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supersonicart · 4 years
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Eric Wert’s “Other Life” at Gallery Henoch.
Opening on Saturday, September 24th at Gallery Henoch in New York City, New York is artist Eric Wert’s outstanding solo exhibition, “Other Life.”
For “Other Life” Eric explains, “what I love most about painting is observing a subject so intensely that every day associations melt away and it becomes something unfamiliar—like repeating a word over and over until it loses meaning and becomes just a sound.  The experience of painting common subjects reveals just how unknowable they truly are.  The more I look, the more mysterious the world becomes: we are on an alien world enveloped by other life.”
The exhibition will be on view until October 17th, 2020.
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tesstress · 5 years
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Yesterday, September 8th was the 53rd Anniversary of Star Trek, and aren’t we lucky to have had this happyplace in our lives? Wishing Happy Anniversary to the surviving cast of The Original Series, William Shatner, Nichelle Nichols, George Takei and Walter Koenig, and happy memories of our beloved other cast members, Leonard Nimoy, Deforest Kelley, James Doohan, Majel Barret, Grace Lee Whitney, and of course the creator, Gene Roddenberry. The dream of a better future lives on with Star Trek in all of it’s incarnations! May its vision of a peaceful and caring society truly live long and prosper!
One thing I loved about the original series is that even though not all characters had equal time, there were countless little moments where we’d see the human (or otherwise) nature of characters that would give us a peek into their personalities. Little quirks anyone could understand. In honor of 53 years of Star Trek, here are 53 moments of my favorite TOS episodes, 🙂
Also, more coverage of my visit to TreKonderoga in August coming this week! 
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Vina gets her wish in The Cage
“Jim.” A sad second of helplessness from Gary Mitchell.
“I can hear it too!”
Uhura bored at a meeting in Corbomite Manuever
Spock nearly apoligizing to Kirk in Corbomite Manuever
Christine hears Corby for the first time in years
Eve tells Ben Childress what to do with his pots and pans
And he does.
Spock grins while playing his harp.
Uhura sings the charms of Spock
Riley in full cowboy mode
Spock collapses against door
Spock’s first mind-meld.
Jim’s beautiful eyes.
RUk lifts Kirk like a baby.
Sulu casually says ‘No’ to Trelane’s food.
Uhura does NOT like Trelane’s
“They are as high above us as we are above the ameoba.”
McCoy and his fantasy showgirls
“With all due respect to the young lady…”
“You’re holding a knife at your physcian’s throat.
Marla entranced by Kahn
‘WE offered the world ORDER!”
“You couldn’t pronounce it”
Guilty.
Kirk misty-eyed after Edith’s kiss.
McCoy gently giggles with Edith.
Kirk devastated.
“Athena! You were right!”
Evil Spock’s first appearance.
Jim reminding Marlena how a lover should kiss.
“Why are you monitoring my communications Mr. Sulu?”
“How is it…done?”
“Vulcan’s never bluff”
That damn transporter at a critical moment!
Mudd realizing there’s 500 Stellas.
The Companion see Ephram through Nancy’s scarf.
“Go to him, Please!”
Eleen trusting McCoy.
Kracko tossing darts at Bela poster.
The first glorious appearance of gangsters K & S.
Kirk all buzzed and happy after his pep talk.
“Well, Hello!”
Henoch makes Spock more laid back.
She just loves him.
“Really, Doctor?”
“I love you, Miranda!”
Bones finally gets a kiss.
Marta’s modern dance..
Spock nonchalantly taps a force-field.
Double Neck Pinch!
Beale tense as destruction sequence continues.
A gentle, curious kiss.
    53 TOS Images for Star Trek’s 53rd Anniversary! Yesterday, September 8th was the 53rd Anniversary of Star Trek, and aren't we lucky to have had this happyplace in our lives?
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@davidkassan is a featured artist in the The Figurative Artist's Handbook by Rob Zeller @robzellerart. . Kassan studied painting and art history at Syracuse University, the Art Students League of New York, and the National Academy School of Fine Art. He has lectured at many schools around the country including Rochester Institute of Technology, Arizona State University, Centre College, Western Illinois University, Syracuse University, the National Academy School of Fine Art, and the University of Alabama. He has taught at the National Academy School of Fine Art, the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine, the Salmagundi Club and at the 72nd Street Studio. Mr. Kassan has conducted many international painting seminars, including workshops in Iceland, Australia, Portugal, Belgium and Spain. He has been a contributor to many different art publications. He has created two video tutorial on drawing and painting. He created s foundation to help support emerging artists in both music and the fine arts, the @kassanfoundation . David Kassan is currently represented by Gallery Henoch. #davidkassan #figurative #driscollbabcock #plus+gallery #instaart #art #artist #contemporaryart #realism #fromlife #figurative #drawing #oil #oilpainting #painting #painter #paints #portrait #artmodel #figure #figureativeart #artistmodel #anatomy #figurativedrawing #figurativepainting #figurativeartistshandbook #robzeller #robzellerart #monacellipress #realism https://ift.tt/2LPEYQq
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trascapades · 5 years
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🎤🎶🎨 #ArtIsAWeapon #NewExhibit #OpeningReception @wutangclan & @absolut_art two-day exhibition in #NYC featuring 20+ artists who’ve been inspired by the legendary hip hop group. See/ buy work from 20+ #artists like @tiff_massey @KEEBS @hankwillisthomas @baseerakhan @lilkool & more. Oct. 24-25 at 555 W 25th Street. #WuTang #WuTangClan #AbsolutArt #MusicAndArt #ForTheCulture #HipHop #ArtExhibit #Reception #BlackArt #BlackArtists #ArtAndTheCity #BlackGirlArtGeeks #TraScapades #ArtIsAWeapon (at Gallery Henoch) https://www.instagram.com/p/B3-vKq2FFH1/?igshid=1otgl79zc7jej
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fineartillo17 · 6 years
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Gallery Info
Low Brow related Galleries:
Copro Gallery- https://www.copronason.com/
Gallery 1988- https://nineteeneightyeight.com/
Booth Gallery-http://www.paulboothgallery.com/
Lyons Wier Gallery- http://lyonswiergallery.com/
Joshua Liner- http://joshualinergallery.com/
Gallery Poulsen: http://www.gallerypoulsen.com/
Chandran Gallery: http://chandrangallery.com/ Gallery Henoch: http://www.galleryhenoch.com/ The Lodge Gallery: http://www.thelodgegallery.com/ Martha Otero Gallery: http://www.marthaotero.com/ Hashimoto Contemporary: http://www.hashimotocontemporary.com/ Gallery Nucleus: http://www.gallerynucleus.com/ Merry Karnowsky Gallery: http://www.mkgallery.com/ PPOW gallery: http://www.ppowgallery.com/artists AFA gallery: http://afanyc.com/ Modern Eden Gallery: http://www.moderneden.com/ Stephen Romano Gallery: http://www.shishigami.com/srfa/indexnewsplashwccELGVID.html
Contemporary Fine art galleries, NYC:
Anton Kern Gagosiian Forum Gallery David Zwirner Gallery Paula Cooper Gallery Andrea Rosen Gallery Barbara Gladstone Marian Goodman zach feuer gallery Mary Boone Hauser & Wirth PACE
Lowbrow Magazines:
Juxtapose Hi Fructose Blab BLISSS! BOOOOOOOM
Beautiful Decay
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carlosfentanes · 5 years
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100 days 100 galleries; Day 85: Gallery Henoch, New York NY
100 days 100 galleries; Day 85: Gallery Henoch, New York NY
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Gallery Henoch represents painters and sculptors who exemplify the best in contemporary American, European, and Asian Realism. The work exhibited comprises a wide diversity of styles and subject matter. These artists stand out for their imagination and distinctive personal approach. All reflect Gallery Henoch’s commitment to an art based on individual, subjective style and sensibility.
Carlo…
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gtunesmiff · 6 years
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Eric Zener, Ride of Your Life, 2015, Gallery Henoch
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myimobile · 7 years
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<the rural nigh> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Chijia's Art also in below: Instagram: Chijia.rural.oilpainting Facebook: facebook.com/yegu2016 Twitter: chijia_rural_canvas LinkedIn: Chijia he ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ #venicebiennale #Fineart #Modernart #Artgallery #Artlovers #Galleryart #Contemporaryart #Artcollector #Artcurator #ArtgalleryNYC #Galerie #ArtCollection #artmuseum #Gallery #Asianart #Chineseart #Galleria #Artgalleryofnsw #Contemporaryartcurator #Artgalleries #Oiloncanvas #Oilpainting #artinvestors #rurallife #Fashion #Model #Photography #Photos #christies @nationalgalleryaus @art.discover @nationalportraitgallery @antonkerngallery @christiesinc #arts_help @maryboonegallery @contemporaychineseart @sothebys @artandsolstudios @nationalgalleryofireland(在 Gallery Henoch)
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vicsterhao · 6 years
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Summer!!! #ericzener #chrisarmstrong #johnevans #richardcombes #instaartist #artist #instaart #art #youngartist #nofilter #galleryhopping #gallery #instadaily #vicsterinnyc @galleryhenoch (at Gallery Henoch)
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maonyc · 6 years
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Night Voyage. oil on canvas, artist Eric Zener. #Artist , Gallery Henoch. May 2018, meatpacking.
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Sharon Sprung is a featured artist in the The Figurative Aritsts’ Handbook by Rob Zeller @robzellerart and Monacelli Press. It’s available for purchase on Amazon by clicking in the link in the Profile above. Sprung is a Brooklyn based artists who teaches at the Art Students League and the National Academy of Design. She has had several solo shows with Gallery Henoch in NYC, and previously at Sherry French. Her work focuses on nudes and portraits, as well as still life. Of her work, she says: “I believe in the transformative powers of painting: that the luminosity of pigment and medium is as manifest as the surface of the soul” #sharonsprung #artstudentsleague #nationalacademyofdesign #atelier #instaart #art #artist #contemporaryart #realism #fromlife #figurative #drawing #oil #oilpainting #painting #painter #paints #portrait #artmodel #figure #figureativeart #artistmodel #anatomy #figurativedrawing #figurativepainting #figurativeartistshandbook #robzeller #robzellerart #monacellipress #realism https://ift.tt/2jkqUTe
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Two paintings by Trey Friedman. One of his projects was to render over 100 sugar maples along a stretch of road in New England, many of which are 250 years old. #treyfriedman #galleryhenoch #newenglandlandscape #sugarmaple #250yearsold (at Gallery Henoch)
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johnmichaelantonio · 7 years
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Sharon Sprung, Entangled, 2015, Gallery Henoch
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the-young-sun-blog · 7 years
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#art #artist #newyork #gallery #portrait #cool #friday #pose #dress #power I had the honor of going to New York and bouncing between galleries. While I was in Chelsea I came across this painting by Sharon Young in Gallery Henoch It is the most beautiful portrait I've ever seen. I am starting a few portraits on Monday and this practically sets the pace for me. (at Gallery Henoch)
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rustytheshackleford · 7 years
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David Kassan (at Gallery Henoch)
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agosnesrerose · 7 years
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Portraits of Holocaust Survivors by David Jon Kassan
Portraits of Holocaust survivors might well be considered the work of decades because truly surviving such a traumatic upheaval goes far beyond living through the experience. Surviving, in its fullest sense, entails thriving—going on to rebuild a life and, eventually, look back upon the days before, during and after the Holocaust to see the complex threads woven together as a whole. Now, more than 70 years since the fall of the Nazi regime, David Jon Kassan  has stepped forward to tell the stories and paint the portraits of Holocaust survivors.
  These portraits of Holocaust survivors by David Jon Kassan are part of the Edut Project. (Gallery Henoch, New York City). Portraits from left to right: Elsa Ross, Hidden Child, Roslyn and Bella (Roslyn Goldofsky and Bella Sztul), Sam Goldofsky, Survivor of Auschwitz
  His portraits form part of the Edut Project (theedutproject.org)—“edut” being Hebrew for “living witnesses.” By telling the stories, based on personal interviews, and painting the portraits of Holocaust survivors, Kassan lends personal faces and testimonies to what might otherwise become standard text and nameless photographed faces in history books.
  David Jon Kassan explains the Edut Project to 11 Auschwitz survivors of the Holocaust (only 8 of these survivors seen in photo). Hassan intends to paint all 11 survivors in one 8×18-foot painting.
Portraits of Holocaust Survivors: Louise and Lazar Farkas
Among Kassan’s portraits of Holocaust survivors is that of Louise and Lazar Farkas. Louise grew up in Northern Romania. Her parents led a comfortable middle-class life, producing dairy products and running a store; Lazar spent his youth across the border in Czechoslovakia and, as a young man, attended business school and then worked in the wholesale grocery business. For a while, the borders between Romania and Czechoslovakia were open, and Lazar would cross over to socialize, talking over coffee and walking the sidewalks with a group of young women, one of whom was Louise.
Descent Into the Holocaust
As anti-Semitism in German-occupied countries grew, Lazar was pressed into forced labor. Working from early morning to late night, he helped build bunkers. Heavy hauling jobs that would normally be performed with horses were consigned entirely to humans. The one silver lining was that, unlike the prisoners in extermination camps, these workers weren’t systematically killed. “They weren’t nice to us,” says Lazar, “but there was no gas chambers.”
  Detail of an oil portrait of Holocaust survivor Lazar Farkas, by David Jon Kassan: The full portrait includes Lazar’s wife, Louise, also a Holocaust survivor. Kassan’s vertical palette is on the right.
  Louise was about 20 when she was deported to Auschwitz: “A woman that was in power at the time liked my shoes,” says Louise, “and she took them and I had no shoes. I was barefoot. It was cold, northern climate there: it’s cold in the fall. We struggled.”
  Gas chambers were a terrifyingly real presence in Auschwitz. “We knew we are to be destroyed,” says Louise.  She kept a protective eye over her sister who was five years younger—and not always inclined to listen to her older sibling. “We had lost our parents, and I felt responsible for her,’ says Louise. “We had no one. … There were several selections, but I held onto her. I didn’t let go. Even for—if it cost my life. Never let go of her. We lost the rest of the family. Five children—I was the oldest. Two of us survived.  … There were times that she would just sit down and she wouldn’t cooperate. She was young and didn’t understand what goes on. I dragged her. It was tough.”
  Detail of an in-process oil portrait of Holocaust survivor Louise Farkas, by David Jon Kassan: The full portrait includes Louise’s husband, Lazar, also a Holocaust survivor.
   Escape
But the tides were turning against Germany, and security was unraveling. “We walked out of the camp. Just simply,” says Louise of her and her sister’s escape. “We had no place to go and no money and no food. We went from country to country from there.“
  Lazar also managed to run away from his forced labor. “I wound up somewhere in Poland, I don’t know where,“ he says. For a time he hid in a farmer’s hay loft, but when the farmer heard that others had been punished for harboring Jews, he asked Lazar to leave. Lazar lived in the forest and met up with the Czechoslovakian army.He joined the army as a volunteer and ended up stationed in his hometown. He learned that people were escaping from the camps and wanted to look for Louise, so he found a bean that inflamed his eyes, making them appear as if he had glaucoma, and presented himself to an officer who sent him to a doctor. The doctor recognized the irritation from the berry but understood. “He knew what I wanted to do,” says Lazar, “that I want to get, so he gave me a paper that I’m free from the army.”
Reunification
Lazar left messages for Louise that he was looking for her. They crossed the border in opposite directions on the same night, just missing each other. Eventually, Lazar found Louise and the two were soon married. His uncle in America was able to arrange for their immigration, and they settled in Brooklyn. (Louise’s sister wasn’t able to leave until a year later). Both spoke some English, but Lazar found getting a job challenging. One day, when Lazar was sitting on a bench, someone who knew him passed by. The two started talking, and the friend offered Lazar a job in the grocery business.
  David Jon Kassan painting Louise and Lazar Farkas’s portrait
  Children
Lazar and Louise had three daughters. Not wanting their young children to be traumatized, at first the parents didn’t talk about their Holocaust experiences, yet all could not be hidden. “I knew, for example,” said one, “that something terrible had happened because I had no grandparents. Friends of mine had grandparents; they had cousins. I had none.”
  Not until the daughters heard about the Holocaust in school did they start asking questions and, little by little, the stories came out. Because the Farkus children attended a Yeshiva school and lived in a neighborhood with many other children of Holocaust survivors, they were able to absorb the information more easily. “It wasn’t that strange to me,” said one daughter. As all three grew older, however, they would grasp the reality of their parent’s experience more fully and work though how it had, in fact, affected them.
Full Lives
  Louise and Lazar Farkas (oil on acrylic mirror panel, 46×42)
  Meanwhile, Lazar and Louise built their lives together. Eventually, Lazar with three partners would own three grocery stores and two convenience stores in New York City. Louise kept house and cared for the children, but when one of her daughters entered college, Louise began taking college classes at night. She eventually earned master’s degrees in special education and urban studies. For 25 years she taught in the New York City Public High School in Queens, retiring at age 85. By the time David Jon Kassan interviewed the Farkas family and began the painting of Lazar and Louise for his series of portraits of Holocaust survivors, Lazar was 97 and Louise was 92. They have been married for more than 70 years. In the fullest sense, they have survived.
  David Jon Kassan: The tattoo on Kasson’s arm is Hebrew for “heritage” or “roots.”
Read the full story of David Jon Kassan’s portraits of Holocaust survivors in the April 2017 issue of “The Artist’s Magazine.”
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Take a sneak peek below at New Realism Oil Painting magazine, created by The Artist’s Magazine:
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