Showing posts with label john fonda gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label john fonda gallery. Show all posts

Thursday, June 14, 2012

New Realities @ John Fonda Gallery

New Realities
New paintings by Dan Perkins
Opening Friday, June 15th
7 - 9pm

Theatre Project
45 West Preston Street 
Baltimore 21201

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Nature / Made @ John Fonda Gallery



NATURE/MADE: Steven Riddle & Amy Boone‐McCreesh

Opening Thursday, January 13 · 7:00pm - 9:00pm
John Fonda Gallery 45 W. Preston Street Baltimore, MD 21201 Located at the Theatre

NATURE/MADE is a two‐person exhibition that references the artists’ mutual rural upbringing in Pennsylvania and their shared artistic interests in creating artificial realties that stem from natural influences.

Steve Riddle


Amy Boone McCreesh



Saturday, April 24, 2010

Natural Remedies @ John Fonda Gallery

Natural Remedies
Caitlin Cunningham & Alex Ebstein

Natural Remedies is a two person exhibition of new works by Caitlin Cunningham and Alex Ebstein. Both artists reflect on their consciousness of health, medicine, and alternative remedies through meticulous, psychedelic imagery.

April 22 - May 30, 2010
Opening Reception: April 29th from 5:30-8:00pm

John Fonda Gallery
45 West Preston Street
Baltimore, MD 21201
located at Theatre Project
410-752-8558

Hours: M-F, Noon-4pm and by appointment

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Nicole Shiflet: Marching For Digits @ The John Fonda Gallery


Nicole Shiflet's Marching For Digits
Curated by Sidney Pink

John Fonda Gallery at Theatre Project
45 West Preston St.
Opening Reception: Thursday, June 4, 6:30-8:00pm
On View June 4 - July 12

John Fonda Gallery is please to present Nicole Shiflet’s first solo exhibition at the gallery. Titled Marching for Digits, the show consists of new paintings that explore Nicole’s fascination with interstitial moments that she documents into the fictional narratives of her paintings.

Shiflet’s paintings use bright color, simple organics forms, and detailed line work to create rich environments. Her work evokes scientific imagery and yet seems to exist inside fantastical landscapes, as if from a children’s book. She plays with the scale of her subject creating a duel sense of micro and macro.