The Rust Belt Biennial is a celebration of photography with work realized throughout the Rust Belt Region in all its manifestations. The exhibition covers the land, its people, and the histories ingrained in the soil across the Rust Belt Region.
Holly Trostle Brigham's beguiling series of watercolors of women artists from the Middle Ages through the Rennaissance, Baroque, and Modern eras calls to mind the eighteenth-century ideal of the speaking likeness. Boldly illu inated and deftly…
Artist Lyn Godley explores the relationship between art and technology in her exhibition, Lit. Inspired by the interaction of light with differing materials, Godley combines LEDs and fiber optics with photography to study the therapeutic applications…
The iconic photographs of Pete Souza are well known from his tenure as Chief Official White House Photographer for President Obama. What most people don?t remember is that Souza, who was trained as a photojournalist, was also an Official White House…
The mid- to late-20th century in America was a time of boundary testing and social critique. Artists, too, challenged accepted techniques and subject matter while critically examining the role of art in society. The works in the exhibition capture…
The exhibition, focused on the art of quilt making, presents 17 works by seven fiber artists representing the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom. Curated by internationally renowned artist and teacher Nancy Crow, Material Pulses contributes…
Martha Posner calls upon the themes of mythology and folklore to represent the duality of the darekst and most triumphant moments of women. She represents women with strength and determination while facing the wilds of the unknown
Ray Klimek, Wilkes University 78' alumni, draws inspiration for his photography from Northeastern Pennsylvanian coal mining landscape. What Klimek sees and shows spans from the black dunes of culm to the surface of the sun. His worth is both local…
A film of the 20th anniversary Gala commemorating the anniversary of the Dorothy Dickson Darte Center in 1985. Featured after the ceremony is an interview with Dorothy Dickson Darte's granddaughter.
This newspaper clipping was found within a Scrapbook, part 1, created by Fisher in the mid-late twentieth century.
Transcription:
Dear Mrs. Fisher,
Here’s hoping
to see you again and
Congratulating you
Again
This newspaper clipping was found within a Scrapbook, part 1, created by Fisher in the mid-late twentieth century. The date in the top left corner appears annotated later, plausibly in her hand.