St. Matthew's Cathedral Arts will present "Sacred Space - Visual Voice," an exhibit featuring new works by Annie Ehrenreich. Ehrenreich found herself fascinated by colorful Christian Medieval artwork, causing her to experiment with the creation of updated devotional mosaics of faith. Utilizing paper tiles of Medieval and Renaissance works from the public domain, her process has been self-taught.
A growing number of secular art mosaics from the same periods has expanded her saturated art line. She finds “the physical action of hand-piecing these works to be spiritually centering and meditative.” This passion was sparked during an Art History of the Middle Ages course taken as a returning college student and was further inflamed while touring museums and cathedrals in Prague and Vienna.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on view through December 31.
St. Matthew's Cathedral Arts will present "Sacred Space - Visual Voice," an exhibit featuring new works by Annie Ehrenreich. Ehrenreich found herself fascinated by colorful Christian Medieval artwork, causing her to experiment with the creation of updated devotional mosaics of faith. Utilizing paper tiles of Medieval and Renaissance works from the public domain, her process has been self-taught.
A growing number of secular art mosaics from the same periods has expanded her saturated art line. She finds “the physical action of hand-piecing these works to be spiritually centering and meditative.” This passion was sparked during an Art History of the Middle Ages course taken as a returning college student and was further inflamed while touring museums and cathedrals in Prague and Vienna.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on view through December 31.
St. Matthew's Cathedral Arts will present "Sacred Space - Visual Voice," an exhibit featuring new works by Annie Ehrenreich. Ehrenreich found herself fascinated by colorful Christian Medieval artwork, causing her to experiment with the creation of updated devotional mosaics of faith. Utilizing paper tiles of Medieval and Renaissance works from the public domain, her process has been self-taught.
A growing number of secular art mosaics from the same periods has expanded her saturated art line. She finds “the physical action of hand-piecing these works to be spiritually centering and meditative.” This passion was sparked during an Art History of the Middle Ages course taken as a returning college student and was further inflamed while touring museums and cathedrals in Prague and Vienna.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on view through December 31.