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Black And White | Review

Mid-America's Visual Arts Publication

Tag Archive for ‘Black and White’

Inside the Loop: Andrea Clark

Clark’s show offers an excellent reason to get inside the Downtown Loop tonight, either before or after hitting the Crossroads … to make it an and evening rather than either/or.

Faces of Home: T.J. Harrison

There’s a definite warmth and intimacy to T.J. Harrison’s photography, a feeling that Harrison is recording not only artistic images but the faces of those for whom she cares deeply.

Studies in Contrast: Sam Smith

Sam Smith’s photographs juxtapose soft and angular elements, his use of black-and-white heightening the inherent contrast and tension.

Cleared for Takeoff: Brud Jones

Brud Jones presents his subjects, airplanes and the places from which they take off and land, not so much as themselves but as surfaces for light, as near-abstract compositions, as patterns and lines and curves.

Bricks on the Wall: Jeff Blank

Jeff Blank’s show at Whole Foods Market show not only his affinity for old brick and steel but also his eye for intriguing details and his skill at composing and arranging the elements in his shots into compelling wholes.

Stark, Spare and Silent: Regen Quinn

Regen Quinn’s black-and-white photographs, produced from film negatives rather than pixels, are reminiscent of stills from old silent films — so much so that one almost expects them to flicker into motion.

For Greyscale Waves of Grain: Daniel W. Coburn

Coburn generally favors a high-contrast approach with a deep field of clarity. Each stalk and petal stands out as though etched.

Human Spacing: Mark Alan Anderson

It seems odd to have that sort of disconnect in an art show at a community center, which is all about … well, people who live in the same area congregating and interacting for this or that purpose.
But, really, isn’t that what we do, all too often?