Monday, August 27, 2012

Last Week To See Carol DeForest

Don't miss this opportunity to see the exhibition of work by
CAROL DEFOREST

Exhibition ends on Saturday, September 1, 2012



Saturday, August 25, 2012

Seeking Fine Art Craft Artists

FINE ART CRAFT EVENT AND OPEN HOUSE

We are looking for craft artists to show and sell their works at Gallery Fifty Six's first annual Open House and Fine Art Craft Event. The event will be in conjunction with the Open House at Palladio and Market Central. The three- day event will be Thursday, Nov. 8, 2012 from 5 to 7 PM (reception), Friday, Nov. 9th, from 10 AM to 5 PM, and Saturday, Nov. 10th from 10 AM to 5 PM. We would like all artists to meet guests on Thursday evening at the reception, and Friday or Saturday, if convenient

Interested craft artists should submit 3 to 5 images of their works to rollin@galleryfiftysix.com. Only original, quality, fine art crafts will be considered. We are looking for jewelry, fibers, leather, hand-made books, unique wearables, wood, small sculptures, etc.

Artist will be notified of acceptance by September 15, 2012. Take advantage of this great opportuity to show and sell your work. If you have questions, call Rollin at the gallery, 901-276-1251 (Wed. - Sat., noon to 4 PM)
(we do not need any more potters at this time)

















Thursday, August 23, 2012

Joyce Garner Coming to GPAC

Joyce Garner, Gallery Fifty Six artist from Louisville, will have an exhibition of her work in
September at the Germantown Performing Arts Center. 

More detailed information will be available soon.



'Momma Said", copyright Joyce Garner




Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Carol DeForest

Now Is The Time To See The Work Of
Carol DeForest



Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Andrew James Williams

The ceramic sculpture of Andrew James Williams now on
exhibit in Gallery C.

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Paul Clarke - The Wanderer


Paul Clarke - The Wanderer

Photographer of the Delta

Gallery Fifty Six has a large collection of original, signed prints by Paul Clarke, available for purchase.



Saturday, August 11, 2012

Carol DeForest Exhibition

Currently Showing in the Main Gallery


See Carol DeForest's Exhibition 'Down To The Wire' at Gallery Fifty Six
Show runs until Sept. 1, 2012


Thursday, August 9, 2012

An Interview with Mariana De Marchi

Between ‘writer’ and futurism the city that distorts.
The argentine artist Mariana De Marchi from Buenos Aires.
Saturday 4th, August 2012 by Antonio Nazzaro Zambon.



An interview with the argentine artist Mariana De Marchi: The pursuit of assembling the artistic language of the street with the Academy. In her works, the graffiti on the walls are made to shout.

Mariana answers quickly, ‘I portray a reality of the world around me, halfway between the personal and social.’

You see half of her face because her long bang hides the other half. She was born during the years of a dictatorship.
I find her between a website and the telephone wire. In her works, there are clear references to the writer's culture and classical elements, besides the use of her own face as a model explored by scratches. Basically, it’s a distorted city with the life that it contains. The futuristic influence is inevitable for those who paint the city. The graffiti on the walls seem to come out of the head of her characters, transformed into a scream.

Behind the curtain of hair is a smile that seems an oversight: "I have chosen to divide my life in a simple way, to working as a teacher in public schools’ -she explains, while playing with her fingers and looking – ‘and working at my art studio in San Isidro. With my art I seek and I draw my dialogue." Legs crossed, hands -while they move- betray the Italian origin or the Argentine living.

‘I have made some expositions, in the Palais de Glace, in the National Museum of Taiwan, in the Museum of Fine Arts “Benito Quinquela Martín, in the Drawing and Print Museum “Guaman Poma” (Concepción de Uruguay), but generally I’m not involved with the art galleries. The influence of the past still hangs in the artistic world. So I am free to paint with a non-accommodative and unscholarly aesthetic." Mariana has big, curious eyes like many of her characters, brought unfairly near to caricature while they represent a metropolitan life that distorts.

"I have used my face as much as a practical matter, for a lack of other models, yet it lets me see me and my way of seeing'', when she smiles her face gets tense, you can see the character in her eyes. "Maybe that's why my characters blend with their surroundings, even when I use color."

"I am bound to Italy not only by my Italian origins, -second generation- but also for some of their writers like Pavese and Eco. I like to hear readings from the books, and they help me think, removing the mental solitude.” Her face becomes child-like. “Sooner or later, I will have to learn Italian." If the aesthetic is metropolitan, the thought and the reflection are deep and it is an existential and social search for an exit that retains the look in her works.

"Teaching at the public schools have thrown me into violence, marginality, and teenage pregnancy. These things are hard for me. Also with the Menem presidency, art education has been reduced.” She sits down in a chair and looks out from the window.

The characters in Marina De Marci’s work seem imprisoned by the city in which they share the subtle gray designs or the bright colors of the paintings that glow at first sight and then merge into a single deforming light. The symbols used in her series: red moons and fishes indicate a temporary escape, as the possibility of something that can break the daily absurdity of the city. She rises from the chair, leaves the phone and sits back, turns away the bangs and greets me. The phone is left on the table.

Gallery Fifty Six has a large collection of drawings, paintings, and prints by Mariana De Marchi.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Slide Show of Carol DeForest and Andrew James Williams

The artists' reception this past Friday evening for Carol DeForest and Andrew James Williams was a total success.  Thanks to all the guests who came out to support our two artists. 


Click the link below to see a slide show of the event: