SUE KATZ
GLORIA KEGELES Thursday, March 6 through Saturday, March 29, 2025 Opening Reception Thursday, March 6, 5–7:00 pm Art Forum Online Thursday, March 20 at 7:30 pm (Click here for video) |
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Image Gallery Art Forum Video Sue Katz website / member page Gloria Kegeles flickr / member page |
KATZ AND KEGELES EXHIBIT ARTWORK
AT GALLERY A3 IN MARCH
Photographs and painted wood and metal assemblages by Sue Katz explore patterns, while photographs by Gloria Kegeles find abstract form in motorcycles and brake rotors. The opening reception is Thursday, March 6, 5–7:00 pm. The artists will present an Art Forum online, on Thursday, March 20, at 7:30 pm.
AT GALLERY A3 IN MARCH
Photographs and painted wood and metal assemblages by Sue Katz explore patterns, while photographs by Gloria Kegeles find abstract form in motorcycles and brake rotors. The opening reception is Thursday, March 6, 5–7:00 pm. The artists will present an Art Forum online, on Thursday, March 20, at 7:30 pm.
SUE KATZ: Patterns
Patterns are an underlying theme of Sue Katz’s current selection of photographs and painted assemblages, all from the past twenty years. She finds pattern—the repeated arrangement of lines or shapes—either in her own purposeful compositions of mixed media or as a happy accident, “found” and then photographed. “I consciously look for pattern or I use it as a primary organizing factor,” she explains. “I am attracted to images that are structured, but I am positively addicted to organization created by repetition of line, color, or shape.”
Patterns are an underlying theme of Sue Katz’s current selection of photographs and painted assemblages, all from the past twenty years. She finds pattern—the repeated arrangement of lines or shapes—either in her own purposeful compositions of mixed media or as a happy accident, “found” and then photographed. “I consciously look for pattern or I use it as a primary organizing factor,” she explains. “I am attracted to images that are structured, but I am positively addicted to organization created by repetition of line, color, or shape.”
GLORIA KEGELES: Motorcycle Images
Gloria Kegeles’s photographs are full-frame, closeup single exposures, that are neither computer-generated nor enhanced. Abstract reflections in gleaming chrome and paint of restored vintage vehicles have been a recurrent inspiration and subject matter in her art. In her most recent work, she turns to motorcycle brake rotors, exposed within the wheels. “Concentric circular shapes, with circular holes interspersed, turn a common sight into semi-abstraction,” she says.
Gloria Kegeles’s photographs are full-frame, closeup single exposures, that are neither computer-generated nor enhanced. Abstract reflections in gleaming chrome and paint of restored vintage vehicles have been a recurrent inspiration and subject matter in her art. In her most recent work, she turns to motorcycle brake rotors, exposed within the wheels. “Concentric circular shapes, with circular holes interspersed, turn a common sight into semi-abstraction,” she says.
ART FORUM ONLINE
In an Art Forum Online on Thursday, March 20, Katz and Kegeles will discuss their work and respond to questions and comments.
Click here to register for this online event, which is free and open to the public. This Art in Community II outreach program is supported in part by grants from the Amherst Cultural Council and the Pelham Cultural Council, local agencies, which are supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.
In an Art Forum Online on Thursday, March 20, Katz and Kegeles will discuss their work and respond to questions and comments.
Click here to register for this online event, which is free and open to the public. This Art in Community II outreach program is supported in part by grants from the Amherst Cultural Council and the Pelham Cultural Council, local agencies, which are supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.