"Somewhere Else" by Jane Szabo explores a yearning for a home or a sense of place that one cannot return to, no longer exists, or maybe never was. Throughout the series, hand-constructed homes are covered in a wide array of maps and photographed in natural settings and within architectural interiors. The maps that surface these homes do not reflect the location of the image, but are instead evocative of locations once explored or longed for, as well as the literal and spiritual journey of life itself. Both dream state and inner search, the series takes the artist and the viewer on a provocative path of escape and wonder.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display until February 28.
"Somewhere Else" by Jane Szabo explores a yearning for a home or a sense of place that one cannot return to, no longer exists, or maybe never was. Throughout the series, hand-constructed homes are covered in a wide array of maps and photographed in natural settings and within architectural interiors. The maps that surface these homes do not reflect the location of the image, but are instead evocative of locations once explored or longed for, as well as the literal and spiritual journey of life itself. Both dream state and inner search, the series takes the artist and the viewer on a provocative path of escape and wonder.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display until February 28.
"Somewhere Else" by Jane Szabo explores a yearning for a home or a sense of place that one cannot return to, no longer exists, or maybe never was. Throughout the series, hand-constructed homes are covered in a wide array of maps and photographed in natural settings and within architectural interiors. The maps that surface these homes do not reflect the location of the image, but are instead evocative of locations once explored or longed for, as well as the literal and spiritual journey of life itself. Both dream state and inner search, the series takes the artist and the viewer on a provocative path of escape and wonder.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display until February 28.