Liliana Bloch Gallery presents "Stay in Touch," a new public work by Ann Glazer. "Stay in Touch" is a memorial to a time when an acquaintance's phone number would be scribbled on a scrap of paper, a make-shift surface or the back of a hand. It is a bittersweet tribute to connections made, however fleeting, with the people that come and go through our lives.
"Stay in Touch" consists of a 19" printed vinyl leaf on which a name and phone number has been hastily written in Sharpie. The work, attached to the outside gallery wall, appears to have found a resting spot, blown there from somewhere else. It speaks to the chance nature of our interactions and the impact technology has had on how we stay connected.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display through May 5.
Liliana Bloch Gallery presents "Stay in Touch," a new public work by Ann Glazer. "Stay in Touch" is a memorial to a time when an acquaintance's phone number would be scribbled on a scrap of paper, a make-shift surface or the back of a hand. It is a bittersweet tribute to connections made, however fleeting, with the people that come and go through our lives.
"Stay in Touch" consists of a 19" printed vinyl leaf on which a name and phone number has been hastily written in Sharpie. The work, attached to the outside gallery wall, appears to have found a resting spot, blown there from somewhere else. It speaks to the chance nature of our interactions and the impact technology has had on how we stay connected.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display through May 5.
Liliana Bloch Gallery presents "Stay in Touch," a new public work by Ann Glazer. "Stay in Touch" is a memorial to a time when an acquaintance's phone number would be scribbled on a scrap of paper, a make-shift surface or the back of a hand. It is a bittersweet tribute to connections made, however fleeting, with the people that come and go through our lives.
"Stay in Touch" consists of a 19" printed vinyl leaf on which a name and phone number has been hastily written in Sharpie. The work, attached to the outside gallery wall, appears to have found a resting spot, blown there from somewhere else. It speaks to the chance nature of our interactions and the impact technology has had on how we stay connected.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display through May 5.