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Exhibitions - Openings and events around the region

Art New England's Exhibition Listingsare an easy, inexpensive, and effective way to highlight your exhibitions, artists, and openings. Our basic 85 word listing is $100 and the contracted rate it $540 per year (six issues). Gain even more exposure by adding an image to your listing for an additional $90. Listing will appear in Art New England magazine and online at www.artnewengland.com. Please include all information you wish to appear in the magazine by typing ad copy below. The limit is 85 words per listing unless otherwise specified.
Connecticut | Maine | Massachusetts | New Hampshire | New York | Rhode Island | Vermont


Connecticut Exhibition Listings

Albert Schweitzer Institute
at Quinnipiac University

275 Mount Carmel Ave.
Hamden, CT
(203) 582-3144
www.quinnipiac.edu/artexhibit.xml
M–F 9–5
Albert Schweitzer Institute (660 New Road, corner of Mount Carmel): September 23–October 14: Images of Peace: A national juried art exhibition in conjunction with the fiftieth anniversary of Albert Schweitzer’s call for nuclear disarmament. Works explore themes of nuclear disarmament, world peace, and Schweitzer’s life and work. The Albert Schweitzer Institute is a nonprofit organization that conducts U.S. and international programs linking education, ethics, and voluntarism. Opening reception: September 23, 11–1 p.m.

Eo Art Lab
69 Main St.
Chester, CT
(860) 526-4833
www.eoartlab.com
T–Sa 10–9, Su 12–9
August 1–28: Life Lines: Mixed media paintings by Massachusetts artist Thaddeus Beal. Opening reception and artist’s talk: August 10, 6–9 p.m. September 1–30: Rhythmic Relativism: Elizabeth Gourlay. Opening reception and artist’s talk: September 7, 6–9 p.m. Accompanying works in each show by Charlie Goodwin, Sarah Gustafson, Vaune Hatch, Janet Lage, Willie Little, Mitch Lyons, Pamela Marks, John Matt, Kelly Jean Ohl, Evelyn Rydz, Erin Schultz, and Thomas Stavovy.

The Flinn Gallery at Greenwich Library
101 West Putnam Avenue, 2nd Floor
Greenwich, CT
(203) 622-7947
www.flinngallery.com
M-W 10 -5, Th 10-8, F-Sat 10-5, Sun 1-5

The Gallery of Contemporary Art at Sacred Heart University
5151 Park Avenue
Fairfield, CT
(203) 365-7650
www.artgallery.sacredheart.edu
gevass@sacredheart.edu
M -Th 12 -5, Sun 12 -4

Closed in August
September 16–November 4: The Elements: Air. The third segment in a series exploring our world through earth, air, water, and fire.Works that use or depict air and its movement: air currents, hurricanes, tornadoes, wings, and breath. Artists include: June Ahrens, Susan Goethal Campbell, Elijah Gowin, Kysa Johnson, Ned Kahn, Mary Magsamen and Stephan Hillerbrand, David Maxim, Jaanika Perna, Tim Prentice, Lucy Sander Sceery, Charlie Varley, Paul Villinski, and more. Opening reception with live jazz: September 16, 1–3:30 p.m.

John Slade Ely House
Center for Contemporary Art
51 Trumbull Street
New Haven, CT
(203) 624-8055
www.elyhouse.org
W-F 11-4, Sat-Sun 2-5

Saint Joseph College Art Gallery
1678 Asylum Ave.
West Hartford, CT
(860) 231-5399
www.sjc.edu/artgallery
T, W, F, Sa 11–4, Th 11–7, Su 1–4
September 29–December 19: 70 Years Collecting Art / 75 Years Educating Women: A Saint Joseph College Anniversary Exhibition. Highlights from the permanent collection, recent acquisitions, promised gifts, and loans from members of the college community. Opening reception: September 28, 6–7:30 p.m.

Silvermine Guild Arts Center
1037 Silvermine Road
New Canaan, CT
(203) 966-5617
www.silvermineart.org
guild@silvermineart.org
T–Sat 11–5, Sun 1–5

Slater Memorial Museum
108 Crescent St.
Norwich, CT
(860) 887-2506
www.norwichfreeacademy.com
Tu–F 9–4, Sa–Su 1–4

Tremaine Gallery at The Hotchkiss School
11 Interlaken Road
Box 800
Lakeville, CT
(860) 435-2591
www.hotchkiss.org
M-Sat 10–4, Sun 12–4
September 4–October 27: The Connecticut Paintings of Ellen Emmet Rand. Ellen Emmet Rand (1875–1941), an artist and resident of Salisbury, CT, and New York City, produced over eight-hundred paintings and illustrations in her fifty-year career. She supported her family after the 1929 stock market crash by painting portraits of businessmen, clergymen, scholars, and others. This exhibition of forty paintings and drawings will focus on a broad sampling of Rand's portraits of family and local residents. Jointly organized by The Salisbury Association and the Tremaine Gallery. Opening reception: September 8, 4–7 p.m.

Westport Arts Center
51 Riverside Ave.
Westport, CT
(203) 222-7070
www.westportartscenter.org
info@westportartscenter.org
M-F 10-4, Sat-Sun 12-4
September 20–October 26: Stalking Suburbia: Through photography, artists raise questions that will surely define the next generation, from environmental awareness to the mysterious narratives that occur in the seemingly staid environment of “suburbia.” Curated by Lauren Ryan. Opening: September 20, 6–8 p.m. Curator's talk: September 26, 7 p.m. November 9–December 21: Quirky: Curated by Michael Amy. This exhibition addresses “quirkiness” through contemporary abstract painting and sculpture. Opening: November 9, 6–8 p.m.



Maine Exhibition Listings

Art Gallery at the University of New England
716 Steven Ave.
Portland, ME
(207) 221-4499
www.une.edu
azill@une.edu
W, F, Sa, Su 1-4, Th 1-7

Chris Calivas at the Barn Gallery, Ogunquit Art Association.

The Barn Gallery
Ogunquit Art Association

Corner of Shore Rd. and Bourne La.
Ogunquit, ME
(207) 646-8400
www.mainegalleryguide.com
M–Sa 11–5, Su 1–5
OAAAuction Preview: August 1–3, 11–5 p.m. and August 4, 11–3 p.m. OAAArt Auction: August 4, 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.Works by OAAmembers. August 8–September 3: What’s Nude: OAA showcased artists Kim Casey and Fran Scully. Reception: August 11, 5–8 p.m. September 6–30: Realism to Abstraction: OAAshowcased artists Chris Calivas, Evelyne Harper Neill, and new members. Memorial exhibitions: Jayne Dwyer and Robert Eric Moore.

Great Works Regional Land Trust
Beach Plum Farm

610 Main St.
Ogunquit, ME
(207) 646-3604
www.gwrlt.org
info@gwrlt.org
Great Works Regional Land Trust’s 4th Annual Art for Land Auction: Preview onsite July 17–August 16, 11–3 p.m. Auction onsite August 17, 5–10 p.m. Juried art auction, chaired by DeWitt Hardy and featuring prominent regional artists. This benefit event supports land conservation in southern York County. Tickets $35 each and includes food and the most spectacular, protected view in Ogunquit. More information and opportunity for advance bidding available on Web site.

Portland Museum of Art
Seven Congress Square
Portland, ME
(207) 775-6148
www.portlandmuseumofart.org
info@portlandmuseum.org
T-Sun 10-5, F 10-9
Through October 8: Frank LloydWright and the House Beautiful.

Massachusetts Exhibition Listings
BOSTON AND THE SURROUNDING AREAS

Alpha Gallery
14 Newbury Street
Boston, MA
(617) 536-4465
www.alphagallery.com
Tu-F 10-5:30, Sa 11-5:30
Closed Saturdays in August
Through September 12: Summer Selections. September 15–October 10: Paul Sattler: New Paintings and Works on Paper.

Arden Gallery
129 Newbury Street
Boston, MA
(617) 247-0610
www.ardengallery.com
ArdenGallery@aol.com
M–Sat 11–5:30
Gallery is free and open to the public
August 1–29: Teri Malo: The artist’s oil on canvas realist paintings depict moments spent with nature observing the Atlantic Ocean and Maine’s rocky coastline. Shifting weather, tides, and atmospheric light are the main characters in her simultaneously energy-filled, yet serene portraits of the sea and its shores. Opening reception: August 3, 5–7 p.m. September 1–29: Paul Béliveau: A new exhibition featuring vibrant acrylic on canvas paintings, which depict close-up views of antique novels, thick art monographs, and historical literature. Opening reception: September 7, 5–7 p.m.

The Art Institute of Boston at Lesley University
Gallery at Porter Exchange
1815 Mass. Ave.
Cambridge, MA
(617) 585-6656
www.aiboston.edu
Tu-F 12-8, Sa-Su 12-5
August 31–October 6: Same Sex America: A Film by Henry Corra & Charlene Rule. Photographs by Amber Davis Tourlentes. Filmmaker Henry Corra with editor Charlene Rule weave the stories of seven gay and lesbian couples on their emotional journey to the altar. Boston-based photographer Amber Davis Tourlentes exhibits work from three portfolios focusing on same sex families and the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered community within Boston and its suburbs. Reception: September 6, 6–8 p.m.

ArtSpace Gallery
63 Summer St.
Maynard, MA
(978) 897-9828
www.artspacemaynard.com
artspace63@aol.com
W-Sa 11-3
September 12–October 7: ArtSpace Artists Annual Open Studios Exhibition: An exhibit of artwork by sixty studio artists at ArtSpace, Maynard Art Center, who are participating in its Annual Open Studios on October 6 and 7.

The Bernard Toale Gallery
450 Harrison Avenue
Boston, MA
(617) 482-2477
www.bernardtoalegallery.com
T–Sat 10:30–5:30
August 28–September 29: Nancy Murphy: Provisional.

Berenberg Gallery
4 Clarendon Street
Boston, MA
(617) 536-0800
www.berenberggallery.com
info@berenberggallery.com
T–Sat 11–6
September 15–November 3: Gabriel Shaffer: Animal Returns: Collage and mixed media works on canvas inspired by the poetry of R.C. Miller.

Boston Sculptors Gallery
486 Harrison Avenue
Boston, MA
www.BostonSculptors.com
(617) 482-7781
Tu-Sa 12-6
September 5–October 7: Julia Shepley: Fluid States and Terry Albright.

Boston University Art Gallery
www.bu.edu/ART
gallery@bu.edu
(617) 353-3371
Tu–F 10–5, Sa–Su 1–5

Brickbottom Gallery
1 Fitchburg Street
Somerville, MA
(617) 776-3410
www.brickbottomartists.com
Th–Sat 12–5
Through August 18: What is BIG?: Work that is oversized or challenges the idea of scale. Lois Fiore, Wally Gilbert, Anne Kirchheimer, Pauline Lim, Cyn Maurice, Diane Novetsky, Anthony Ragucci, Izabela Riano, Dan Rocha, Beverly Sky, David Tonnesen, Bill Turville, Kevin Van Aelst, and Debra Weisberg. September 4–8: The Intersection of the Visual and the Written Word: Prospect Hill Academy Charter School with artist in residence Debra Weisberg. Check Web site for special gallery hours. September 14–October 13: Fabrications: Fabric Is The Medium. Curated by Beverly Sky. Participating artists: Kate James, Mario Kon, Marilyn Pappas, Beverly Sky, John Tricomi, and Clara Wainwright. Opening reception: September 16, 4–6 p.m.
 
Bromfield Gallery
450 Harrison Street
Boston, MA
(617) 451-3605
www.bromfieldartgallery.com
T–Sat 12–5
August 3–25: Heat: National competition, juried by Carole Anne Meehan of the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston. The theme of heat— global, political, sexual—interpreted by ten artists in two five-person shows. Reception: August 3, 5:30–7:30 p.m. September 5–29: Plus One: Bromfield Gallery artists plus one invited guest artist each, featuring printmaking, sculpture, painting, and mixed media. Reception: September 7, 5:30–7:30 p.m.

Cambridge Art Association
Kathryn Schultz
Gallery
25 Lowell Street
Cambridge, MA
T–Sat 11–5
University Place Gallery
124 Mt Auburn Street
Cambridge MA
M–F 9–6, Sat 9–1
(617) 876-0246
info@cambridgeart.org
www.cambridgeart.org
Wainwright Bank: Through September 28: Lora Brody. University Place Gallery: Through July 12: 4th Annual Art Fair. September 8–October 4: 63rd Annual Fall Salon.

Carney Gallery at Regis College
Fine Arts Center
235 Wellesley St.
Weston, MA
(781) 768-7084
www.regiscollege.edu
M–F 10–4 and by appointment
September 1–October 5: Regis: At 80—Photographs by Ann Grady, CJS. Nature is a metaphor for celebrating the eightieth anniversary of the founding of Regis College.

Chase Gallery
129 Newbury Street
Boston, MA
(617) 859-7222
www.chasegallery.com
M–Sat 10–5:30
 
Clark Gallery
145 Lincoln Road
Box 339
Lincoln, MA
(781) 259-8303
www.clarkgallery.com
T–Sat 10–5
August 1–31, Tu–Th 10–5 September 4–27: Holly Farrell New Paintings: Meticulous still life paintings by Holly Farrell capture the essence and nostalgia of antique objects, such as wooden chairs, chipped bowls, and wellloved books, emphasizing the beauty of such simple objects. Reception: September 8, 4–6 p.m.
 
Concord Art Association
37 Lexington Road
Concord, MA
(978) 369-2578
www.concordart.com
gallery@concordart.org
T–Sat 10–4:30, Sun 12–4
Through August 15: Adorned & Embelished: The Art of Accessories 2. September 13–October 14: 8th Annual Frances N. Roddy Open Competition. Juried by Barbara O’Brien. Reception: September 13, 6–8 p.m.
 
Copley Society of Art
158 Newbury Street
Boston, MA
(617) 536-5049
www.copleysociety.org
T-Sa 11-6, Su-M 12-5
Through August 25: Co|So Artists A–Z: HeatWave: Smaller works from the full range of our artist membership. August 2–25: Lalie Schewadron: Synthesis: A breathtaking multi-media exhibition in both of the upper galleries. September 6–October 13: Ellen Granter: On theWire: An Invitational Exhibition & Painted Turtles: Two concurrent exhibitions of Granter’s newest oil paintings. Co|So is the oldest nonprofit art association in the Unites States.We represent over five-hundred living artist members, ranging in style from traditional and academic realists, to contemporary and abstract painters, photographers, sculptors, and printmakers.

Danforth Art Museum
123 Union Avenue
Framingham, MA
(508) 620-0050
www.danforthmuseum.org
W-Th, Su 12-5, F-Sa 10-5
Admission: $8 adults, $7 students and seniors
Through October 28: 2007 New England Photography Biennial. Curated by Karen Hass and Arlette Kayafas. Info, Insight, Interruption. Curated by Martha Buskirk. David Aronson. Curated by Katherine French. A Collective Vision: New Acquisitions. Members’ preview reception: September 9, 6–8 p.m. Family Day activities: September 10, 1–4 p.m.

DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park
51 Sandy Pond Road
Lincoln, MA
(781) 259-8355
www.decordova.org
T–Sun 10–5, and selected Monday holidays
Through August 12: The 2007 DeCordova Annual.
September 1, 2007–January 13, 2008: Trainscape: Landscape Sculptures Meet Model Trains. Through September 16: Approaches to Narrative.
 
Depot Square Gallery
1837 Massachusetts Avenue
Lexington, MA
(781) 863-1597
T–Sat 10–5:30, Sun 12–4
Through August 25: HOT: A juried show. Artists respond to global warming. August 28–September 23: Sankar: Impressions: New work by Rani Sarin. Reception: September 9, 3–6 p.m.

Forest Hills Cemetery
95 Forest Hills Avenue
Boston, MA
(617) 524-0128
www.foresthillstrust.org
Open daily 8 a.m. to dusk
Free admission
The Contemporary Sculpture Path: Sculpture and installations by thirty-five artists using media ranging from bronze and cast cement to organic materials to create site-specific work. Artists include Fern Cunningham, Christopher Frost, Danielle Krcmar, Mitch Ryerson, Carol Spack, and Lesley Wilcox. Forest Hills is also home to masterpieces of nineteenth-century sculpture by Daniel Chester French,MartinMilmore, and others. Visit www.foresthillstrust.org for information about tours and events.

Gallery Anthony Curtis
186 South Street
Boston, MA
617.988.8119.
www.galleryanthonycurtis.com
Tu-Sa 11-6, and by appointment.
Through August 4: Kathleen Cammarata and Nancy Selvage: This is about us.: Gallery Anthony Curtis in association with Mass Audubon Society. Reception: July 12, 5–8 p.m. Gallery talk by Kathleen Cammarata and Nancy Selvage: August 2, 6–7 p.m. August 8–September 1: Wanderlust: Agroup exhibition of artwork inspired by cultures from all corners of the earth. Includes artists Adria Arch,William Bateman, Petula Bloomfieldd, Gillian Frazier, Lise Lemeland, and Filiz Emma Soyak. Reception: August 10, 5–8 p.m. September 5–October 6: Marie Josée Roy: US premier: Sponsored by The Quebec Delegation. Reception hosted by Quebec Cultural and Public Affair Attaché: September 7, 5–8 p.m.

Gallery NAGA
67 Newbury Street
Boston, MA
(617) 267-9060
www.gallerynaga.com 
September: Tu–Sa 10–5:30
Open by appointment in August
September 4–October 6: Masako Kamiya New Painting. Stuart Ober: Mistakes, I've Made a Few. Reception: September 7, 6–8 p.m.

Gasp Gallery
362 Boylston St.
Brookline, MA
(617) 418-4038
www.g-a-s-p.net
galleryinfo@g-a-s-p.net
Th–Sa 11–5, Su–W by appointment
September 6–October 13: Abstraction Updated: There is renewed energy in the many vocabularies of abstract art and the artists practicing them. In this exhibition we have three artists whose paintings, drawings, and site-specific sculpture explore different possibilities of abstract form. Curated by Alicia Faxon. Featuring artwork by Susan Scwalb, Suzanne Volmer, and Deborah Muirhead. Opening reception: September 6, 5–8 p.m.

John Colby, Untitled, c. 2007, at Gateway Gallery.

Gateway Gallery
62 Harvard Street
Brookline, MA
(617) 734-1577
www.gatewayarts.org
M–F 9–4:30, Sat 12–5
Through August 25: Five Summer Installations: Paint, ink, marker and pencil, scribbles, words, patterns, and multiple images. An opportunity to view the work of these five Gateway artists: John Colby, Rebecca Geller, Russell McNaught, Kathleen Wells, and Roger Swike.

Gibbs Gallery
at Arlington Center for the Arts
41 Foster Street
Arlington, MA
(781) 648-6220
www.acarts.org
info@acarts.org
M–F 9–5
Through September 7: Urban Perspectives: Street and street-inspired art, painting, printmaking, and drawings by Rocket North artists Tim Bithoney, Brett Calzada, Bryan Hutcheson, Mark Kelly, Boris Savic, and Dennis Torres, aka Señor Fridge. September 17–November 4: Arlington Open Studios Group Show. Open Studios Weekend: October 14–15, 12–5 p.m.

The Griffin Museum of Photography
67 Shore Road
Winchester, MA
(781) 729-1158
www.griffinmuseum.org
T–Th 11–5, Fri 11–4, Sat–Sun 12–4
Admission: $5 for adults, $2 for seniors
Members and children under 12 free on Thursday
Through August 12: Joyce Tenneson: A Retrospective. Miriam Goodman, After a Certain Age. August 23–October 28: 13th Annual Griffin Museum Juried Show. Opening reception: August 23, 7–8:30 p.m.

Grossman Gallery
at School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
230 The Fenway
Boston, MA
(617) 369-3718
www.smfa.edu
M–Sat 10–5, Th 10–8
September 18–October 13: America’s Paradise and Isla Del Encanto: Contemporary Art from the American Caribbean: Current work by twelve artists from the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico who are actively engaged in a serious, often angst-filed conversation about the myth of paradise and attempts to reclaim innocence. Opening reception: September 17, 5–7 p.m. Video screenings 12:30 p.m.: September 25: Marcha Triumfal by Quintín Rivera-Toro, introduced by the artist; September 27: In Concrete and Urban Graphics In Vieques about artist Rafael Trelles; and October 4: Vieques: Una isla forjando futuros/Vieques: An Island Forging a Future by Johanna Bermúdez Ruíz, introduced by SMFA faculty member Bonnie Donohue.

Hartje Gallery
4 Brington Rd.
Brookline, MA
(617) 566-1284
www.hartjegallery.com
info@hartjegallery.com
September 14–October 24: That 80s Print Show: Bartlett, Clemente, Fink, Haring, Longo, Paladino, Ruscha, and Scully.

Hess Gallery at Pine Manor College
400 Heath St.
Chestnut Hill, MA
(617) 731-7157
www.pmc.edu/hess/hessgallery.html
M–Th 8:30–10, F 8:30–5, Sa 12–5, Su 2–10
September 13–October 24: Lou Jones: Every Color has a Different Story. Artist’s lecture: October 3, 7 p.m. Reception: October 3, 8–9 p.m.

The Institute of Contemporary Art, Bostong
100 Northern Ave.
Boston, MA
(617) 478-3100
www.icaboston.org
info@icaboston.org


Seconda stanza cinese, (Second Chinese Room), 2006–2007, at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
280 The Fenway
Boston, MA
(617) 566-1401
www.gardnermuseum.org
T–Sun 11–5
September 20, 5–9 p.m.: Launch of Gardner After Hours: Evenings of live music, art, and conversation featuring Journey to the East program highlighting the museum’s Asian art collection. 7 p.m.: Contemporary dance performance by Butoh dancer and artist-in-residence Ledoh. Through October 18: Stefano Arienti: The Asian Shore: An installation work by Arienti brings together new drawings, rugs, and objects from the museum’s Asian collection to create an intimate and sensual encounter with art of the East. September 9–30, 1:30 p.m.: Sunday Concert Series classical music performances.
 
Judi Rotenberg Gallery
130 Newbury Street
Boston, MA
(617) 437-1518
www.judirotenberg.com
T–Sat 10–6  
August 9–September 1: Zygmund Jankowski: With Love. Reception: August 9, 6–8 p.m. September 6–October 6: Mary Ellen Strom, Ann Carlson, and Rebecca Chamberlain. Reception: September 6, 6–8 p.m.

Khaki Gallery
9 Crest Road
Wellesley, MA
(781) 237-1095
www.khakigallery.net
khaki@khakigallery.net
M–Sat 10–6
Through August 30: Atlantic Light: Photographs by Luke Snyder and paintings by Susanah Howland. September 1–October 6: Phases of the Moon and other Lessons in Science: Photographs by Kevin Van Aelst. Opening reception: September 7, 6–8 p.m.

Kingston Gallery
450 Harrison Avenue #43
Boston, MA
(617) 423-4113
www.kingstongallery.com
T–Sat 12–5 and by appointment
September 4–29: Hi Ho Silver!: 25th Anniversary Members’ Show. First Friday’s reception: September 7, 5–7:30 p.m.

Lillian Immig Gallery at Emmanuel College
2nd floor
Cardinal Cushing Library
400 The Fenway
Boston, MA
(617) 735-9992
www.emmanuel.edu
M–Sa 10–4
Wheelchair accessible Free and open to the public September 12–October 24: Emmanuel Art Faculty Group Show Part One. Artists’ talk: September 19, 5:30 p.m. Reception: September 19, 6–7:30 p.m.


Susan Crile, Live from Lincoln Center, 1980, at MIT. Albert and Vera List Collection.

MIT List Visual Arts Center
Weisner Building, E15
20 Ames Street
Cambridge, MA
(617) 253-4680
http://web.mit.edu/lvac
M–Su 12–6
Through September 7: Media Test Wall: Hung- Chih Peng. Includes three works from the artist’s ongoing Canine Monk series which depicts the artist's dogs quoting classic religious texts on walls with their tongues. The Media Test Wall, an ongoing series of contemporary video exhibitions, is located in the Whitaker Building (21 Ames St., Bldg. 56) on the MIT campus. List Visual Arts Center Galleries: September 4–16: Student Loan Art Exhibition. Features a selection of approximately four-hundred framed prints and photographs by leading modern and contemporary artists such as Berenice Abbott, Louise Bourgeois, Nancy Spero, Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, Joan Miro, Takashi Murakami, Nam June Paik, Lorna Simpson, Cindy Sherman, and many others. For information: (617) 253-4680 or http://web.mit.edu/lvac

Mount Ida College Galleries
777 Dedham St.
Newton, MA
(617) 928-4654
Tu–Su 1–6, Th 6–8
September 11–October 14: School of Design Faculty of Mount Ida College: This exhibition profiles recent work in varied areas of expertise, media, and subject matter ranging from political commentary to concepts on contemporary beauty. Reception: September 20, 5–7 p.m. Gallery talk: September 20, 6 p.m.

Nesto Gallery at Milton Academy
Science Building, Lower level
170 Centre St.
Milton, MA
(617) 898-1798
M–F 8:30–3:30
September 18–October 19: David Brewster, paintings. Reception: September 18, 5:30–7:30 p.m.

New Art Center in Newton
61 Washington Park
Newton, MA
(617) 964-3424
www.newartcenter.org
M–F 9–5, Su 1–5
September 14–October 28: Belief in Paint: The work of expressionist painters Thorpe Feidt, John Grillo, and Richard B. Lethem are featured in this exhibit, highlighting the energy and pictorial invention of their work spanning from the mid-1940s to the present. Curated by Timothy Harney. Opening reception: September 14, 6–8 p.m. Gallery talk: October 14, 2 p.m. In the Holzwasser Gallery: Irwin Thompson.

New England Wild Flower Society's
Garden in the Woods

180 Hemenway Rd., Framingham, MA
(508) 877-7630
www.newenglandWILD.org
registrar@newenglandWILD.org
Daily 9–7 through August,
9–5 in September and October
Through October 31: Seventy-fifth anniversary show: Art Goes Wild: Innovation with Native Plants. An exuberant site-specific environmental art installation by renowned artist, W. Gary Smith, featuring eleven destination gardens and 1,500 native plant species overlaying the seventy-five-year-old masterpiece wildflower garden. Music, performance, classes, and festivals are part of the celebration. Garden in the Woods is a magnificent forty-five acre living museum twenty miles west of Boston.

Newton Free Library
330 Homer Street
Newton Centre, MA
(617) 796-1360
www.ci.newton.ma.us/library
M–Th 9–9, F 9–6, Sat 9–5, Sun 12–5
Closed Sunday in August
August 2–30: In the Gallery: Repete by Sharon St. Hilaire: Wool and rayon weavings. In the Main Hall: Friends’ Series: Recent Work by Jane Moore Houghton. Collage arks and whimsical landscapes. Reception: August 2, 7 p.m. September 5–27: In the Gallery: Perpetual Care by Susan Eisenberg: Photos of Forest Hills Cemetery. Reception: September 10, 7 p.m. In the Main Hall: Recent Paintings by Artists at the Villa. Reception: September 6, 7 p.m.
 
Nielsen Gallery
179 Newbury Street
Boston, MA
(617) 266-4835
www.nielsengallery.com
T–Sat 10–5:30
Closed August 5–September 3
September 22–October 27: Jay DeFeo: A retrospective survey of works from the estate. Opening reception: September 29.


Fritz Tröger, Untitled (detail), 1928, at Pierre Menard Gallery.

Pierre Menard Gallery
10 Arrow St., Harvard Sq.
Cambridge, MA
www.pierremenardgallery.com
pierre@pierremeanardgallery.com
W–Su 11–7, or by appointment
(617) 868-2033
Modern art, artist’s books, contemporary painting, sculpture, photography, and installation. Through August 5: Elena Urbaitis, painting and sculpture. August 8–September 2: Fritz Tröger, works on paper; Gordon Wagner, box constructions. Reception: August 10, 6–9 p.m. September 5–30: Nicholas Kilmer, painting. Reception: September 7, 6–9 p.m. Exhibited artists: Christian Bastian, Dove Bradshaw, Lucien Clergue, Hiroyuki Hamada, Heide Hatry, Nicholas Kilmer, Peik Larsen, Jim Peters, Jan Saudek, Carolee Schneemann, Donald Shambroom, Josef Sudek, Josef Vachal, and Matt Weber. Archives: E.E. Cummings and Gordon Wagner.

Towne Art Gallery at Wheelock College
200 The Riverway,
Boston, MA
(617) 879-2219
www.wheelock.edu/art/
Tu–Sa 12–5
Free to the public and wheelchair accessible
September 18–October 13: Tribute Exhibition: Makoto Yabe: Makoto Yabe was a world renowned ceramic artist as well as a long time Wheelock College faculty member. Memorial exhibition pays tribute to this great artist and teacher. Reception: October 8, 11–1 p.m. In conjunction with Opening Our Doors Day: Sponsored by The Fenway Alliance. October 24–November 16: Lavish Birds: Resa Blatman, oil paintings. Artist’s reception: October 27, 2–4 p.m.

Trustman Art Gallery at Simmons College
300 The Fenway
Boston, MA
(617) 521-2268
www.simmons.edu/trustman
M–F 10–4:30
September 6–October 5: Spinning Straw Into Gold: The Ethics of Production. In the first of three exhibits supported by the LEF Foundation, Chantal Zakari's twelve-foot high murals will transform the Trustman Gallery into a virtual "chat room" using photographic images from the project Web Affairs. In a chat room, the virtual space replaces the social life, while the line between what is public and what is private becomes blurred. This series of exhibits is curated by Trustman Gallery Director Barbara O'Brien and will run through November. Gallery talk: September 20, 4:30 p.m. Reception: September 20, 5–6:30 p.m.

Tufts University Art Gallery
Aidekman Arts Center
40R Talbot Ave.
Medford, MA
(617) 627-3518
www.ase.tufts.edu/gallery
galleryinfo@tufts.edu
T–Su 11–5, Th until 8
Opening September 6: Ilya & Emilia Kabakov: The Center of Cosmic Energy.

CAPE AND THE ISLANDS


Paul Resika, Provincetown, Violet Sky, 1985, at BertaWalker Gallery.

Berta Walker Gallery
208 Bradford St.
Provincetown, MA
(508) 487-6411
www.bertawalkergallery.com
bertawalker@bertawalkergallery.com
Daily 11–6
July: Polly Burnell, paintings. John Thomas: Tibetan Spirit, photographs, music, and video. Focus: The Nancy Whorf Family: Nancy Whorf, John Whorf (father), and Julia Whorf Kelly (daughter). July–August: Robert Henry, expressionistic paintings; Elspeth Halvorsen, constructions; Sky Power, abstract paintings; and Selina Trieff, drawings. August: Varujan Boghosian, constructions; Dimitri Hadzi, bronze sculpture; and Paul Resika, new paintings from Maine. Fall: Focus: The Norman Mailer Family: Norman Mailer, ink drawings; Norris Mailer, Danielle Mailer, and Maggie Mailer, paintings.

Bowersock Gallery
373 Commercial St.
Provincetown, MA
(508) 487-4994
www.bowersockgallery.com
sales@bowersockgallery.com
Daily 11–10 in season
August 17– September 5: The Classics: The much anticipated, annual exhibition featuring painters Dennis Perrin and Darlou Gams. The renowned New Hampshire/Maine seacoast artists demonstrate the tradition that first made that sliver of seacoast one of the epicenters of American art. Both deftly create stunning, captivating canvases that blend a sense of old world and own hand. "I can only describe this work as the art that forms a soul's song," says co-owner Steve Bowersock. "Both artists, masters of light, tap into something deep beneath the surface of the image itself." Reception: August 17, 7–10 p.m.


Brian Larkin, Toys, at Galleria Raffaello.

Galleria Raffaello
430 Commercial St.
Provincetown, MA
www.brianlarkin.com
brianlarkin1@cox.net
Brian Larkin finds his muse in Provincetown, MA, and the nearby dunes of Race Point on the outer reaches of Cape Cod. He works in a variety of styles and techniques from traditional watercolors to hybrid combinations of media that stretch the limits of what a given medium can and should do. In testing these limits, he is able to evoke a visceral impact on the viewer. Gallery opening: August 3, at Galleria Raffaello. Brian Larkin is represented by Galleria Raffaello, Robyn Watson Gallery, Isolt Gallery, and the Icon Gallery, all in Provincetown.

 

NORTH OF BOSTON

Addison Gallery of American Art
at Phillips Academy

180 Main St.
Andover, MA
(978) 749-4015
www.addisongallery.org
Tu-Sa 10-5, Su 1-5
Free admission
September 4–December 30: Class Pictures: Photographs by Dawoud Bey. September 22, 2007–January 6, 2008: Ipswich Days: Arthur Wesley Dow and His Hometown. September 22–October 28: Angela Lorenz: Artist’s Books

Essex Art Center
56 Island St.
Lawrence, MA
(978) 685-2343
www.essexartcenter.com
Through August: M–Th 10–6
Beginning September 4: M–F 10–6
Free admission
Closed August 27–31
Through August 17: Alphabet Project 2: Twenty-four artists, one poet, and one lawyer create an alphabet with inspiration from an old dictionary. September 14–October 19: Main Gallery: A Journey: Four Image Makers: Jack Armitage, Jeremy Barnard, Jill Kennington, and Robert Pyle. Elizabeth A. Beland Gallery: Trace: Nina Wishnok.

The Gallery at Barrington Center for the Arts
at Gordon College

255 Grapevine Rd.
Wenham, MA
(978) 927-2300 x4751
www.gordon.edu/arts_music/gallery.htm
M–Sa 9–7
Through October 6: Cross/Purpose: A sampling of the many forms and purposes the cross has taken over the centuries. From the Edward and Diane Knippers Collection.

McCoy Gallery at Merrimack College
315 Turnpike St.
Andover, MA
(978) 837-5255
www.merrimack.edu/mccoy
M–F 9–5
September 4–October 19: Edward Stapel: American Flags Cleaned Free of Charge.

Montserrat College of Art Galleries
23 Essex St.
Beverly, MA
(978) 921-4242 x1319
www.montserrat.edu
gallery@montserrat.edu
M–F 10–5, Th 10–8, Sa 12–5
August 27–October 27: Merging Influence: Eastern Elements in New American Art. Artists Ahmed Abdalla, Shiva Ahmadi, Kamrooz Aram, Shelly Bahl, Eung Ho Park, E. Meng, and Yun-Fei Ji.

The Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University
415 South St.
Waltham, MA
(781) 736-3434
www.brandeis.edu/rose
Tu–Su 12–5
September 25–December 16: Tom Sachs: Logjam: Known for his ironic constructions on the topic of consumerism Tom Sachs utilized similar cunning when designing his personal studio. Consisting of several "work stations" which are equally aesthetic and functional, Logjam offers a peek into the life of the artist. Steve Miller: Spiraling Inward: Science and art, at the hands of Steve Miller, find an uncommon symbiosis. In participation with Nobel-prize winning chemist Rod MacKinnon, the heavily researched Miller opens a wormhole of postulates about the mysteries of the universe.

University Gallery at UMass Lowell
McGauvran Student Union, 1st floor
71 Wilder St.
Lowell, MA
(978) 934-3491
(978) 934-3494
www.uml.edu/dept/art
Tu–F 9–4, Sa by appointment

The Winfisky Gallery at Salem State College
Ellison Campus Center
Salem, MA
(978) 542-6999
M, W, F 10–5, Tu, Th 10–2
Weekends by appointment
September 4–20: Martin Brief. Reception: September 11, 2–3 p.m. September 24–October 18: Haig Demarjian. Reception: October 10, 6–8 p.m. October 22–November 15: Kathryn Myers. Reception: October 23, 2–3 p.m.

SOUTH OF BOSTON

The Art Complex Museum
189 Alden Street
Duxbury, MA
(781) 934-6634
W–Sun 1–4
www.artcomplex.org
Through September 9: Complex Women: Celebrating the impressive women artists in the museum’s collection in a variety of mediums. Art of the Southwest. July 29–October 7: On Their Own: Susan Jane Belton, oil and charcoal.

South Shore Art Center
119 Ripley Rd.
Cohasset, MA
(781) 383-2787
www.ssac.org
info@ssac.org
M-Sa 10-4, Su 12-4
Free admission
September 14–October 28: Women Who Travel.


CENTRAL  & WESTERN MASS

Cantor Art Gallery at Holy Cross College
O’Kane Hall, 1st floor
1 College St.
Worcester, MA
(508) 793-3356
www.holycross.edu/departments/cantor/ website/cantor.html
M–F 10–5, Sa 2–5
Part I: August 29–October 20 and Part II: October 30–December 21: Crossroads: Artwork from the Faculty of the College of the Holy Cross: An exhibition in two parts, including work by Michael Beatty, Michael Demers, Amy Wynne Derry, David Gyscek, Roger Hankins, Tim Johnson, Robert ParkeHarrison, Naomi Ribner, Cristi Rinklin, Susan Schmidt, and Leslie Schomp.

Hallmark Museum of Contemporary Photography
85 Avenue A
Turners Falls, MA
(413) 863-0009
www.hmcp.org
Th–Su 1–5
Through June 17: Recycled Realities & Other Stories: Tom Young and John Willis. Through September 23: Ron Rosenstock: Hymn to the Earth. September 27–December 16: Michael Yamashita: Great Wall of China & the Silk Road.

Herter Gallery at UMass Amherst
215 Herter Hall
Amherst, MA
(413) 545-0976
www.umass.edu/art
M–F 11–4, Su 1–4
September 11–29: Counterpoints: Recent work by current and incoming students in the MFA Studio program at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.


Lucy MacGillis, Lo Studio, at the Hoadley Gallery.

Hoadley Gallery
21 Church St.
Lenox, MA
(413) 637-2814
www.hoadleygallery.com
info@hoadleygallery.com
M-Sa 10-6, Su 11-5
Through August 7: Lucy MacGillis: Recent Paintings: MacGillis, a Berkshire native living in Italy, paints exquisite still lifes, luminous interiors, and landscapes with a poet's touch. The lush warm colors and loose sensuous brushwork of her oils recreate the seductive experience that many of us associate with Italy. In addition, her interpretation of seemingly ordinary, rustic objects combined with a skillful use of light set a strong emotional tone.

Norman Rockwell Museum
Route 183
Stockbridge, MA
(413) 298-4100 open daily
www.nrm.org
Open daily
Through October 28: Norman Rockwell’s 323 Saturday Evening Post Covers: This comprehensive exhibition of original cover tear sheets features each of Norman Rockwell’s illustrations for the publication, created between 1916 and 1963. Ephemeral Beauty: Al Parker and the American Women’s Magazine, 1940–1960: Examines the artist’s impact on American publishing and the perceptions and expectations of generations of American readers. August 18–September 16: America’s Camp: The Children of 9/11: A powerful exhibition of artworks created by the children of parents who died as a result of the tragic events of September 11, 2001.


Leonard Baskin (1922–2000), Medusa, 1982, at Smith College Museum of Art. Collection of Lisa Unger Baskin. Photo: Petegorsky/Gipe.

Smith College Museum of Art
Elm Street at Bedford Terrace
Northampton, MA
(413) 585-2760
www.smith.edu/artmuseum
Through August 4: Aesthetics of the Sacred: The Buddhist Art of Tibet. Through September 15: Medea and Her Sisters: Leonard Baskin’s Images of Women. Through September 30: Ansel Adams. Opening August 31: The Dream of Italy. Opening September 28: William Kentridge Prints. Free open hours, hands-on art, and more on Second Fridays: August 10 and September 14, 4–8 p.m. Lively, changing exhibitions, distinguished permanent collection, plus acclaimed artist-designed restrooms, Museum Shop, and Sam’s Café.

Worcester Art Museum
55 Salisbury Street
Worcester, MA
(508) 799-4406
www.worcesterart.org
W-Su 11-5, Sa 10-5, third Th of the month 11-8
Through Spring 2008: Wall at WAM: Alexander Ross: Sixty-seven foot wall project. Opening September 8: Printmaking Methods/STENCIL. Opening September 14: Textile Heirlooms from Indus Valley. Opening September 22: Martha Rosler: Bringing the War Home. World-renowned for its 35,000-piece collection, WAM features must-see masterpieces spanning the globe from ancient mosaics to contemporary art. Browse the shop, eat in the café, take a class, or visit the library.

New Hampshire Exhibition Listings


Aidron Duckworth Art Museum
21 Bean Rd., NH
(603) 469-3444
info@aidronduckworthmuseum.org
Fri -Sun 10-5
August 4–October 28: Exhibition X—Paintings and Drawings 2000–2001: Forty works in acrylic and pastel, including some rice paper overlay effects, in a late series, along with drawings and the unfinished preparatory drawings left at the easel, just prior to Aidron Duckworth's death. The conclusion of the chronological presentation of works by the artist, whose works explored the enigmatic emotional reality of life, and the potential of line and color on the two-dimensional surface to go beyond ordinary naturalistic representation of faces and figures. Opening reception: August 4, 3–6 p.m.

Currier Museum’s Zimmerman House
201 Myrtle Way
Manchester, NH
(603) 669-6144, ext. 102
www.currier.org
Tour hours: M, Th, and F at 2; Sa at 11 and 12:30; Su at 12:30 and 2
Admission: $11 adults, $8 seniors and students, free to Currier members
The Zimmerman House was designed in 1950 by Frank Lloyd Wright (1867–1959). Wright designed the house, the interior, all furniture, gardens, and even the mailbox. In 1990 it was opened to the public so that visitors could enjoy a private world from the 1950s and 1960s including the Zimmermans unique collection of modern art, pottery, and sculpture. Tours are one and a half hours. Reservations are required and may be made online through www.ticketweb.com or by calling the Currier box office at (603) 669-6144 x108.

Karl Drerup Art Gallery
at Plymouth State University
17 High Street, MSC 21B
Plymouth, NH
(603) 535-2614
http://www.plymouth.edu/gallery/
M–Sat 12–5
August 15–October 27: Enchanted Garden: Enamels from an American Master, Works by Karl Drerup (1904–2000). Curated by Jane Port. Opening events: August 15, 4–6 p.m. and September 12, 4–6 p.m.

The lakes gallery at Chi-Lin
17 Lake St.
Meredith, NH
(603) 279-8663
www.chi-linasianarts.com
M–Sa 9:30–5:30, Tu and Su by appointment
August 3–September 29: The Lakes: A Contemporary Interpretation: Meredith Public Library and the lakes gallery. Artists Denise Linet, Phil Frey, Rose Umerlik, Sachiko Furi, John David O’Shaughnessy, Janet Slom, Patricia Burson, Gail Sauter, Alec Richardson, and Kathleen Brennan. August 17–September 17: Eve, Lauren, & Jules Olitski. September 21–November 4: The Four Gentlemen and the Mountains: Bruce Iverson, Jong-Yoon Kim, Mien-Chien, and Kim Bernard. November 9–December 24: NH Professors Invitational. Also featuring a Japanese tea garden, serving light lunch and afternoon tea.

Lamont Gallery at Phillips Exeter
Tan Lane
Exeter, NH
M 1–5, Tu–Sa 9–5
September 5–October 3: From Ireland to Exeter: Works from the Kilkenny Collective of Art Talents: Featuring artists George McCutcheon, Margaret Walker, Karl Fitzgerald, and Sinead Fahey. Reception: September 14, 6:30–8 p.m.

Alen MacWeeney, McDonagh Family, at the New England College Art Gallery.

New England College Art Gallery
7 Main St.
Henniker, NH
(603) 428-2329
www.nec.edu
Tu–Th 11–6, F 11–3, and by appointment
August 28–September28: Main Gallery: Irish Travellers, Tinkers No More—Photographs by Alen MacWeeney: An exhibition of photographs to coincide with the publication of his first book from New England College Press. These photographs from the book, Irish Travellers, Tinkers No More, reveal a moving personal essay of his experiences among these fiercely independent and clannish Irish people who have wandered Ireland’s roads for centuries. Gallery 2 and Balcony Gallery: Ken Morgan: Recent Work.A selection of works fromMorgan’s energetic and whimsical circus-genre and multiple page drawings.

RedmondBennett Gallery, LLC
Dublin Village Park,
1283 Main St.
Dublin, NH
(603) 563-8565
www.redmondbennettgallery.com
info@redmondbennettgallery.com
W–Sa 11–5, Su 1–4, and by appointment
Through August 12: Paintings and Notebooks: Lee Newton. Through September 4: Old and New: Andrew Newman. Opening reception: August 19, 1–4 p.m. September 7–23: Intimate Drawings and Collages: Carol Gove. Opening reception: September 8, 5–7 p.m. September 28–October 9: Monadnock Art/Friends of the Dublin Art Colony: Studio Tour 12. Opening reception: September 29, 5–7 p.m.

Spheris Gallery
59 South Main St.
Hanover, NH
(603) 640-6155
www.spherisgallery.com
For information on artists’ lectures, music performances, and other events, please visit our Web site: www.spherisgallery.com

Thorne-Sagendorph Art Gallery
at Keene State College

229 Main Street
Keene, NH
(603) 358-2720
www.keene.edu/tsag
thorne@keene.edu
Sat–W 12–4,Th–F 12–7
Free admission
September 4-October 14: In Residence: Artists and the MacDowell Colony Experience: Works by visual artists in residence at the Colony. Reception: September 4, 7 p.m., screening Seasons of MacDowell. September 14-November 11: From Cassatt to Wyeth: American Masterworks from the Mitchell Museum: Features paintings by Thomas Eakins, Mary Cassatt, Childe Hassam, John Singer Sargent, George Bellows, and others. Reception: September 14, 5:30-7:30 p.m.


New York Exhibition Listings

Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum
at Skidmore College

815 North Broadway
Saratoga Springs, NY
(518) 580-8080
www.skidmore.edu/tang
tang@skidmore.edu
Tu–Th 10–5, Fri 10–7, Sa–Su 12–5
July 14–December 30: West African Masquerade: Recent Photographs by Phyllis Galembo: Large-scale color photographs reflect the ritual adornment and spirituality of masquerade in Nigeria, Benin, and Burkina Faso in West Africa. September 8–December 30: Molecules That Matter: This unique exhibition will include contemporary art by nationally recognized artists, such as Fred Tomaselli, and Alexis Rockman, as well as historical artifacts and documents representing the cultural history of each molecule substance alongside scientifically accurate newly commissioned molecular models.

Lake Placid Center for The Arts
17 Algonquin Dr.
Lake Placid, N.Y.
(518) 523-2512
August 17–September 4: Tu–F 10–5, Sa–Su 1–5
September 4–15: Tu–Sa 1–5
August 17–September 14: Texture of Color. Fiber Artists: Jackie Abrams, woven vessels; Rosemary Hoffenberg, studio quilts; and Ann Noel Krider, tapestry weaver. Opening reception: August 17.

Rhode Island Exhibition Listings

Chazan Gallery
228 Angell St.
Providence, RI
(401) 421-9230
www.chazangallery.org
info@chazangallery.org
Tu–Sa 12–5, Su 3–5
September 20–October 12: Recent works by sculptor Christopher Romer. Public reception: September 20, 5–7 p.m.

David Winton Bell Gallery
at Brown University List Art Center

64 College Street
Providence, RI
(401) 863-2932
M–F 11–4, Sat, Sun 1–4
September 8–October 21: Yumi Kori: An Architectural Environment.

Gallery 297
297 Hope St.
Bristol, RI
(401) 253-5005
www.gallery297.com
M–Sa 10–6, Su 12–5
August 1–31: To Benefit the Environment: Regional artists exhibit work to raise funds for the Audubon Society. Reception: August 5, 1–3 p.m. September 2–29: The Art of Colored Pencil. Juror: Carol Strause FitzSimonds. Reception: September 2, 1–3 p.m.

Hunt-Cavanagh Gallery and Reilly Gallery
at Providence College

549 River Avenue
Providence, RI
(401) 865-2400
www.providence.edu/art/gallery.html
M–F 11–4 when school is in session
September 4–October 4: Hunt-Cavanagh Gallery: Michele Provost: Lightness and Gravity:Paintings & Drawings 2006–2007. Reception: September 9, 2–4 p.m. Gallery Night: September 20, 5–9 p.m.

Dora Atwater Millikin, Scallopers, at Providence Art Club.

Providence Art Club
11 Thomas Street
Providence, RI
(401) 331-1114
www.providenceartclub.org  
Through September 8: M–F 12–3
After September 8: M–F 12–4, Sa–Su 2–4
Closed weekends in August
Through August 31: Members’ Exhibition: Summer Sale. September 9–28: Art League of Rhode Island Members’ Exhibition. Reception: September 9, 2–5 p.m. Gallery Night Providence: September 20, 5–9 p.m. September 30–October 19: Maxwell Mays Gallery: Del-Bourree Bach, Harley Bartlett, and Anthony Tomaselli. Moite Gallery: Raymond Finelli. Dodge House Gallery: Jeanne Sturim. Receptions: September 30, 2–4 p.m.

Rhode Island Watercolor Society
Slater Memorial Park
Armistice Boulevard
Pawtucket, RI
(401) 726-1876
www.riws.org
T–Sat 10–4, Sun 1–5
August 5–24: Passion For Color: Open Juried Show. Opening reception: August 5, 1–4 p.m. August 26–September 13: Paint RI: Open Juried Show. Opening reception: August 26, 1–4 p.m. September 16–October 12: 14th National Watermedia Competition: Opening reception: September 16, 1–4 p.m.


Vermont Exhibition Listings

Brattleboro Museum & Art Center
10 Vernon St.
Brattleboro, VT
(802) 257-0124
www.brattleboromuseum.org
Daily except Tu 11–5
Admission $4 adults, $3 seniors, $2 students, free to BMAC
August 11–November 25: From Street to Studio: Artists who worked in the NYC East Village art scene in the 1980s. The Life of Toussaint L'Ouveture: Silkscreen prints by Jacob Lawrence. Will the Circle be Unbroken: Three Generations of African-American Quilts: Spanning nearly a century, quiltsmade by three generations of a Texas family. Tibet Through the Red Box: Original illustrations fromthe picture book by Peter Sís.Art exhibits, public programs, education, concerts, community events, facility rental, and gift shop.

Cooler Gallery
85 North Main St., Suite 250
White River Junction, VT
(802) 295-8008
www.coolergallery.biz
coolergallery@together.net
July-August: Finish This!: Thirty artists from the United States, Canada, and Europe paint the same painting in their own style. September: Altered Reality: Photographs painted, collaged, transformed: artists who use photos as their canvas.

The Firehouse Gallery
135 Church Street
Burlington, VT
(802) 865-7166
www.BurlingtonCityArts.com
Su, Tu, W 12–5, Th–Sa 12–8
July 27–September 8: Wes Disney: A Retrospective: This retrospective exhibition will include many of Disney’s best photographs, paintings, and drawings made later in his life, and documentation of his important public art work, A Wall. Reception: July 27, 5–8 p.m. September 19–October 2: Location Shifts: Kathy Marmor, Christa Erickson, and others. Each artist uses interactive electronic artwork to connect viewers to a broader context. Panel discussion at the University of Vermont: September 19, 5 p.m. Reception: September 19, 6–8 p.m.

The Robert Hull Fleming Museum
at the University of Vermont

61 Colchester Ave.
Burlington, VT
(802) 656-0750
www.uvm.edu/fleming/
Closed through September 3 September 4–December 14, 2007: Material Pursuits: Alarge-scale exhibition exploring how contemporary American artists are creating conceptual artworks utilizing methods, materials, and strategies usually associated with craft. The Wandering Eye: An exhibition of travel photography drawn from the museum's permanent collection. Shoes!: An historical and cultural exploration of shoes and footwear drawn from the museum's permanent collection.

The Pegasus Gallery
3479 Woodstock Rd.
Rte 4 at Exit 1 off I-89
next to Quechee Mobil, Quechee, VT
(802) 296-7693
www.pegasusgalleryvt.com
F–Sun, 11–5, W, Th by appointment
Through August 5: The Art of the Print: Group show by members of the Two Rivers Printmaking Studio inWhite River Junction. Artists include: Jennifer Anderson, Judy Lampe, Victoria Shalvah Herzberg, Edward Huse, Debra Jayne, Elizabeth Mayor, Judith Lundahl, and Lois Beatty. Opening reception: July 20, 5–7 p.m. August 10–September 3: John Lynch, New Work: Landscapes from the greater London area in watercolor and gouache. Opening reception: August 10, 5–7 p.m. Artists’ talk: August 14, 6 p.m. September 7–October 15: Fall Group Show.

 

Exhibition Listings for
October/Novemeber 2007
are due August 10, 2007.
Call (617) 782-3008 or email smercurio@artnewengland.com for more information. Listings also appear on www.artnewengland.com

 
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