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Touchstone Contemporary Art Gallery

901 New York Avenue NW
Washington D.C 20001
202-682-4125

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Touchstone Contemporary Art Gallery

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Rosa Vera: Painting Narrative Paths to Peace

September 12, 2018 Touchstone Gallery
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When hearing about immigration, the word “crisis” comes to mind.  Perhaps it’s because so many people are migrating everywhere in the world now.  It seems like a new humanitarian predicament, but migrations have occurred in every age and time stirring the human population pot and generating conflict as well as new traditions and cuisines.  In the late 1800’s for instance, the multinational population of Peru was transformed by an huge inflow of Chinese indentured laborers.

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In Featured Artist Tags abstraction, acrylic, bilingual, collage, composition, contemporary art, creativity, Ellis Island, experience, family paintings, immigration, Jhumpa Lahiri, Lima Peru, Michael Ondaatje author, niche boxes, nomadic life, painting, Passages and Borders, silhouette, stencil overlays, storytelling, the three graces, Touchstone Gallery DC

Carol Moore: A Printmaker's Response to the Natural World

May 6, 2018 Touchstone Gallery
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Printmaker and Touchstone Foundation for the Arts Fellow Carol Moore presents her solo exhibition during the month of May 2018. This accumulation of work reflect's Carol's long standing exploration of nature in which she searches for a personal connection with the plant specimens that she collects and manipulates.  As a child she always felt at home in nature, she would spend long hours in the woods playing in trees, foraging for “natural supplies” or crushing rocks under bushes.  As an adult she continues taking refuge in the natural world and reveals her encounters and imaginings in her original lithographs and intaglio prints.

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In Featured Artist Tags acid, aluminum plates, emotion, image, imagination, imagined image, ink, layered intaglio, lighographic stone, nature, plant specimens, printmaking, Touchstone Foundation for the Arts, Touchstone Gallery DC, visual art, zinc plates

Susi Cora: Art from the Earth

May 6, 2018 Touchstone Gallery
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Susi Cora’s May 2018 show Highwire at the Touchstone Gallery at 901 New York Avenue, Washington DC is a study of the impact of memory on one’s physical presence. The show features ceramic figurative and coneptual work, and composite photography.

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In Featured Artist Tags clay, composit photography, conceptual work, exploring memories, figurative ceramics, Highwire, metamorphosis, natural world, pit firing, sculptor, Susi Cora, Touchstone Foundation for the Arts Fellow, Touchstone Gallery DC

Shelley Lowenstein Links Science and Art Through Paint

April 8, 2018 Touchstone Gallery
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Albert Einstein said that mystery is at “the cradle of true art and true science” In her new solo show  opening April 6 at Washington, DC’s Touchstone Gallery “(as far as we know),” artist Shelley Lowenstein explores the mystery and wonder of the human beta cell, a major force essential to human life, and sometimes a victim of autoimmune attack.

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In Featured Artist Tags abstraction, autoimmune disease, beta cells, color, composition, creativity, imagination, JDRF, Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, painting, science, shelley lowenstein, storytelling, T1D, type 1 diabetes, visual art

Meg Schaap Paints Joie de Vivre

March 5, 2018 Touchstone Gallery
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In her first solo exhibition, Marie Antoinette, at Touchstone Gallery Meg Schaap explores the    personality, beauty and power of the last Queen of France.  This project began by a reading of Marie Antoinette: The Journey by Antonia Fraser and then viewing Sophia Coppola’s 2009 movie Marie Antoinette.  Both portrayed the compelling story of an Austrian teen who was forced to enter a political marriage with King Louis XVI, an introvert, pretty much her opposite. Meg’s painterly portrayals explore the quandaries Marie faced as she was swallowed up by the new French Court environment bound by outlandish rules, extravagance, and unbending traditions.

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In Featured Artist Tags collaged paper, color, contemporary art, fashion, freedom, French Court, gold leaf, Gucci, HOlland, jewels, joie de vivre, kAcademy of Art Minerva, liberation, Marie Antoinette, masks, Meg Shaap, narrative, pearls, portraiture, St- Martin's College, Touchstone Gallery DC, transformation, Vogue Magazine

Makda Kibour: Raw Paintings

February 26, 2018 Touchstone Gallery
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Makda Kibour, a quiet gentle woman who immigrated to the United States from Ethiopia by way of Zambia, has under gone many transformations on her way to becoming an artist.  After reaching Pennsylvania, she become part of a Mennonite family for five years, learning to navigate that religion’s discipline of “the simple life."  This austere Bible-based faith was quite a contrast to ancient traditional rituals of the Greek Orthodox Church she grew up knowing in Ethiopia. Her artistic sensibilities responded to the expert woodworking and hand sewn quilts pieced with deep reds, blues and other dark colors that were part of the Mennonite culture.

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In Featured Artist, Uncategorized Tags color, emotional paintings, Ethioopia, form, gap between cultures, line, Makda Kibur, painting, sewing, stories, textures, The Art League School, touchstone gallery, universal language, vigorous brush strokes

Rosemary Luckett: exploring the terrain within

February 5, 2018 Touchstone Gallery
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In her February 2018 solo exhibition Landscapes: the terrain within, Rosemary Luckett steps back from exploring the environmental landscape to make art about the archetypes she recognizes in her interior landscape.  Over time she discovered the inner guides or archetypes portrayed in art, literature, mythology, and religion, heroes that have been with humanity everywhere since the dawn of time. Inspired by female contemporary heroes and writer Carol S. Pearson's book on the topic (Awakening the Heroes Within), she constructed collages about the twelve archetypes, putting herself into the picture.  They percolated in a drawer for years until she decided to explore them further in larger format.

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In Featured Artist Tags acrylic paintings, archetypes, birds, Carol Pearson, collage, doors, dragon, female heroes, icons, interior landscape, Jung, Landscape: the terrain within, masks, mixed media, niche boxes, Rosemary Luckett, symbolic imagery, touchstone gallery, wood collage elements

Elaine Florimonte: Layering and Balancing

February 5, 2018 Touchstone Gallery
Elaine Florimonte

Elaine Florimonte is drawn to the simplicity and consistency of the horizon, specifically the proportions of sky, water and ground in paintings comprising her solo exhibition, The Pursuit of Balance at Touchstone Gallery, February 2018. Through her use of acrylic media and collage, she creates landscape images in an effort to find balance in an ever shifting world.

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In Featured Artist, Uncategorized Tags American reality, balance, collage, composition, contemporary art, Elaine Florimonte, ground, horizon, landscape, light, nature, painting, Pursuit of Balance, shifting world, sky, sunrise, Touchstone Gallery DC, vigorous brushwork, water

BD Richardson: Repetition, Pattern and Form--From Intimate To Immense

January 11, 2018 Touchstone Gallery
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In what turned out to be a prescient decision, BD Richardson, fresh from earning a master’s degree from American University, began a habit of carrying a camera everywhere she went.  Beginning with a trip to China as part of a women’s press group in 1980, she captured bits and pieces of that huge country just prior to its national efforts to modernize. After that, no place in the world was exempt from her restless eye: Paris, South America, North America’s heartland with its aging buildings and big skies, and coastal villages replete with fishing boats and seamen.  Lately she has focused her camera up close on plant forms turning their growth patterns into mandalas.

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In Featured Artist Tags balance, BD Richardson, boats, camera, clouds, color, composition, contemporary art, fields, fine art photographer, form, human presence, landscape, lone figure, monochrome tones, patterns, repetition, sea, storms, touchstone gallery

Maureen Squires: Partnering Painting with Words

November 30, 2017 Touchstone Gallery
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While writing Touchstone blog essays, I ask the question, ”How do artists arise in America?” The answer, of course, is that exceptional artists come from small towns and large all across the land, predictably and unpredictably.  I thought about this recently while driving the Pennsylvania Turnpike, where my attention alternated between fast-moving 18-wheelers and glimpses of green pastures sculpted from long-ago deciduous forests when horses were the main mode of transport.  Road signs mention the small towns that are quickly by-passed.

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In Featured Artist Tags Annie Dillard, calligraphy, creativity, drawing, free art opening, harmony, International Calligraphy Conference, muse, painter's eye, painting, Pennsylvania, places to see in DC, Scripsit, scripts, Touchstone Gallery DC, typography, visual art, Washington Calligraphy Guild, words

dana brotman: capturing the confluence of humble materials & insightful gaze

October 1, 2017 Touchstone Gallery
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If we each open our eyes a little wider and really look at our environment, we begin to see a lot of packaging “stuff” that might be falling to the floor as we open a gift or other everyday objects--the worthy and useful objects we think important.  We throw that packaging away mostly without really looking at it. But, even if the rest of the world ignores it, Dana Brotman does not.  She’s actually attracted to many of those “stuffs” and now actually uses it in her art processes.

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In Featured Artist Tags art, artists's community, attitude, boxes, charcoal, corrugated cardboard, Dana Brotman, drawing, eyes, faces, packaging, paint box, painting, portraits, psychology, simplification of forms, textured surface, The Art League School, Touchstone Gallery DC

Patricia Williams: Ordered Complexities

August 24, 2017 Touchstone Gallery
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“Both science and art have to do with ordered complexity.” –L. L. Whyte, 1957

My September 2017 solo show was originally intended to be an abstract landscape series, but it turned into an homage to math and science.  This happened because the people who decide such things declared March 14, 2015 to be the official pi (π) day. (Pi is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter and always equals 3.14159265359….) I met my husband Andy in engineering school, and while neither of us claims any particular STEM skills at this point in our lives, we had a vigorous discussion of this important issue over breakfast one morning, and we vigorously dissented. In our opinion, the official pi day should have been March 14, 2016. That’s because 2015 is truncated, and we believe it more appropriate to round up to 2016.

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In Featured Artist, Uncategorized Tags art, color, color and form, color jolt, content, creativity, Fermat's Last Theorem, Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, mathematical constructs, murky darks, natural logarithm, Ordered Complexities, Patricia Williams, pi, Schrodinger's Cat, Touchstone Gallery DC, transparent watercolor, underlying texts, water-soluble graphite

Claudia Samper Mixed Media Stories

July 5, 2017 Touchstone Gallery
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Argentinian-born Claudia Samper reminisces on her early life in Buenos Aires.  “As a youngster I was always drawing and creating things with my hands,” she recalls. “By the time I entered the university I didn't have many choices in Buenos Aires except for traditional career paths--medicine, education, law, etc. We of course did have a wonderful art institute, but it never crossed my mind to pursue art then.”  The one track that suited her the most was architecture.  After completing that 6-year degree program, she had acquired a solid base in both the technical and the art spheres of the curriculum.

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In Featured Artist Tags abstract, abstraction, architecture, Argentina, art, artist, birds, Claudia Samper, Connecting the Dots, graphic design, graphic quality, imagination, Mylar, Origami birds, paintings, portraits, relationships, surreal paintings, Touchstone Gallery DC, translucence, transparency

Jeanne Garant: Parallel Paintings

May 4, 2017 Touchstone Gallery
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Touchstone oil painter Jeanne Garant paints abstractly.  For a painter like Jeanne, abstract means to focus on a particular shape and color noticed at any given moment and then to discard the rest.  She draws from the jumble of life rather than trying to capture it all in a photographic or three-dimensional way.  Garant's attitude in creating the flat or one-perspective paintings, 275 Stripes, mirrors that of New England painter Milton Avery. “I try to construct a picture in which shapes, spaces, colors, form a set of unique relationships, independent of any subject matter. At the same time I try to capture and translate the excitement and emotion aroused in me by the impact with the original idea.”

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In Featured Artist Tags 275 Stripes, abstraction, art studio, balance, cold wax, color, complexity of simplicity, composition, contemporary art, creativity, encaustic, imagination, lines, minimal color, oil on canvas, oil painting, pastels, rectangular panels, textures, Torpedo Factory, Touchstone Gallery DC, visual experiences, washington art, wood panels

Marcia Coppel: Conversations

May 3, 2017 Touchstone Gallery
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Marcia Coppel's paintings are influenced by the color and spontaneity of Mexico.  She loves to sketch in restaurants, cafes and on the beach. Her May 2017 solo, Connect/Disconnect 2, is about communication and the lack of it in today’s digital culture. The interactions (or isolation of individuals in the same space) could have been situated anywhere in the world.  But since she loves Mexico and spends a lot of time there, she made drawings and paintings situated in that country.

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In Featured Artist Tags artist, beach, bright, color, communication, composition, conversation, creativity, dc art, digital culture, drawing, imagination, languishing nudes, Mexico, opening reception, painting, storytelling, Touchstone Gallery DC, tropical, visual art

Lisa Tureson: Curiosity ---> Exploration ---> Creativity

March 6, 2017 Touchstone Gallery
Lisa Tureson

Lisa Tureson

Once Lisa Tureson decided to leave her career in the insurance industry, there was no stopping her from exploring and learning about the many techniques, materials and tools artists use to express themselves.  Actually, she probably always did have a curious and exploratory bent.  At age four Lisa often watched her artist-teacher mother at the easel. Thusly inspired, her first murals were created out of her mother’s lip stick on her sisters’ bedroom walls. Whether she was chastised for her use of the lipstick medium or praised for her ambitious wall-size art expression, this “project” proved a precursor to the large paintings in her present day solo exhibit Scribbles: An Urban Art Expression at Touchstone Gallery during March 2017.

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In Featured Artist Tags abstraction, art, artist, collage, commissions, crayon, creativity, DC Design House, exploration, ink, Lisa Tureson, mixed media paintings, non-objective paintings, painting, palette knives, plaster, surface complexity, textures, Touchstone Gallery DC, visual art, watercolor

April Rimpo: Finding Different Perspectives

February 26, 2017 Touchstone Gallery
April Rimpo

April Rimpo

It’s been said that there are about 34 towns in 25 states named Springfield. Five of them are in Wisconsin and at least one is in Massachusetts. The latter is singular, because April Rimpo grew up there close to her grandparent’s home where paintings made by her grandfather graced the walls.  When April drew pictures as a child, copying cartoon figures and exploring what the pencil could do, she received positive feedback from the family and teachers.

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In Featured Artist Tags acrylic painting, acute vision, April Rimpo, art, art studio, artist, color enhancement, composition, creativity, different perspective, draw with eyes, drawing, emotional expression, fine art photographer, imagination, integrated circuit boards, opening reception, systems engineer, Touchstone Gallery DC, Van Gogh, watercolor

Mary Ott: The Pull of Metallics

January 26, 2017 Touchstone Gallery
Mary Ott working in the Montgomery College Print Studio, Silver Spring MD

Mary Ott working in the Montgomery College Print Studio, Silver Spring MD

Mary Ott’s February solo exhibit “Metallics: Paintings and Prints” at Touchstone Gallery features artwork that includes copper, silver and gold-colored paints and inks. Mary’s techniques, whether on a smooth canvas base or a unique and textured paper, result in images of nature that seem influenced by the Zen of Japanese art, an art aimed at uncovering the essence of the object under scrutiny.  In Mary’s work, grasses are singled out and isolated from complexities of a natural biosphere; then presented in a simplified space, elucidating the purity of seemingly simple life forms--forms often forgotten in our contemporary rough-and-tumble mechanical world.

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In Featured Artist Tags abstraction, aquatint, art, artist, canvas, color, contemporary, copper, dc art, embroidery yarn, etchings, gold, grasses, Japanese art, landscape, Mary Ott, metallic paint, nature, ornamental grasses, printing plates, pulled prints, screen print, silver, simplified space, soft ground, textured paper, tonal effect, Touchstone Gallery DC, Zen, zinc plate

Steve Alderton’s Fleeting Memories

January 23, 2017 Touchstone Gallery
Steve Alderton

Steve Alderton

Steve Alderton, in his third series “Memoryscapes: Blurry Lines III,” continues an exploration of landscape memories as viewed through the prism of time.  In this final component, Alderton pushes his works until they become abstract and the focus is contemplative in nature.  His acrylic paintings describe landscape qualities that are “felt” rather than defined as specific representational scenes our eyes see in the real world of land, sea or sky.

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In Featured Artist Tags abstraction, acrylic on board, acrylic on canvas, artist, blurry junctures, color, imagination, landscape, meditative influences, Memoryscapes, movement, nature, overlapping blocks of color, painting, steve alderton, temperature, Touchstone Gallery DC

Elaine Florimonte: Painting Layered Metaphors

November 29, 2016 Touchstone Gallery
Elaine Florimonte

Elaine Florimonte

Elaine Florimonte’s day often starts out over coffee in the morning while she touches base with some of her high school art students. They come in early to talk about the parallels between art and life and what to do when something goes wrong in a painting—philosophical stuff. “It’s a privilege to be present in their lives at these moments when 15 to 18-year olds are forming their identities,” she muses, “and I stay connected to about four or five each year, following their progress through college.” In the classroom Elaine teaches techniques and various media while coaching them through the standard processes of making art. Sometimes she picks up the brush and paints on her own canvas to get a point across, a technique she learned from one of her own teachers during her high school days. It was this particular teaching model that convinced her to study art and then become an art teacher herself.

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In Featured Artist Tags abstraction, Accumulation solo exhibition, art, art studio, artist, color, composition, drawing, Elaine Florimonte, image, imagination, layers of color, metaphor, movement, opening reception, overlapping shapes, painting, painting process, shapes, teaching, Touchstone Gallery DC, visual art, Washington DC art opening, Westfield High School art studio program
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