Showing posts with label bridgehampton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bridgehampton. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Take Joanne's virtual tour of Miami Basel earlier this month as reported by artist and blogger extraordinaire, Joanne Mattera. Nice coverage in particular of Jorge Fick works at Eric Firestone Gallery, Tucson booth.
Labels:
blogging at basel,
bridgehampton,
Eric Firestone Gallery,
joanne matera,
miami basel,
red dot,
scope hampton
Monday, February 25, 2008
Thru March 8th
Jesse Pasca is a working artist- splitting his time between New York City and the East End of Long Island. The duality of his work and personal life is mirrored in his artwork. He finds it necessary to balance both urban and rural velocities-(steeping himself in both the landscapes of human density and the natural world) as well as act as an arts educator to balance the solitary work done in the studio. As an arts educator he has worked in public and private schools as well as the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Museum of Modern Art in their School and Family Programs divisions. The work Jesse has done as an educator connects directly to the work he does as an artist. His work is in many private collections in both the U.S. and the U.K.
Sunday, February 24, 2008

The Gideon Stein Gallery New to Bridgehampton
About the Artist in Residence and Gallery Director, Gideon Stein:
His first serious exposure to Jazz was while interning in the art department of GRP Records in New York City in 1987. He then studied with guitar master Howard Morgen at the New School. Following which he played with post-punk and alt-rock bands on the lower east side in the early ‘90’s. He contributed guitar tracks to a Lisa Lisa album in 1993 entitled “LL77”. While earning a living as a musician, his interest and development in visual art grew concurrently. In 1993 his mural “Universal Harmony”, strongly influenced by jazz, was exhibited at the Borough of Manhattan Community College.
During 1995 he traveled throughout Central Java and Bali, Indonesia at which time he took a sabbatical from painting. Far from his urban roots, the light, color and lifestyle of these primitive places lead to a renewed enthusiasm and a breakthrough for Stein as a visual artist. This was a pivotal point at which he decided to study painting intensively with Emily Mason and printmaking with Vincent Longo at Hunter College. He became a member of the Salmagundi Club, NYC In 1998. Following in 1999, another journey abroad, this time to Morocco, where he traveled from Casablanca through Marrakech to the High Atlas Mountains presented even further inspiration.
When Stein returned to America, he moved to Woodstock, NY to assist the painter Al Held. While assisting Held, he continued to explore his own work. In 2002, Stein’s love of music and art synchronized in his mobile “Guitar Sculpture”, which was featured in the Woodstock art communities’ centennial event. In 2003, he immersed himself in a four-year music and art intensive in Brooklyn’s Park Slope, where he recorded music, participated in group shows, displayed his work in local venues, and performed at area clubs. In 2006 he participated in the Park Slope Artist Studio tour following which he relocated to Bridgehampton, NY to open the Gideon Stein Gallery in 2007. On August 19th he launched the gallery’s inaugural show, a retrospective of his own pieces of mixed media works on paper, canvas, wood and shoes. Proceeds from this inaugural show benefited the Peconic Land Trust and the Nassau Land Trust.
An Artist-in-Residence in Bridgehampton, Mr. Stein seeks to focus his energy on private, site-specific murals and sculpture, while providing exposure for both established and emerging artists. He is currently working on the roster for exhibitions for the summer season.
Labels:
art gallery,
bridgehampton,
gideon stein,
hamptons
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