Logan County Arts presents "Artful
Disarray" starting August 9th
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[August 03, 2018]
LINCOLN
Logan County Arts and the Lincoln Art Institute are currently
gearing up for their August exhibit, “Artful Disarray”. The show
will debut with a reception from 5 to 8 p.m. on Thursday, August 9
at the Lincoln Art Institute, 112 S. McLean St, Lincoln.
For this show LCA members will have a chance to present new media
and styles and to display works that did not fit any of the group’s
recent themes. With this freedom of approach there are sure to be
some interesting surprises in the gallery. Experienced photographers
Bev Noble and Mitch Douglas know that many photographs owe their
quality not to careful planning but to the ability to record a
spontaneous moment. Noble says, “Sometimes I have to pull the car
over to capture a unique view or a dramatic change in the light.
It’s not something you can come back to later – that view will never
be the same again.” The results of this dedication are apparent in
her ethereal photos Lighter Than Air and On a Clear Day.
In addition to his formal studies of the female model, Douglas will
show action images of the diving Dock Dogs that performed on the
Square earlier this summer. Other art on display will include
acrylics, pastels and mixed media pieces from artists Sharon Fak,
Jason Hoffman, Pam Moriearty, and Moses Pinkerton, as well as work
from several guest artists. Some of these pieces will have spent the
previous week on display at the Logan County Fair.
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After the initial reception, the “OPEN” flag flying in front of the Institute
will indicate when the gallery is open. Otherwise, the show will be available
for viewing until early September by appointment. Visitors may ring the
doorbell, and if Pinkerton is available he will open the gallery. For an
appointment, people may call Pinkerton at 217-651-8355.
Also available at the “Artful Disarray” opening will be information on the
September, 2018 invited exhibit of a photography collection of Patrick Moore.
The show will feature prints of the old American West made from glass negatives
taken by renowned early 20th Century photographer Howard Clinton Tibbitts.
[Pamela Moriearty] |