The central focus of Heather Levy's art installation is the expression of her life at different times as seen in three of her major paintings with the same title, "Time To Think." Levy asks the viewer to reflect on her life process of becoming a woman, a wife, and a mother. Her identity is part of a matrix of many ideas from Freud, Sartre, and Dostoevsky, existentialism, Rand and Rumi; and a matrix of family and home: boyfriend becoming husband, baby becoming her nine year old son, and always with sweet kittens, gardens full of zinnias, and games of chess and music.
The exhibit will be on view July 1-31.
The central focus of Heather Levy's art installation is the expression of her life at different times as seen in three of her major paintings with the same title, "Time To Think." Levy asks the viewer to reflect on her life process of becoming a woman, a wife, and a mother. Her identity is part of a matrix of many ideas from Freud, Sartre, and Dostoevsky, existentialism, Rand and Rumi; and a matrix of family and home: boyfriend becoming husband, baby becoming her nine year old son, and always with sweet kittens, gardens full of zinnias, and games of chess and music.
The exhibit will be on view July 1-31.
The central focus of Heather Levy's art installation is the expression of her life at different times as seen in three of her major paintings with the same title, "Time To Think." Levy asks the viewer to reflect on her life process of becoming a woman, a wife, and a mother. Her identity is part of a matrix of many ideas from Freud, Sartre, and Dostoevsky, existentialism, Rand and Rumi; and a matrix of family and home: boyfriend becoming husband, baby becoming her nine year old son, and always with sweet kittens, gardens full of zinnias, and games of chess and music.
The exhibit will be on view July 1-31.