Stardust
Hamilton Street Gallery now has 3 ways for our visitors to purchase artwork, including cash, check and now PayPal. On your cell phone, tablet or computer, just go to: PayPal.Me/hamiltonstgallery
Kristen Martin-Aarnio “Starry Earth” wood, plastic, modeling paste, cardboard, acrylic, dried flower, fabric, wire, yarn, thread, rocks, paper, led lights, 37”H x 13” W x 11”D, 2023, $600.00
Peter Arakawa “Untitled Cosmological Map of a Parallel Universe ” mixed media, 24” W x 18” H, $1,250.00
Patricia A. Bender “Cosmology 1” unique oxidized gelatin silver cliche-verre print with colored pencil, 10”H X8”W unframed, 2018/2023, $2200.00
Ry An Image Uchujin / 宇宙人 recycled paper pulp with wood scraps, discarded acrylic paint, & donated acrylic mediums, 18 H x 10 W x 23” D, 2021, $2,225
Larry McCandlish “Singularity” digital print H archival ink on matte paper 20” W x 16” H, 2023 Price: $175.00
Gail Morrison-Hall “Yellow Storm” – Chromatic Storms Series, acrylic with collage, 48” H x 36”W 2022, $800.00
Erin Kuhn “Light The Way,” mixed media diptych: wood, paint, hand cut paper and vinyl, resin, mirrors, 8″ x 8″ each, 2021, $125.
Patricia A. Bender “Moon” graphite + colored pencil drawing on a 1920’s Funk & Wagnall’s dictionary page, 2021, $1200.00
As night falls millions of stars light up the sky. Stargazing our spiral Milky Way has an hypnotic effect on the psyche that seems rather strange, yet familiar. In 1957, astronomer, Geoffrey Burbridge discovered a good reason for that. He found that our bodies contain an ancient chemical camaraderie with stars, or stardust (as the song goes) —specifically from the same star or super nova, physically tying all of us to that star and to each other.
Our tendency toward narrow-minded thinking restricted in scope and understanding can’t possibly negate the cosmic enormity of that which bonds us together.
Hamilton Street Gallery is excited to welcome 26 artists as they transport us through the astral plain exploring imaginative scenarios in this stelliferous exhibit.