| The annual Fine Arts Faculty exhibition includes a variety of works of art in a wide range of media. The exhibit provides a look at the aesthetic and educational philosophies advocated by El Camino College Art Department and demonstrates an array of concepts and techniques currently characteristic of the art world. The majority of works in the gallery are grounded in an academic approach to art study and training. Represented in the exhibition are oil, watercolor or acrylic paintings on canvas, paper, or panel. The show includes abstractions by Craig Antrim and Carson Gladson, Mary Addison Hackett and Harrison Storms. Rodman de la Cruz presents watercolors with calligraphic text while Linda Busch and Diane L. Hayden give us brilliant figurative pieces on canvas, and Lee Kim shows detailed local landscape in acrylic and Willie Brownlee shows loose landscapes in oil on canvas. Jack King presents both a mixed media altar piece and ink and watercolor portraits, while Lawrence Klepper shows both watercolors and acrylic work and Annie Malone shows humorous encaustic pieces on wood. Randall Von Bloomberg presents airy landscapes in oil on linen, Tom Kidd shows quirky landscapes and figures on wood and Susanna Meiers presents small moonscapes in acrylic on wood. In the area of printmaking Medora Wildenberg presents elegant dark intaglio while R. Iset Anuakan shows a 3-dimensional print accompanied by a poem. In the area of drawing, Norm Looney presents obsessively detailed ink drawing on paper and David Patterson shows his Classic Dream in pastel on paper. Besides the familiar technique of black and white photographic printing represented in beautiful images by Robert Dalton, Susan Einstein, Darilyn Rowan and Sandra Trepasso the exhibition includes other methods of photographic printing such as color pigment prints by Michael Quinn. The computer arts area of the department is represented by fanciful ink jet images by Mike Angelino and Robin Valle, sensitive digital abstraction by Deborah Patterson and imaginative digital creations by Willie Middlebrook. The
exhibition also includes a cross-section of 3-dimensional techniques
taught in the department –imaginative jewelry fabrications of
Tina Chambers-Riggs and Irene Mori, humorous mixed media constructions
by Terry O’Donnell and Paul Gellman show and an enormous newspaper
tornado by Joyce Dallal that looms ominously over the gallery. Kent
Hayward presents small-scale constructions employing objects from his
everyday life while Gretchen Potts-Jones presents large-scale mixed
media work, Wallpaper for the Mind. Thank
You, |
| Images from the exhibit will be available soon, please check back. |
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