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Weekend in New York | Jewish Arts: Loosen Your Borscht Belt and Raise Your Highbrows The city?s Jewish population defies definition, from secular to Orthodox, from the Upper West Side to Borough Park, from Ashkenazi to Sephardic. The art scene is hardly less diverse.
Victor Christ-Janer, Modernist Architect, Dies at 92 Mr. Christ-Janer was a member of a group of influential architects who built Modernist homes and offices in New Canaan, Conn.
Leighann Hill
Here's Looking at You - to view a larger copy of image plus go over the newest research on this Leighann Hill gallerie art poster, carry on through the artist designation atop the tiny photo. There is more buying, frame and print proportion information for this fine artwork. Leighann Hill has many more remarkable wall pictures in addition to "Here's Looking at You", review the artists store for additional museum art prints. Don Li-Leger
Passage to India - to look at a full size photo of this print and also be given more refined knowledge about this Don Li-Leger wall image , click the artists title on top of the reduced copy. You can also peruse buying, safe framing methods and width and height hints for this artworks. Don Li-Leger has many other top notch artist giclees in addition to "Passage to India", look at the artists inventory for more artists giclees. Art in the Garden (Fri, May 16) 10:00 AM-5:00 PM,
Tower Hill Botanic Garden: Milton Gallery, Stoddard Center, 11 French Drive, Boylston, MA
The first exhibit in Tower Hill Botanic Garden's "Art in the Garden" 2008 Exhibition Series opens on Tuesday, May 13 with the hauntingly beautiful photographs taken by Dominick Marcigliano, and the sensually detailed sculptures created by Arlene Fins.
Dominick Marcigliano is a photographer whose current portfolio features photographs of art and architecture; or as the artist terms it "objects people see everyday but may not notice." His work has been exhibited at ArtsWorcester and other venues. Marcigliano is the Executive Director of the East Side Community Development Corporation in Worcester, and a past recipient of the Greater Worcester Community Foundation's Renaissance Award.
Complementing the photographic essay is the work of Arlene Fins, a sculptor whose the hand-wrought bronze figures are emotive masterpieces. Fins, a resident of Acton, Mass., has an extensive education in the arts, including a long career as an illustrator and a degree in Theater Arts & Music. "I love to create sculptures that express something of the human condition," says Fins, "For me, each piece is an exploration of human energy, character, and feelings...I want to find the right gesture, tilt of the head, facial expression that will reveal what person the sculpture was meant to be." Her work has been exhibited at the DeCordova Museum, the Cape Cod Art Association National Exhibition, the New England Sculptors Association, and many other venues.
Cost: Included with admission; $10 Adults, $7 Seniors, $5 Youth, Free to children under 6
Through Sunday, Jun 22.
005 AngloMania: Tradition and Transgression in British Fashion Punk legend John Rotten provides commentary on the evolution of British fashion, relating fashion of necessity to social structures and the bravado of the individual. A Baghdad Rescue Operation
How one Navy officer whisked Iraqi art out
of the country—and into Soho. Inside Art: Met?s Nautical Mural Has a Return Voyage A grand Art Deco mural is made whole for the first time since the Normandie sank.
011 Americans in Paris, 1860?1900 The actor Charles Turner reads amusing descriptions of Parisian daily life by Henry Ossawa Tanner (1859?1937), the first African American artist to achieve international acclaim. |