FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
"Spiritual
Surface"
- New Works by Selected Gallery Artists:
Shelley Herman, Nancy Kay Turner
Dates: November 1-29, 2003
Opening Reception: Saturday, November 1, 6-9 PM
Absolute Art Gallery
2326 Huntington Drive, San Marino, CA 91108
Tel: 626.285.8585, Fax: 626.285.8808
E-mail, <mailto:info@absoluteartgallery.net>
Web site, <http://www.absoluteartgallery.net>
Gallery Hours: Tuesday to Saturday, 11am-6pm, and by appointment

San Marino, CA
-- Absolute Art Gallery, a new contemporary art gallery, is very pleased
to announce its second exhibition, ÒSpiritual Surface,Ó featuring
two artists, Shelley Herman, Nancy Kay Turner.
With a strong
passion for art, Absolute Art gallery will present a variety of excellent
contemporary artists working in many different styles and media. The
gallery will act as go-between classical and modern, human and natural,
historical and realistic, and stimulate conversation of such issues
in order to provide a window of communication for art enjoyment and
appreciation, and to increase dynamic cultural activities for our
families, friends, and the community. The exhibition opens November
1, 2003 and runs through November 29.
"Spiritual Surface" brings together the vibrant, color-filled
paintings of Shelley Herman and the dark, mystical, mixed-media works
on paper by Nancy Kay Turner.
Shelley Herman's lush large-scale and multi-paneled stained
canvases evoke both the macro- and the micro-worlds of inner and outer
space. Her gem-like acrylic paintings suggest aerial views from space
and, paradoxically, the microscopic views of cells and decaying materials.
In the grand tradition of Morris Louis and Helen Frankenthaler, Herman
manipulates liquid and spray paint onto unprimed canvas on the floor.
She then crops the work, like a photographer working from the outside
border to the inside.
Herman has exhibited widely in California and New York and has been
the recipient of several grants from the New York foundation for the
arts. Piri Halasz, in an article for the NY Arts magazine entitled
ÒAlternative Los Angeles Ò(July/August 2002) writes Òthe only
Los Angeles art that I Éconsidered truly contemporary and alternative
was in the studio of Shelley HermanÓ. Herman says Òmy painting has
always been primarily about colorÓÉ. ÒIÕm very committed to making
beautiful objects because there is so much in contemporary culture
that is not beautifulÓ. Herman graduated from Bennington College,
and Bucknell University and was a scholarship student at the prestigious
Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Skowhegan, Maine.
Nancy Kay Turner is an artist, critic and educator whose powerful
mixed-media work on paper and foam uses both industrial materials,
such as tar and asphaltum, in combination with urban detritus, vintage
photographs and gold leaf to create mysterious narratives, which range
from the humorous to the poignant. Dark and brooding, TurnerÕs work
is filled with references to memory, forgetting, chaos and identity.
Her soulful multi-panel works (which include images and text) like
pages of a book invite contemplation and encourage the viewer to participate
in the construction of a personal narrative.
Turner's rich and dense work also references alchemy, and she uses
the black tar and gold leaf to evoke transformation. Her interest
in religious icons -- Russian, Greek, and Christian as well as the
concepts of Jewish mysticism -- inform her work. Turner has said that
Òall art is transformation: artists everywhere are seeking to take
the immaterial and make it materialÓ. Most recently, her works have
been exhibited at the University of Judaism Borstein Gallery and at
the Jose Drudis-Biada Art Gallery at Mount St. MaryÕs College. TurnerÕs
large-scale works on canvas are also currently showing at a solo exhibit
at Transport Gallery, Los Angeles. Her work is in private and public
collections and has been exhibited widely. Turner was educated at
Queens College, and The University of California, Berkeley and also
was a scholarship student at the Skowhegan School of Painting and
Sculpture, where she first met Shelley Herman.
The opening reception will be held from 6-9 PM on Saturday, November
1, 2003 and will be open to the public.
Absolute Art Gallery is located at 2326 Huntington Drive, between
San Marino Avenue and Del Mar Avenue, 100 feet east of San Marino
City Hall, south of Huntington Library in San Marino.
For more information about Absolute Art Gallery, including images,
please contact: 626.285.8585 or info@absoluteartgallery.net