Checkmate will transform sTudio 6 gallery into a symmetrical world of fantasy and fun. Just like the game of chess where each game piece has its own method of moving across the board, each artist participating in this showcase expresses their own technique and uniqueness through painting or photography. In sTudio 7 gallery, patrons will enter into a season of delight. Spring into Flowers will bring the outdoor garden indoors. Budding blossoms, electrifying colors; experience the spectacular view of a variety of flowers that we like to call “flower art”.
Opening reception May 13. Artists: Natalie Jeremijenko and xClinic, Mary Miss, Rirkrit Tiravanija, and George Trakas. Co-organized with The Noguchi Museum and curated by Amy Smith-Stewart.
The LIC Arts Open is back for more. Putting Queens on the cultural map for a second year in a row, the festival takes over Long Island City and brings with it the new and noteworthy. We’ve got the cultural fix you’ve been looking for.
The photography of Audrey Gottlieb will be on exhibit in the Visitor & Administration Building Gallery of the Queens Botanical Garden. Artist’s Talk May 19.
Cartoons come to life at the New York Hall of Science during Animation, a 6,000-square-foot exhibition featuring characters from the Cartoon Network. The exhibition explores animation from concept to finished product — from storyboarding, character design, and drawing techniques to movement, timing, filming and sound. Larger-than-life graphics of popular Cartoon Network characters provide a colorful backdrop to the exhibition, which also explores the history of animation and features a screening room and a cartoon museum.
Featuring the work of Puerto Rican artist Edwin Cadiz. Reception April 21 at 2 p.m.
Opening Reception: April 22, 5-7 pm. Bollinger made significant waves in the late 1960s, challenging the limits of sculpture and expanding thought regarding concept, materiality, and commodity. His works were made from primarily pre-fabricated industrial supplies, such as sawhorses, oil drums, rubber tubing and cyclone fence. Focusing on the gesture of construction and the physical limits of material, Bollinger’s work addressed ideas of gravity, balance and material nature. According to him his interests lay not ‘in the aesthetics of form but in the fact of form’. He frequently used water for as a material, transforming it into something sculptural with mass and form as it fills a plastic hose or a steel barrel. Bollinger summed up his attitude to the making of his work: ‘It is all very easy to execute, does not exist until it has been executed, ceases to exist when it has been taken down.’
Yegam Art Space is pleased to present Eco Friendly Art Project : Terra-fic Garden, new and recent workst of three artists, Jongil Ma, Youngmi Kim and Sisun Song.The show focuses on the social functions of art and how art should take a role in a social and cultural way for the public. The opening reception will take place on April 28th Saturday from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
The installation Industry/Cinema is a split-screen work that juxtaposes images from industrial films and popular films made between 1896 and 1991. With specialized dual-channel headphones, visitors are able to toggle between the soundtracks, creating an ever-changing interplay between sound and image as they take an illuminating journey through film history.
Solo exhibition of works by Mark Tribe, video and print artist and performer, featuring photographs of lush landscapes found in contemporary video games and a video of a militia training ground in Upstate New York. 6 pm – 9 pm opening reception. 12 pm – 6 pm.
Checkmate will transform sTudio 6 gallery into a symmetrical world of fantasy and fun. Just like the game of chess where each game piece has its own method of moving across the board, each artist participating in this showcase expresses their own technique and uniqueness through painting or photography. In sTudio 7 gallery, patrons will enter into a season of delight. Spring into Flowers will bring the outdoor garden indoors. Budding blossoms, electrifying colors; experience the spectacular view of a variety of flowers that we like to call “flower art”.
Opening reception May 13. Artists: Natalie Jeremijenko and xClinic, Mary Miss, Rirkrit Tiravanija, and George Trakas. Co-organized with The Noguchi Museum and curated by Amy Smith-Stewart.
The photography of Audrey Gottlieb will be on exhibit in the Visitor & Administration Building Gallery of the Queens Botanical Garden. Artist’s Talk May 19.
The LIC Arts Open is back for more. Putting Queens on the cultural map for a second year in a row, the festival takes over Long Island City and brings with it the new and noteworthy. We’ve got the cultural fix you’ve been looking for.
Cartoons come to life at the New York Hall of Science during Animation, a 6,000-square-foot exhibition featuring characters from the Cartoon Network. The exhibition explores animation from concept to finished product — from storyboarding, character design, and drawing techniques to movement, timing, filming and sound. Larger-than-life graphics of popular Cartoon Network characters provide a colorful backdrop to the exhibition, which also explores the history of animation and features a screening room and a cartoon museum.
Featuring the work of Puerto Rican artist Edwin Cadiz. Reception April 21 at 2 p.m.
Opening Reception: April 22, 5-7 pm. Bollinger made significant waves in the late 1960s, challenging the limits of sculpture and expanding thought regarding concept, materiality, and commodity. His works were made from primarily pre-fabricated industrial supplies, such as sawhorses, oil drums, rubber tubing and cyclone fence. Focusing on the gesture of construction and the physical limits of material, Bollinger’s work addressed ideas of gravity, balance and material nature. According to him his interests lay not ‘in the aesthetics of form but in the fact of form’. He frequently used water for as a material, transforming it into something sculptural with mass and form as it fills a plastic hose or a steel barrel. Bollinger summed up his attitude to the making of his work: ‘It is all very easy to execute, does not exist until it has been executed, ceases to exist when it has been taken down.’
Yegam Art Space is pleased to present Eco Friendly Art Project : Terra-fic Garden, new and recent workst of three artists, Jongil Ma, Youngmi Kim and Sisun Song.The show focuses on the social functions of art and how art should take a role in a social and cultural way for the public. The opening reception will take place on April 28th Saturday from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
The installation Industry/Cinema is a split-screen work that juxtaposes images from industrial films and popular films made between 1896 and 1991. With specialized dual-channel headphones, visitors are able to toggle between the soundtracks, creating an ever-changing interplay between sound and image as they take an illuminating journey through film history.
Solo exhibition of works by Mark Tribe, video and print artist and performer, featuring photographs of lush landscapes found in contemporary video games and a video of a militia training ground in Upstate New York. 6 pm – 9 pm opening reception. 12 pm – 6 pm.
Checkmate will transform sTudio 6 gallery into a symmetrical world of fantasy and fun. Just like the game of chess where each game piece has its own method of moving across the board, each artist participating in this showcase expresses their own technique and uniqueness through painting or photography. In sTudio 7 gallery, patrons will enter into a season of delight. Spring into Flowers will bring the outdoor garden indoors. Budding blossoms, electrifying colors; experience the spectacular view of a variety of flowers that we like to call “flower art”.
Opening reception May 13. Artists: Natalie Jeremijenko and xClinic, Mary Miss, Rirkrit Tiravanija, and George Trakas. Co-organized with The Noguchi Museum and curated by Amy Smith-Stewart.
The photography of Audrey Gottlieb will be on exhibit in the Visitor & Administration Building Gallery of the Queens Botanical Garden. Artist’s Talk May 19.
The LIC Arts Open is back for more. Putting Queens on the cultural map for a second year in a row, the festival takes over Long Island City and brings with it the new and noteworthy. We’ve got the cultural fix you’ve been looking for.
Cartoons come to life at the New York Hall of Science during Animation, a 6,000-square-foot exhibition featuring characters from the Cartoon Network. The exhibition explores animation from concept to finished product — from storyboarding, character design, and drawing techniques to movement, timing, filming and sound. Larger-than-life graphics of popular Cartoon Network characters provide a colorful backdrop to the exhibition, which also explores the history of animation and features a screening room and a cartoon museum.
Featuring the work of Puerto Rican artist Edwin Cadiz. Reception April 21 at 2 p.m.
Opening Reception: April 22, 5-7 pm. Bollinger made significant waves in the late 1960s, challenging the limits of sculpture and expanding thought regarding concept, materiality, and commodity. His works were made from primarily pre-fabricated industrial supplies, such as sawhorses, oil drums, rubber tubing and cyclone fence. Focusing on the gesture of construction and the physical limits of material, Bollinger’s work addressed ideas of gravity, balance and material nature. According to him his interests lay not ‘in the aesthetics of form but in the fact of form’. He frequently used water for as a material, transforming it into something sculptural with mass and form as it fills a plastic hose or a steel barrel. Bollinger summed up his attitude to the making of his work: ‘It is all very easy to execute, does not exist until it has been executed, ceases to exist when it has been taken down.’
Yegam Art Space is pleased to present Eco Friendly Art Project : Terra-fic Garden, new and recent workst of three artists, Jongil Ma, Youngmi Kim and Sisun Song.The show focuses on the social functions of art and how art should take a role in a social and cultural way for the public. The opening reception will take place on April 28th Saturday from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
The installation Industry/Cinema is a split-screen work that juxtaposes images from industrial films and popular films made between 1896 and 1991. With specialized dual-channel headphones, visitors are able to toggle between the soundtracks, creating an ever-changing interplay between sound and image as they take an illuminating journey through film history.
Come check out art from Flatbush’s growing community of artists in some of the neighborhood’s finest homes! noon – 6 pm.