Black White & Brown

Where we stop and smell the roses for you

Black White & Brown as seen at: Bristol Art Museum

Artist photo

Caitlin Bergman pictured at the Bristol Art Museum

On display February 4 – March 24 2024, Black White & Brown’s photo “Titans” was selected from a national call for art by the Bristol Art Museum (BAM). Per the museum:

Breadth and Depth: Earth, Water, Air, Fire is a national juried exhibit that challenges conventional boundaries, inviting artists to create artwork that expresses ideas about the natural world. Our goal with this exhibition is to venture into the intricate interplay between the elemental forces of nature and the profound depths of human consciousness.<br>

The photo was submitted along with the following description:

Battered and broken
Fallen unspoken
A life cut short in time
When winds raged
And fires blew
A monster
No friend of mine
But in his wake
He leaves a space just big enough
For a titan
And so the ocean
Lays in wait
To see who’s next
To fight him

More about the exhibit, per the Bristol Art Museum:

The Bristol Art Museum announces its next exhibit, Breadth & Depth: Earth, Water, Air, Fire, a national juried exhibit that challenges conventional boundaries through which 51 artists from 18 states, express ideas about the natural world. The exhibit is on view from Sun., Feb 4 through Sun. Mar. 24, Thursday to Friday, 1 to 4 p.m. An Artist Reception is scheduled for Sun., Feb. 11 from 2 to 4 p.m.

Karen Drysdale Harris, a Jamaican-born watercolorist and oil painter based in Rhode Island, served as juror for the exhibit. Artwork in Breadth & Depth relates to one or more of the elemental themes of earth, water, air or fire that express the artists’ emotion and perception. Artists explore symbolism, textures, colors, and conceptual interpretations that evoke the essence of these elements.

“This exhibit ventures into the intricate interplay between the elemental forces of nature and the profound depths of human consciousness,” shared Mary Dondero, Curator and Museum Board Member. “Artists selected for this exhibit were challenged to push the limits of artistic expression and embrace the tactile experience. The result is a national exhibit of artists from around the country that explores the natural world.”

The exhibit also features work by Stephanie Stroud in the Museum’s Brick Gallery. Complementing the primary exhibit, Stroud describes her work as “influenced by the variation in nature and landscape that New England offers.” She is an artist who works in fiber and felted wool.

Drysdale Harris attended Rhode Island School of Design where she earned her BFA. Her primary sources of inspiration are nature and the memory of her Jamaican roots. Her work strives to express both the colors and the gentle quiet of the Caribbean. Drysdale Harris is particularly interested in how her lost memories can be triggered by nature. She has been featured in So, So Rhode Island and the Providence Monthly Magazine and was awarded first place at the 34th Annual Rhode Island Open at the Warwick Center for Arts. Drysdale Harris attended I-Park Foundation’s artist residency and was recently featured in GoLocalProv.com’s Inside Art with Michael Rose.

About the Bristol Art Museum (BAM):

BAM is a non-profit 501 (c) 3 organization, founded in 1963. It serves the local East Bay and greater Rhode Island communities.

  • Visit the main galleries at 10 Wardwell Street, located behind the historic Linden Place museum.
  • For additional viewing, visit BAM’s Community Galleries at Rogers Free Library, located across the way at Hope Street.

To learn more about BAM, visit: About BAM – The Bristol Art Museum.

error: Content is protected !!

Make your website live today!

GET A FULL COPY OF THIS EXACT DEMO THEME IN YOUR WORDPRESS WITHIN MINUTES.

Purchase this WordPress theme today!

Buy Food Travel Blog Theme SALE