Gallery Exhibition—Work/Play: Color-ism
Watson Fine Arts - Beard and Weil Galleries Norton, MA, United StatesWORK/PLAY, aka Danielle and Kevin McCoy, work in graphic design, printmaking, textiles, teaching, curating, and activism.
WORK/PLAY, aka Danielle and Kevin McCoy, work in graphic design, printmaking, textiles, teaching, curating, and activism.
On & On features works that have no beginning, no middle and no end. On & On artists make work about time as it moves on, but also the ‘electrical on’, in other words, ‘turned on’. The show is deliberately staged as a loopy, pulsing, loudly colored response to the short days of winter”.
This embodiment-oriented class will introduce how the evolution of chair design has influenced anatomical posture of Westernized cultures—a posture necessarily adopted by classroom and writing-based scholars. Visiting Artist Jessie Dwiggins […]
All welcome! Learn to knit or knit better. Bring your lunch. Bring a project if you have one. Or use our needles and yarn to get started. Every Monday and Wednesday. Offered by Anne Marie Battistone, of the Norfolk Knitting School.
On & On features works that have no beginning, no middle and no end. On & On artists make work about time as it moves on, but also the ‘electrical on’, in other words, ‘turned on’. The show is deliberately staged as a loopy, pulsing, loudly colored response to the short days of winter”.
WORK/PLAY, aka Danielle and Kevin McCoy, work in graphic design, printmaking, textiles, teaching, curating, and activism.
Come support our senior female athletes be recognized during halftime of the women's basketball game
Dr. Miller leads a Zen-style sitting meditation that lasts about 20 minutes and emphasizes the settling of your mind. Come and practice suspending all judgmental thinking and let words, ideas, […]
WORK/PLAY, aka Danielle and Kevin McCoy, work in graphic design, printmaking, textiles, teaching, curating, and activism.
On & On features works that have no beginning, no middle and no end. On & On artists make work about time as it moves on, but also the ‘electrical on’, in other words, ‘turned on’. The show is deliberately staged as a loopy, pulsing, loudly colored response to the short days of winter”.