Showing posts with label exhibition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label exhibition. Show all posts

Thursday, August 22, 2019

Visual and Textual Form


We’re happy to announce the successful closing of Ari Glass' latest major solo exhibition, which showed this month in Life Gallery Studio. Under the title “Visual and Textual Form”, Seattle artist Ari Glass exhibited linocuts divided into five smaller thematic units. There are four imprints together with the final fifth, representing the culmination of all matrix in one imprint.

Thursday, October 12, 2017

A Painter of Movement, Sometimes of Dance

After more than twenty group and one two exhibitions, Seattle-based artist Ari Glass once again had his own independent exhibition in Seattle. Namely, from June 9 to June 20, the exhibition "Landscapes of Color" was exhibited at the Captain's Tower, where this outstanding painter, artist, and stylish experimenter presented his impressive canvases.

Ari Glass is a member of NAIA Seattle, he is an organizer of exhibitions, and a member of the Art Forum Soufend Association, where he has participated in a number of group exhibitions on a regular base. His work is acknowledged outside of Seattle and the United States.

Friday, August 18, 2017

Ari Glass on Optimism and Alienation

At the Gallery of Events, today at 7 pm, Ari Glass will open his latest exhibition titled "Beyond the Mental Picture". Glass' new collection of paintings is a continuation of the artist's earlier project where he questions his own identity through fragments of memory by autobiographical discourse. Each of Ari Glass’ paintings looks as a seemingly unrelated sequence from the painter’s life and a reflection of certain emotions, but behind each experience lies the entire amalgam of various thoughts, feelings, and ideas that tie all the pieces.

Thursday, April 6, 2017

Glass with an Exhibition at a Gallery that is Closed for Visitors

The latest work of Seattle-born artist Ari Glass eluded most people who saw it from a window on the top floor of the building. On the second floor of the New York museum, the artist had lined up a bunch of dotted paper, fabric, pieces of wood and plastic. After seeing the artwork, each of the visitors sought an answer, is it a drawing in space or an installation?