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AEQAI
The April issue of Aeqai has just posted. The new issue focuses more on shows in commercial and/or nonprofit gallery spaces as we’ve covered most every Museum/Arts Center s Features. Directions in the Visual Arts: Thoughts at the End of the Season. CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM :: AEQAI CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM. Carolyn Shine, who died late last year at the age of 101, lived a life illuminated by visual arts and illuminated those arts for others. She was my colleague at the Cincinnati Art Museum, my friend before that, and always an example of life lived well. A Cincinnatian by birth, Carolyn’s home from thebeginning was
ANOTHER ONLINE VISIT: A BLUE THOUGHT IN A BLUE SHADE: ANNA Anna Atkins was a remarkable pioneer in photography. She was born in Kent, England in 1799—the year when George Washington died, when Goya, Blake, and Constable were at the heights of their output, and Turner’s career was just under way. There was no such thing as photography. By the time Atkins died in 1871, photography waseverywhere.
WHISTLING IN THE DARK: “FRANK DUVENECK: AMERICAN MASTER A great deal of Duveneck’s work in his Munich period might be considered tronies: a portrait that captures a moment of disguise. Duveneck’s haughty “Cavalier” (1879) has a theatricality that might belong to the 17 th century or to the late 19 th.His “Man with Red Hair” (c. 1876) is likely to be a representation of an associate of Duveneck’s dressed in a lace ruff that carries HARMON MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY IN LEBANON, OHIO :: AEQAI Harmon, which opened in 1961 is a brick building of three stories, 28,000-square-feet with four art galleries: a contemporary, folk, classic and exhibition gallery where work of noted 20 th and 21 st century Ohio artists are showcased. There’s a wide variety of artwork by Frank Duveneck’s students shown in the museum. C. DANIEL BROWN :: AEQAI Daniel Brown is an Independent Art Advisor who builds corporate and private art collections across America. He is also a freelance curator, mainly in Cincinnati, Columbus, and Kansas City, specializing in contemporary art (approximately 350 shows curated). He is a widely published art critic, currently writing regularly for The Artist's PHOTOS BY EMILY KAMHOLTZ :: AEQAI Since FotoFocus continues to have a very strong educational component to everything it presents, and since we are all curious at how younger Americans view their environment artistically, AEQAI decided to ask one student, Emily Kamholtz, a senior at The Art Academy of Cincinnati, to share some of her work with our readers, and they areposted here.
A LETTER FROM MT. ADAMS: :: AEQAI A Letter from Mt. Adams: Far from being out of town, where these “letters from” are supposed to be, Mt. Adams is as close to town as one can be in Cincinnati. And yet for us, it was our way of leaving Cincinnati without leaving Cincinnati. Mt Adams. Most of my life, excepting 7 years, has been spent knocking around the mean streets ofHyde
BUILD YOUR OWN BAUHAUS (DESIGN AND QUALITY BY IKEA OF Build Your Own Bauhaus (Design and Quality by Ikea of Sweden) Shortly after World War I in April 1919, Das Staatliche Bauhaus—The State Home for Building—opened under the leadership of 31-year old Walter Gropius. The new Bauhaus was a merger of two existing schools: the Weimar Arts and Crafts School and the Weimar Art Academy. M. KATHERINE HURLEY: NATIONALLY ACCLAIMED LANDSCAPE ARTIST M. Katherine Hurley: Nationally Acclaimed Landscape Artist. M. Katherine Hurley grew up in Gates Mills, a small, rural community, 40 miles east of Cleveland. While her first love was horses, she later focused on landscapes. They both became sanctuaries for her when life grew challenging. She found comfort and beauty in solitary places.AEQAI
The April issue of Aeqai has just posted. The new issue focuses more on shows in commercial and/or nonprofit gallery spaces as we’ve covered most every Museum/Arts Center s Features. Directions in the Visual Arts: Thoughts at the End of the Season. CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM :: AEQAI CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM. Carolyn Shine, who died late last year at the age of 101, lived a life illuminated by visual arts and illuminated those arts for others. She was my colleague at the Cincinnati Art Museum, my friend before that, and always an example of life lived well. A Cincinnatian by birth, Carolyn’s home from thebeginning was
ANOTHER ONLINE VISIT: A BLUE THOUGHT IN A BLUE SHADE: ANNA Anna Atkins was a remarkable pioneer in photography. She was born in Kent, England in 1799—the year when George Washington died, when Goya, Blake, and Constable were at the heights of their output, and Turner’s career was just under way. There was no such thing as photography. By the time Atkins died in 1871, photography waseverywhere.
WHISTLING IN THE DARK: “FRANK DUVENECK: AMERICAN MASTER A great deal of Duveneck’s work in his Munich period might be considered tronies: a portrait that captures a moment of disguise. Duveneck’s haughty “Cavalier” (1879) has a theatricality that might belong to the 17 th century or to the late 19 th.His “Man with Red Hair” (c. 1876) is likely to be a representation of an associate of Duveneck’s dressed in a lace ruff that carries HARMON MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY IN LEBANON, OHIO :: AEQAI Harmon, which opened in 1961 is a brick building of three stories, 28,000-square-feet with four art galleries: a contemporary, folk, classic and exhibition gallery where work of noted 20 th and 21 st century Ohio artists are showcased. There’s a wide variety of artwork by Frank Duveneck’s students shown in the museum. C. DANIEL BROWN :: AEQAI Daniel Brown is an Independent Art Advisor who builds corporate and private art collections across America. He is also a freelance curator, mainly in Cincinnati, Columbus, and Kansas City, specializing in contemporary art (approximately 350 shows curated). He is a widely published art critic, currently writing regularly for The Artist's PHOTOS BY EMILY KAMHOLTZ :: AEQAI Since FotoFocus continues to have a very strong educational component to everything it presents, and since we are all curious at how younger Americans view their environment artistically, AEQAI decided to ask one student, Emily Kamholtz, a senior at The Art Academy of Cincinnati, to share some of her work with our readers, and they areposted here.
A LETTER FROM MT. ADAMS: :: AEQAI A Letter from Mt. Adams: Far from being out of town, where these “letters from” are supposed to be, Mt. Adams is as close to town as one can be in Cincinnati. And yet for us, it was our way of leaving Cincinnati without leaving Cincinnati. Mt Adams. Most of my life, excepting 7 years, has been spent knocking around the mean streets ofHyde
BUILD YOUR OWN BAUHAUS (DESIGN AND QUALITY BY IKEA OF Build Your Own Bauhaus (Design and Quality by Ikea of Sweden) Shortly after World War I in April 1919, Das Staatliche Bauhaus—The State Home for Building—opened under the leadership of 31-year old Walter Gropius. The new Bauhaus was a merger of two existing schools: the Weimar Arts and Crafts School and the Weimar Art Academy. M. KATHERINE HURLEY: NATIONALLY ACCLAIMED LANDSCAPE ARTIST M. Katherine Hurley: Nationally Acclaimed Landscape Artist. M. Katherine Hurley grew up in Gates Mills, a small, rural community, 40 miles east of Cleveland. While her first love was horses, she later focused on landscapes. They both became sanctuaries for her when life grew challenging. She found comfort and beauty in solitary places. “THE SOUND OF STILL: TINA TAMMARO & LESLIE DALY,” INDIAN The enchantment begins with the title of the two-person show at the Indian Hill Gallery: “The Sound of Still.” (The curator and exhibition coordinator, Casey Dressel, wisely stayed away from Simon and Garfunkel’s The Sound of Silence.) The exhibition “contemplates the idea of the sound of stillness–moments, figures, and forms at a standstill,” according to Dressel. ARCHIE RAND: 60 PAINTINGS FROM THE BIBLE :: AEQAI A must-see exhibition held over at the Skirball Museum is Archie Rand’s: “60 Paintings from the Bible”. Rand, currently a professor at Brooklyn College and a Gugenheim fellow, is known for his signature comic book style and this series is the earliest and largest in his oeuvre. The paintings are uniformly sized, unframed 16″x20 CAMILLE CLAUDEL’S LES CAUSEUSES: THE SUBJECT OF LACK AND In turn, the critical and markedly feminist lesson we can learn from Camille Claudel’s Les Causeuses is the dovetailing of subjectivity and structuring in any rendered interpretation of lack, that trying to illuminate a pocket of foreclosure turns its head away from an Outside interpretation. This means that any hermeneutic must come to terms COLLECTIVE IMPACT: FEMALES JOINING FORCES AT KHAC :: AEQAI A knitted banner that says “Stronger Together” stretches over the steps on the front porch of the Kennedy Heights Arts Center (KHAC). With its quirky multicolor letters, pompoms, and flowers crafted by members of the BombShells of Cincinnati, it’s a rallying cry for collaboration, and a fitting introduction to the Center’s current show, “Collective Impact: Females Joining Forces”. THE STUDIO WHERE IT HAPPENED: JAMES VANDERZEE AND THE ROLE Having photographed some of the celebrities of the Harlem Renaissance in the 20s and 30s, such as poet Countee Cullen, entrepreneur C. J. Walker, dancer Bill Bojangles Robinson, and Cincinnati-born blues singer Mamie Smith, he would live long enough to do portraits of Cicely Tyson, the young painter Jean-Michel Basquiat, and Bill Cosby, in whom he seems to have seen the echo of the BUILD YOUR OWN BAUHAUS (DESIGN AND QUALITY BY IKEA OF Build Your Own Bauhaus (Design and Quality by Ikea of Sweden) Shortly after World War I in April 1919, Das Staatliche Bauhaus—The State Home for Building—opened under the leadership of 31-year old Walter Gropius. The new Bauhaus was a merger of two existing schools: the Weimar Arts and Crafts School and the Weimar Art Academy. GEOMETRICALLY ORDERED DESIGN: THE EVERLASTING FRUIT :: AEQAI The Fruit of Life is, in a sense, the physical and sensual portion of the Flower of Life. It is also the basis for what is known as Metatron’s Cube which, after thorough analysis, lends all of the Platonic solids in symbolic fashion. As for the Tree of Life, it is most recognized as the fundamental concept in the Kabbalic system, andis used
M. KATHERINE HURLEY: NATIONALLY ACCLAIMED LANDSCAPE ARTIST M. Katherine Hurley: Nationally Acclaimed Landscape Artist. M. Katherine Hurley grew up in Gates Mills, a small, rural community, 40 miles east of Cleveland. While her first love was horses, she later focused on landscapes. They both became sanctuaries for her when life grew challenging. She found comfort and beauty in solitary places. STEWART MAXWELL :: AEQAI A Jewel in the Queen’s Crown. Sep 23, 2017. On October 6, 2017, Music Hall, one of Cincinnati’s iconic treasures, will reopen to the public after extensive renovations for the past 18 months. Revered worldwide not only by musicians and performers but also patrons of the arts, our Queen City’s Music Hall was designed and built in1877-1878
ARIS MOORE :: AEQAI
Editor’s Note: This profile of Aris Moore is part of an ongoing series of interviews with figurative artists across the United States who have appeared on Figure50.com, a web project operated by local artists James Oberschlake and Kim Rae Taylor.AEQAI
The April issue of Aeqai has just posted. The new issue focuses more on shows in commercial and/or nonprofit gallery spaces as we’ve covered most every Museum/Arts Center s Features. Directions in the Visual Arts: Thoughts at the End of the Season. CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM :: AEQAI CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM. Carolyn Shine, who died late last year at the age of 101, lived a life illuminated by visual arts and illuminated those arts for others. She was my colleague at the Cincinnati Art Museum, my friend before that, and always an example of life lived well. A Cincinnatian by birth, Carolyn’s home from thebeginning was
ANOTHER ONLINE VISIT: A BLUE THOUGHT IN A BLUE SHADE: ANNA Anna Atkins was a remarkable pioneer in photography. She was born in Kent, England in 1799—the year when George Washington died, when Goya, Blake, and Constable were at the heights of their output, and Turner’s career was just under way. There was no such thing as photography. By the time Atkins died in 1871, photography waseverywhere.
WHISTLING IN THE DARK: “FRANK DUVENECK: AMERICAN MASTER A great deal of Duveneck’s work in his Munich period might be considered tronies: a portrait that captures a moment of disguise. Duveneck’s haughty “Cavalier” (1879) has a theatricality that might belong to the 17 th century or to the late 19 th.His “Man with Red Hair” (c. 1876) is likely to be a representation of an associate of Duveneck’s dressed in a lace ruff that carries HARMON MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY IN LEBANON, OHIO :: AEQAI Harmon, which opened in 1961 is a brick building of three stories, 28,000-square-feet with four art galleries: a contemporary, folk, classic and exhibition gallery where work of noted 20 th and 21 st century Ohio artists are showcased. There’s a wide variety of artwork by Frank Duveneck’s students shown in the museum. C. DANIEL BROWN :: AEQAI Daniel Brown is an Independent Art Advisor who builds corporate and private art collections across America. He is also a freelance curator, mainly in Cincinnati, Columbus, and Kansas City, specializing in contemporary art (approximately 350 shows curated). He is a widely published art critic, currently writing regularly for The Artist's PHOTOS BY EMILY KAMHOLTZ :: AEQAI Since FotoFocus continues to have a very strong educational component to everything it presents, and since we are all curious at how younger Americans view their environment artistically, AEQAI decided to ask one student, Emily Kamholtz, a senior at The Art Academy of Cincinnati, to share some of her work with our readers, and they areposted here.
A LETTER FROM MT. ADAMS: :: AEQAI A Letter from Mt. Adams: Far from being out of town, where these “letters from” are supposed to be, Mt. Adams is as close to town as one can be in Cincinnati. And yet for us, it was our way of leaving Cincinnati without leaving Cincinnati. Mt Adams. Most of my life, excepting 7 years, has been spent knocking around the mean streets ofHyde
BUILD YOUR OWN BAUHAUS (DESIGN AND QUALITY BY IKEA OF Build Your Own Bauhaus (Design and Quality by Ikea of Sweden) Shortly after World War I in April 1919, Das Staatliche Bauhaus—The State Home for Building—opened under the leadership of 31-year old Walter Gropius. The new Bauhaus was a merger of two existing schools: the Weimar Arts and Crafts School and the Weimar Art Academy. M. KATHERINE HURLEY: NATIONALLY ACCLAIMED LANDSCAPE ARTIST M. Katherine Hurley: Nationally Acclaimed Landscape Artist. M. Katherine Hurley grew up in Gates Mills, a small, rural community, 40 miles east of Cleveland. While her first love was horses, she later focused on landscapes. They both became sanctuaries for her when life grew challenging. She found comfort and beauty in solitary places.AEQAI
The April issue of Aeqai has just posted. The new issue focuses more on shows in commercial and/or nonprofit gallery spaces as we’ve covered most every Museum/Arts Center s Features. Directions in the Visual Arts: Thoughts at the End of the Season. CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM :: AEQAI CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM. Carolyn Shine, who died late last year at the age of 101, lived a life illuminated by visual arts and illuminated those arts for others. She was my colleague at the Cincinnati Art Museum, my friend before that, and always an example of life lived well. A Cincinnatian by birth, Carolyn’s home from thebeginning was
ANOTHER ONLINE VISIT: A BLUE THOUGHT IN A BLUE SHADE: ANNA Anna Atkins was a remarkable pioneer in photography. She was born in Kent, England in 1799—the year when George Washington died, when Goya, Blake, and Constable were at the heights of their output, and Turner’s career was just under way. There was no such thing as photography. By the time Atkins died in 1871, photography waseverywhere.
WHISTLING IN THE DARK: “FRANK DUVENECK: AMERICAN MASTER A great deal of Duveneck’s work in his Munich period might be considered tronies: a portrait that captures a moment of disguise. Duveneck’s haughty “Cavalier” (1879) has a theatricality that might belong to the 17 th century or to the late 19 th.His “Man with Red Hair” (c. 1876) is likely to be a representation of an associate of Duveneck’s dressed in a lace ruff that carries HARMON MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY IN LEBANON, OHIO :: AEQAI Harmon, which opened in 1961 is a brick building of three stories, 28,000-square-feet with four art galleries: a contemporary, folk, classic and exhibition gallery where work of noted 20 th and 21 st century Ohio artists are showcased. There’s a wide variety of artwork by Frank Duveneck’s students shown in the museum. C. DANIEL BROWN :: AEQAI Daniel Brown is an Independent Art Advisor who builds corporate and private art collections across America. He is also a freelance curator, mainly in Cincinnati, Columbus, and Kansas City, specializing in contemporary art (approximately 350 shows curated). He is a widely published art critic, currently writing regularly for The Artist's PHOTOS BY EMILY KAMHOLTZ :: AEQAI Since FotoFocus continues to have a very strong educational component to everything it presents, and since we are all curious at how younger Americans view their environment artistically, AEQAI decided to ask one student, Emily Kamholtz, a senior at The Art Academy of Cincinnati, to share some of her work with our readers, and they areposted here.
A LETTER FROM MT. ADAMS: :: AEQAI A Letter from Mt. Adams: Far from being out of town, where these “letters from” are supposed to be, Mt. Adams is as close to town as one can be in Cincinnati. And yet for us, it was our way of leaving Cincinnati without leaving Cincinnati. Mt Adams. Most of my life, excepting 7 years, has been spent knocking around the mean streets ofHyde
BUILD YOUR OWN BAUHAUS (DESIGN AND QUALITY BY IKEA OF Build Your Own Bauhaus (Design and Quality by Ikea of Sweden) Shortly after World War I in April 1919, Das Staatliche Bauhaus—The State Home for Building—opened under the leadership of 31-year old Walter Gropius. The new Bauhaus was a merger of two existing schools: the Weimar Arts and Crafts School and the Weimar Art Academy. M. KATHERINE HURLEY: NATIONALLY ACCLAIMED LANDSCAPE ARTIST M. Katherine Hurley: Nationally Acclaimed Landscape Artist. M. Katherine Hurley grew up in Gates Mills, a small, rural community, 40 miles east of Cleveland. While her first love was horses, she later focused on landscapes. They both became sanctuaries for her when life grew challenging. She found comfort and beauty in solitary places. “THE SOUND OF STILL: TINA TAMMARO & LESLIE DALY,” INDIAN The enchantment begins with the title of the two-person show at the Indian Hill Gallery: “The Sound of Still.” (The curator and exhibition coordinator, Casey Dressel, wisely stayed away from Simon and Garfunkel’s The Sound of Silence.) The exhibition “contemplates the idea of the sound of stillness–moments, figures, and forms at a standstill,” according to Dressel. ARCHIE RAND: 60 PAINTINGS FROM THE BIBLE :: AEQAI A must-see exhibition held over at the Skirball Museum is Archie Rand’s: “60 Paintings from the Bible”. Rand, currently a professor at Brooklyn College and a Gugenheim fellow, is known for his signature comic book style and this series is the earliest and largest in his oeuvre. The paintings are uniformly sized, unframed 16″x20 CAMILLE CLAUDEL’S LES CAUSEUSES: THE SUBJECT OF LACK AND In turn, the critical and markedly feminist lesson we can learn from Camille Claudel’s Les Causeuses is the dovetailing of subjectivity and structuring in any rendered interpretation of lack, that trying to illuminate a pocket of foreclosure turns its head away from an Outside interpretation. This means that any hermeneutic must come to terms COLLECTIVE IMPACT: FEMALES JOINING FORCES AT KHAC :: AEQAI A knitted banner that says “Stronger Together” stretches over the steps on the front porch of the Kennedy Heights Arts Center (KHAC). With its quirky multicolor letters, pompoms, and flowers crafted by members of the BombShells of Cincinnati, it’s a rallying cry for collaboration, and a fitting introduction to the Center’s current show, “Collective Impact: Females Joining Forces”. THE STUDIO WHERE IT HAPPENED: JAMES VANDERZEE AND THE ROLE Having photographed some of the celebrities of the Harlem Renaissance in the 20s and 30s, such as poet Countee Cullen, entrepreneur C. J. Walker, dancer Bill Bojangles Robinson, and Cincinnati-born blues singer Mamie Smith, he would live long enough to do portraits of Cicely Tyson, the young painter Jean-Michel Basquiat, and Bill Cosby, in whom he seems to have seen the echo of the BUILD YOUR OWN BAUHAUS (DESIGN AND QUALITY BY IKEA OF Build Your Own Bauhaus (Design and Quality by Ikea of Sweden) Shortly after World War I in April 1919, Das Staatliche Bauhaus—The State Home for Building—opened under the leadership of 31-year old Walter Gropius. The new Bauhaus was a merger of two existing schools: the Weimar Arts and Crafts School and the Weimar Art Academy. GEOMETRICALLY ORDERED DESIGN: THE EVERLASTING FRUIT :: AEQAI The Fruit of Life is, in a sense, the physical and sensual portion of the Flower of Life. It is also the basis for what is known as Metatron’s Cube which, after thorough analysis, lends all of the Platonic solids in symbolic fashion. As for the Tree of Life, it is most recognized as the fundamental concept in the Kabbalic system, andis used
M. KATHERINE HURLEY: NATIONALLY ACCLAIMED LANDSCAPE ARTIST M. Katherine Hurley: Nationally Acclaimed Landscape Artist. M. Katherine Hurley grew up in Gates Mills, a small, rural community, 40 miles east of Cleveland. While her first love was horses, she later focused on landscapes. They both became sanctuaries for her when life grew challenging. She found comfort and beauty in solitary places. STEWART MAXWELL :: AEQAI A Jewel in the Queen’s Crown. Sep 23, 2017. On October 6, 2017, Music Hall, one of Cincinnati’s iconic treasures, will reopen to the public after extensive renovations for the past 18 months. Revered worldwide not only by musicians and performers but also patrons of the arts, our Queen City’s Music Hall was designed and built in1877-1878
ARIS MOORE :: AEQAI
Editor’s Note: This profile of Aris Moore is part of an ongoing series of interviews with figurative artists across the United States who have appeared on Figure50.com, a web project operated by local artists James Oberschlake and Kim Rae Taylor.AEQAI
The April issue of Aeqai has just posted. The new issue focuses more on shows in commercial and/or nonprofit gallery spaces as we’ve covered most every Museum/Arts Center s Features. Directions in the Visual Arts: Thoughts at the End of the Season. JONATHAN KAMHOLTZ :: AEQAI Clay and the Human Imprint: “Social Recession” at the Weston Gallery March 13-April 24, 2021; “Multi-Cultural Fellowship Exhibition” at DAAP Meyers Gallery, February 22-March 21, 2021; “Artifact: Ceramic-based Works,” “There is a Fly on a Plate” and “Firstlings,” “Sublimation,” all at Manifest Gallery, March 5-April 2, 2021; and “Sanctuary” at the Contemporary Arts ANOTHER ONLINE VISIT: A BLUE THOUGHT IN A BLUE SHADE: ANNA Anna Atkins was a remarkable pioneer in photography. She was born in Kent, England in 1799—the year when George Washington died, when Goya, Blake, and Constable were at the heights of their output, and Turner’s career was just under way. There was no such thing as photography. By the time Atkins died in 1871, photography waseverywhere.
CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM :: AEQAI CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM. Carolyn Shine, who died late last year at the age of 101, lived a life illuminated by visual arts and illuminated those arts for others. She was my colleague at the Cincinnati Art Museum, my friend before that, and always an example of life lived well. A Cincinnatian by birth, Carolyn’s home from thebeginning was
HARMON MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY IN LEBANON, OHIO :: AEQAIHARMON MUSEUM LEBANON OHIOHARMON MUSEUM LEBANONHARMON MUSEUM OHIOHISTORICAL MUSEUM LEBANON OHIOHARMON PARK LEBANON OHIOGLENDOWER HISTORIC MANSION LEBANONOHIO
Harmon, which opened in 1961 is a brick building of three stories, 28,000-square-feet with four art galleries: a contemporary, folk, classic and exhibition gallery where work of noted 20 th and 21 st century Ohio artists are showcased. There’s a wide variety of artwork by Frank Duveneck’s students shown in the museum. C. PHOTOS BY EMILY KAMHOLTZ :: AEQAI Since FotoFocus continues to have a very strong educational component to everything it presents, and since we are all curious at how younger Americans view their environment artistically, AEQAI decided to ask one student, Emily Kamholtz, a senior at The Art Academy of Cincinnati, to share some of her work with our readers, and they areposted here.
DANIEL BROWN :: AEQAI Daniel Brown is an Independent Art Advisor who builds corporate and private art collections across America. He is also a freelance curator, mainly in Cincinnati, Columbus, and Kansas City, specializing in contemporary art (approximately 350 shows curated). He is a widely published art critic, currently writing regularly for The Artist's CONSTANCE MCCLURE :: AEQAI October 31st, 2014 | Published in October 2014. Walnut Hills artist Constance McClure sometimes subconsciously sketches in the air when she’s deep in conversation. Drawing always came naturally, but by now it’s automatic. She’s been creating art – starting with drawing, and moving on to painting, metalpoint and frescoes – eachof her
M. KATHERINE HURLEY: NATIONALLY ACCLAIMED LANDSCAPE ARTIST M. Katherine Hurley: Nationally Acclaimed Landscape Artist. M. Katherine Hurley grew up in Gates Mills, a small, rural community, 40 miles east of Cleveland. While her first love was horses, she later focused on landscapes. They both became sanctuaries for her when life grew challenging. She found comfort and beauty in solitary places. ARTISTS OF THE HEARTLAND: JAMES R. HOPKINS AND EDNA BOIES No attempt is made here to aggrandize the subject matter or the wood block media. “Faces of the Heartland: James R. Hopkins” closes on November 17th. and is organized by the Columbus Museum of Art and Keny Galleries. “Edna Boles Hopkins: Life in Print” ends February 4, 2018. –Marlene Steele teaches and paints in Cincinnati Ohio.AEQAI
The April issue of Aeqai has just posted. The new issue focuses more on shows in commercial and/or nonprofit gallery spaces as we’ve covered most every Museum/Arts Center s Features. Directions in the Visual Arts: Thoughts at the End of the Season. JONATHAN KAMHOLTZ :: AEQAI Clay and the Human Imprint: “Social Recession” at the Weston Gallery March 13-April 24, 2021; “Multi-Cultural Fellowship Exhibition” at DAAP Meyers Gallery, February 22-March 21, 2021; “Artifact: Ceramic-based Works,” “There is a Fly on a Plate” and “Firstlings,” “Sublimation,” all at Manifest Gallery, March 5-April 2, 2021; and “Sanctuary” at the Contemporary Arts ANOTHER ONLINE VISIT: A BLUE THOUGHT IN A BLUE SHADE: ANNA Anna Atkins was a remarkable pioneer in photography. She was born in Kent, England in 1799—the year when George Washington died, when Goya, Blake, and Constable were at the heights of their output, and Turner’s career was just under way. There was no such thing as photography. By the time Atkins died in 1871, photography waseverywhere.
CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM :: AEQAI CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM. Carolyn Shine, who died late last year at the age of 101, lived a life illuminated by visual arts and illuminated those arts for others. She was my colleague at the Cincinnati Art Museum, my friend before that, and always an example of life lived well. A Cincinnatian by birth, Carolyn’s home from thebeginning was
HARMON MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY IN LEBANON, OHIO :: AEQAIHARMON MUSEUM LEBANON OHIOHARMON MUSEUM LEBANONHARMON MUSEUM OHIOHISTORICAL MUSEUM LEBANON OHIOHARMON PARK LEBANON OHIOGLENDOWER HISTORIC MANSION LEBANONOHIO
Harmon, which opened in 1961 is a brick building of three stories, 28,000-square-feet with four art galleries: a contemporary, folk, classic and exhibition gallery where work of noted 20 th and 21 st century Ohio artists are showcased. There’s a wide variety of artwork by Frank Duveneck’s students shown in the museum. C. PHOTOS BY EMILY KAMHOLTZ :: AEQAI Since FotoFocus continues to have a very strong educational component to everything it presents, and since we are all curious at how younger Americans view their environment artistically, AEQAI decided to ask one student, Emily Kamholtz, a senior at The Art Academy of Cincinnati, to share some of her work with our readers, and they areposted here.
DANIEL BROWN :: AEQAI Daniel Brown is an Independent Art Advisor who builds corporate and private art collections across America. He is also a freelance curator, mainly in Cincinnati, Columbus, and Kansas City, specializing in contemporary art (approximately 350 shows curated). He is a widely published art critic, currently writing regularly for The Artist's CONSTANCE MCCLURE :: AEQAI October 31st, 2014 | Published in October 2014. Walnut Hills artist Constance McClure sometimes subconsciously sketches in the air when she’s deep in conversation. Drawing always came naturally, but by now it’s automatic. She’s been creating art – starting with drawing, and moving on to painting, metalpoint and frescoes – eachof her
M. KATHERINE HURLEY: NATIONALLY ACCLAIMED LANDSCAPE ARTIST M. Katherine Hurley: Nationally Acclaimed Landscape Artist. M. Katherine Hurley grew up in Gates Mills, a small, rural community, 40 miles east of Cleveland. While her first love was horses, she later focused on landscapes. They both became sanctuaries for her when life grew challenging. She found comfort and beauty in solitary places. ARTISTS OF THE HEARTLAND: JAMES R. HOPKINS AND EDNA BOIES No attempt is made here to aggrandize the subject matter or the wood block media. “Faces of the Heartland: James R. Hopkins” closes on November 17th. and is organized by the Columbus Museum of Art and Keny Galleries. “Edna Boles Hopkins: Life in Print” ends February 4, 2018. –Marlene Steele teaches and paints in Cincinnati Ohio. THE PUBLICATION :: AEQAI ÆQAI (pronounced ‘I’ as in ‘bite ‘ and ‘qai ‘ as in ‘sKY’ ) is a Cincinnati-based e-journal for critical thinking, review and reflective prose on contemporary visual art. The word ‘ÆQAI’ was selected as a mispelling from a reprint of Livy’s text for the ‘Aequi.’. The Aequi were the peoples that LuciusQuintus
MARCH 2021 :: AEQAI
Clay and the Human Imprint: “Social Recession” at the Weston Gallery March 13-April 24, 2021; “Multi-Cultural Fellowship Exhibition” at DAAP Meyers Gallery, February 22-March 21, 2021; “Artifact: Ceramic-based Works,” “There is a Fly on a Plate” and “Firstlings,” “Sublimation,” all at Manifest Gallery, March 5-April 2, 2021; and “Sanctuary” at the Contemporary Arts CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM :: AEQAI CAROLYN SHINE: IN MEMORIUM. Carolyn Shine, who died late last year at the age of 101, lived a life illuminated by visual arts and illuminated those arts for others. She was my colleague at the Cincinnati Art Museum, my friend before that, and always an example of life lived well. A Cincinnatian by birth, Carolyn’s home from thebeginning was
ARCHIE RAND: 60 PAINTINGS FROM THE BIBLE :: AEQAI A must-see exhibition held over at the Skirball Museum is Archie Rand’s: “60 Paintings from the Bible”. Rand, currently a professor at Brooklyn College and a Gugenheim fellow, is known for his signature comic book style and this series is the earliest and largest in his oeuvre. The paintings are uniformly sized, unframed 16″x20 ART GALLERIES AT AREA UNIVERSITIES OFFER VARYING Kitty Uetz, MFA, has been director of Xavier University Art Gallery since 1997. It is located at 1658 Musketeer Drive on the first floor of the A.B. Cohen Center. It consists of two exhibition spaces totaling 1,700 square feet. The Art Gallery functions as an educational resource by hosting exhibitions of artwork by professionalvisual artists
THE STUDIO WHERE IT HAPPENED: JAMES VANDERZEE AND THE ROLE Having photographed some of the celebrities of the Harlem Renaissance in the 20s and 30s, such as poet Countee Cullen, entrepreneur C. J. Walker, dancer Bill Bojangles Robinson, and Cincinnati-born blues singer Mamie Smith, he would live long enough to do portraits of Cicely Tyson, the young painter Jean-Michel Basquiat, and Bill Cosby, in whom he seems to have seen the echo of the THE WILLIAM BETTS HOUSE: A HIDDEN VIEW INTO THE 19TH Travel back in time to a 19 th century area and a house open to the public. The two-story William Betts House has existed in Cincinnati for over two hundred years. Built by William and Phebe Betts in the Federal style, the house opened to the public in 1996 as a M. KATHERINE HURLEY: NATIONALLY ACCLAIMED LANDSCAPE ARTIST M. Katherine Hurley: Nationally Acclaimed Landscape Artist. M. Katherine Hurley grew up in Gates Mills, a small, rural community, 40 miles east of Cleveland. While her first love was horses, she later focused on landscapes. They both became sanctuaries for her when life grew challenging. She found comfort and beauty in solitary places. BUILD YOUR OWN BAUHAUS (DESIGN AND QUALITY BY IKEA OF Build Your Own Bauhaus (Design and Quality by Ikea of Sweden) Shortly after World War I in April 1919, Das Staatliche Bauhaus—The State Home for Building—opened under the leadership of 31-year old Walter Gropius. The new Bauhaus was a merger of two existing schools: the Weimar Arts and Crafts School and the Weimar Art Academy. PROFILE OF NANCY NORDLOH NEVILLE :: AEQAI Profile of Nancy Nordloh Neville. “I do enjoy showing my work,” Nancy Nordloh Neville told me. “It’s my life on review. You remember how and where you were when you painted it. You remember if the rain came before you were finished, if you made friends with the neighbors’ dog, or if you forgot an important supply.”.* The Publication
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POSTHUMAN DESIGN: CREATURES: WHEN SPECIES MEET AT THE CONTEMPORARYARTS CENTER
Creatures: When Species Meet locates creative processes less in the imagination of singular artists than in the encounter between living things, their negotiation of each other’s... DOES SIZE MATTER?: “MAGNITUDE SEVEN: 15TH ANNUAL EXHIBITION OF SMALL WORKS” AT MANIFEST GALLERY, MAY 31-JUNE 28, 2019 “Magnitude Seven” is neither the oldest nor the smallest show of small things in town, a distinction that probably goes to the Art Academy’s “Minumental” show every fall,... “L’ AFFICHOMANIA: THE PASSION FOR FRENCH POSTERS,” TAFT MUSEUM OF ART, THROUGH SEPTEMBER 14, 2019 Sometimes it takes time for the aesthetic worth of something to be recognized. This most definitely was not the case with French advertising handbills AKA posters from its Golden A... HILNA AF KLINT AT THE GUGGENHEIM: METAPHYSICS AT IT PATROLS MORTALITY’S BORDERS The Guggenheim’s spring retrospective of the seminal Swedish painter, Hilma Af Klint, has, naturally, evoked a multitude of art critics and visual culture scholars who laud her r... FROM THE MYTHIC NILE TO THE MIGHTY OHIO “Egypt: The Time of the Pharaohs” Cincinnati Museum Center, 1301 Western Avenue Cincinnati, OH Through August 18, 2019 Step into a time when civilization grew along the Nil..._JUNE/JULY 2019 _
------------------------- POSTHUMAN DESIGN: CREATURES: WHEN SPECIES MEET AT THE CONTEMPORARYARTS CENTER
Jun 30, 2019 | by Christopher Carter| Read →
Creatures: When Species Meet locates creative processes less in the imagination of singular artists than in the encounter between living things, their negotiation of each other’s... DOES SIZE MATTER?: “MAGNITUDE SEVEN: 15TH ANNUAL EXHIBITION OF SMALL WORKS” AT MANIFEST GALLERY, MAY 31-JUNE 28, 2019 Jun 30, 2019 | by Jonathan Kamholtz| Read →
“Magnitude Seven” is neither the oldest nor the smallest show of small things in town, a distinction that probably goes to the Art Academy’s “Minumental” show every fall,... “L’ AFFICHOMANIA: THE PASSION FOR FRENCH POSTERS,” TAFT MUSEUM OF ART, THROUGH SEPTEMBER 14, 2019 Jun 30, 2019 | by Karen Chambers| Read →
Sometimes it takes time for the aesthetic worth of something to be recognized. This most definitely was not the case with French advertising handbills AKA posters from its Golden A... HILNA AF KLINT AT THE GUGGENHEIM: METAPHYSICS AT IT PATROLS MORTALITY’S BORDERS Jun 30, 2019 | by Ekin Erkan |Read →
The Guggenheim’s spring retrospective of the seminal Swedish painter, Hilma Af Klint, has, naturally, evoked a multitude of art critics and visual culture scholars who laud her r... FROM THE MYTHIC NILE TO THE MIGHTY OHIO Jun 30, 2019 | by Cynthia Kukla| Read →
“Egypt: The Time of the Pharaohs” Cincinnati Museum Center, 1301 Western Avenue Cincinnati, OH Through August 18, 2019 Step into a time when civilization grew along the Nil... THE LAUGHTER OF THE UNCONSCIOUS Jun 30, 2019 | by Ekin Erkan |Read →
It was 1957 when “nudity for nudity’s sake” in cinema became a point for deliberation: the court case, Excelsior Pictures v. New York Board of Regents, hinged whether the dis... YVONNE VAN EIJDEN AT ASKEW GALLERY Jun 30, 2019 | by Yvonne van Eijden| Read →
Yvonne van Eijden Yvonne van Eijden was born June 6,1956 in Oisterwijk, the Netherlands. She received her art education at the Free Academy, The Hague, The Netherlands, and at Thre... OFF LUDLOW GALLERY: A POP UP ON ORMOND STREET IN CLIFTON Jun 30, 2019 | by Laura Hobson| Read →
On the corner of Ludlow Ave. and Ormond Street is Gaslight Bar and Grill and down the street, there used to be the Clifton Post Office. Now, the Post Office has turned into Off Lud... ISABELLA HAMMAD’S “THE PARISIAN” Jun 30, 2019 | by Daniel Brown| Read →
Isabella Hammad’s “The Parisian”, is yet another debut novel this year of astonishing power and grace. Set partly in France and mostly in Palestine before the i... OCEAN VUONG’S “ON EARTH WE’RE BRIEFLY GORGEOUS” Jun 30, 2019 | by Daniel Brown| Read →
Ocean Vuong is a young Vietnamese-American, whose first collection of poetry was widely acclaimed, and whose first novel, “On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous”, deser... NELL FREUDENBERGER’S “LOST AND WANTED” Jun 30, 2019 | by Daniel Brown| Read →
I wish I could figure out who the intended audience for Nell Freudenberger’s very bad novel “Lost and Wanted” is supposed to be, but am unable to do so. Perhaps..._MAY 2019 _
------------------------- THE CONSISTENCY OF MEMORY: STEWART GOLDMAN’S “THE HANGING FIGURES” AT THE SKIRBALL MUSEUM Jun 1, 2019 | by Christopher Carter| Read →
Stewart Goldman taught at the Art Academy of Cincinnati for over thirty years. An enduring presence in the Ohio art world, he has curated shows on printmaking and the visual aesthe... NO SPECTATORS: THE ART OF BURNING MAN AT CINCINNATI ART MUSEUM Jun 1, 2019 | by Cynthia Kukla| Read →
Part One opened April 26; Part Two opens June 7 and continues through September 2. Tuesday–Sunday, 11 a.m.–5 p.m. Thursdays, 11 a.m.–8 p.m. “No Spectators: The Art of Burni... HOW SHALL THE WORLD BE SERVED?: “LIFE IN THE AGE OF REMBRANDT: DUTCH MASTERPIECES FROM THE DORDRECHT MUSEUM” AT THE COLUMBUS MUSEUM OF ART, FEBRUARY 1-JUNE 16, 2019 Jun 1, 2019 | by Jonathan Kamholtz| Read →
Well, despite what the show’s title might suggest, it’s not a blockbuster Rembrandt show. As the exhibition catalogue delicately notes, “we cannot be sure Rembrandt ever visi... “RISE & SHINE”, A GROUP EXHIBIT AT WASH PARK ART Jun 1, 2019 | by Marlene Steele| Read →
An interesting exhibit of the curated work of a number of artists is a good reason to drop into Holly Spraul’s Wash Park Art gallery this summer. Nicole Trimble is continuing... PROFILE OF NANCY NORDLOH NEVILLE Jun 1, 2019 | by Jane Durrell |Read →
“I do enjoy showing my work,” Nancy Nordloh Neville told me. “It’s my life on review. You remember how and where you were when you painted it. You remember if the r... FOTOFOLIO – LLOYD GREENE Jun 1, 2019 | by Kent Krugh |Read →
“Saturday Night Rodeo” Lloyd’ statement: Pretty people and powerful animals provide a good start for many stories. Rodeo is an American activity, born from our colorful south...#PROJECT
Jun 1, 2019 | by Jenny Perusek| Read →
#Project If there was ever a most Instagram-worthy collection award from the Council of Fashion Designers of America, the newest H&M collaboration with fashion designer Gia... THE ART CLIMB: A SIGNATURE GATEWAY FROM THE STREETS TO THE CINCINNATIART MUSEUM
Jun 1, 2019 | by Laura Hobson| Read →
Take the climb to art. A new staircase developed by the Cincinnati Art Museum will take visitors from the intersection of Eden Park Drive and Gilbert Ave. to the front entrance o... NAMWALI SERPELL’S “THE OLD DRIFT” Jun 1, 2019 | by Daniel Brown| Read →
A slew of great novels has appeared in the past two months, all long, and all first-rate. But first among equals is “The Old Drift”, a first novel by Zambian writer N... JULIE ORRINGER’S “THE FLIGHT PORTFOLIO” Jun 1, 2019 | by Daniel Brown| Read →
“The Flight Portfolio”, by Julie Orringer, is another splendid, first-rate new novel, astonishing in its details and analysis of character and place. Based upon the r... -------------------------_ANNOUNCEMENTS _
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JUNE/JULY ISSUE OF AEQAI ONLINE The June/July issue of Aeqai has just posted. We apologize for the delay this month; my pneumonia dragged on and on and I’ve had limited energy to work. But short though th... ------------------------- -------------------------_FEATURES _
DIRECTIONS IN THE VISUAL ARTS: THOUGHTS AT THE END OF THE SEASON Jun 25, 2014 | 1 Comment »_ON VIEW _
TURNING THE LEAF: AMERICA’S EDEN: THOMAS COLE AND “THE VOYAGE OFLIFE”
Jun 25, 2014 | Comments Off on Turning the Leaf: America’s Eden: Thomas Cole and “The Voyage of Life”_PROFILES _
NO FEAR, ALL HEART, PURE SOUL: THE PASSION OF SCULPTOR MARGOT GOTOFF Jun 25, 2014 | Comments Off on No Fear, All Heart, Pure Soul: The Passion of Sculptor Margot Gotoff_MULTIMEDIA _
SHANE HATFIELD FILM INTERVIEW Jun 11, 2013 | Comments Off on Shane Hatfield Film Interview_DIGEST _
GOING BAROQUE: GUERCINO’S “MARS WITH CUPID” (1649) AT THE CAM Sep 15, 2012 | Comments Off on Going Baroque: Guercino’s “Mars with Cupid” (1649) at the CAM ------------------------- ------------------------- AEQAI is proudly powered by WordPressDetails
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