×
Your location has been changed to Washington DC area.
This Event has Passed
On display: October 30 - December 1, 2019 Art Reception: Friday, November 8, 6 - 8:30pm Meet the Artists: Saturday, November 16, 2 - 4pm GALLERY A
Touchstone Gallery Member Show
GALLERY B
“Glimpses” New Watercolors by Patricia Williams
“Glimpses” provides a tantalizing look inside the artist’s life. The vibrant watercolors take full advantage of the medium’s unique properties to breathe color and light into personal objects and rooms. The works are intimate, yet the viewer is kept at a distance by transparent washes and drips of color that partially obscure the images. The abstract quality of the drawing and application of paint raises the question of what is real, what is imagined and what is remembered.
GALLERY C
“On the Bright Side by Pamela Reynolds” by Pamela Reynolds
Color ---vivid, fluorescent color, unfettered and free, is the subject of Pamela Reynolds’ most recent series of abstract paintings. Contrasting bold linear pattern with freely-wrought drips, splatters and pours, these paintings were inspired by urban signage, graffiti, psychedelia, tropical textiles, and the inner workings of the artist’s own mind.
Touchstone Gallery Member Show
GALLERY B
“Glimpses” New Watercolors by Patricia Williams
“Glimpses” provides a tantalizing look inside the artist’s life. The vibrant watercolors take full advantage of the medium’s unique properties to breathe color and light into personal objects and rooms. The works are intimate, yet the viewer is kept at a distance by transparent washes and drips of color that partially obscure the images. The abstract quality of the drawing and application of paint raises the question of what is real, what is imagined and what is remembered.
GALLERY C
“On the Bright Side by Pamela Reynolds” by Pamela Reynolds
Color ---vivid, fluorescent color, unfettered and free, is the subject of Pamela Reynolds’ most recent series of abstract paintings. Contrasting bold linear pattern with freely-wrought drips, splatters and pours, these paintings were inspired by urban signage, graffiti, psychedelia, tropical textiles, and the inner workings of the artist’s own mind.
