Blink Contemporary Art
Gallery
1709 Franklin St, Michigan City, IN 46360
Event Types
Upcoming Events (6)
First Friday, September 4, 2015 Opening Reception: 6:0 pm. Featuring: Mary Gault - Singer and Storyteller on guitar! Performance at 7:00pm Sculpture by: Suzanne Cohan-Lange Paintings & Drawings by: Richard Lange & Surprise Guest Artists! We would love to see you there!
Don’t miss the current show, “and now for something entirely different” which opened on July 1st. In it, Rick and Suzanne changed places: he created a series of sculptures all about the “art world” while Suzanne has a whole new body of 2D gods and goddesses! Stop by and let us know what you think. The show will be up for several months. Just call and let us now you are on your way! POSTED AT 12:08PM
“What’s Wrong With This Picture” is the name of our current show by designer Kay Hartmann. Using interactive text and image, the show deals with her personal journey as a breast cancer survivor. It is also a critique of the breast cancer “Industry”. Our upcoming exhibition, opening Friday, December 7, entitled “Cloud9″ highlights nine artists’ responses to the ”Information Cloud”. Don’t miss it! POSTED AT 3:40PM
POSTED AT 11:44AM
Please join us on First Friday in April when Blink hosts “Pages”, a group exhibition guest curated by Chicago based artist, Yoonshin Park. The exhibition opens on Friday, April, 6, and runs through Sunday, May, 27. The Opening reception is on Friday, April 6 from 5:30-8:30pm. “Pages” features six, Chicago women artists- each who have a unique take on the notion of the “page”. Using a variety of media techniques, they investigate a range of processes, structural properties, & the serial qualitie
“In the future all our data will be stored in the cloud”. WIRED Magazine This quote filled us with wonder… If the clouds are now filled with data, where do the dead people sit? Have the angels and the cherubs been evicted? How does the data get up there? And who owns all that data? Do we need very tall ladders to unlock the clouds and get our data? Is there a key? Just what does the “ Information Cloud” look like? Thus began a conversation with nine Midwestern artists and writers and the result