Spillover, 2021
Burlington Center for the Arts, Burlington, VT
Burlington Center for the Arts, Burlington, VT
Boston Sculptors Gallery, Boston, MA
Housatonic Museum of Art, Bridgeport, CT
Housatonic Museum of Art, Bridgeport, CT
Boston Sculptors Gallery, Boston, MA
Museum of Art, University of New Hampshire, Manchester, NH
McIninch Gallery, Southern New Hampshire University, Manchester, NH
Blue Star Contemporary Art Museum, San Antonio, TX
3S ArtSpace, Portsmouth, NH
Fernando Alvarez Gallery, Stamford, CT
Montserrat College of Art Gallery, Beverly, MA
Islip Art Museum Carriage House, East Islip NY
Currier Museum of Art, Manchester, NH
DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park, Lincoln, MA
Maine College of Art, Fort Andross, Brunswick, ME
Hallwalls Contemporary Art Center, Buffalo, NY
The Vox Populi, Philadelphia, PA
ArtSpace, New Haven, CT
Firehouse Gallery, Burlington, VT
“Spillover,” an installation of three related, disconnected architectural structures was created for “Unbound,” an exhibit curated by Heather Ferrell.
“Unbound features new and recent work by three New England artists, Rachel Gross, Rob Hitzig, and Kirsten Reynolds, who explore contemporary approaches to abstraction as it relates to architecture, space and materials. United by their use of geometric, shaped forms that push outside the boundaries of the common rectangle, each artist considers the possibilities of abstraction using novel perspectives – unconstrained by prescribed expectations or formal rules.”
– Heather Ferrell, BCA Curator and Director of Exhibitions
Dimensions: 8 ½’ x 20’ x 8 ½’ / 6’ x 14’ x 4½’ / 4’ x 11’ x 7 ½’
Materials: Wood, paint, stain
Photo: Lisa Voll
“Spillover,” an installation of three related, disconnected architectural structures was created for “Unbound,” an exhibit curated by Heather Ferrell.
“Unbound features new and recent work by three New England artists, Rachel Gross, Rob Hitzig, and Kirsten Reynolds, who explore contemporary approaches to abstraction as it relates to architecture, space and materials. United by their use of geometric, shaped forms that push outside the boundaries of the common rectangle, each artist considers the possibilities of abstraction using novel perspectives – unconstrained by prescribed expectations or formal rules.”
– Heather Ferrell, BCA Curator and Director of Exhibitions
Dimensions: 8 ½’ x 20’ x 8 ½’ / 6’ x 14’ x 4½’ / 4’ x 11’ x 7 ½’
Materials: Wood, paint, stain
Photo: Lisa Voll