Posted December 08, 2011 in Member News
Dawn Roe's New Work Featured in Urbanautica
A selection of photographs from Roe's work-in-progress series, Goldfields, has recently been featured in Urbanautica. Editor Steve Bisson writes that "In general, the research and the work of Dawn, which makes use of different audiovisual media, impressed us with its intense introspective ability. The nature, the forest, with their representation, become object and space for physical and digital display, relations and interaction. We are very interested in her work, critique approach and dialogue with natural environments..."
Urbanautica is a web independent journal dedicated primarly to contemporary landscape photography, and introduces new works or new talented photographers that research the urban environment to the world.
Current Exhibitions
From These Hills - Contemporary Art in the Southern Appalachian Highlands
William King Museum
Abingdon, VA
October 14, 2011 - February 19, 2012
This exhibition boasts a wide range of media and subjects with reference to this notable time and place and includes the work of twenty-three artists from throughout Southwest Virginia, Northeast Tennessee, Western North Carolina, Eastern Kentucky, and Southern West Virginia.
For more information visit http://www.williamkingmuseum.org/2011_0825/from-these-hills-contemporary-art-in-the-southern-appalachian-highlands-2/
Synchronicity: Studio Faculty Biennial Exhibition 2011
Cornell Fine Arts Museum at Rollins College
Winter Park, FL
October 22, 2011 - January 15, 2012
The 2011 edition of the Studio Faculty Biennial features new or recent work by five artists: Joshua Almond (sculpture), Rose Casterline (painting), Dana Hargrove (painting), Dawn Roe (photography/video), and Rachel Simmons (printmaking).
For more information visit http://www.rollins.edu/cfam/exhibitions/future.html
Specific Environments: Landscape as Metaphor
Lincoln Center Galleries
Fort Collins, CO
December 2, 2011 - January 14, 2012
Curated by Leanne Goebel, this group exhibition is deeply tied to how we experience and interpret our relationship to the land, the environment, and our surroundings. The focus of the exhibition will center on work that stretches the idea of how we view our environment, surroundings and the 'scape and scope' of the land as metaphor for something else entirely.
For more information on the exhibition, visit http://www.fcgov.com/lctix/galleries-exhibitions.php