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The Bucks Gallery of Fine Art brings a stunning big city gallery experience
to the heart of Bucks County. Located in Newtown, the gallery specializes in
contemporary Impressionist and Modernist art, and devotes two spacious
floors to showcasing Bucks County and Philadelphia based painters and
sculptors. The gallery carries only originals and does not stock works on
paper or lithographs. In addition to exhibiting their permanent collection,
the gallery also specializes in international art. “If you went to a New York
City gallery, you would see a cross section of artists. I want people to be
able to come here and get that experience within our gallery,” says director
Joan Groody. “We provide a big city experience locally. You can find the best
local, regional, and national artists here. We even have international artists for people who collect
globally.”
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Artesano Iron Works has been in business in Philadelphia since 2000, starting with a single showroom in Manayunk. They have since added a gallery on Main Street and also expanded to Lansdale last March in order to serve the residents of Bucks and Montgomery Counties. This September, Artesano will expand again and open a new and larger showroom on Cresson Street in Manayunk. Artesano’s president and founder, Jaime Kaplan, chose to open the iron works because of a love for the artistic beauty of wrought iron and a desire to revitalize the ancient millenary techniques inherent in creating that art. Judging by Artesano’s rapid expansion and acknowledgement as 2005’s “Best Place for Metal Heads” by Philadelphia Magazine, the Delaware Valley seems to share Kaplan’s appreciation for the beauty of iron. |
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With her focus on discarded alleys and deserted warehouses, 29–year-old
Laura Kicey’s photographs prove that light can make an isolated scene
beautiful and banal objects remarkable.
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Alan Hines is a mixed media artist utilizing local geologic textures
and an earth-inspired palette to create work that bears witness to his
Doylestown surroundings, while in the end generating imagery that is
almost wholly abstract.
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