Newsletter:MesArt Artist:Open Studio Artists
From Content
Revision as of 05:00, 10 February 2008 Tatiana Lyskova (Talk | contribs) ← Previous diff |
Revision as of 05:54, 10 February 2008 Tatiana Lyskova (Talk | contribs) Next diff → |
||
Line 53: | Line 53: | ||
{| border=0 style="border: 0px" cellpadding=3 | {| border=0 style="border: 0px" cellpadding=3 | ||
<div class=accent> | <div class=accent> | ||
- | ==== | + | New Art book of Terry Horrigan.<br> |
- | [[Image:Art wimage.gif|170 px|http://www.marketstreetgallery.com/exhibition.html]] | + | Calligraphy by Ann Miller<br> |
+ | [[Image:Art aeolian.Island.jpg|170 px|http://www.mesart.com/artworks.jsp?artist=388 More Info]]<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Aeolian Island was inspired by Beaufort's and Petersen's Scales: written descriptions of the force of the wind as understood in land and marine weather warnings (miles per hour or mean speed in knots). | ||
+ | |||
|} | |} | ||
</div> | </div> |
Revision as of 05:54, 10 February 2008
RECEPTION: Friday, February 15th, 6 PM - 9 PMMarket Street Gallery: 1554 Market Street, San Francisco Market Street Gallery proudly announces the opening of "An African Diaspora-A Trilogy" featuring three Bay Area African American artists: Rae Louise Hayward, James Gayles and TheArthur Wright. Their works represent a wide range of African-based themes. Rae Louise Hayward, a beloved member of the East Bay arts community died on January 3, 2008. Ms. Hayward co-founded "The Art of Living Black," an event and venue held annually during Black History Month for African American artists at the Richmond Arts Center. "This exhibit, though planned before her passing, is also in memoriam to a great friend and artist, Rae Louise Hayward. Her work is beautiful...but she created a more wondrous thing in 'The Art of Living Black', an event that has grown and brought in a growing number of artists of African descent who will live, along with their progeny, here in America, forever. She is sorely missed..." said TheArthur Wright. This exhibit showcases thoughtful, bold, colorful, expressive works of three artists whose very different techniques are inextricably linked by their heritage and shaped by their individual experiences in the African Diaspora. |
|