Taller de impresión – Hidalgo Villa de Tututepec, Primaria Miguel Hidalgo
After visiting the Botanical Garden of the Foundation, Amy Feldman, in collaboration with the children of the community of Hidalgo, worked in the production of a printing workshop based on geometric and organic shapes extracted from the morphology of the garden plants. This workshop focused on rudimentary forms of printing which sought to explore the concept of wabi-sabi – a concept fundamental to the mission of the foundation.
Log-Piece
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USA
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Amy Feldman’s work has been shown in galleries and museums since 2008. Her work is planned but spontaneously painted with loosely geometric, graphic gestures in light to dark grays on various white grounds.[1] Her paintings are abstract and often anthropomorphic and darkly humorous with psychologically charged imagery.[2][3][4] Feldman’s artistic influences range from Cubism to the works of Jean Arp, Ellsworth Kelly, Shirley Jaffe, and Mary Heilmann.[5] Feldman is represented by Blackston Gallery in New York City, ANNAELLE Gallery in Stockholm, Sweden, Brand New Gallery in Milan, Italy, and Ratio 3 in San Francisco, California. She lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.
Feldman’s work is in the permanent collection of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago.
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October – November 2014