Suzanne at Two Coats has words about Michele’s newest at Kate Werble, noting the works look more like a dream than a product of twentieth-century formalism.
#micheleabramowitz

Suzanne at Two Coats has words about Michele’s newest at Kate Werble, noting the works look more like a dream than a product of twentieth-century formalism.
#micheleabramowitz

Claire at Whitehot sits downs to talk about Outside the Possibility of Worldly, Mannat’s first solo exhibition in New York.
#mannatgandotra

was also one of the artists (like Constantino) in Nivola, Savelli, Scarpitta: an international trio.
#salvatorescarpitta

Manuela at White Hot takes a look at the American dream through the talent of three Italian artists, touching on Constantino, a multifaceted sculptor and artist.
More (video)
#costantinonivola

Carlotta at Whitehot magazine invites us to consider how Haley’s works feel like windows into other worlds, “at once transcendent and deeply grounded—a vibrant meditation on landscape, abstraction and the emotional weight of form.”
#haleyyoung

Juxtapoz notes Jess’s recent Notes From a Lurker at Chefas Projects, which are abstractions more than abstraction (they are “an ode to meditative observation of both the self and of one’s surroundings”).
#jessackerman

Artsy said Ang is one of 8 rising Asian American women artists to watch (Jacqueline also made this list).
#angziqizhang

Adam Simon at Two Coats recently gave us a two-fer on Bettina and Don, saying they share a vocabulary of basic geometric forms, directional brushwork, and an emphasis on color relationships. Both shows present the rectangle as a primary condition of most painting as well.
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#bettinablohm

For the last couple of months I’ve been working on drawing-based project and exhibition that will take place at Birdland in July with fellow abstractionist Jason Lord. The impetus of the show, for me, is a continuation of my interest in parallels between the epoch in which late Modernism exploded, and the present day– specifically in pointing at the former to draw awareness to the latter. It has also been a refreshing and invigorating extension of my current practice as I have had the opportunity to use some mark making strategies I wouldn’t normally. There is a strong footprint on the finished work, specifically some large individual contributions, from Linda Cato, Peter Deligdisch, Cindy Morefield and Chris Thomas. There will also be a spectrum of participation by many artists from our local community, you’ll have to come visit to see who!
The project started with the early 20th century Surrealist parlor game Exquisite Corpse, where the collaborative joining of unrelated ideas yields novelty, contradiction, and the unexpected. This process of dismantling and reassembling branched into other strategies of disruption: attempting to suppress the conscious mind through the act of automatic drawing; using frottage, asemic writing, and collage to deconstruct meaning or remove it entirely. Some samples of the some of the drawing I’ve generated are below- quite different from hard-edged squares within squares. Show statement follows.





village impulse is a drawing project that centers communal strategies to disrupt conventional image-making and design. We pull from art historical traditions, like the ego disruption of the Surrealists, the rejection of logic in Dada, and the experimental spirit of Black Mountain College. Through collective experimentation, we embrace absurdity, challenge the inert, and uplift the unexpected. As the planet and its inhabitants face compound systemic failure, we ask, “how can we use disruption as a strategy to enable collective creativity and transformation?”
Artists respond to the world and its happenings. When the political landscape becomes irrational and the status quo unacceptable, artists respond and disrupt accordingly. Through village impulse, we make a case for embodied disruption through drawing: disrupting the hand through interventional tools and limitations; disrupting the image by decentralizing its maker; and disrupting the drawing process by adding elements of chance and randomization.
By revisiting these Modernist strategies, we plant a rhizome and let it spread into new territory, drawing approaches, and means of disruption, and through shared prompts, mail art, and on-site drawing (YES! when you visit, you can add to the exhibit!), we invite you to join us in asking, “how can we build something new together?”
Birdland Gallery is located at 706 Mountford Ave in Raleigh. The space will be open Fri/Sat/Sun in July (hours to come but expect late afternoon). Opening 7/5. Tell a friend to tell a friend!

newest is Ones, Chapter 0;2 at Miguel Abreu Gallery. R. H. Quaytman approaches painting as if it were poetry: when reading a poem, one notices particular words, and how each is not just that one word, but other words as well. Quaytman’s paintings, organized into chapters structured in the form of a book, have a grammar, a syntax, and a vocabulary.
#rhquaytman

One of the most celebrated Australian painters of the 20th century, Emily Kame Kngwarreye painted over 3,000 abstract acrylic paintings of dots, gestural lines, and vibrant hues, all inspired by her Aboriginal community’s symbols, rituals, and daily life.
#emilykamekngwarreye
