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Choose another day to see event’s scheduled for that day.
at Cherry & Webb Gallery on Weekdays from 03/25/2010 to 04/26/2010 – 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Kevin Arruda. sculpture, entrance lobby
Adam Furtado, paintings, main lobby
at Narrows Center for the Arts on Every Wednesday through Saturday from 03/17/2010 to 04/17/2010 – 12:00 PM to 5:00 PM
Two Massachusetts artists present an exhibition that demonstrates the potential of structure-based freedom. Catherine Carter’s web-like networks, extruded as fluid paint through squeeze-bottles and rooted in the configurations of hand-writing, imply energetic movement and impressionistic forms. Jeanne Williamson’s grid-based compositions derive from architectural elements – both in spirit, as the artist is inspired by views of building facades under construction, and literally, as she uses lengths of orange construction fencing as a template to print through. Together, their work goes beyond its organized framework with twisting lines, bouncing shapes and glowing colors.
www.JeanneWilliamson.com
www.CatherineCarterArt.com
Image above:
Left: Catherine Carter, “Wave 3,” acrylic on paper, 30” x 22”, 2009.
Right: Jeanne Williamson, “Orange Construction Fence Series #70,” mixed media on fabric, 43” x 33.5", 2009.
at Grimshaw-Gudewicz Gallery on Every day but Sunday from 03/11/2010 to 04/07/2010
featuring work by Cynthia Swanson, Sand T, Hannah Verlin
All forms of art-making embrace the word linear – it is an essential element of visual language. Words such as logic, perception, and thinking seem to be a perfect mate to our notions of line. Terms like value, shape, form, edge, and contour provide the structure through which we can evaluate and interpret art forms and are elemental to our understanding of line.
at Narrows Center for the Arts on Every Wednesday through Saturday from 03/03/2010 to 04/18/2010 – 12:00 PM to 5:00 PM
About the photographs:
The creation of this series of photographs began ( innocently-enough ) with a picture of cut daffodils, just beginning to open, in a vase in the photographer’s kitchen. A week later, the fading bouquet was bundled with an elastic bow and tossed out into the cold on a glass-topped patio table. As the flowers deteriorated, more pictures were made as time, light, and weather conditions affected the daffodils over the next six weeks, resulting an a wide variety of images.
About the photographer:
Jack Foley, 55, grew up in North Andover, Massachusetts. At age six, he was given an old box camera as a toy, and has been playing with cameras ever since. He is a staff photographer for The Herald News, a daily newspaper in Fall River, Massachusetts. He has been a newspaper photographer for more than 30 years. He and his wife, D.J., live in Warwick, R.I.