For those who missed the latest reception, we have a recap and some photos to share with you.
First of all, we have a few photos of the exhibit. Fair warning: these were taken before a few final adjustments and tags:
AWARDS:
From Suzanne Barnes, Exhibits Chair:
“Greg Pai’s comments on AHA Prize winners:
First Place:
Joe Palmieri: Polo: Very strong composition, dynamic openness and good articulation of shapes. Good values and edges showing spatial dimensionality and good treatment of values and chroma to show foreground and background elements.
Second Place:
David Kingston: Abstract: Strong composition of shapes, lines and values creating a dynamic sense of dimensional movement. Use of color temperature and line evoke a strong sense of spatial depth and movement. Seemingly random strokes and shapes evoke a coherent sense of remnants of the unconscious rising to the surface. Reminiscent of Kandinsky, Chagall and Miro. Very powerful, creative, unique and personal imagery.
Third Place:
Kelly Kimura: Shades of Green: Excellent use of values to show depth and spatial perspective. Strong use of lines and shapes to create a dynamic composition and design. Beautiful sense of the light filtering through the leaves. Excellently executed watercolor.
Honorable Mention:
Edd Harnas: Anamolies of the 20th Century: Powerful portrayal of existential angst
over the paradox of modernism. The composition of the face over a flag-like pattern of shapes and colors suggest a sense of disillusionment with ideology and polemics, resulting in a sense of confusion, anxiety, and anguish bordering on insanity; Very simple but evocative portrait.
Honorable Mention:
Sara Sakakibara: A Village in May: Beautiful composition of shapes and values
denoting a sense of spatial dimensionality. Despite the title, the image evokes a sense of a snow covered village in Winter. Light and whimsical treatment of
surfaces, edges and lines represent a Chagall-esque dreamlike quality that is
very powerful. Contrast of color temperatures and values creates a complex interplay of shapes and spatial complexity.
Honorable Mention:
Brennan Simcock: Birds Sing… Elegant interplay of lines, shapes and colors to create a dynamic sense of movement and flight. Contrasts in hue and values also create a strong sense of spatial dimensionality and movement. Very poetic use of line and color to evoke a feeling of freedom and movement.
First Place: Three Dimensional
Christina Ubelein: Chaos.Ladder: Evokes a strong sense of the paradox of contemporary existence living in a world of facade and propriety, which is in fact a cage that
masks a sense of escalating chaos inside. Very Escherian quality. evokes a sense of contradiction, confusion and paradox. Placement of what look like small clocks on the floor of the piece create a sense of the pressure of time, escalating the sense of anxiety and anguish with the passing of life. Very skillfully executed piece of sculpture.
Second Place: Three Dimensional
Scott Osborn: Pinao in Space: Just a very beautiful, skillfully crafted, piece of sculpture. Beautiful openness of form and delicacy of technique in the wings and legs. Beautifully executed sculpture.
The show will remain at 1132 Bishop Street (top of the escalator on the Fort Street Mall side) through July 28. There are many excellent pieces on display. Hope you take the time to see the work of our AHA members.”