Monday, January 21, 2013

Jason Green: Past and Present, Exhibition at Houghton College Ortlip Gallery, January 15 - March 7

Jason Green






Jason Green: Past and Present 
January 15 - March 7
Artist's talk - February 23 at 7:30 pm

Exhibition features sculptural ceramic tiles from artist Jason Green. He produces his sculptural tile by hand pressing clay into plaster and wood molds that are made using modular components of his own design.  His work and process embrace the polarities of interior and exterior, fluid and static, fragment and whole. Green's work is both nationally and internationally exhibited and currently teaches at Alfred University.



Ortlip Gallery
Houghton College
One Willard Avenue
Houghton, New York 14744
Phone: 585-567-9393 

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Walter McConnell , "NEW THEORIES" Solo Exhibition at Cross Mackenzie Gallery, DC. Jan-Feb 2013

Walter McConnell , "NEW THEORIES" Solo Exhibition


Walter McConnell , "NEW THEORIES" Solo Exhibition
January 11th through February 27th 2013.
Opening Reception for the Artist January 11th 6-8pm
Artist Talk & Closing Reception February 27th 6-8


From the Cross Mackenzie Gallery Website:

Cross MacKenzie Gallery is proud to present an exhibition of new ceramic sculpture by acclaimed sculptor Walter McConnell. The artist will create an original work from his extraordinary stacked porcelain series, "The Theory of Everything" in our gallery. Hundreds of individual pieces of slip cast and glazed porcelain; faux-Ming vases, kitschy figurines, Disney dwarves and grandma's collectibles — form his now iconic stupa-like forms — this time in evocative, if somewhat sinister, hues. The new hauntingly dark work is comprised of black, metallic charcoal and burnt umber elements with McConnell's signature crystalline glazes bursting across the surfaces, creating a rich patina of contrasts and baroque excesses. The clash of cultures is intentional as the artist presents the viewer with multiple hidden messages embedded in the juxtapositions. McConnell's extravagant floor-to-ceiling ceramic creations become greater than the sum of their parts. The works culminate in a pyramidal architectural form aptly described in a Washington Post art review, "McConnell's artistic sensibility transforms western pop cultural waste into an eastern aesthetic worthy of worship".