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“This exhibit featuring women artists highlights the importance and richness of women’s artistic voices,” said Lynn Siebert, Director of Galleries at Morris Arts.
Drawing on their life experience, the artists offer their perspectives in brilliant colors, intriguing forms, and wide ranging artistic styles, from the figurative to abstract expressionism.
The works of art range from watercolor, oil, mixed media to photographs and digital media.
On the fourth floor, 40 works by Italian-born artist Isabella Pizzano include acrylics, watercolors and mixed media. These abstract expressionist works veritably burst with color, imagination and energy. As a Signature member of the International Society of Experimental Artists, Isabella adds, “I am always in search of innovative techniques as well as a unique way to use color and design.”
On the third floor, nearly 50 works by Lisa Marseglia Moran range from vividly and imaginatively colored landscapes in oil to the subtle delicacy of floral designs made of woven paper. Influenced by Abstract-Expressionists like Kandinsky and DeKooning, Moran works in oils but has also created an award-winning style of mixed media works where multiple drawings, paintings or block prints are woven together to create a single, abstracted image.
Two Contrasting Artists On The Second Floor
Award winning African American artist/ photographer Kay Reese’s “Witness to Captivity” series includes 14 photo-based digitally collaged prints on canvas which she describes as being “in the context of Dadaist and surrealist format, my assemblages and photo-based collages become de-constructive strategies to explore the dichotomies between collective truth, reality, desire and freedom.” Her powerful abstract imagery becomes a universal language to convey the horror, brutality and suffering of all captivity.
Providing dramatic contrast, Marilyn Greenberg’s 10 abstract acrylics on Yupo paper are bright, whimsical, imaginative and meticulously executed abstracts that also explore important themes. Influenced by Italian circus parades, shadow puppetry in Indonesia, nature, and biology, Greenberg combines images in unlikely yet artistically intriguing, captivating ways. Her deep roots in the art community include serving on the Brooklyn Museum’s Advisory Board and Elizabeth Sackler Center for Feminist Art.
Most artwork is for sale. Details and pricing are available in catalogues at the gallery and through the online exhibit catalog. The Atrium Art Gallery is free and open to the public from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. weekdays. It’s located in the Morris County Records and Administration Building, 10 Court Street, Morristown The exhibit closes on Jan. 8, 2023. For more information, visit www.morrisarts.org.
- Top, left to right: Lisa Marseglia Moran’s oil, “Spirit Tree II, Hope,” Isabella Pizzano’s acrylic, “Open Mind,” and Marilyn Greenberg’s acrylic on Yupo paper, “Bridge.”
Center: Kay Reese’s photo-based digital collage, “My Soul…My Son” and Medy Bozkurtian’s acrylic, “Books and Other Treasures”
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