co
Vol 2 . Nº 16 FEB 2009
Wynwood Gallery walk
SECOND SATURDAY
 
36th street
dot51

Dot Fiftyone Gallery
51NW 36th St.
Miami, FL 33127
305 573 9994
EMAIL
WEB


Gallery Hours
Mon - Fri 11:00 - 7:30
Sat 1- 6
Private viewing by appt.

Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10

Dot 51

Cristobal Quintero,
Fresh Drawings,
Acrylic on Canvas, 63 x 51

Until April 4
Bazaar. Pancho Luna
Paintings and Installations.
Luna’s works express a suggestive apprehension of meaning, alluding to many traditional and contemporary issues of existential transcendence. For Pancho Luna, saying less, is sometimes a way of saying more, or at least, of saying best.
Luna’s installations work as ciphers, hybrids, transient/durable artifacts between Conceptual Art and Arte Povera. The carefully realized pieces exhibit a feel for intuition mixed with conceptual precision.

Until April 4
Painted Paintings. Cristobal Quintero
Drawings and Paintings
Project Room.
Cristobal Quintero an artist from Seville, Spain, usually uses drawing as a form of experimentation, covering multiple facets and with various techniques. He rarely uses it as the final work itself, more likely to experiment and make notes: sometimes to transmit an idea in an objective way, and others, taking advantage of the free association of ideas, the automatic drawing.

 


dot51

Renaissance Arts Emporium
203 NW. 36th St
Miami, FL 33127
305 576 6030
EMAIL

Gallery Hours
Mon - Fri 11:00 - 7:30
Sat 1- 6
Private viewing by appt.

Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10

Dot 51
Lacoon and his Sons. Made by 3 Rhodian sculptors Agesander, Athenodoros, and Polydorus. Which stands in the Vatican Museums, Rome."


Marble Sculptures

From Tuscany, the birthplace of Italian Renaissance to the intimacy of your home. The most magnificent and decorative pieces of art, recreated by craftsmen in Tuscany whose skills have been handed down through centuries and who still continue with the tradition.

Renaissance Arts Emporium is now showing, marble sculptures, semi precious stone table tops, columns, fire places consoles and vases.

The Commesso technique, which is a decorative pattern of small unevenly shaped and variously colored semi precious stones, makes the marble marquetry. The Medici family worked very close and together with the craftsmen in the production of these amazingly beautiful pieces, using natural motives like flowers, fruits and birds plumage.

Marble stones come from all over the world. The Bahia stone is coming from Brazil, Lapis Lazuli from Afghanistan, White Marble from Italy or the Porphyry from Egypt. 

 


 
2nd Avenue

alejandra von hartz gallery
2630 NW 2nd. avenue
Miami, Fl 33127
305 438 0220
EMAIL


Gallery hours:
Tues - Fri 11- 6
Sat 12 - 5

Opening Reception Saturday February 14, 7 – 10
Artist will be in attendance

Alejandra von Hartz Jaime Gili, Hibert, 2007. Acrylic on canvas, 25 ½ x 19 ¾ in


Until March 29
Jaime Gili. Everything is borrowed

In his recent series of works he depicts what could possibly be the clash of utopia and reality. His paintings expand to take over visually and physically ever larger spaces, as in his  Superestrellas at Riflemaker Soho square, in 2008, and at Periférico Caracas in 2006. He has recently spent more time in his native Venezuela, where he is developing public art projects and organizing possibilities for young local artists with the space Oficina#1. He has published writings in the Spanish art magazine LAPIZ and he is part of the advisory committee of CIFO, Miami.

Jaime Gili was born in 1972. He grew up in Caracas, at the peak of a very singular local modernity in art and architecture.Gili often quotes as the best examples of a very special, modernist integration of the arts the private houses that Gio Ponti built in the city, and the campus of the Central University in Caracas, planned in the 1940´s by Carlos Raúl Villanueva, a campus which includes many artworks by local and international artists.

PanAmerican ArtProjects
2450 NW 2nd Ave.
Miami, 33127
305 573 2400
EMAIL
WEB


Gallery hours:
Mon-Friday 9:30- 5:30
Saturday 12-5:30

Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10

panamerican
Carlos Gallardo, Evidencias VIII, 1996. Metal box, lead, letters, resin, photographs,
13.75 x 13.75 x 3 in




Gory, Gian Paolo Minelli, Santiago Porter, Pablo Soria, Rickee Mahoney
…Click, a trigger happy photography  show

Project Room: Tribute to Carlos Gallardo (1944-2008)

Until February 28

In this exhibition we are exploring photography as a medium and as a way of expression. Through this selection of photographs we can see how each artist approaches the medium from a different point of view and how each of them sees a dissimilar image through their lens.

Some artists offer an intimate view of their lives while others take on political overviews and social themes. The list of photographers includes an international roster with outstanding names such as Alfred Jaar and Vick Muniz to gallery artists such as Gory, Gian Paolo Minelli, Santiago Porter and Pablo Soria; to young locals like Rickee Mahoney.

In the project room we will present a tribute to the late Carlos Gallardo (1944-2008).  He was a very well-know Argentinean artist whose work reflected themes such as displacement and migration. His oeuvre had an intimate and personal quality, created mostly by his use of mementos such as letters and personal objects.

Gallardo’s extensive artistic trajectory included his participation in prestigious biennials and significant solo exhibitions in prominent institutions.. Gallardo was represented by Pan American Art Projects, where he held a solo exhibition in 2007.


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Lyle O. Reitzel Gallery Miami
2441NW 2nd Ave.
Miami, Fl 33127
786 693 8155
305 573 1333
WEB
EMAIL

Gallery Hours:
Wed to Sat 12- 5 or by appointment

Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10

Lylie Gerard Ellis.In the garden of delights II, 2008, m/c 36 x 60 in



José Bedia, José Garcia Cordero, Gerard Ellis, Victor Payares, Melissa Mejía and Eleomar Puente
Collective Show

In this collective show a unique visual impact is perceived, through the contrasts and its differences, under a conductive wave which unifies the diverse artistic languages; honest proposals, truly fresh and original in a conceptual level, with an explosive aesthetic in color, versus black or white, where in many cases the language is managed with intelligence and acute humor.



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dpm
2441 N.W. 2nd Avenue
Miami, Florida 33127
305 283 4480
EMAIL
WEB


Gallery Hours:
Thu-Sat 12 - 5 or appt.


Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10

SammerAlejandro Campins, Mercedes Benz, 2008, oil on canvas, 180x140 cm


Until February 28
Alejandro Campins. Ariel Cusnir

Creators of an atmosphere where reality shows itself unmarked from the normal laws, acutely heteroclite, these creators alter the semantic order with an undeniable familiarity, like if each elements dwells with propriety in a strangely believable world. 

They exemplify diverse tendencies of the pictorial realm, that other subjectivity that does not reflect the modernist slide of a SELF that is looked for in the mysteries of the repressed unconscious by the logocentric vocation and instrumental to modern society. 

That is why, and even though their heterodox and mutant worlds simulate sometimes the unexplored universes that surrealism aspired to reveal, they cannot concur with the liberator attitude, nor with the depressive stages of the modern artist….  

 


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Linda Copeland Studio/Gallery
2303 NW 2nd Avenue
Miami, Florida 33127
305 710 8187
EMAIL
WEB

Gallery hours:
Mon - Fri 9 - 3

Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10

Emanuel PerrotinCopeland, Moon Dust III,
6ft – 8ft, Mixed Media


Linda Copeland
Artist in Residence
Copeland’s art is all about expressing energy.  Her paintings lack familiar objects and as a result she invites the viewer to feel the painting emotionally. Rather than trying to interpret the painting, she would like you to simply enjoy the experience, feel the energy and see the beauty.  Her process is very physical and it is this form of both bodily and emotional intensity that inspires her.  She believes that in our daily life we personally interpret what we see to define the experience we have. Each of us can look at the same object and see something different based on our level of consciousness.

All the art you will view in her gallery studio has the impression of spontaneity. In the first room, you’ll find paintings that use an “all over” technique – there is no definable composition.  In the other room is a brand new series called Moondust. 

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Durban Segnini Gallery
2145 NW 2nd. Ave.
Miami, Fl 33127
304 774 7740
EMAIL
WEB

Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10


SammerJesus Soto, Penetrable BBL Blue, 365 x 400 x 1400 cm., 1999, Edition 2/8


Jesus Soto.
Penetrable BB
L Blue, 1999

Enjoy this spectacular Soto at Durban Segnini new open space in Wynwood. Soto was a Venezuelan artist (1923 – 2005). He was a sculptor and painter and is most famous for his op art and kinetic art works. Soto is particularly well known for his penetrables, interactive sculptures which consist of square arrays of thin, dangling tubes through which observers can walk. It has been said of Soto's art that it is inseparable from the viewer; it can only stand completed in the illusion perceived by the mind as a result of observing the piece.

Durban-Segnini Gallery was founded in Caracas, Venezuela, in 1970 and in Miami, USA in 1992, by its present director and owner Mr. Cesar Segnini.

Durban-Segnini Gallery specializes in contemporary painting and sculpture, emphasizing in artists who have worked with abstract expressionism, geometric abstraction and kinetic art.Simultaneously, the Gallery strives to promote and diffuse new artistic values as well as the historical vanguards that have influenced those.


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Abro Gallery
2137 NW 2nd. Ave
Miami, FL 33127
786 348 2100
EMAIL
WEB
Tues - Sat 10 – 7

Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10


Sammer


Until February 28
Marian Balcacer. Ada Balcacer. Domingo Batista. Máximo Caminero.Aurelio Grisanty.Domingo Liz. Freddy Rodríguez. Ezequiel Taveras
Group Show curated by Ada Balcacer

Grisanty. From one window, techniques and compositions form different versions of the same landscapes. Light and time manipulate the inner mood of the artist to endlessly work in search of spectacular solutions. Rodríguez. Baseball in the Dominican Republic is a passion. His creative effort he integrates Baseball to his art. Batista. A master in the art of photography. Liz. His drawings have been titled as The writings of the Ozama River  on the East bank of Santo Domingo a place where he has lived and work all his life. Taveras. Ceramics, Printmaking and Painting. His flirtation with antiquity runs throughout his work. Balcacer. Her new series Veggies show hand pencil drawing in color plus white and black on the tradition of the classic Italian chiaroscuro. Caminero. Inspired on pre-Columbian expressions the artist presents works with a new conceptual vision of the historical source of information. Ada Balcacer. A prestigious name in the Caribbean Region known for her personal style and infinite creativity.


 
North Miami Avenue
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East Village Gallery
East Village Gallery
art from the street
3450 N Miami Avenue
(corner of 34th Terr)
Miami, Fl 33127
305 446 1222

EMAIL
WEB

Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10

Kevin Shie Moreno

Stratum. Eight progressive artists
Shie Moreno, Leonardo Hidalgo, Alex Brewer, Alex Yanes, Rachel Mouial, Natalia Yovane, Richard Hambleton and Todji Kurtzman

Lawrence Savage is expanding his art presence from the magnificent home base in his Coral Gables location ( 4217 Ponce de Leon Blvd.) to open East Village Gallery, art from the street, in the Wynwood Art District. Stratum is a group exhibit highlighting the importance of artistic expression as a means to generate social awareness.

The work showcased in Stratum celebrates artists’ who share an inherent need to create imagery captivating social life and personal exploration. Stratum has united seven progressive artists from the east coast metropolitan hubs including Miami, Atlanta, New York City, and St. Martin island. Stratum includes paintings from the six emerging artists and the unveiling of Todji Kurtzman’s 12 foot sculpture weighing over 2,000 pounds. Each of these artists’ work embodies internally consistent characteristics that are distinguishable from their peers.

The newest artist to join our Wynwood Gallery is Alex Yanes. "My generation was raised on cartoons, graffiti and tattoos; it's what we consider fine art." Using vivid colors, Yanes uses bold outlines to define his intricate figures.

East Village Gallery is the ideal venue to host this exhibit; offering over 2000 square feet of open space, extremely high vaulted ceilings, and an outdoor garden fit for 100’s of purveyors to enjoy.


Hardcore Art Contemporary Space
3326 N Miami Ave.
Miami, Fl 33127
786 488 4375
EMAIL
WEB

Gallery hours:
Tues - Fri 10 - 6
Sat 11 - 4

Open Reception
February 14, 7 - 10

Hardcore
Julie Lopez, poster on street graffiti, 2008


Julie López. “it tastes like chicken"

López, a local Miami artist with an extensive multi–media body of work, says “the figures that inhabit my surfaces are a culmination of muted strangers present in the media. Paleolithic drawings have shown us that life repeats itself; today, graffiti and street artists are making sure to document current lives with the same intensity of any scholar”.

Andres Michelena. RE-CYCLE
The artist’s works on paper which permeate into a broader concept of the word to not just materials but ideas where the artist revisits his own process.

Anne Brunet. Drawings on paper
French artist, Anne Brunet’s shows her neo-pop surrealistic detailed drawings.

Luis Salazar. Manic
Also, painter shows his large paintings flaunting a “Manic” fair, touching on issues of media.

Alexis W. La Ventana Indiscreta VI
Spanish photographer, Alexis W continues exhibiting his light boxes of great visual strength on fighters (boxers) as metaphor for life itself.

 

Diana Lowenstein
Fine Arts

2043 N Miami Ave
Miami, Fl 33127
305 576 1804
EMAIL
WEB

Gallery hours:
Tues– Fri 10- 5
Sat 10 - 3


Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10

Diana LowensteinBasso, Voz sobre Amarillo, Oil, acrylic, varnish, 2008. Hoyo de Manzanares, 69 x 52 in


Until March 7
Darío Basso. Pigment Coast
Strong, bright colours, rich in contrasts, coupled with a dynamic use of form are the distinguishing features of the works of the Spanish artist Darío Basso.The forthcoming exhibition "Pigment Coast" presents Darío Basso's new artistic developments manifesting a completely new treatment of form and content. Remaining true to his typical material aesthetic, the artist uses not only thickly applied acrylic and oil paints but also dried leaves, heightening the impression of depth still further.  The optical effect of the roughened, in parts almost furrowed surfaces of the paintings is strengthened through the addition of marble sand. 

Art writer Alexandra Henze states, “Darío Basso's most recent works are different from his previous body.  They are characterized by very luminous, clearly demarcated colors.  While in the first versions of these new works, the broad stripes of colour ran straight down or rose straight up, like stalactites and stalagmites, they are now bundled together into floral or semi-circular formations.  Basso creates outdoors.”

 

  23rd. Street & Around
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artformz Alternative
171 NW 23rd Street
Miami, FL 33127
305.572.0040
EMAIL
WEB
305 572 0040

Almost always:
Tues-Fri: 12 - 7
Sat: 12 - 5
and by appt - please call ahead

Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10


SammerPJ Mills, Hedgehog, photograph, 2008, 84 x 120 in

Until March 9
Faith, Fear, and Fortune
PJ Mills – large format photography
Ramon Williams – sculptural objects & photography

Religion and faith are the subjects of lectures, books, artwork, and architectural monuments.  In the gallery’s February show artists Mills (Irish-American) and Williams (Cuban-American) exhibit haunting interpretations of this theme flowing pervasively throughout much of each artist’s work.   The imagery and objects are observations on the condition of contemporary society, filtered through each artist’s ethnic experience that has led to the creation of each one’s visual vocabulary.  

Mills sees religions as  predominately mechanisms for family/social control  and Williams as instruments of faith, to help look forward beyond that existence of fear and solitude. Even as the resulting works follow personal and private interpretations on the theme, and are separate stories, they are not – as evidenced in the collaborative installation One Question, One Answer on exhibit in the project room.  The artists invite visitors to enter – one by one – where they may find, as Williams states: the chance of grasping the meaning in the actual frailness of the merchandise and its hopeful consumer.


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Kevin Bruk Gallery
2249 NW 1st Place
Miami, Fl 33127
305 576 2000
EMAIL
WEB


Gallery hours:
Tues – Fri 10 – 6


Opening Reception:
Tuesday Dec 2, 6 – 9

Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10

KevinSam Gordon; Sketchbooks (1995 2008) Banner #1; Inkjet on indoor/outdoor


Until March 11
Sam Gordon. 48 Hours in Miami
8 Hours in Miami: The Lost Kinetic World, Volumes 1­24 (2005­2008) and Sketchbooks (1995-2008)

Two parallel time lines: 48 hours of video captured with a point-and-shoot digital camera and stored on an iPod; 8 vinyl banners, printed at Kinkos, composed of 640 scanned sketchbook pages. In both his video and banner works, Gordon employs consumer grade media tools and formats to archive immediate gestures‹be they doodles or 15-second video clips‹and coalesce them into sites of aggregation and experimentation. 48 Hours in Miami: The Lost Kinetic World, Volumes 1­24 (2005­2008) consists of thousands of video clips: art moments from the recent past edited into a kaleidoscopic, encyclopedic, temporal collage.

Painthings. Curated by Sam Gordon
Lecia Dole-Recio / Jake Ewert / Jacob Robihcaux
The premise is paintings that are things Painthings. Self aware objects, abstract but not abstract at all, a portrait of a painting: cut, stitched, and baked (literally). Side projects of each artist have come to inform their individual work and will surface in different ways in the exhibition, such as spontaneous performances and an idosyncratic installation. When is work, the work and when is work a hobby. Jobby. Painthings. New words fornew activities.


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Purvis Young
Studio
255 NW 23rd St.
Miami, FL 33127
786 285 0034
EMAIL
Second Saturdays and by
appt.

Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10

Purvis Yung Young, Locked Up Their Minds, 1972. 84 x 84 in. Photo credit: Larry Clemons


Purvis Young
Artist in residence
Internationally acclaimed Southern African American Vernacular artist Purvis Young creates his canvases from recycled products including found wood, discarded library books, old political posters, used furniture and various surplus items from construction sites.His complex language expresses what he sees and experiences in the world around him in all its unpretentious stark reality. His symbols convey the on-going economic and cultural divides so prevalent in Miami and beyond through recurring images of black and white horses, pregnant women, highways and overpasses, convoys of trucks and trains, railroad tracks, airplanes, angels and Zulu warriors (whom he considers his tribe).

Today, Young's work is in more than 60 public collections and numerous private ones. His work hangs in The Bass Museum of Art (Miami); American Folk Art Museum (New York); The Corcoran Gallery of Art (Washington, D.C.); Lowe Art Museum (University of Miami); Museum of Fine Arts (Houston); Philadelphia Museum of Art; the Smithsonian American Art Museum among many others.

 

  29th street & midtown
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Luis Perez Galería at warehouse
550 NW 29th St.
Miami, Fl 33127
305 379 3763
EMAIL
WEB


Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10


Americas Collection Wynnwood

Edgar Negret, Mauro Mejiaz and Organic Arma
LPG offers the community a place where one can enjoy art indoors and out, learn to initiate collections, continue building upon them and combine the fine art world with other art expressions: music and technology.

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Blank Canvas Concepts | Contemporary African Art Gallery
166 Northwest 29th St.
Miami, FL 33127
305 924 8517
EMAIL
WEB

Open Second Saturdays and by appt

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Richard Korblah, Untitled (detail),2008


Contemporary African Art
Blank Canvas Concepts features the work of some of the most talented and authentic contemporary West African artists.  These artists draw their inspiration from their personal life journeys, their peoples’ cultural heritage and deep-seeded mystical beliefs.

Their work tells the tale of the evolution of Africa, illustrating its interaction with the western world and providing an intimate look at the continent’s complex and passionate identity in an increasingly interwoven world.

In the spirit of sustained artistic stimulation, Blank Canvas Concepts reinvests portions of the proceeds to fund these artists’ big ideas.  Together, they have created an art center in Dassa, Benin, where artists can work together, exchange techniques, train new apprentices, and have access to high-quality supplies and resources. 

Blank Canvas Concepts finances international residencies and symposiums in West Africa, allowing artists from diverse backgrounds to exchange, create and learn together.

Kelley roy Gallery
50 NE 29 St. N Miami Ave
Miami, Fl 33127
305 444 0004
EMAIL
WEB

Gallery Hours
Tue - Fri 10- 5 and by appointment

Gallery Night Reception
February 14, 7 - 10

Soile Yli-Mayry, Asphalt Dream, oil, 2008, 44 x 56 in



Until February 28
Finnish Artist Soile Yli-Mayry

Kelley Roy Gallery in Wynwood will showcase the bold, expressive paintings of acclaimed Finnish artist, Soile Yli-Mayry.

Yli-Mayry is an abstract painter of significant international stature with 240 solo exhibits in 26 countries including solo exhibitions in the art capitals of Paris, London, Rome, Basel and New York. 

Her work is distinguished by her deft use of the pallet knife which she employs to achieve multiple effects, from a thin, even coat to thick lines to a three-dimensional quality, made by scraping lines into the painted canvass.  Her paintings are asymmetrical and her colors vivid, reflecting the elements of the earth and the richness of her themes which she describes as humanity and people's alienation from nature in the urban world.

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Sammer Gallery
82 NE 29 th St.
Miami, Fl 33137
EMAIL
WEB

Mon – Fri 10 – 6
Saturday 7 – 10

Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10

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Julio Le Parc, Movement Surprise, 1968, 100 cm h


Until March 2nd, 2009
Light+Movement+Line
Arden Quin, Asis, Boto, Carreño, Costigliolo, Cruz-Diez, Charoux, Freire, Lauand, Le Parc, Llorens, Lozza, Magariños, Pavlotzky, Serpa, Soto, Tomasello and Vardanega.

Sammer Gallery is dedicated to the promotion of Constructivism with emphasis in Joaquin Torres Garcia & the School of the South and lately to The Non- Figurative Group (geometric abstraction) created in the 50's and to the Grupo 8 from the 60's. The gallery showcases works by majors Uruguayan masters such us Torres Garcia, Gonzalo Fonseca, Francisco Matto, Jose Gurvich, Julio Alpuy, Manuel Pailos, Rafael Barradas, Pedro Figari, Petrona Viera, Jose Pedro Costigliolo, Maria Freire, Miguel Angel Pareja, Raul Pavlotzky, Lincoln Presno, Hilda Lopez, Antonio Llorens, Juan Ventayol and also represents contemporary artist Ricardo Pascale.

dot51

DAniel Azoulay Gallery
Midtown 4,
3301 NE 1st Ave. Ste. 105
Miami, FL  33137
305 576 1977   
EMA
IL   
WEB

Tues to Fri, 11 to 5
Saturday by appt.


Gallery Walk Reception: February 14, 7 - 10

Dot 51
Laura London, Rock Star Moment 2, Color Photograph, 2000, 30 x 30


Closing Reception, Thursday February 12, 7 – 10
Gallery Night Reception Saturday February 14, 7- 10

Laura London. Exposed. Photographs
Laura London is an L.A. based photographer . This is her first solo show with Daniel Azoulay Gallery, she is presenting 10 large scale photographs based on themes of Identity, youth culture & rock-n-roll.

For the Exposed exhibition, she is showing work from the following three series:  Couples, Groups and Friends, the True Self:  Portrait Series and the Sketch Book Dressing Room Portrait Series.

Since graduating from California Institute of the Arts, photographer Laura London has examined various notions and stereotypes of the feminine. At first glance, her documentary-style photographs of punk rock chicks and other teenage girls may appear to be the work of a social anthropologist.  However, these staged teen dramas depicting beauty rituals, fashions and other habits of young girls in bedrooms, bathrooms and shopping malls are narratives constructed by the artist herself. 

Also Showing:
Daniel de Azoulay: Antilope Canyon
Alfredo du Stefano:  Brief Chronicle of Light

 

  beyond 2nd avenue
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Bakehouse art complex
561 NW 32 St
Miami, FL 33127
305 576 2828
EMAIL
WEB

Gallery hours:
Mon - Sun, 12 - 5

Opening Reception Friday, February 13
Live music from Streetkind,
a local rock/reggae band.

Bakehouse

Until March 3
Autumn Casey. Cynthia Cruz, Laura Duran, Mauricio Gonzalez. Bárbara Gutierrez. Samuel López de Victoria, Natalia Manrique. Orlando Robaina. Mónica Tábora

Nine visual arts students from the New World School of the Arts.
Main Gallery.

Adriano Nicot. New Work
Swenson Gallery

  Design District and beyond

101 / exhibit
101 NE 40th St.
Miami, FL 33137
305 573 2101
EMAIL
WEB


Tue – Sat: 11 – 7

Gallery Walk Reception Saturday February 14, 7 - 10

101Manson, Übermensch, Watercolor, 2002, 30x 22 in


Closing Party Tuesday February 18, 6 – 10
Closing Day Friday February 20, 11 – 7


Until February 20

Marilyn Manson, Trismegistus

Multi-talented artist Marilyn Manson, legendary for the cult status of his music career and persona, has simultaneously been creating a large and remarkable body of painting over the past two decades that will be revealed for the first time in the U.S. Just as Manson’s lyrics are provocative, driving the expressive form of music to its limits, the artist’s paintings, though aesthetically pleasing, play with the grotesque and confront the viewer with the dark side of the American Dream – its obsessions and pitfalls. This exhibition of more than twenty paintings is presented by the Cologne-based Galerie Brigitte Schenk in cooperation with 101 Exhibit, a dynamic new art space in Miami’s Design District.

The artist known as Marilyn Manson took his pseudonym from the names Marilyn Monroe and Charles Manson – figures whom he sees as reflecting the ultimate and most disturbing dualism of American culture. “Marilyn Manson is a living work of art and an anti-popstar.“ stated his gallerist Brigitte Schenk.


Lawrence Savage Galleries
66 NE 40th St.
Miami, Fl 33137
305 446 1222
EMAIL
WEB


LawrenceAlex Brewer


Opening Reception Thursday February 12, 7 - 10
Gallery Walk Reception Saturday February 14, 7 - 10


Shie Moreno. Alex Brewer. New Paintings

Moreno and Brewer’s journey together creates anew the dynamic friendships of earlier masters of Modern Art. As others before them, the pair continue to evolve the language of their individual expression in a way that is liberating for those who follow them.

Shie Moreno continues to utilize a variety of mediums such as: paint, collage, tar, marker, aerosol, wax, keepsakes and photography for pieces that display spontaneity poised with earnest examinations of color, letter forms and composition.

Alex Brewer’s new work consists of layers and layers of marks applied on a surface with spray paint, marker, graphite and “anything interesting” to create a final product.

The gallery will also be expanding its display of noted designer Andrew Muggleton’s 2009 furniture collection.

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CAROL JAZZAR HOME GALLERY
158 NW 91 St
Miami, Fl 33150
305 490 6906

EMAIL
WEB

Gallery hours:
Sat & Sun 1- 6
and by appt


Guerra de la Paz


Until March 10th
Guerra de la Paz
OTHERWORLD

Puppet masters of the contemporary arts Cuban born American collaborative, Guerra de la Paz breathe life into their sublime appreciation for form with anthropomorphic sculptures and installations characterized by vibrant colors and bucolic elegance. Inspired by the ready-made they honor contemporary culture with their references to traditional disciplines, historic themes and classic icons.
   
  Coconut grove
rule

Cocowalk
3015 Grand Avenue,
Coconut Grove, Fl 33133

305 444-0777 ext 14
WEB

EMAIL

ArtWay 66 & Gallery & Photo Studio
Artway66@yahoo.com
www.artway66.com

Cocowalk Suite # 237

Hours:
Sun thru Thurs 10 to 10
Fri thru Sat 10-11


image

Jacket by Johnny



 

Opening Cocktail Reception Saturday  February 28, 7 - 11

The top of the walk International Gallery
Artistic Clothing and Accessories.

Top of the Walk
Johnny, PRoman, Carlos Ampudia, Adrianne Willamson, Jose Riera, G.G, Cooper Hanson, Alexander Calderon, Laura Pimentel, Omar Garcia and
artistic jewelry by Steven Rehage.

A new art gallery in the 2nd. Level of Cocowalk showing one of a kind original clothing, accessories and jewelry created by local and national artists.

CocoWalk is located at 3015 Grand Avenue, in Coconut Grove. The unique grounds and buildings of CocoWalk were carefully designed to blend seamlessly into the surroundings of Coconut Grove, a bayside village known for being eclectic, sometimes eccentric and always exciting. CocoWalk's rows of art galleries, shops and boutiques are a window-shoppers paradise, while the AMC movie theatre gallery provides cultured entertainment for any taste. Restaurants and sidewalk cafes offer a kaleidoscope of flavors from every corner of the globe. Each night a variety of bars and nightclubs fill the center with sparkling lights, music and laughter.

 

 

   

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