Hope Lewis saw a need to connect critically ill patients around the world with the best medical specialists in the United States. Lewis’ friends in China were given death sentences because the doctors there couldn’t or wouldn’t provide treatment for some serious illnesses.
Onessimo Fine Art, Palm Beach Gardens, is proud to announce its presentation of Salvador Dali: The Argillet Collection.
Recent Media for: Angels and Icons & The Art of Drums featuring artwork by Def Leppard drummer Rick Allen has been touring Wentworth Galleries around the country throughout the year. The touring exhibit is due to make its next stop at Wentworth Gallery in Short Hills, New Jersey, where Allen will make a special appearance on Saturday, December 10 from 5:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m.
Step into the creative mind of the infamous Dr. Seuss at LaMantia Fine Art Gallery in Northport, where limited edition artworks from “The Art of Dr. Seuss Collection” are on display. The exhibit, “If I Ran The Zoo” features the artist’s “three-dimensional unorthodox taxidermy.” It’s the first time all 17 sculptures have been presented together in an exhibit dedicated to Dr. Seuss’s sculptural heritage.
Relevant Communications is proud to have secured National Public Radio’s “All Things Considered” for its’ Client Chase Art and The Art of Dr. Seuss
Autumn de Forest appears on NPR’s “State of Nevada” discussing her upcoming Las Vegas Exhibition this weekend at The Gallery of Music & Art in Las Vegas: A Preview to her Collection which will premiere at Art Miami 2016.
Autumn’s the youngest member of the Presidents’ Committee on the Arts & Humanities, and the bubbly artist designed a fun way to help underprivileged students and under-resourced schools across the country by teaching painting classes.
The artist forever known as Dr. Seuss didn’t stop at writing and illustrating 44 wise and whimsical storybooks. While he produced popular literature by day, he spent his nights in the 1930s sculpting and painting for his own enjoyment. The Secret Art of Dr. Seuss Collection is largely unknown to the world, excepting art specialists and true Seuss enthusiasts. Now, a new exhibition is bringing a curated array on tour for public viewing. They’re available for acquisition, too—in other words, someone could actually take home “The Mulberry Street Unicorn” as a piece, instead of a page.
Smiling goofily from their wooden mounts sit the imaginings of Dr. Seuss, animals with bizarre names like the Turtle-Necked Sea-Turtle, Two Horned Douberhannis, and Semi-Normal Green-Lidded Fawn. The beasts were not designed by fanatics of Dr. Seuss’ famous children’s books, but are based on works created by the man himself over 80 years ago, each originating from an obscure collection of paintings, drawings, and sculpture known as The Secret Art of Dr. Seuss Collection.