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PROVINCETOWN GUIDE
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| DIRECTORY |
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Provincetown :: Wednesday, February 8th 2012
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One of Chuck Anzalone’s canvases that will be on display. |
Three Artists at Lyman-Eyer
Opening Reception on Sept. 3
By Sue Harrison
August 29th, 2010
Lyman-Eyer Gallery, 432 Commercial St., is holding a Labor Day Open House featuring work by gallery artists Rob Adamcik, Chuck Anzalone, & Jacob Cooley. The opening reception is at 7 pm on Friday, Sept. 3 and continues through Sept. 15.
 | Chuck Anzalone says he has always been drawn to the hidden paths and ponds covered with water lilies of the Beech Forest in Provincetown. |
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Provincetown artist Rob Adamcik plumbs his inner-most feelings and experiences and translates them into complex multi-layered, mixed media paintings. "My work is very personal but I look for ways to express my ideas that I hope are universal; that tap into a common, shared sub-conscious"
Adamcik's work is usually dense with layers of color, texture, and images, floating in and out of different realities. The result is a stream of consciousness; a dreamscape of freely associating images; a topography of personal experience, symbolic and open to a multitude of interpretations.
Chuck Anzalone says he has always been drawn to the hidden paths and ponds covered with water lilies of the Beech Forest in Provincetown. This year's new work is focused on the beauty of nature in some of his favorite places in town. “With each painting I learn something new as I strive to find my true voice. Although I'm exploring a different direction than the traditional Cape School style, I still use the valuable foundation that I learned in those first workshops as a base for my work.”
Captured moods and painted whispers describe the fields and wetlands as seen through the eyes of Jacob Cooley. Focusing on landscapes and the movement of light, Cooley demonstrates his love for what he calls the gothic quality of certain Northern and Southern Landscapes "My paintings are informed by harmonious, hallowed places, landscapes about contemplation and the spirit, but also about the transient, ephemera l characteristics of light and darkness and ultimately, of life. These paintings are my stories. Though they are landscapes, I also see them as self-portraits, distinctly personal and emotional experiences. I am painting where I've been, what I know, who I am."
432 Commercial Street Provincetown, Massachusetts 02657 (508) 487-3937
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