Wura-Natasha Ogunji-2011
This exhibit will feature paintings and videos based on performances by the artist. Ogunji uses physical actions of the body to explore her connections to place, land, history and memory.… Read More »
This exhibit will feature paintings and videos based on performances by the artist. Ogunji uses physical actions of the body to explore her connections to place, land, history and memory.… Read More »
Join us for a conversation with three area psychotherapists: Gemma Marangoni Ainslie PH.D., ABPP, Mary Holman, MA, LPC, and Naomi Freireich, LCSW. By creating magically gorgeous paintings Virginia Yount… Read More »
Austin based artist Virginia Yount presents paintings, collages, and sculptures that depict a near-future society of hoarders, shut-ins and escapists. The inhabitants of this world are ominously not present, or… Read More »
Austin-based artist and Fulbright scholar Erin Curtis presents a solo exhibition of paintings, drawings, and sculptures depicting overlapping visions of architectural history, interior decoration, and obsessive patterning. Large lush paintings,… Read More »
This is the true story of what happens when five artists get together every week to watch Reality TV. As the artists absorb the ritualistic dazzle of So You Think… Read More »
Orange, blue, every shade of brown, bright yellow, light purple. Although you can make out cavernous tourist destinations in the paintings, color is the real subject of Retreat, an exhibition… Read More »
In this multi-media exhibition, Fauerso explores the world of animation. Her captivating frame-by-frame paintings come alive as they move across the screen and interact with each other. Influenced by her… Read More »
Women & Their Work is pleased to present Houston artist, Angela Fraleigh in her solo exhibit titled there i still my thirst. Fraleigh creates large-scale, sumptuously painted oils on panel… Read More »
Women & Their Work is pleased to present a series of silverpoint drawings and watercolor painting by Liz Ward in her solo exhibit titled Aqueous. James Housefield, in his essay… Read More »