Showing posts with label christine bailey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christine bailey. Show all posts

Monday, July 5, 2010

H&H Double Opening, Saturday July 10 After the Sondheim Prize Announcement!

NUDASHANK
RE:
FURNISHED

Seth Crawford
Georgia Dickie
Mitch Magee
Nathan Manuel
Nick Van Woert

July 10th- July 31st
Reception: 8:00 - 11pm
An all sculpture show of works that play on home decor, household objects, furniture, and function.

The opening reception follows the announcement of the Sondheim Prize at the BMA and is in conjunction with receptions at Gallery Four and the Whole Gallery. CURRENT Gallery will also be having a reception for their reopening video show- Baltimore vs. the World. 1 block away on Howard Street.

GALLERY FOUR

July 10th - August 28th

Reception: Saturday, June 10th 8:30PM - 11PM

Gallery Four brings San Francisco based artist John Chiara to Baltimore for a residency to create new works for an exhibition with Baltimore artists Christine Bailey, James Rieck, and Jacqueline Schlossman. You and Me Living Today / Vol. 2 / The Land is the second half of a two volume series, showcasing the exploration of horizon as a contemporary mantra.

This exhibition opens in conjunction with Nudashank Gallery in the H&H Building, immediately after the Sondheim announcement July 10th.


Monday, November 30, 2009

Christine Bailey: Drawings @ Theatre Project

Christine Bailey: Drawings
December 3, 2009 – January 3, 2010
Opening Reception: December 3 from 6:00-8:00pm
John Fonda Gallery
45 West Preston Street
Baltimore, MD 21201
410-539-3091
www.theatreproject.com
located at Theatre Project


The show consists of new works that explore Christine’s fascination with drawings that blur the line between process and image.

The drawings in this series are made with powdered photocopy toner on paper. Bailey applies and manipulates the toner with paintbrushes and erasers and set it using heat. The toner creates a grainy, soft-focus surface reminiscent of photographic enlargements. Alternating between the baroque and the banal, the imagery in these handmade “copies” is drawn from various sources, including media images, photographs of natural disasters, places Bailey has traveled, places she has imagined, and her own previous artworks.