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Jane Seymour
May 26th - 28th
The
award-winning actress and artist Jane Seymour brought her collection of
paintings to Stone Harbor over Memorial Day weekend. "The Art of Jane
Seymour" was on display May 26-28 at Ocean Galleries. Receptions with
the artist were also held, giving fans and collectors an opportunity to
meet with Jane Seymour.
Jane Seymour began painting nearly a decade ago. Prompted by a period of
personal challenge, her art became the expression of a very private
healing process. She emerged from this experience as an accomplished,
passionate painter and has created an intimate world of delicate
watercolors and colorful, vibrant oil paintings.
Often described as a California colorist, Seymour paints colorful
flower arrangements, detailed landscapes and lush gardens as well as
numerous beachscapes and figurative paintings.
The Masters of Modern Art
Dali, Picasso,
Miro, Matisse & Chagall
June
29th - July 8th
Ocean
Galleries in Stone Harbor, NJ will hosted an incredible exhibition of
original artwork by Picasso, Dalí, Matisse and Miró, the most
influential artists of the Modern Art movement, for ten days this
summer. This event included special receptions beginning with curatorial
lectures.
The Bold innovations of these five important artists were a
reaction to what they saw as a stagnant idea of art in the twentieth
century. They experimented with new looks in painting that reflected a
rapidly changing time, and broke all the rules and structures of art. In
addition to painting and other mediums, all of these artists were
devoted to making original fine-art prints. These prints were a means of
artistic expression that offered the artists new vehicles for creating
and have long been coveted by the great museums and collectors of the
world.
Alexandra Nechita
August 4th
& 5th
Ocean
Galleries welcomed the extraordinary young artist, Alexandra Nechita,
back to the Jersey Shore for her second consecutive summer exhibition.
Her “Quest for Peace” collection of over 50 paintings and sculptures
opened on Friday, Aug. 3 and ran through Sunday, Aug. 5, with Alexandra
making personal appearances during intimate receptions throughout the
weekend.
Hailing from Romania, Alexandra began drawing at the age of two and was
painting with oils and acrylics by the age of seven. Her first exhibit,
a one-woman/child show, was held at a Los Angeles public library when
she was just eight years old. Alexandra's talent was instantly
recognized as capacity crowds came to see her amazing and often
monumental abstract paintings. The press soon labeled her "The Petite
Picasso," drawing the attention of art critics and media around the
world who began claiming her as the rarest of child prodigies - an
artist who had mastered drawing and color, and who had created a visual
language of her own, by the young age of nine years old.
Barbara McCann
September 1st & 2nd
On
Labor Day weekend, Ocean Galleries hosted an art exhibition titled, "Palette
of Colors--Favorite Places and Things," featuring the work of palette-knife
artist Barbara McCann. The exhibition marked McCann's first appearance in
New Jersey and featured more than 30 of her original paintings as well as
limited editions on canvas and paper.
Barbara McCann was born and raised in the rural environs of Newcastle in
western Pennsylvania. She began her artistic endeavors as a child and, upon
graduating from high school, she completed a four-year apprenticeship in
architectural illustration and design. In 1973, she moved to Florida and ran
her own architectural illustration studio which she maintained for twenty
years. Her skills in art and architectural illustration led to a decade-long
relationship as an instructor with the Ringling College of Art & Design.
Over the course of her career, McCann steadily expanded both her commercial
and fine art clienteles, which led her to establish a gallery in Sarasota,
Florida. She continues to live and work in Florida and finds aesthetic
inspiration both near and far -- from the sunny climate of her home to
places she has visited throughout her life, such as, the Caribbean, the West
Indies, Central America, Greece and Europe.
The Secret Art of Dr. Seuss
& 50 Years of The Cat In The Hat
October 5th - 8th
Ocean
Galleries, 9618 3rd Ave., Stone Harbor, hosted a unique exhibition over
Columbus Day Weekend, “The Art of Dr. Seuss — A Retrospective & National
Touring Exhibition.” The exhibition, the first in New Jersey featuring
the work of Theodor Seuss Geisel, a.k.a. Dr. Seuss, offered a glimpse
into the artistic life of this celebrated American icon and chronicles
almost seven decades of work that is uniquely “Seussian.”
Theodor Seuss Geisel began his career as a little known editorial
cartoonist in the 1920s. His unique artistic vision emerged as the
thread which linked every facet of his varied career, and his artwork
became the platform from which he delivered 44 children’s books, over
400 World War II political cartoons, hundreds of advertisements, and
countless editorials filled with wonderfully inventive animals,
characters and clever humor. Geisel single-handedly forged a new genre
of art that falls somewhere between the Surrealist Movement of the early
20th Century and the inspired nonsense of a child’s classroom doodles.
In 1997, for the first time in history collectors were able to see and
acquire lithographs, serigraphs and sculptures reproduced from Geisel’s
original drawings and paintings. This opened the world’s eyes to the
unique artistic talent of Dr. Seuss. Some of the pieces known as The
Secret Art show a side of the artist that readers, familiar with his
classic children’s books, have never seen. These works break new ground,
using a dazzling rainbow of hues not seen in the primary-color palette
of Geisel’s books for children. Geisel had also embarked on an ingenious
project in the 1930s as he evolved from two-dimensional artworks to
three-dimensional sculptures. What was most unusual for the mixed media
sculptures was the use of real animal parts, including beaks, antlers
and horns from deceased Forest Park Zoo animals where Geisel’s father
was superintendent.
A four foot
bronze sculpture of The Cat in the Hat, created by famed artist Leo
Rijn, was also a part of the exhibition at Ocean Galleries.
The extraordinary piece was created in celebration of the
significant and lasting impact of one of Theodor
Seuss Geisel’s most popular books, “The Cat in the Hat,”
currently celebrating its 50th anniversary.