| Summer 2009 Show: July 30-August 28 |
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From 6-9 pm on Thursday July 30th, 2009, we invite you to have the first viewing of the exceptional art comprising the show, as well as to meet the artists, network with fellow artists and art enthusiasts, and enjoy a glass of wine and light nibbles! The show will run through August 28th, 2009.
After serving in WWII, Rosenfeld studied painting, sculpture and drawing at the Art Students League of New York. By the early 1950s, he was ensconced in the Cedar Bar, the abstract expressionists' hang-out in Greenwich Village. Clement Greenberg, Willem DeKooning and Allen Ginsberg frequented The Cedar, as did other abstract expressionists, art critics and beatniks. In 1957, Rosenfeld produced his "Railroad Drawings". In the early 1980s, he exhibited his "rag paintings" in Soho at Ivan Karp's OK Harris Gallery on West Broadway (a.k.a the “supermarket"). Most of the 1980s were devoted to his favorite work – "wire paintings." Other painting series followed: “Graffiti", "Nuts and Bolts", and "Angels". During 2004-2007, he painted soldiers at war, including a portrait of General David Petraeus. In both his life and art Bokov has found himself acting the mediator between cultures and art movements. A painter, junk artist and collagist, Bokov makes the recycling of cultural and industrial waste the central theme of his work. Bokov's paintings employ the language of impressionism while disrupting the laws of classical depiction in unexpected ways. After the ideologically unreliable artist was exelled from the Soviet Union over 30 years ago, Bokov found residence in Washinigton Heights in New York City. Through their unique verbal and visual syntax, Bokov's canvases and recycled pieces offer an image of New York that is both a scathing critique and profession of love.
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Please join us for the opening of our newest exhibit featuring a selection of artwork by Leonard Rosenfeld and Konstantin Bokov - two esteemed New York artists, who have gained acclaim both locally and abroad. Through their talent, humour and unique world-views, the artists capture the nuances of New York City life as well as pose questions about contemporary realities. Rosenfeld's 1957 Brooklyn Railroad Tracks drawings are amongst the highlights of the show, alongside Bokov's exquisite oil paintings and recycled pieces.