Wednesday, September 14, 2011

2011 NYC Affordable Art Fair

 

Next week Catherine is heading off to the 2011 Affordable Art Fair in New York located at 7 West 34th Street (near 5th Avenue).

aaf-newyorkcity-header-logo

 

The John Cleary Gallery’s booth, F7, will be showcasing many of our artists, highlights including:

Niniane_Kelley_Parallel_Pear

Niniane Kelly: Parallel Pear

 

Seascapes - one Location (1999-2009)

Renate Aller: Oceanscape, January 2, 2009

Maggie_Taylor_The_Collector

Maggie Taylor: The Collector

camelliaweb

Charles Grogg: Camellia

Dan_Burkholder_Three_Trees_near_Water

Dan Burkholder: Three Trees Near Water, New York

Mitch-Dobrowner_Trees-Cloudspicture15

Mitch Dobrowner: Trees-Clouds

 

Tickets may be available for printing at the following links:

Private Preview: Wednesday, September 21, 6-8pm

Code= ONPPGJCLEAR

 

Regular Day Pass: Thursday the 22nd - Sunday the 25th

Code= ONDPGJCLEAR

 

Please stop by and check out our fantastic selection of fine art photography!

The gallery will also be open for regular business hours during the fair.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Houston Fine Art Fair

 

This week from Thursday, September 16 through Sunday, September 18 marks the inauguration of the Houston Fine Art Fair, located at the George R. Brown Convention Center.

 

Web

 

If you manage to make it out to the fair, please visit our friend Peter Fetterman of the Peter Fetterman Gallery in booth #404.  Peter will also be giving a talk on “Everything you need to know about collecting Fine Art Photography” at 12 noon on Saturday, September 17.

Tickets for the event may be obtained here, provided by the Peter Fetterman Gallery.

Enjoy!

Jeri Eisenberg: Bokeh

Please join us Saturday, September 17, from 6 – 8 p.m. for the opening of Jeri Eisenberg: Bokeh. The exhibition will run through Saturday, October 15. The artist will be in attendance for the opening reception.

Jeri_Eisenberg_Magnolia_No_13

Magnolia, No. 13, 2011

Bokeh, the Japanese term for an “aesthetic quality of the blur” in a photographic image, is the latest installment in Eisenberg’s Sojourn in Seasons: Sketching with Light Amongst Trees, with this exhibit focusing specifically on the foliage of the spring and summer months. Eisenberg began the series upon the advent of her father’s loss of both vision and memory and maintains the work is unabashedly retinal, as much object as it is image. Shot through a purposefully oversized pinhole or defocused lense and printed onto Japanese rice paper and lightly coated with wax, the images represent a distortion of recognizable form reminiscent to her fathers ocular and mnemonic deterioration.

Jeri_Eisenberg_Quaking_Ash_No_4

Quaking Ash, No. , 2008

According to the artist, her work is “firmly grounded in the natural world, a particular place, a particular season, a particular time. But by obscuring detail, only the strongest brush strokes emerge: the images become sketches with light, literally and figuratively.” Ignoring grand vistas or exotic locales, Eisenberg focuses instead on the ordinary rather than the spectacular, on the common landscapes of day to day life.

Jeri_Eisenberg_Forsythia_No_3

Forsythia, No. 3, 2011

As a working and teaching photographer in rural upstate New York, Eisenberg has exhibited in spaces ranging from the Center for Photography at Woodstock Permanent Collection, Dorsky Museum, New Paltz, New York to the Cordon Potts Gallery of San Francisco. Corporate collections include Banana Republic (New York, NY), Vinson & Elkins, LLP (Houston, TX) and the Sheraton Hotel (Stockholm, Sweden), among others. Bokeh is Eisenberg’s second solo exhibition at the John Cleary Gallery, following her successful showing in March of 2009.

Jeri_Eisenberg_Giant_Magnolia_No_2

Giant Magnolia, No. 2, 2010

For more of Jeri’s work you can check out our Bokeh exhibit page at the John Cleary Gallery website here or please feel free to stop in or give us a call with any other questions.

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Salt of the Earth

 

This past summer I had the pleasure of working for an organization in western Michigan before going on tour and on one of the rare occasions I got to get away from camp to run into nearby Muskegon I passed a giant mount of sand (?) salt (?) something (?) and was instantly reminded of the work of one of the gallery’s artist, Tom Hawkins.

My poor imitation (it’s the sincerest form of flattery, right?):

2011-06-15 11.37.32

 

The real deal:

Salt Mound Bonaire

Salt Mound, Bonaire

 

Tom_Hawkins_Salt_Harvest_5_Bonaire_t

Salt Harvest #5, Bonaire

 

Salt Harvest No 3- Bonair

Salt Harvest #3, Bonaire

 

For information about Tom Hawkins or to see more of his work, check out his website here or contact the John Cleary Gallery here!

~Joseph