Joseph Peller’s recent exhibitions in New York and China.
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.
On September 5, Max Ginsburg will paint a portrait from life at the Salmagundi Club (NYC).
Ephraim Rubenstein will be exhibiting paintings in two solo exhibitions. The first opens at the George Billis Gallery, in Chelsea, NYC; the second opens at the Stone Tower Gallery, in Glen Echo, MD.
Raphael Soyer’s art was the subtle expression of an unwavering vision, writes Jerry N. Weiss.
“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.
David A Leffel, Sherrie McGraw, and Jacqueline Kamin have launched an online art resource program, the Artists Guild.
David A Leffel, Sherrie McGraw, Gregg Kreutz, and Jacqueline Kamin will exhibit twenty works in a four-person show at the Salmagundi Club.
This fall Sherrie McGraw will have a solo exhibition at the Butler Institute of American Art that features seventy-five paintings and drawings created over her thirty-five-year career.
“I feel that art should represent an artist’s deepest feelings and thinking about his place, his society, what moves him.”










