Join Gallery Night Providence at The Brooklyn Coffee Tea & Guest House for our Nov 2019 Exhibition, showcasing work by Robin Hogg and Amy Webb and featuring special guests The Vox Hunters
The exhibition will be on view on the first floor of the Brooklyn Coffee House located at 209 Douglas Ave, in Providence, RI from Nov 1 – Jan 1. Gallery hours are Tuesday – Saturday 8am-2pm, during public events and by appointment.
Join us for the Opening Reception during the Providence Gallery Night event on Thursday, November 21st from 6–8pm. Light refreshments will be served. Free on and off-street parking is available.
Robin Hogg
https://www.instagram.com/robbotood/?hl=en
Robin Hogg, returned to Providence in 2015. She is is a RISD alumna with a BFA in painting.
Prior showings include Austin, San Antonio, Dallas, and Fort Worth, Texas, New Orleans, and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Spokane, Washington. Her work was also recently featured at The Wurks Gallery and Sprout Co-working in Providence. Robin is currently working on a large commissioned piece for a client in Fort Worth, Texas.
Amy Webb
www.mockingbirddesign.biz
Amy Webb is an artist and graphic designer, as well as gardener and washboard player, creating mixed media paintings, drawings, sculpture and design projects in her home studio, Mockingbird Design, in Providence, Rhode Island. She received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Printmaking at the University of Iowa, studying with Virginia Myers, and book arts with Kay Amert. She has a Master of Arts in Book Arts from Mills College, with an emphasis on unique artist books. She is a Rhode Island State Council on the Arts grant recipient and has exhibited her work in San Francisco, Palo Alto & Santa Cruz, California, as well as Providence and Pawtucket Rhode Island.
"A fascination with all things avian, birds hold a constant place in my visual iconography. These evocative creatures are laced through our human history reflecting the poetic psyche, spiritual transformation, and prophetic messenger for the gods. As emissaries of song, birds are a ubiquitous, though diminishing, part of our human interaction with nature, offering a magical glint in our daily comings and goings. An exercise in movement, there is something in the action of flight and flocking, the perpetual motion, the social exchanges, and micro adjustments that are copacetic with my own sense of line and gesture."
- Amy Webb
Light Refreshments will be served
FREE off-street parking is available.