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Fine Arts

  • Kidspace Exhibit: Devorah Sperber at Mass MoCA

    The Last Supper Recreated in 20,736 Spools of Thread

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 12th, 2008

    Using a computer program Devorah Sperber reduces details of Old Masters into a pattern of individual pixels. These are then combined in grids made of spools of thread. The results prove to be visually delightful as well as educational.

  • Mary Coble Takes the Pulse

    Let It Bleed

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 08th, 2008

    During the recent Pulse New York art fair Mary Coble presented a live, two day event, in which onlookers viewed the inkless tattooing of hate words on her body.

  • Dark Fair at the Swiss Institute

    Things That Go Bump in the Night

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 06th, 2008

    As its contribution for the intense weekend of New York Art Fairs it was strictly lights out at the Swiss Institute. Exhibitors were challenged to find novel ways to illuminate their booths with an emphasis on the dark arts in every sense.

  • Pulse New York

    Be Still Dear Art

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 06th, 2008

    Also, like the Armory Show, located in a Pier along the Hudson, Pulse New York is now well established with some 70 international art dealers. Overall it proved to be more edgy and interesting than the mainstream Armory Show.

  • Dmitri Cavander at MPG Contemporary

    Views of San Francisco

    By: Shawn Hill - Apr 06th, 2008

    Ex-Somerville painter imports new realist visions from the other coast back to the old hometown.

  • The New York Art Fairs: Far As the Eye Can See

    The Armory Show NYC, Pulse, Scope, Volta NY, Red Dot, Bridge, New York Art, Dark Fair

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 05th, 2008

    During a week in New York we averaged eight to ten hours a day of touring the many art fairs and museums. It was both exhilerating and exhausting.

  • Cai Guo-Qiang at the Guggenheim

    Snap, Crackle, and Pop

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 03rd, 2008

    Few artists have ever more thoroughly used to full and dramatic impact the daunting vortex of the Guggenheim Museum. In that sense alone the installation of work by Cai Guo-Qiang is a spectacular triumph. Berkshire residents will recalls his earlier exhibition at Mass MoCA.

  • Eclipse Mill Gallery Offers a Full Range of North Adams Based Exhibitions

    Off the Wall, Sculpture and Craft Next Up on June 27

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 19th, 2008

    The 2008 season of the artist run Eclipse Mill Gallery in North Adams opens on May 23 with an open invitation for regional artists to participate in the Berkshire Salon.

  • Holographer Harriet Casdin-Silver Was 83

    Homage to a Friend – Artist – and Mensch

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Mar 14th, 2008

    Harriet Casdin-Silver, who died at 83, is widely viewed as one of the pioneers, and leading exponent, in the field of fine art Holography. This is a tribute from a friend, and colleague, of more than thirty years.

  • Greylock Arts Collaborative Net Art Exhibit Provides Opportunities For Local Artists

    Partnership Between Greylock Arts, Turbulence, and MCLA Gallery 51

    By: Matthew Belanger - Mar 08th, 2008

    Over the past several months, Greylock Arts, in Adams, MCLA Gallery 51 (North Adams) and Turbulence (a Net Art organization) have been working together to bring forward a series of exciting events, exhibitions, and opportunities to Northern Berkshire County.

  • Tony Vevers, Provincetown Artist, 1926-2008

    Figurative Painter Was a Member of the Legendary Sun Gallery

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 04th, 2008

    Tony Vevers was a much beloved and widely honored member of the Provincetown arts community. He showed with the legendary Sun Gallery as well as Longpoint Gallery. Vevers also wrote on art and organized many exhibitions for the Provincetown Art Association and Museum.

  • Conference on the Black Atlantic at the Clark

    Participants Include Artists in Williams College Museum of Art Exhibition

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 02nd, 2008

    For the Spring semester the Williams College Museum of Art has organized several exhibitions and related events focused on African, African American art and the African Diaspora involving the Middle Passage of the Black Atlantic.

  • Tom Krens Resigns from the Guggenheim

    A Remarkable Career That Started In the Berkshires

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 28th, 2008

    In July it will be 20 years since Tom Krens left the Williams College Museum of Art to become director of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. His resignation was announced today. He has changed forever the mandate for major museums and how they are managed.

  • Rachel Perry Welty at Barbara Krakow Gallery

    Consumerism in Miniature

    By: Shawn Hill - Feb 24th, 2008

    Imagine if Marcel Duchamp was more fascinated by the kitchen cabinets than the chessboard. Rachel Perry Welty's assisted readymades exist in the domestic sphere.In this work Dada/ Pop invades the kitchen.

  • The Boston Athenaeum: All Shook Up

    Photographs by Thomas Kellner

    By: Erica H. Adams - Feb 18th, 2008

    All Shook Up is an exhibition of photographs deconstructing the Boston Athenaeum by German artist in residence Thomas Kellner known for photographing the world's monuments.

  • Yee Hah: Remington Opens at the Clark

    Y'All Come Back

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 17th, 2008

    Frederick Remington, one of the artists collected by Francine and Sterling Clark, proved to be the poster boy for Manifest Destiny and a favorite artist of presidents, particulary Republicans. But it was great fun and the Texas two step during the gala opening of the Remington exhibition at the Clark Art Instiute.

  • Chinese Themed Exhibition for Mass MoCA

    Eastern Standards: Western Artists in China

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 05th, 2008

    In the past few years Mass MoCA has presented major installations by the leading Chinese artists, Cai Guo Qiang and Huang Yong Ping. The current exhibition presents a diverse group of Western artists inspired by visits to China and encounters with a rapidly changing economy and culture.

  • The Awakening of Henry Schwartz

    Gallery NAGA to Exhibit the Artist's Last Paintings

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 26th, 2008

    In 1990 Henry Schwartz was given a retrospective by the Fuller Museum of Art. This provoked a severe depression, ending his activity as an artist, from which he only recently has emerged. Gallery Naga is showing some of the last finished works he created in 1991. It is being described as one of the major gallery events of the season.

  • Philippe de Montebello: Museums Why Should We Care

    Resigning Met Director Reveals Stress of Returning Antiquities

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 24th, 2008

    Philippe de Montebello, the retiring director of New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art charmed and captivated a capacity audience at the Clark Art Museum.

  • Todd Holoubek at Greylock Arts

    Hangin Out in Adams

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 20th, 2008

    Junk or mobile sculpture? That's for visitors to decide when viewing the site specific work of Todd Holoubek at the edgy Greylock Arts in the Berkshires.

  • Stephen D. Paine Scholarship Exhibition at New England School of Art & Design

    Honoring Boston's Student Artists

    By: James Manning - Jan 19th, 2008

    For the third year the New England School of Art & Design is hosting the annual exhibition of winners and finalists of the Stephen D. Paine Awards named in memory of a prominent Boston collector and supporter of emerging artists. The Paine Awards are organized by the Boston Art Dealers Association (BADA)

  • Greylock Arts Features The Art of Todd Holoubek

    In Holoubek's World Time Is For The Cows and Everybody Wins

    By: Matthew Belanger - Jan 16th, 2008

    Co-Director of Greylock Arts, Matthew Belanger, gives a tour of artist Todd Holoubek's work. Holoubek playfully experiments with human perceptions and interactions creating an exhibit that generates an image of the artist's own mind at work.

  • Met Director Philippe de Montebello to Lecture at the Clark

    This Week He Announced Plans to Retire After 30 Years

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 10th, 2008

    Philippe de Montbello joined the Metropolitan Museum of Art while still a graduate student in 1963. Except for a hiatus of four years as Director of the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston he spent his entire career at the Met and has been its director since 1977. This week he announced plans to retire.

  • The Writer's Brush at Pierre Menard Gallery

    Show of Famous Writers Who Paint in Harvard Square

    By: Shawn Hill - Jan 08th, 2008

    This salon-style show is full of surprising works on paper by beloved writers from the 19th century to last year, including Victor Hugo, Annie Proulx, Charles Bukowski and William Burroughs

  • Williams College Museum of Art: 2008

    Felix Gonzalez-Torres, William Kentridge, Julie Mehretu, Frank Jackson, Okwui Enwezor in Schedule of Exhibitions and Events

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 02nd, 2008

    There is an emphais on aspects on Hispanic, African American and African art and culture in the Spring semester exhibitions and programming for the Williams College Museum of Art.

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