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Nassau County Museum of Art Showcases "Metamorphosis" by Rona Pondick
Written by Doris Meadows Tuesday, 02 August 2011 21:14
Roslyn Harbor, New York - Sculptural work by Rona Pondick, fusing human and natural forms in provocative ways, are on view in Metamorphosis: Rona Pondick, at Nassau County Museum of Art’s Contemporary Gallery through May 23, 2010 (the exhibition opened on March 13, 2010). Rona Pondick blends traditional sculptural methods with the latest 3-D computer technology to produce powerful sculptural objects that morph human, animal and plant forms.
Her work has been featured in solo and group exhibitions in this
country
and abroad and is in the collections of the Whitney Museum of American
Art, The
Morgan Library & Museum, the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Los Angeles
County
Museum of Art, among other art museums in this country, and in prominent
museums
in France, Germany and Israel. Much honored in her field, Pondick’s many
awards
include a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship, a Mid-Atlantic Arts Grant
and
Guggenheim Fellowship.
A native of New York, Pondick lives and works in New York City. She studied at Yale University School of Art and received her MFA in 1977. She has lectured at many universities and institutions in the U.S. and in Israel and France.
Nassau County Museum of Art is located at One Museum Drive (just off Northern Boulevard, Route 25A, two traffic lights west of Glen Cove Rd.) in Roslyn Harbor. Hours are 11 am to 4:45 pm Tuesday through Sunday. Docent-led tours of the exhibition are offered at 2 pm each day. Admission to the main building, the Arnold & Joan Saltzman Fine Art Building, is $10 for adults, $8 for seniors (62+) and $4 for students and children ages 4-12; includes admission to The Art Space for Children. Members are always admitted free. There is a $2 parking fee on weekends (members free). The Museum Shop is open all museum hours. For information, call (516) 484-9337 or log onto www.nassaumuseum.org.
Nassau County Museum of Art is chartered under the laws of New York State as a not-for-profit private educational institution and museum. A privately elected board of trustees is responsible for its governance. The museum is funded through income derived from admissions, parking, membership, special events and private and corporate donations as well as federal and state grants.
“I am interested in looking at the way the psychological
has been manifested in sculptures from all periods.” . . Rona Pondick
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