Throughout the 20th century, artists absorbed new ideas in philosophy, politics, and aesthetics, spurred in part by European-American cultural exchange and giving rise to what we call “modern art.”
Especially Terrific, the title of Pat Perry’s most recent body of work, is multivalent. The phrase invokes both the exceptional and also the grim, which the Detroit-based artist conjures as he captures singular moments on canvas.
Andrew Wyeth wrote of his painitngs, "I search for the realness, the real feeling of a subject, all the texture around it... I always want to see the third dimension of something... I want to come alive with the object."
As part of the exhibition The Art of the Skateboard on view at the Fort Wayne Museum of Art, Ken Harman of Hashimotoo Contemporary has co-curated Inclusive - Highlighting Emerging Underground Skaters and Artists.
Early last week, Bard Graduate Center launched an online exhibition entitled Majolica Mania: Transatlantic Pottery in England and the United States, 1850–1915.
The lifesized, realistic portraits crafted by Joel Daniel Phillips currently inhabit the Fort Wayne Museum of Art in the new exhibition “Charcoal Testament.”
The Fort Wayne Museum of Art announced a major gift to its permanent collection, over 200 paintings and more than 500 prints from the estate of internationally-acclaimed American artist David Shapiro.
The first show of the Fall season at Nancy Hoffman Gallery, entitled “American Exodus,” new oil paintings and watercolors by Hung Liu, opens on September 8 and continues through October 22.
Opening July 11th, the Fort Wayne Museum of Art will host Invisible College, a group exhibition co-curated by Andrew and Shawn Hosner of Los Angeles’ Thinkspace Gallery, and Josef Zimmerman of the Fort Wayne Museum of Art.