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Area youth compete Saturday in 13th annual YMCA Splash and Dash races
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This is CT I don t know if they ll get it : Once famous for comics, CT artist shows abstract work
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This is CT I don t know if they ll get it : Once famous for comics, CT artist shows abstract work
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Angst and humanity: Norwalk exhibit examines psychological impacts of pandemic
Joel Lang
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The Lockwood Mathews Mansion Museum’s “Socially Distant Art: Creativity in the Lockdown” exhibit features 25 artists and runs through Aug. 29. Forced Separation by Kathie Milligan will be included in the exhibit.Courtesy of Kathie Milligan / Contributed photo
When Susan Gilgore, executive director at the Lockwood Mathews Mansion Museum in Norwalk, began thinking about a pandemic-related art exhibit, one of the first works that came to mind was a 1919 painting by the Norwegian artist Edvard Munch.
This wasn’t Munch’s famous, frightening “Scream.” It was a self-portrait, showing the artist seated in an invalid’s robe and blanket, almost defeated by the Spanish flu. His pale face looks out from the canvas; only the circle of his open mouth reminiscent of the more lurid “Scream.”
Norwalk artist says she wants viewers to ask questions when viewing her bone sculptures
Joel Lang
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Norwalk artist Miller Opie creates bone sculptures.© Miller Opie / Contributed photo
Last fall, Norwalk artist Miller Opie won the Jacobson sculpture award at the Silvermine Art Center’s annual A-One show for a pair of pieces fashioned primarily from moose bone.
Yes, that’s right: moose, the antlered animal of northern forests.
Now, as a reward for winning the A-One prize, Opie has two more animal bone sculptures in Silvermine’s current new members’ show, running through March 13.
The smaller of the two, titled “Jete” after the ballet leap, also incorporates moose bone. This time, Opie has used a pair of surprisingly thin ribs. Set vertically and slightly bowed on a block of hemlock wood, the ribs suggest striding legs arrested in forward motion.