Cris Worley Fine Arts will present Patrick Turk, with his solo exhibit, “Trip Harderrr.” The exhibition will feature 20 new mixed media sculptures with an additional installation, to be seen under ultraviolet light. This exhibition has traveled to Dallas from Houston, where it showed at Apama Mackey Gallery.
Turk is known for his highly imaginative collages, assembled using illustrations from printed media sources with botanical, commercial, medical, mythical, and religious subjects. The artist’s work is often described as a visually dense and destabilizing microcosm of cultural artifacts and natural forms encased in resin. Organic and unsettling, his work utilizes a bewitching visual vernacular chosen to question the nature of collecting and ordering our existence.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on view through August 18.
Cris Worley Fine Arts will present Patrick Turk, with his solo exhibit, “Trip Harderrr.” The exhibition will feature 20 new mixed media sculptures with an additional installation, to be seen under ultraviolet light. This exhibition has traveled to Dallas from Houston, where it showed at Apama Mackey Gallery.
Turk is known for his highly imaginative collages, assembled using illustrations from printed media sources with botanical, commercial, medical, mythical, and religious subjects. The artist’s work is often described as a visually dense and destabilizing microcosm of cultural artifacts and natural forms encased in resin. Organic and unsettling, his work utilizes a bewitching visual vernacular chosen to question the nature of collecting and ordering our existence.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on view through August 18.
Cris Worley Fine Arts will present Patrick Turk, with his solo exhibit, “Trip Harderrr.” The exhibition will feature 20 new mixed media sculptures with an additional installation, to be seen under ultraviolet light. This exhibition has traveled to Dallas from Houston, where it showed at Apama Mackey Gallery.
Turk is known for his highly imaginative collages, assembled using illustrations from printed media sources with botanical, commercial, medical, mythical, and religious subjects. The artist’s work is often described as a visually dense and destabilizing microcosm of cultural artifacts and natural forms encased in resin. Organic and unsettling, his work utilizes a bewitching visual vernacular chosen to question the nature of collecting and ordering our existence.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on view through August 18.