Review by Gay Riseborough
This is a review of "Town and Country," a three-person exhibition I organized at the Evanston Art Center in 2024.
Paint the Town Class
This is the "Paint the Town" class that I teach at the Evanston Art Center.
Evanston Roundtable Article by Jean Cunningham
Jean Cunningham is an artist and writer who is learning to paint. She wrote an article about her experience in the Evanston Roundtable. She writes a weekly column about art. Check it out!
Photo caption: a figure drawing workshop in my studio. Pictured: Ken Czech, Nettie Spiwack, and Mark Hanson.
Americana Juried Exhibition
“Americana”: an exploration of the visual iconography of contemporary art reflecting the unique perspectives that embody the idea of the “American Dream” as a survey of people, place, concepts, current events and perhaps some nostalgia.
Sponsored by 33 Contemporary/Poets&Artists
Music/Man Online Exhibition published in Hashtag Magazine
This is an online exhibition that was published in the Hashtag Art Magazine in March, 2021. The exhibition was juried by Alessandro Tomasetti. All pieces selected were inspired by a song.
Art Encounter
Picturing Evanston
This is a link to an interview done by Joerg Metzner, the creator of the Picturing Evanston Project.
Voyage Chicago Interview
Illinois Artisan of the Month
UPCOMING EXHIBITION: SARAH KAISER-AMARAL’S “BOUNDARIES”
Artists throughout the course of time have pushed the boundaries. Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque fragmented subjects in their Cubist works. Marcel Duchamp created the “readymade,” a term he coined in which mass-produced objects were decidedly pieces of art by the choice of the artist. The list goes on. Considering this theme in a different vein, Chicago-based artist and Evanston Art Center instructor Sarah Kaiser-Amaral creates an exhibition about boundaries in her upcoming show at MLG Gallery, aptly titled “Boundaries.”
Happy Faces Chicago
Amy Rudberg came for a studio visit and wrote an article about my studio practices.
*Happy Faces Chicago Blog*
Created by Amy Rudberg.
Written for the annual Chicago Printmakers Small Print Exhibit, December 2008.