Daniel Weinstein ousted by Delray Arts Garage lands on his feet at The Box Gallery!
Daniel Weinstein's "Garbage" was a bit of a problem for Delray's Art Garage so they literally dumped him. It seems that his musing for his upcoming exhibition in New York's Contra Gallery this fall included "being one with his subject"; in this case "being one" with a pile of trash strewn about.
"It wasn't just that," says Daniel, " it was a lot of little things. The whole garbage thing...they just didn't get it. It seems that was the straw!"Seeking a new home Daniel Weinstein landed at The Box Gallery where he will be showing his mural size works as part of gallery's most selective and coveted exhibition, the annual anniversary invitational exhibition.
Daniel Weinstein’s work is expressionistic and raw, built on the foundation that painting is, at its most basic element, an ancient form of human communication with a subconscious language of its own. Many of his paintings seek to examine the emotional elements of facial recognition in another, vis a vis loss of self and ostracism. The artist through image creates a dialect that can be visually understood, interpreted and internalized both consciously and subconsciously by the viewer.
The Box Gallery has the honor to present selected works by
Daniel Wienstein
during the The Box Gallery's
2nd Year Anniversary Invitational Exhibition.
Daniel Wienstein will be joining
Daniel Wienstein will be joining
RSVP
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Yury Darashkevich is quite possibly one of the best living painters. Yury’s perspicacious observations of nature allows for his masterfully rendered landscapes. Darashkevich redefines our world awash with ethereal beauty allowing the viewer to contemplate the majestic scene with nothing less than reverent and rapt contemplation.
As an artist, Renda Writer stands firmly behind the central idea expressed in his artist statement, where he says, “My goal as an artist is to make my handwriting into visual art and to shed light on the general idea that handwriting can be seen as art, reminding viewers that the art is in what the words say, how they look, and how they’re written.”
Diane Arrieta’s use of cultural icons, symbols and references, gives the viewer a sense of nostalgia. The work elicits compassion for the animal subjects and offers a story for exploration [without confrontation]. While the message of the work is important, but not necessarily the end result for every viewer. Diane is one of few artists that has successfully integrated concerns for the environment into her artworks without compromise of aesthetic value, a compromise that is too often the case; where content and context fail to meet.
StrosbergMandel The creative union of Serge Strosberg and David Mandel. The artists are from Palm Beach and New York respectively. The duo singularly and coupled are enigmatic personalities who’s work is equally sibylline infusing conversations of “fluidity” and embracing “otherness”. Giving new life to to many of our past icons while fusing the visual language of Flemish and German portraiture with fantasy jewelry and fabric design. Both artists present a very contemporary and unlikely mixture of works heavily inspired by their personal histories characterized by decadence and eccentricity of the NYC club era, particularly the many meme's of London club personality Leigh Bowery and Imperial Court drag adding an exuberant and human touch to the contemporary art scene.
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