'Relationships-2' By Julian Kernes

'Billboard IV' By Dora Golfetto
Dora Golfetto’s Bio: The artist incorporates a variety of textures and media in her work. Her goal is to create a piece of art that draws and intrigues the viewer’s eye in different ways upon repeated viewings. She prefers for each individual to have his or her own interpretation, and search for their own meaning and message. Dora G. Golfetto, a native of Baltimore, Maryland, moved to New York City in the 1970’s, going on to study collage in the famous SoHo district of New York. she then moved closer to her roots, the Trenton area in 1992, where she has participated in a number of art shows, while perfecting her technique. Dora has worked closely with various artists and has the opportunity to study under the renowned painter/artist from Barcelona, Spain, Porta-Misse. She held her first major showing in 1997 at the famous Tres Puentas Gallery in Barcelona. She has also participated in several Trenton Artists Workshop Association (TAWA) exhibits and Ellarslie Opens at Ellarslie, The Trenton City Museum and the Mercer College Gallery and is currently selling her collage plates at the Museum gift shop. Her artwork has also been displayed at the following shows:
Tres Puentas Gallery in Barcelona, Spain
Ellarslie, The Trenton City Museum in Trenton, NJ
Mercer County Commmunity College Gallery in West Windsor, NJ
McDade Administration Building in Trenton, NJ
Yardley Borough Hall in Yardley, PA
AM Delight in Yardley, PA
125 Gallery in Trenton, NJ
Artworks in Trenton, NJ
Amsterdam Whitney Gallery in New York, NY
She is a member of TAWA and currently resides in Fairfax, Virginia.
Julian Kernes Bio: Julian Kernes is a painter, digital artist and freelance graphics designer. He received his Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree in Illustration from the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, PA (formerly PCA) . He has been on the Board of Trustees of the Trenton Museum Society and former President of the Trenton Artist’s Workshop Association (TAWA).
Much of his fine arts work consists of acrylic paintings with surrealistic imagery, linear abstract paintings, impressionism style landscapes, and prints of digitally altered images often combining paintings, photos, sketches and design work together on his computer. In both his fine art computer work and surreal style painting, the realistic imagery he chooses are in a natural looking landscape often arranged similar to a collage, playfully blending the use of some familiar icons of social issue with personal imagery suggesting multiple levels of meanings. The source of the abstract work is derived from sketches of forms, patterns and textures found in nature and architectural settings. More recent dimensional look came about in Shade Garden comes with parts of the painting echoing the floral carving in the frame he found for the painting. The recent constructions, “PhotoSynthesis”, ‘Shoe String Budget”, “Gas Guzzler” and “Surveillence Game” based on stream of conscience word associations bring a dimensional variation to the abstract work. Having been compared to traditional mystic icons, each nature abstraction and architecture abstract becomes transformed into window portals of a new environment. His work has been described in art reviews as “a painterly sense of the fantastic, an imaginative element that fired the early Surrealists.” He also works extensively with the tools of the computer creating illustration and graphic designs as well as self-published digital color prints and note cards of my work. Selections of my note cards, magnet art and t-shirts are featured in the New Jersey State Museum Gift Shop and the gift shop at Ellarslie, the Trenton City Museum.
Julian's work has been exhibited at the New Jersey State Museum, Ellarslie, Artworks, Mercer County Community College Gallery, Princeton ETS Gallery and the New Jersey Network and Gallery 125. Paintings and prints have been on display at local establishments in Mercer and Bucks Counties.
Please join us as we honor these two long term members of TAWA and wish them well as they move away from the Trenton area.
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