Joseph Peller’s recent exhibitions in New York and China.
The Instructors Exhibition, the Art Students League’s inaugural show every season, reveals the array of media, styles, and aesthetic viewpoints available for study—not to mention some exceptional art.
Virtually every artist, from the time of cave painting to the dawn of non-objective art, will tell you they paint what they see. Painting what you see seems like the most obvious and simplest thing in the world…until you try to do it.
Hugo Bastidas’s solo exhibition at the Mattatuck Museum of Art, in Waterbury, CT, opened August 14 and will run through mid-October.
Six graduates of the Art Students League’s Certificate Program for 2014 are exhibiting work in The Final Project.
Peter Reginato will be showing paintings with Flagg Gallery at ArtHamptons, which begins July 10, 2014.
Everett Raymond Kinstler will present a talk on his career and critique student work at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts on November 1.
“The most interesting artists have always made work that embodies shifts, even radical jumps, breaking through earlier stylistic habits” writes Sarah Sutro in “Magnifying Stillness: Locating Meaning in the Work of Ephraim Rubenstein,” which appears in the Spring 2014 issue of American Arts Quarterly.
You’re in a cave, it’s pitch dark, you’re holding a silk thread, and you move one inch at a time forward, because the secret you want is deep inside …
Exceptional student work for the week of May 12, 2014.










