By: Shawn Hill - May 25th, 2008

    Beatty's wood and metal sculpture is elegant, polished, and perfected, belying concerns with polar oppositions and biological referants.

  • Eclipse Mill Gallery and Greylock Arts Launch Summer Art Season

    Berkshire Salon and Being There

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 24th, 2008

    The Memorial Day weekend saw the exuberant launch of the arts season. In the Northern Berkshires Greylock Arts, in Adams opened Being There while the Eclipse Mill Gallery in North Adams hosts the Berkshire Salon.

  • Berkshire Salon at Eclipse Mill Gallery

    North Adams Based Artists Lively Regional Survey

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 19th, 2008

    Some 47 artists from the Berkshires, New York State, Vermont and Cape Cod are participating in the first annual Berkshire Salon at the Eclipse Mill Gallery in North Adams.

  • New Works on Paper by Lara Loutrel

    at the South End Boston Public Library

    By: Shawn Hill - May 16th, 2008

    Minimal black and white prints suggest worlds of expression and variation in Boston's South End

  • To Live Forever: The Brooklyn Museum's Fabulous Egyptian Treasures

    A Traveling Exhibition on Funerary Arts and Rituals

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 15th, 2008

    The Brooklyn Museum has published a fascinating, richly illustrated, scholarly text to accompany a traveling exhibition. This catalogue covers the complex rituals and artifacts related to preparing the deceased for life after death.

  • Rembering the Artist Robert Rauschenberg, 1925-2008

    Considering the Pop Pantheon

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 13th, 2008

    One of our greatest artists, Robert Rauschenberg, has passed away at 82. We consider his position and contributions in the short list of leading Pop artists.

  • Art In the Life of the City: Learning from London

    A Symposium At The Harvard Design School Part 2

    By: Mark Favermann - Apr 23rd, 2008

    After a provocative keynote address on Thursday evening, an all day symposium looked at a variety of compelling ephemeral art projects in London. UK curators discussed the nuts and bolts of temporary project work of artists and architects. The Fourth Plinth at Trafalgar Square, The Serpentine Gallery's Pavilions, The Tate Modern's Public Space and the Sultan's Elephant were all striking. London's public art energy was persuasive.

  • Art In the Life of the City: Learning from London

    A Symposium At The Harvard Design School

    By: Mark Favermann - Apr 22nd, 2008

    A recent symposium at the GSD focused on how ephemeral art can build civic engagement, community dialogue and public debate. What is the impact of temporary public art events? Is public art a force for urban change? Coupling this with sense of place, citizenship and ecology, UK curators discussed the impact of their work. Can this work in America as well? Part 1 of 2 parts

  • Whitney Biennial 2008

    Visualizing the Uncertainty Principle

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 13th, 2008

    Just what does the Whitney Biennial 2008 have to do with theoretical physics? According to the curators more than you have ever imagined.

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