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IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
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REGARDING
ARCADIA: RURAL VIEWPOINTS by ANGELA A'COURT, MARIA PASSAROTTI
and JAMES ISHERWOOD
May
8 - June 12, 2008
@ Susan Eley Fine Art
46
West 90th Street - Floor 2 | New York NY 10024
917.952.7641
Gallery Hours: Monday-Friday by appointment
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CONTACT:
Susan Eley: 917.952.7641
susie@susaneley.com
| www.susaneley.com |
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Maria
Passarotti
(American)
Apparition, 2006
chromogenic print
28.25 x 28.25 inches |
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James
Isherwood
(American)
Barn, 2007
acrylic on panel
32 x 24 inches |
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Angela
A'Court
(British,
b. 1961)
Red Jug, 2007
soft paster on paper
23 x 31 inches |
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Arcadia
is a place, either real or imagined,
where a person retreats to find solace, comfort
and beauty
Arcadia is the name for an ancient region of
Greece, where people lived in relative isolation
from civilization. Because of this, Arcadians
were said to have lived the quintessentially
pastoral life. The modern definition of Arcadia
is metaphorical: that of a place people yearn
to go to find solace, comfort and beauty. We
all have our Arcadias that we retreat to in
our imagination or in reality.
This exhibition features visual expressions
of Arcadian moments in the country side, in
parks or in rural environments, captured by
artists working in three diverse media--color
prints, soft pastels and acrylics. Angela
A'Court depicts scenes she observes
of people, objects, birds and animals, rendered
through a painstaking process of layering pastel
colors to find moments of near musical harmony
and compositional balance. James Isherwood
appropriates the proverbial barn for his current
work, exploring its angles, simple geometry
and weight, meshed with a complex underpinning
of a textured and abstracted landscape. Maria
Passarotti’s large color prints
show seemingly happened-upon scenes of mythic
forests, waterfalls and western frontier towns.
However, there is another narrative revealed
as you look deeper: the forest is a manicured
sculpture garden, the gushing waterfall, a curated
view for tourists taken from a roadside platform
and the frontier town a stage set, giving an
ironic twist to the notion of idealistic beauty.
for
more information and to see more works by the
artists: click
here
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