Author Archives: jolanta
Su-en Wong
Su-en was born in Singapore in 1973, She spent her early years with aspirations of becoming a ballerina. Su-en was born in Singapore in 1973, She spent her early years with aspirations of becoming a ballerina. She seemed to be much better at the piano bench than at the ballet bar though, so at age […]
Su-en Wong
Su-en was born in Singapore in 1973, She spent her early years with aspirations of becoming a ballerina. Su-en was born in Singapore in 1973, She spent her early years with aspirations of becoming a ballerina. She seemed to be much better at the piano bench than at the ballet bar though, so at age […]
Su-en Wong
Su-en was born in Singapore in 1973, She spent her early years with aspirations of becoming a ballerina. Su-en was born in Singapore in 1973, She spent her early years with aspirations of becoming a ballerina. She seemed to be much better at the piano bench than at the ballet bar though, so at age […]
Little Monsters – Tomoko Ashikawa
Childhood is the most uncertain period in human life, both physically and psychologically. A group exhibition, “Little Monsters,” presents four different artists whose works express an idea of children as sentimentalized creatures in uncertain reality. Selected works range from painting and drawing to silkscreen print, all with fantastical scenes and nostalgia. Maria Isabel Arango expresses […]
Once We Were All Children – Chaco Kato
When creativity, philosophy and human wisdom are integrated, art, including architecture, will be born. And it will form a city, a city that will produce its own culture and generate its own civilization. Civilization has also created constant war and environmental destruction. I believe the realization of the fact that once we were all children […]
Reconstruction – Leah Oates
“Reconstruction” explores the many subtleties and shapes of survival and transformation using all manner of media, from painting to video and performance; the nightly news is a litany of destruction. The wreckage surrounds us—towers fall, waves crash, the world is at war and love is hard to find. But reconstruction and renewal spring eternal even […]
Audrey Kawasaki – Whitney May
Sometimes it’s OK to fall in love with pretty things and the alluring paintings of LA artist Audrey Kawasaki may well merit adoration through their aesthetic appeal alone, but there is a bit more to the gorgeous fantasy characters she creates on wood panel after wood panel. Death via skull imagery abounds in her works […]
Drawathon
The art world, like most of the world, is a very segregated and sometimes extremely lonely place. In reaction to these surroundings, I have launched the monthly Draw-A-Thon. At this alternative art event, figure drawing is re-cast by adding narrative, theatrical and musical components, creating context and energy in public spaces. I studied art from […]
White – Rachel Abramovitz
Tchera Niyego, the curator of the “White” show at the Broadway Gallery, NYC, happens to be a woman of style and substance. Luckily for me, the show lived up to what I have come to expect from her (because there is nothing worse than having to face a beautiful woman and tell her she’d better […]
Robert Laliberte
Robert Laliberte was born in Colorado Springs, Colorado in 1955. He still resides in Colorado Springs. Robert Laliberte was born in Colorado Springs, Colorado in 1955. He still resides in Colorado Springs. While earning a B.A. in Psychology from the University of Colorado, he studied fine art. Later, he completed a Masters of Architecture, also […]


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