In Mark Greenwalt’s "Familiar Anomalies," his non-deterministic figures, through frequent cycles of forming, deforming, and reforming, evolve on drawing surfaces parallel to the greater world in which nature and culture increasingly fuse in wonderful and terrifying ways.
In "Nightboxes," Ward Sanders presents a series of boxes, that are different sizes with instruments and objects placed within them, that visually respond to unpleasant subject matter: death, dying and the passage of time in various manifestations (despair, sorrow, depression, fear, displacement, absurdity, extinction, grief, chance, etc.)
Following the opening reception, the exhibits will be on display until November 21.
In Mark Greenwalt’s "Familiar Anomalies," his non-deterministic figures, through frequent cycles of forming, deforming, and reforming, evolve on drawing surfaces parallel to the greater world in which nature and culture increasingly fuse in wonderful and terrifying ways.
In "Nightboxes," Ward Sanders presents a series of boxes, that are different sizes with instruments and objects placed within them, that visually respond to unpleasant subject matter: death, dying and the passage of time in various manifestations (despair, sorrow, depression, fear, displacement, absurdity, extinction, grief, chance, etc.)
Following the opening reception, the exhibits will be on display until November 21.
In Mark Greenwalt’s "Familiar Anomalies," his non-deterministic figures, through frequent cycles of forming, deforming, and reforming, evolve on drawing surfaces parallel to the greater world in which nature and culture increasingly fuse in wonderful and terrifying ways.
In "Nightboxes," Ward Sanders presents a series of boxes, that are different sizes with instruments and objects placed within them, that visually respond to unpleasant subject matter: death, dying and the passage of time in various manifestations (despair, sorrow, depression, fear, displacement, absurdity, extinction, grief, chance, etc.)
Following the opening reception, the exhibits will be on display until November 21.