Elevate is an interactive business ethics game that will challenge players to rise to the top, while taking the high ground. My triptych is a launching point for a curriculum-based board game for college students, to be developed by Native American leaders and business educators.
Read MoreArt Exhibit
WALL: Curated by Molly Ruppert
“The Wall,” seems to be on everyone’s mind lately. What are walls, what do they accomplish and how do we as a society perceive the word wall? Curator Molly Rupert poses these questions to a select group of artists.
Read MoreZenith Gallery Presents: Women Who Work, Care and Create
at 1111 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington DC 20004
January 14–April 13, 2019
Opening Reception: Wednesday January 30th, 5pm-8pm
Featured Artists: Elizabeth Ashe, Jacqui Crocetta, Michelle Dickson, Elissa Farrow-Savos, Susan Freda, Katharine Owens, Lynda Smith-Bugge, Paula Stern, Emily Tucci
From the Zenith Gallery Press Release:
Throughout history, women have been excluded in virtually every field. Even when women are included, their achievements are overlooked and forgotten. Within the male-dominated art historical field, women sculptors are a rarity—normally working in textiles, decorative and fabric art—disregarded as a lower art form. While some women sculptors working in the “high art” form such as Edmonia Lewis, Barbara Hepworth, Beverly Pepper, Properzia de' Rossi, Ruth Asawa, and Louise Bourgeois, most of these women are not discussed enough with their male counterparts in the history of art. In the current environment we are striving to showcase our local women sculptors, their works, and their importance to the Global arts scene.
Elizabeth Ashe’s recent sculptures use minimalism – wire and shadow – to examine personal space in our relationship to one another or our environment. Bird sculptures are her metaphor for the migratory nature of living in D.C. or any Sanctuary city. Ashe is the Administrative Director of Zenith Gallery’s non-profit organization, Zenith Community Arts Foundation (ZCAF).
Jacqui Crocetta’s art investigates the human condition through abstraction. Through resilience, hope, and healing, she responds to the stories of women in her community who have faced adversity. Additionally, she focuses on interconnectedness through time in natural environments. One of the works featured in exhibit, Protect. Nurture. Release., emphasizes the complex mother-child dynamic and the idea of letting go & leaving the nest.
Michelle Dickson inwardly contemplates time and mortality to investigate her identity and place in the chaotic ever-changing world today. The cycles of nature, growth, death, and decay are present in Dickson’s series Neither Mine Nor Yours. Additionally, it explores contradiction of environmental devastation by man but the need for survival. The uncertainty and fragility of the environment and the world also exist within our bodies.
Elissa Farrow-Savos is inspired by her own personal experiences and emotions, her titles and sculptures reflect the journey of femininity and womanhood. Farrow-Savos’s universal poetic titles provoke emotion in the viewer because they resonate with our private selves. “The stories I tell are about inner worlds revealed - the things that we are not supposed to talk about and perhaps not supposed to feel, about our bodies, our families, and our life’s choices.”
Susan Freda is known for her organic, ephemeral, intricate weaving style. She works with form, light, and line to create her luminous dresses and shoes. Her fashionable and ghostly dresses have caught the eye of many designers and her work has been featured and collected at NY Fashion Week, Neiman-Marcus, and Stuart Weitzman.
Katharine Owens, a self-taught artist, wields her scissors with precision in meticulously designed three-dimensional paper collages that stand out of a two-dimensional surface. Owens is a sculptor in her own right creating structures, people, and places out of paper. Apprenticing under Guenther Riess, she has continued his legacy of three-dimensional paper construction in her own way.
Lynda Smith-Bugge “undresses” trees to reveal their beauty and their imperfections. In doing so, she brings forth rough exteriors and explores rich, hidden interiors, thus shaping fallen trees into works of art with spirit, structure, and timelessness. Lathe-turned symmetrical, mechanical shapes play off organic design. In her view, tree wounds (through their ‘scars’) suggest strength and add expression and history to each of her pieces. Lynda invites you to witness the simple grace of line, texture, and rhythm created by the forces of nature, as presented in each of her works.
Paula Stern’s art is the tangible manifestation of her deeply conscious effort to capture personality, corporal existence, and human vigor. Her sculptures honor the creation of the human body, not to idealize the body. Stern sculpts a variety of portraits, fictional characters from Shakespeare, and everyday people in a human form that her “mind’s eye sees.”
Emily Tucci repurposes what she takes from the environment to advocate for the natural world. Her Trophy sculptures display how ingrained all elements of the creature are with each other, through a focus on their anatomy. Elements of their natural environment are present within the piece, thus showing the integration of the animal within nature.
For four decades, Zenith Gallery has been a pillar in the D.C. art community. We attribute our success to our ability to transform with the ever-changing times. We do this by combining our longstanding commitment to inspired, unique artworks with our personalized, high quality customer service. This commitment to celebrating the creative spirit of our artists is the core value at the heart of Zenith Gallery. As the Owner and celebrated artist in her own right, Goldberg is fond of saying, “With billions of people on the planet, for someone to come up with an original idea and execute it in an original way is what has kept me in business all these years.”
Information: Margery Goldberg, 202-783-2963, art@zenithgallery.com
Gallery Hours: Monday-Friday 8am- 7pm, Saturday 8am-4pm. On Saturday, enter on 12th St. NW. Please knock & guard will let you in.
Rei Kawakubo/Comme des Garçons: Art of the In-Between
Top 5 Reasons I Admire (Japanese fashion designer) Rei Kawakubo's Genius
Read MoreElle Peace Project
My Elle Peace Project is a new series of works created in response to the stories of local women who have faced adversity and retained, or returned to, a sense of hope. My focus is on resilience, hope and healing.
Read MoreDIALOGUE: A Visual Conversation
"Project DIALOGUE" has been one of the most rewarding experiences in my career. In a nutshell, it's the story of what happens when a group of professional artists and a group of artists living with mental health disorders come together to talk about art. It's a story of creativity and community, of risk-taking and breakthroughs, of finding common ground.
Read MoreWarrior Writers and Combat Paper NJ: The Art and Poetry of Veterans and Service Members
Warrior Writers and Combat Paper NJ work with veterans and service members to create paper from their military uniforms and develop art and poetry in response to their experiences with war.
Read MoreLiljevalchs Vårsalong 2016—A Must-See Exhibit in Stockholm
Three reasons not to miss Liljevalchs Vårsalong 2016, Stockholm's Spring Salon.
Read MoreWomen Chefs: Artists in the Kitchen
In "Women Chefs: Artists in the Kitchen" 21 artists redefine portrait. Sept 5-Nov 8, 2015, Mansion at Strathmore.
Read MoreFresh OUTLOUD! Invitation to Opening Reception at Delaplaine Visual Arts Education Center
I'm delighted to be exhibiting my abstract paintings in the beautiful gallery spaces at The Delaplaine Visual Arts Education Center with my friends and fellow members of OUTLOUD Artists. Please join us at our opening reception on Saturday, April 4 (3:00-5:00 p.m.). Our interactive Artists Talk, which begins at 4:00 pm, will kick off a lively discussion—in a unique format—where you'll have the opportunity to meet the artists and share your reactions to our diverse body of works.
The Delaplaine Visual Arts Education Center is located in the 100-year-old Mountain City MIll in historic downtown Frederick, Md, on the banks of Carroll Creek (40 South Carroll Street, Frederick, Md.). If you've never been to Frederick, you're in for a treat as it's a very walkable town with loads of character. I love the wonderful architecture, great restaurants and wonderful boutiques and antique shops.
Don't miss this fun celebration—and be sure to invite your friends!