Shiba Ward : New Works at Sullivan Goss Gallery |
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| Wednesday, 07 June 2006 15:51 |
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Shiba Ward paints small. His paintings are quiet. They whisper. In each work, the artist opens a window into his world - the world of the contemporary American city: telephone poles, advertisements, distinctive colors, and the textures of the everyday world. Ward finds richness there. Workaday imagery has its roots in the American Scene tradition of the 1930s and 1940s. These paintings celebrated people braving a Depression in the modern world. One American artist, Edward Hopper, conspicuously omitted people in his paintings of the Depression. Hopper’s cities were often empty; suggesting, perhaps, the loneliness of the big city. Shiba Ward’s scenes are often uninhabited too, but the sense of loneliness is rarely present. Rather, there is a sense of pause within a narrative. Who will meet at Phillipe’s? Where is the train bound? Who lives behind the shadowed door? The artist’s interest in the shapes and textures of his new environment are clearly evident, but there is more. The attention lavished on the details of these places elevates them. In so doing, Ward makes art out of the everyday. Exhibition 8 June until 2 August. Sullivan Goss first began showing Ward’s work while he was in his last semester at the Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles. Ward debuted in a 2004 Sullivan Goss exhibition entitled, In Search of America: Art of the American Scene. Visit Sullivan Goss-An American Gallery at : http://www.sullivangoss.com/exhibits/ward_2006.asp Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~ |


Santa Barbara, CA - Sullivan Goss – An American Gallery presents SHIBA WARD: NEW WORKS, the debut solo-exhibition from the contemporary scene painter. 
