Browsing by Author "Crutchfield, Margo"
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- Amy CutlerCrutchfield, Margo (Virginia Tech. Moss Arts Center, 2016-15-09)Amy Cutler’s drawings, prints, and gouache on paper paintings portray a wildly imaginative and enigmatic world in which groups of women, seemingly from an imaginary or bygon era, carry ridiculous loads, weave and braid interminable lengths of hair, and otherwise engage in traditional but essential “women’s work” in utterly preposterous situations.
- ArborealCrutchfield, Margo (Virginia Tech. Moss Arts Center, 2019-24-01)Infused throughout much of the work in the exhibition is the prevalence of beauty—pristine, sometimes sublime, always powerful—and how trees can embody that while laden with underlying subtexts.
- Artists and Architecture: Projection/Convergence/IntersectionCrutchfield, Margo (Virginia Tech. Moss Arts Center, 2017-01-19)By incorporating architectural images and ideas in their work, the artists in this exhibition engage in collapsing real and fictive imagery, and in so doing, uncover a depth of ideas and perspectives about our world, both past and present.
- Aspects of the SelfCrutchfield, Margo; Hicklin, Meggin; Yohn, Brian (Virginia Tech. Moss Arts Center, 2014-03-21)Aspects of the Self: Portraits of our Times explores concepts of the self and a range of related issues such as identity, gender, sexuality, race, memory, and technology.
- DATAStreamCrutchfield, Margo (Virginia Tech. Moss Arts Center, 2016-04-02)A significant body of art by four artists whose work comes out of the digital landscape of the 21st century, works that respond to and feed off the digital world in which we live while exploring and incorporating digital technologies as a medium for creative expression.
- Lynn Hershman LeesonCrutchfield, Margo (Virginia Tech. Moss Arts Center, 2016-20-10)Hershman Leeson’s art confronts us with some of the most pressing issues of our times—how we will manage not just the opportunities but the terrifying possibilities that technological and scientific advances have, and will have, on humankind.
- Odili Donald Odita: Bridge, 2014Crutchfield, Margo (Virginia Tech. Moss Arts Center, 2014-10)A Grand Lobby wall painting displaying expansive scale, brilliant color, compositional complexity, and rhythmic energy.
- Ray KassCrutchfield, Margo (Virginia Tech. Moss Arts Center, 2018-18-01)Landscape has always served as a point of departure for Kass; an aesthetic and philosophical inquiry into the essence of nature, and its key element—transformation—and into what ultimately is transient and unknowable.
- Sam Krisch: ElementsCrutchfield, Margo (Virginia Tech. Moss Arts Center, 2014-12-04)Over the last five years, Krisch has journeyed to remote locations ranging from the Mojave Desert, Greenland, Antarctica, and Bhutan to capture exquisite images of ice formations, the raw force of turbulent waters, or empty expanses of desert landscapes. This exhibition presents a selection of the artist’s digital photographs created between 2010 and 2014 in which his approach to composition verges on the abstract, taking the work beyond documentation into a world of pristine, but daunting beauty.
- The Sun That Never Sets: New Paintings by Paul RyanCrutchfield, Margo; Archer, Clover; Kistler, Ashley (Virginia Tech. Moss Arts Center, 2015-07-09)Paintings of abstracted, traced, unfolded packaging cartons as a metaphor for consumption, accumulation, and mindless waste, as well stylized silhouettes of treetops, smokestacks, hands, and other iconic images add layers of subtle but significant socio- economic subtexts to the work.
- Threaded: Angelo FilomenoCrutchfield, Margo (Virginia Tech. Moss Arts Center, 2015-02-12)Threaded is a suite of three one-person exhibitions focusing on artists who work with thread and fabric as their medium.
- Young Artists: Community High School. Narratives and Persuasion: Puppets, Prints, and ManifestosCrutchfield, Margo (Virginia Tech. Moss Arts Center, 2014-12-04)This exhibition, featuring the work of students from Roanoke’s Community High School, presents a collection of two- and three- dimensional works that explore human connections through various media, including puppetry, painting, film, sculpture, and printmaking.