Art Basel

Spectrum Art Fair 2016

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In association with Miami Art Week and Art Basel, Galerie Myrtis participated in the Spectrum Miami Art Show. Spectrum Miami is a juried, contemporary art show taking place in Miami’s Arts and Entertainment District.
Featured artists: Anna U. Davis, Morel Doucet, Michael Gross, Ronald Jackson, Delita Martin and Jamea Richmond-Edwards.

Galerie Myrtis at Spectrum Miami -  Booth S900
Galerie Myrtis at Spectrum Miami – Booth S900

Artists


 

Spectrum Art Fair 2016

Exhibitions

Michael Gross Abstraction – Curatorial Statement

Michael Gross, Colors 11 (detail), 2014, Acrylic on Canvas, dyptch, 6 x 8 ft

Michael Gross: Abstraction

June 13 – July 26, 2015
American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center

 

Michael Gross: The Man and His Passion

When the intention to create art is coupled with passion, intuition and improvisation, the result is an almost indescribable beauty; and such is the work of Michael Gross. As a Bethesda, Maryland-based painter and printmaker for more than three decades, Gross has strived to, and succeeded in, establishing his own art idiom. His works are influenced by the masters of Abstract Expressionism: Willem de Kooning, Richard Diebenkorn and Jackson Pollock. However, Gross does not seek to mimic, but rather pay homage to those whose styles he admires.

In his solo exhibition, Michael Gross: Abstraction, the artist takes us on a visual journey with dramatic, emotion-filled canvases from his Colors series (2013-2015); and then diverts us down an insouciant path where we discover whimsical and richly layered monoprints.

Born and raised in Chicago, Illinois, Gross (b. 1944), showed artistic promise from a young age. His talents would not only be influenced and nurtured by his artist mother, with whom he would travel to the Art Institute of Chicago where they took classes; and his father, an advertising executive who took Gross to his office on weekends, where he would set him up at a drafting table with crayons and paper, allowing him to draw for hours; but also recognized and rewarded monetarily, as the fledgling artist, at the age of ten, won an art competition and received a $500 savings bond.

Gross would go on to earn a Juris Doctor degree from New York University School of Law, becoming a corporate attorney, and in the 80s, a real estate developer. But art-making always remained an integral part of his life, as he continued to take classes at the Corcoran College of Art + Design in Washington, D.C. and develop his techniques under the watchful eye of friend and mentor, artist William Christenberry.

Writer, Shelley Singer, Gross’s wife, admits that she fell in love with him because he has the “mind of a businessman and the soul of an artist”. It is this dual existence, and complex nature of the man that reveals itself in the artwork. Gross creates art as “a means of grappling with the impulses and struggles that make up the way I see my place in the world.”

Michael Gross invites us into his world and it is easy to succumb to the magnetism of his acrylic paintings. His rhythmic brushstrokes, punctuated with mark-making and intentionally laid drippings of paint are hypnotic. Through spatial separation and planes of color, Gross achieves a dynamism and lyricism in the work that is enticing.

Each painting beckons for a macro and micro examination. In viewing the work from a distance, it is easy to become engulfed by the magnitude of the paintings and kaleidoscope of colors. A micro perspective, offers an intimate experience which reveals Gross’s intentionality in creating structure and balance.
In exploring Gross’s monoprints, a more playful, but no less serious side of the artist is revealed. The execution of each piece was carried out with the same tenacious effort as that of the paintings. For Gross is resolute in creating beauty.

Gross’s layering of cut-up photographs and repurposed older prints, fashioned in various shapes are enhanced by stenciling and the artist’s hand; the result is richly surfaced prints, each with its own unique stylized impression. Under the guidance of master printmaker Susan Goldman, the ink and materials were carefully laid with the intent to achieve equilibrium in both composition and form.

As painter and printmaker, Gross’s work is devoid of social or political commentary, and ideological reference; it offers instead an intellectual dialogue on the beauty of abstraction. His vernacular is steeped in a spectrum of color and intensely focused compositions. Gross’s profound works are imbued with his passion to create art.

Myrtis Bedolla, Founding Director and Curator
Galerie Myrtis
Artist

Michael Gross – Abstraction

Michael Gross: Abstraction I & II


Opening reception – American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center, Washington, DC

Abstraction I
American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center
June 13 – July 26, 2015
Washington, DC

Abstraction II
July 8 – August 8, 2015
Gallery B
Bethesda, Maryland

About the Exhibition

Michael Gross, painter and printmaker, offers expressive and emotionally filled works using a kaleidoscope of color. Gross creates art as “a means of grappling with the impulses and struggles that make up the way I see my place in the world.” Through his visual lexicon,which is devoid of ideological reference, Gross seeks to create order from chaos. His lyrical compositions of concatenated lines, textured surfaces and rich hues, invoke Abstract Expressionism and pay homage to artists who inspire his work: Willem de Kooning, Richard Diebenkorn and Jackson Pollock. Curated by Myrtis Bedolla

Artwork

Michael Gross

Born in 1944 and raised in Chicago, Illinois, Gross showed artistic promise from a young age. His talents were influenced and nurtured by his artist mother, with whom he would travel to the Art Institute of Chicago where they took classes and his father, an advertising executive who took Gross to his office on weekends, where he would set him up at a drafting table with crayons and paper, allowing him to draw for hours. As a fledgling artist at the age of ten, Gross won an art competition and received a $500 savings bond.

Gross would go on to earn a Juris Doctor degree from New York University School of Law, becoming a corporate attorney, and in the 80s, a real estate developer. But art-making always remained an integral part of his life, as he continued to take classes at the Corcoran College of Art + Design in Washington, DC and develop his techniques under the watchful eye of friend and mentor, artist William Christenberry.

Video

Woman as Color Light and Form Artists Talk

Woman as Color, Light and Form

July 18, 2013 – August 31, 2013

view exhibition

In challenging the notion of the feminine archetype, artists embrace and reach beyond the boundaries of the female form to express the essence of a woman, figuratively, conceptually and metaphorically. Participating artists: Sondra Arkin, David Carlson, Oletha Devane, Phylicia Ghee, Michael Gross, Nora Howell, Edwin Remsburg, Rachel Rotenberg, and Mary Walker. Myrtis Bedolla, curator, Jessica Stafford-Davis, co-curator

YouTube player
Artist Talk

The Secret Garden: Revealing the Inner Sanctum Artist Talk

The Secret Garden: Revealing the Inner Sanctum

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Artists’ Talk: The Secret Garden Revealing the Inner Sanctum is the culmination of Goldman’s three year collaboration with Elizabeth Catlett, Michael Gross, Jake Muirhead, Marti Patchell and Renee Stout in which etchings, monotypes, screen prints, and woodcuts become the conveyers of nature and personal mythology.

Exhibitions

Woman as Color Light and Form

Diapotheque Series, 2010  by Edwin RemsburgDiapotheque Series, 2010 by Edwin Remsburg

Woman as Color, Light and Form

July 18, 2013 – August 31, 2013

| watch artists’ talk |

In challenging the notion of the feminine archetype, artists embrace and reach beyond the boundaries of the female form to express the essence of a woman, figuratively, conceptually and metaphorically.

As Color, alluring imagery stretches the imagination and explores a woman’s sexual and intellectual power through aggressive gestures and symbolic references to the feminine life-giving force.

As Light, provocative photographs portray a woman’s physical strength and ubiquitous presence in nature.

As Form, moving two and three dimensional objects, emblematic of the ethereal qualities of a woman, reveal the complexities, convictions and intuitiveness of the feminine expressed as the divine; a ritualistic-based video serves as testimony to one woman’s personal journey of renewal, and others speak to healing, identity, memory and transformation in tableaus that embody a woman’s unbridled spirit.

Artwork

Participating artists: Sondra Arkin, Maya Freelon Asante, David Carlson, Oletha Devane, Phylicia Ghee, Michael Gross, Nora Howell, Ada Pinkston, Edwin Remsburg, Jamea Richmond-Edwards, Rachel Rotenberg, Amy Sherald, Sigrid Vollerthun and Mary Walker. Along with Sondheim Semi-finalists: A. Moon and Adejoke Tugbiyele

Artscape Gallery Network Exhibit curated by Myrtis Bedolla and co-curator Jessica Stafford-Davis
 

art
Artscape Gallery Network
Galerie Myrtis was part of the 2013 Artscape Gallery Network presented by M&T Bank

The Artscape Gallery Network connects two dozen Baltimore galleries to a wider audience through a promotional campaign sponsored by M&T Bank and provides art lovers with an extended opportunity to enjoy Baltimore’s talented artists before, during and after the festival weekend. The Artscape Gallery Network exhibitions highlight 2013 Janet & Walter Sondheim Artscape Prize applicants, along with artists working throughout the region.

Educational Videos

Print Making Demonstration

Print Making Demonstration

Demonstration: The Secret Garden is the culmination of Goldman’s three year collaboration with Elizabeth Catlett, Michael Gross, Jake Muirhead, Marti Patchell and Renee Stout in which etchings, monotypes, screen prints, and woodcuts become the conveyers of nature and personal mythology.

related exhibition: The Secret Garden: Revealing the Inner Sanctum
 

 

Related Videos

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Demonstration was held during The Secret Garden: Revealing the Inner Sanctum Artist’s Talk

Exhibition Video

Abstraction: The Syncopation of Light, Color and Form –…

Abstraction: The Syncopation of Light, Color and Form

 
view the exhibition

Artists’ Talk: Artists assert their creative voices through textured canvases rich with vibrant hues, and sculptures which free the inherent beauty of the natural stone. Drawing from their intuitions and imaginations, the artists form rhythmic patterns employing light and color to explore social issues, and the metaphysical and spiritual realm.

Featured Artists: David Carlson, Calvin Coleman, Elsa Gebreyesus, Michael Gross, M. Scott Johnson and Jeffrey Kent.

Exhibitions

Abstraction

Echo (detail), 2008 by David Carlson
Echo (detail), 2008 by David Carlson

Abstraction: The Syncopation of Light, Color and Form

May 28 – September 23, 2011

watch artists’ talk
 
Abstraction: The Syncopation of Light, Color and Form artists assert their creative voices through textured canvases rich with vibrant hues, and sculptures which free the inherent beauty of the natural stone. Drawing from their intuitions and imaginations, the artists form rhythmic patterns employing light and color to explore social issues, and the metaphysical and spiritual realm.

Featured Artists: David Carlson, Calvin Coleman, Elsa Gebreyesus, Michael Gross, M. Scott Johnson and Jeffrey Kent.

Artwork