Alfond Auditorium.
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Angela Dufresne's work has been referred to as a kind of painterly Parkour, energetically improvised action in which she acts as a conductor between two reference points: found images (mostly cinematic or architectural) and friends to unleash her own expansive responses that are by turns irreverent, politically biting, self-mockingly melodramatic, and hilarious. In past works, Dufresne employed hypothetical guidelines in the creation of her "bastard portraits" -- portraits that, indicated by their titles, were meant to illustrate what the progeny of such unlikely pairings as Julia Child and Kris Kristofferson might look like. Angela Dufresne was born in Hartford, CT. She currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.
Room B-311
School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Andrew Stanbridge has been photographing the beaten and unbeaten streets, dirt roads and superhighways of Asia for the past 12 years. He enjoys moving from place too place by any means possible. Along the way he is always looking, photographing the arcane, the banal, the believers and disbelievers and most of the things in between. Published and exhibited internationally, his work has addressed issues including westernization, post-conflict rehabilitation, the sex industry and environmental tragedies. He often redresses his more arcane imagery with various inks, stickers and other items he collects along the way. He will be talking about work from these exploits as well as recent images from Ethiopia.
September 13November 19, 2011
MondaySaturday: 10 am5 pm
Thursday: 10 am8 pm
closed Sundays and holidays
Barbara and Steven Grossman Gallery | Mrs. E. Ross Anderson Auditorium
School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
A group show featuring eight contemporary Mexican artists:
Natalia Almada
Arturo Hernández Alcázar
Edgardo Aragón
Marcela Armas
Manuel Rocha Iturbide
Mauricio Limón
Teresa Margolles
Hector Zamora
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