Close Close
  • Aaron Wexler

    Lecture: Thursday, September 24 from 4:30 – 5:30 p.m., Wilson Hall Auditorium
    Opening Reception: Thursday, September 24 from 5:30 – 7:00 p.m.
    Free and open to the Public

    Aaron Wexler’s work investigates shapes in nature as they relate to abstraction in painting. He collects distinctly different representations of abstraction of nature and architectural networks and utilizing prints, books, photographs and hand painted paper, makes drawings and collages from these source materials. Wexler received his M.F.A from the School of The Art Institute of Chicago in 1999. His work has been included in various solo and group shows in New York and London including the Morgan Lehman Gallery, Josee Bienvenu Gallery, The National Academy Museum, and Katonah Museum of Art, among others.

  • Selections from the Monmouth University Collection

    Rechnitz Hall’s DiMattio Gallery, 2nd Floor
    Free and open to the public

    Featuring selections from Monmouth University’s permanent collection including works by Adam Wurtz, Salvadore Dali, Jacob Landau, and Robert Mueller among others.

  • James Deane: A Hidden Treasure

    Opening Reception/ Gallery Talk: Wed. Oct 7 5:30-7:30 pm
    Free and open to the public

    This exhibit will feature recently discovered artwork by artistic visionary James Deane a life-long resident of Long Branch (1906 – 2001.) Prolific in many mediums, Deane created works of art with watercolors, pen and ink, pencil and clay. He was supported by his only sibling, his sister Laura, which allowed him the freedom to focus exclusively on his artwork for many years. The works featured in this exhibit include magnificent botanical studies, futuristic landscape paintings and whimsical pottery, most of which has been unseen since the 1930’s.

  • Sylvia’s Children

    Free and open to the Public
    Opening Reception: November 5, 5:30-7:30 PM

    Experience the village of Mbiriizi in Uganda, Africa. This exhibit tracks the progress of the Mbiriizi Advanced Primary School and its children over the last 12 years. It celebrates their lives through pictures, stories, crafts, batiks and artifacts. See the growth made possible through one woman’s determination to make a difference. The richness and beauty of the culture (as well as its poverty) is shared through audio clips from travelers who have visited and experienced the school. It is an exhibit of joy, of determination, of success, of life.

  • December 2015 Senior Show

    November 20 – December 4, 2015
    Opening Reception: Friday, November 20 from 7:00 – 9:00 p.m.
    Free and open to the public

    Featuring the work of Monmouth University graduating seniors who will receive their degrees in Graphic Design, Animation or Fine Art.

  • Art in Science

    Opening Reception: Wed, Jan 27 5:30-7:30 pm
    Free and Open to the Public

    The 2nd Biennial Art In Science juried
    exhibition will express and highlight the beauty of science – through images,
    drawings, and photos of natural forms and visualization of scientific,
    mathematic, and engineering processes based on the research and coursework of
    Monmouth University employees, students, and alumni. Images will reveal the
    elegance of science art in scientific results, observations, and failures.

  • SUSAN AMONS: WILD SIDE Maine Monoprints

    Lecture: February 11 from 4:30 – 5:30 p.m. | Wilson Hall Auditorium
    Opening Reception: Thursday February 11, from 5:30 – 7:00 p.m.
    Free and open to the public

    Susan Amons lives on a rare and beautiful peninsula in southern Maine. The estuary forms the western boundary, and the ocean stretches out to the east. Every day, Susan observes unusual birds and animals living in this preserved pocket of wildlife habitat. Marsh hawks, eagles, ibis, geese, mink, and fisher cats, are some of the species included in her repertoire of study. In late summer, Susan camps in the solitude of the north woods. The lake supports it’s own unique selection of species including; salmon, trout, moose, otter, and loons. Susan loves to sit on a rock in the stream and paint.

    Each winter, Susan returns to the studio to work on large-scale prints inspired by images that she records from nature throughout the year. To develop her monoprints, she creates a group of mylar shapes which she inks, prints, and re-inks; building up color layers and altering spatial relationships. A series of related work evolves from the printed collection of cut out shapes. What Susan enjoys most about this process, is that she is able to pursue multiple variations of her original idea. Susan’s final prints are multiple and varied, brilliantly frontal, or receding in space like the animals themselves, a memory, mysterious, and wild by nature.

    Susan Amons holds a BFA from the Massachusetts College of Art, and has received 21 artists’ fellowships from the Vermont Studio Center, The Women’s Studio Workshop in New York, and the Heliker-LaHotan Foundation in Maine. Susan is a member of the prestigious Peregrine Press in Maine, and the venerable National Association of Women Artists in New York. Her work was chosen for the acclaimed exhibit, “Maine Women Pioneers”, at the University of New England in 2013. Her two recent solo exhibits include; “Natural Vision”, at the Liriodendron Mansion in Maryland, 2014, and “Tidal Edge”, at The Courthouse Gallery, in Ellsworth, Maine, 2015.

    Susan Amons is represented by numerous galleries on the east coast. Her work is included in many public collections including; The Portland Museum of Art and The Farnsworth Art Museum in Maine, The New York and Boston Public Libraries, The Indiana University Library, The University of New England Art Gallery, Colby, Bates, and Bowdoin College Collections in Maine, and the Zimmerli Museum Collection at Rutgers University in New Jersey.

    For more information, please see susanamons.com

  • Michael Malpass Retrospective

    Exhibition extended through August 18

    Pollak Gallery and outdoor locations on campus
    Documentary Screening: May 18, 10 AM at Wilson Hall

    Michael Malpass’ (1946-1991) artistic legacy consists of sculpture, drawings , collage, paintings, and assemblages. He is best known for his spheres, which revitalize found industrial objects using bandsaw and traditional blacksmithing techniques. He described his sculpture, overall, as “a blend of artistry, collage, craftsmanship and movement,” terms that could be applied to his work in other media, as well. His vast, stimulating and powerful body of work has established him as one of the most respected sculptors of the 20th century.

    The opening reception will include a premiere screening of a new documentary “Michael Malpass – A Great Circle” created by Monmouth University Communication students under the direction of Erin Fleming,
    director of Production Services at 7:30 pm in Pollak Theatre.

  • First Senior Show – Fine Art, Art Education, & Animation

    DiMattio Gallery

    Opening Reception: Friday, March 25 from 7:00 – 9:00 p.m.

    Featuring the work of Monmouth University graduating seniors who will receive their degrees in Fine Art, Art Education, and Animation.

  • Second Senior Show – Graphic Design

    DiMattio Gallery

    Opening Reception: Friday, April 8 from 7:00 – 9:00 p.m.

    Featuring the work of Monmouth University graduating seniors who will receive their degrees in Graphic Design.