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After 37 years, Atlanta s OG graffiti crew resurfaces
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Fay Gold, promoting art in Atlanta for 50 years, to be honored at gala
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Fay Gold, promoting art in Atlanta for 50 years, to be honored at gala
ajc.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ajc.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Josephine Lee: Practice Until You Feel the Language Inside You. Guest curator
Tanya Gayer is creatively preoccupied with the storytelling history she uncovers in archives, databases and the bureaucratic categorizing of citizens. Leeâs life has been divided between the U.S., Canada and South Korea. The artistâs sculptures, installations and performances explore the intersections of nationality, geography and the immigrant experience through conceptual works that attempt to convey the notion â and more importantly, the feeling â of home.Â
The gallery will also be unveiling a new exhibition space outside of its Packing Plant gallery.
AIRSpace Projects is a pair of flagpoles intended to display the work of artists who specialize in â or want to explore â flying flags as creative expression. AIRSpaceâs inaugural artist,
East Nashville
The Red Arrow Gallery. I recently read a description of
Paul Collins’ creative practice in which the word “diaristic” caught my eye it captures both Collins’ everyday subject matter and observational gaze so precisely. Collins’ point of view is the strongest aspect of his work, giving his paintings, drawings and sculptures conceptual depth while also informing a recognizable style that’s offhand, but always thoughtful and sincere. Again, that description of his art fits so well because his work always reads like notes he’s taken during the day stuff he saw, things he did. His new series of avian watercolors will look very familiar to Nashvillians who might have gotten a kick out of all the winter bird-watching the recent blizzards brought us. Collins also noticed the chromatic pop of crimson cardinals flitting through the falling white; the puffed-up orange chests of cold-weather robins; black squadrons of starlings lighting on bare branches.