Norlin Maps: Exhibits and Galleries
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From An Academic Perspective: canvasses featuring acrylic applied with scrapers, palette knives, or various household items by Dennis Stowell.
Vice/Verse: Travel narrative, timeline and photo essay documenting a Boulder to Belgrade cross-cultural collaboration of musicians and artists, using digital arts to create international communities.
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The Celestial Light: Reflections on the Journey Home: an exploration of light and being in the paintings of former library staff member William Wallace Carson (June 19th 1948 - August 4th 1990).
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Exhibition by Ray Tomosso. Paper maker, scholar and artist presents works in cast paper.
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Bicycles around the World. This captivating photography series aims to highlight the diversity of cycling around the world. From every corner of globe, cultural, social, and economic factors help make cycling more than just a means of transportation – to some, it is a lifestyle, a leisure activity, and to others – a way of life. This is a collaboration of photographers from around the world, who share our sentiment of cycling, and want to show how it is threaded within all cultures, to present a wide variety of uses. This eclectic series aims to elevate cycling beyond its traditional views, and to give the viewer a taste of the world through the people who love the wheels and spokes of a bike for more reasons than one.
Presented by the Sustainable Transportation Program.
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Wondering in the World of Chinese Characters. Chinese characters have been used continuously in Chinese, Japanese and other Asian writing for more than 3000 years, and they have captured the world’s interest for their distinctive pictographic and expressive qualities as well as unique and formal beauty. This exhibit traces the history of early writing in China and Japan.
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Lines in Color on Color from Corners, Sides, and Centers to Specific Points on a Grid by Sol LeWitt (1928-2007). Six silkscreens on paper on loan from the CU Art Museum’s Polly and Mark Addison Collection. Scattered and abstract patterns of lines against grid backgrounds create a sense of three dimensions.
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Animal Clusters: captivating series of animal forms emerging from patterns by former textile print designer, Bhagvati Khalsa.
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Exhibition by Ray Tomosso, paper maker, scholar, and artist presents works in cast paper.
Art Through the Ages marks the first ever senior art competition sponsored by U.S. Representative Jared Polis. Artists 65 and over throughout the second congressional district were invited to take part. 69 pieces of various media from 41 different artists are included in this show.
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View an original illustrated fairy tale by brothers Nicholas and Jonathan Baldridge with Yelizaveta Baktin. Framed text and illustrations from their story "Camellia".
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Lauren McKenzie offers "the representation of a kinship between the animal-soul and the artist [in which the] animal soul may be taken for granted as the hero-subject of each scene, but the meaning does not stop with the representation of the subject".
Andrew Violet's "unifying intention is to apprehend an almost instinctual fascination with a kind of dramatic form, embracing the scene with my own formless family of colors."
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The legacy of two founding professors of CU-Boulder anthropology -- Omer Stewart: cultural anthropologist, social activist, defender of Indian religious practices, founder of the CU Department of Anthropology; and Joe Ben Wheat: archaeologist, teacher, developer of southwestern textile classification techniques, and first curator of anthropology at CU’s Museum of Natural History.
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Bright colors, riveting patterns, and musical allusion: the artistic skills and cultural commentary of Boulder painter, Louis DeAngelis (and additional DeAngelis pieces in the Triptych Gallery).
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Enigmatic paintings by Nicholas Baldridge (and more Baldridge pieces in the 3rd floor northwest hallway)
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12 Vibrant Textures: Rebecca Jewell’s painting as game making, with “rules” of patterning and color, and color palettes from childhood video games.
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