Showing posts with label Installation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Installation. Show all posts

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Upcoming Exhibition: Eco-Sensitive Beachcomber Artist Turns Profane into Sublime

Art made from Medical Waste dumpped on our shores
"Art made from glass, trash, and other non-organic waste (medical waste inclusive) may raise questions about how we care for our shores. 
One Man's Trash which will open on November 8th at 7 PM at ActivistArtistA Gallery is a utopian evnvironment created by Thomas Bazinet, a/k/a "Tiki Tom" who has made cleaning up the beach and making art some what of a synchronism. Taking the profane to the sublime the folk artist brings his outsider art in doors to create an environment for comtemplation, introspection and marvel. "
-Rolando Chang Barrero, Curator 

One Man's Trash: The Work of TIKI TOM
at
ActivistArtistA Gallery
422 West Industrial Ave.
Boynton Beach, FL 33426
786-521-1199

November 8th thru December 201th, 2013

 Below are some of the elements that will become 
beachcomber artist, Tiki Tom's "One Man's Trash" Environment.


















Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Serafima Sokolov at ActivistArtista


Serafima Sokolov 
"Memorial to Innocence"
(installation)


Packaging Nature Exhibition

Curated by Rolando Chang Barrero, BFA The School of the Art Institute
On display at 
ActivistArtistA Gallery
422 West Industrial Ave
Boynton Beach FL 33483

VIP Preview 7-9 pm (Invitation Only)
April 24, 2012

Opening Reception: April 26, 2012 (Open to the Public)

Exhibition Dates: April 26 thru May 17


"Memorial to Innocence"


For More information visit ActivistArtistA.com

Friday, October 28, 2011

Business Forum: New Gallery to Open on 11.11.11


Business Profile - 

ActivistArtistA Gallery


Sun Sentinel Business Forum
Posted by Staff Writer on October 21, 2011 9:16 AM 

A flourishing neighborhood of artists is quietly located within the city of Boynton Beach.
Most residents are not privy to the existence of the Neighborhood Arts District and its newest member, the ActivistArtistA Gallery, 422 W. Industrial Ave.
Owner and artist Rolando Barrero is having fun with the opening date, launching his gallery at 6 p.m. Nov. 11 or 11-11-11. The art of Kim Fay and Robert Catapano has been selected by Barrero to be shown for the grand opening.
“Kim has a particular vision,” he said. “She has traveled quite a bit and some pieces are more personal to her.”
Catapano does multimedia art but both use the abstract technique and vivid colors, Barrero said.
“Also, the departure from one artist to the other is so amazing; they are the same genre, but both very different,” he said.
The Arts District was established in 1986 by Richard Beau Lieu, who also has his gallery and studio located there.
Other artists have followed suit over the years.
But Barrero is no dilettante in the art field.
“I came from Chicago, where I went to school at the Art Institute,” he said. “Chicago has a lot of areas where little enclave of artists reside.”
New York and a gallery on Lincoln Road in Miami are other stops where “Roly,” as his friends call him, made his mark, including changing the usual way galleries have art openings by stripping them down to just the art and its fans.
“We take away the booze, take away the furniture and have a casual environment,” he said. “It is a family outing place where an intellectual can mingle with a beach bum.”
Barrero has been making art since he was 16, giving him three decades to hone his craft.
As for the name ActivistArtistA Gallery, he said it is just something he has been using since he was young.
“I was originally doing a lot of activist art for a number of different political groups during the AIDS crisis,” he said.
Debby Coles-Dobay, the city’s public art administrator, said the Arts District already has seven artists and more moving in.
“It was an industrial area before and wasn’t kept up real well with a lot of crime,” she said. “Rick and others cleaned it up and put art on the street. Crime lowered because of this.”
She said “Roly” brings a new energy to the area, having a following not just from Boynton Beach but also from all of South Florida.
“His art is more edgy,” Coles-Dobay said. “Now we are getting a great mix of different types of art in this district.”
For information about the ActivistArtistA Gallery, call 786-521-1199.
Posted by Staff Writer on October 21, 2011 9:16 AM 

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

ActivistArtistA:Pre-Opening Exhibition

Pre-Opening September 9th, 2011
Works by: Gina Bentivegna
Organized by Roly Chang

I am a dreamer, a designer, a painter, and an imaginative. Everyday is a new opportunity to create and inspire. I believe that art is not one's ability to paint a perfect portrait, but the ability one has in capturing the mind's eye in a way that no one else can.

My work is not what you would typically find hanging in the average living room next to pastel beach scenes and floral patterns. OH NO NO. Often times my work has a darker edge to it, which I like to contrast with a bright color palate.

I do not sign my pieces, my signature is my brush stroke.

Gina


Saturday, August 15, 2009

Carlos Alves: Prolific Works


Carlos Alves has been serious about art since he was a child and it shows in his passion for making things out of clay, glass, salvaged artifacts, broken shards and recycled ceramic knick–knacks. Alves has created mosaic murals for walls, floors, driveways, and swimming pools. Alves is now applying his artistry to large public and private artwork projects throughout the US and abroad. Most recently Alves finished the fountain on Miami Beaches’ Lincoln Road, in front of the Colony Theater. He originally tiled the fountain after Hurricane Andrew and when the City of Miami Beach installed a new water feature to the fountain, they called Carlos to embellish the new fountain.
It is a magnificent coral reef theme, one Alves uses throughout a lot of his work. Many of you may recognize his work as you walk thru Art Center
South Florida, Miami Beach City Hall, Miami’s 8th Street Metro Mover
station and the 40’ Sand Castle at the Miami Children’s Museum.