Constant Bearing
“Constant bearing, decreasing range” is the phrase used by sailors to warn of an imminent collision, much like the inevitable intersection of colors, patterns, and themes found in this combined body of work.
“Constant bearing, decreasing range” is the phrase used by sailors to warn of an imminent collision, much like the inevitable intersection of colors, patterns, and themes found in this combined body of work.
Through the irony of Sun Young Kang' working process, which is visualizing non-visuals, she tries to question this non-describable concept—the continual parallels of presence and absence, their inseparability.
In partnership with The Entertainment Software Association and the Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences, SAM is exhibiting selections from the official 2014 Into the Pixel collection. Created in 2004, and now in its 11th year, the annual ITP art exhibit honors video game artists who continue to push the interactive entertainment art form forward.
Towards A New / Old Architecture is an exhibition exploring the concept of using modern architecture as the language for additions to and renovations of the rich building stock in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
Les Diners de Gala (Gala’s Dinners) was published in 1973 and instantly became a Salvador Dalí collectible. This unique cookbook was published as a collaboration between Dalí, his wife Gala, and a secret chef.
Each of these artists painted the landscape en plein air. Their direct observations of the effects of daylight are reminiscent of the European Impressionists who were popular at the time.
The pieces in this show encompass my major subject areas: the figure, the studio-interior, chairs, and the still-life. My sensibility is autobiographical, so these pieces reflect my surroundings and experiences.
Artist Maya Schock, born in 1928, studied both dance and acting in her native Japan. After marrying American Floyd Schock and moving to Central Pennsylvania, she studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Maya converted the building at Second and Reily Streets in Harrisburg into the DŌSHI Gallery for Contemporary Art and Japanese tea shop in 1972. There, Maya exhibited and advocated for the work of contemporary Pennsylvania artists until her death in 1975.
May 13 – August 11, 2016 the Susquehanna Art Museum will present The City, a juried exhibition that challenges artists to capture the relationship between urban space and its influence on art.
Beth Galston is a Boston-based sculptor who builds architectural-scale environments based on an interest in light and the quality of space. Using delicate materials – scrim, metal mesh, resin, shadows, plants – Galston creates multilayered spaces through which viewers move and interact.
The Susquehanna Art Museum presents Luminous River by John Pfahl, on view in the main gallery Friday June 10 – Sunday September 18, 2016. This collection of photographs documents the course of the 464 mile long Susquehanna River from its origins in Cooperstown, New York and Carrolltown, Pennsylvania to its mouth at the Chesapeake Bay.
Después de la Frontera / After the Border is a bilingual group exhibition that honors the stories of recent unaccompanied immigrant youth, families, and young adults who fled their homes in Central America.
If life as we know it were to come to a sudden stop, what would archeologists find decades from now? "Future Fossils" presents a possible view into that frozen moment in time and culture.
Ai-Wen Wu Kratz creates vibrant, calculated paintings that are influenced by theatre, classical music and dance. Kratz is interested in the spirituality and emotion that all art forms can convey.
Lou Schellenberg invites viewers to respond to patterns of habitat and change in small towns, suburbs, and rural communities and the human story behind every dwelling and built boundary.
These narrative quilted swing coats by artist Patricia A. Montgomery celebrate under-recognized women who made major contributions to the Civil Rights Movement.
If life as we know it were to come to a sudden stop, what would archeologists find decades from now? "Future Fossils" presents a possible view into that frozen moment in time and culture.
Ai-Wen Wu Kratz creates vibrant, calculated paintings that are influenced by theatre, classical music and dance. Kratz is interested in the spirituality and emotion that all art forms can convey.
Lou Schellenberg invites viewers to respond to patterns of habitat and change in small towns, suburbs, and rural communities and the human story behind every dwelling and built boundary.
These narrative quilted swing coats by artist Patricia A. Montgomery celebrate under-recognized women who made major contributions to the Civil Rights Movement.
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