Another artist to check out is: Tom Green, which is featured in the Fine Arts Gallery on the main floor of the GMU Fine Arts Building. His work entitled, "Inventory: Paintings from 1997-2006" feature large scale paintings based on sketchbook drawings. However, once you walk into the gallery, the images will seem like bizarre cave paintings or alien symbols. His work is detailed and vivid in color, which appeals to the eye and causes an overwhelming emotion. The image to the left is entitled, "FIRST ONE," 2001, 17" x 122," acrylic on canvas.
Green is a professor at the Corcoran School of Art. Walter Kravitz, who is the gallery director for the department of Art and Visual Technology, wrote a section on Green. He has known Green for 25 years and said, "For many years he has been inspiring his students to gain a fuller and clearer understanding of their own personal prosody in visual form; but aslo what it means to be an artist inlery director for the today's complex landscape." The other work on the right is entitled, "TRICKSTER VIBE," 1998, 71" x 62," acrylic on canvas.
If you look closely at this painting, you notice the two rectangular comparisons. Both sides feature windows looking out, possibly to the sky meeting at the horizon line with the ocean. The left side displays a stone frame while the right side displays a create with animorphic parts. It is a review of the opening and closing actions we face.
I thought it was cool when I walked into the gallery just for a look during a break in my sculpture class. The work is definitely worth a second look so try to catch a glimpse of Green's work, which will be featured until Wednesday, February 21. Other gallery spaces on campus are the 123 Gallery in the Johnson Center, the Fine Arts Building Alcove, the PhotoSpace area in Innovation Hall and the Mason Hall Atrium.
Friday, February 9, 2007
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