In 1984, while on sabbatical leave from the Art Department at Wilkes College, Richard Fuller went to Japan to learn the art of shibori. There, under the tutelage of a master textile artist and dyer Hiroyuki Shindo, he studied the fundamentals of…
William Sterling, a former Wilkes Universtiy professor of painting and art history, has had a profound influence on the area's artistic and intellectual life. This survey of his work encompasses the artists primary focus, which is to say that his…
Winston Link was a young practitioner of an old photographic tradition, one still much used, but which now commands little public notice. In this exhibition, he uses a different photographic technique to capture life as he might wish it be.
Edward Schmidt's Mythologies prsesnt an oblique, cultured, yet modern way of looking at reality. Informed by erudition, drawing inspiration from classical tradition, and paying frequent tribute to Old Masters, Schmidt's paitnings conjure up an…
As a designer, Michael Thomas has chosen to engage in architectural issues primarily through the medium of photgraphy. This choice has allowed him to focus on the essential components of the most practical of the fine arts. This exhibition is a show…
Sharon Bowar: Recent Prints and Paintings featured original prints and paintings the artist and Professor of Art at Wilkes University produced during her first sabbatical awards in Italy, France and Spain, and consecutive travel for exhibiting her…
Michael De Jong's images perform an operation of individuation, defining the viewer---the self---as isolated, withdrawn from the world, yet spying on it.
Pamela Earnshaw Kelly's subjects are ordinary---farm or jungle animals---and her material is humble----clay. But there is nobility in her depiction of her subjects, and thousands of years of ceramic history to show clay's potential to move, provoke,…