Tag: painting

Diversity: Paintings by Robert Allen ?>

Diversity: Paintings by Robert Allen

Diversity: Paintings by Robert Allen

RECEPTION June 11th at 6pm 


The Fordham University Galleries
Ildiko Butler Gallery
June 5 – August 23, 2026
Fordham University at Lincoln Center map
113 West 60th Street at Columbus Avenue
New York, NY 10023
fordhamuniversitygalleries


I prefer to avoid claiming any profound meaning to be found in the images I create. These
paintings are simply meant to be looked at, and it is hoped that they communicate in a purely visual language, not needing a narrative explanation. Either the work captures a viewer’s imagination or it doesn’t. Frankly, unfortunately, some of that ‘art critique stuff’ can be rather pretentious.

However, I do believe creative acts represent attempts to validate self-worth, or a means of documenting one’s existence, announcing that, for a short time, “I was a part of humanity.” So, these paintings are reflections of my imagination, starting usually as doodles, then turning into temporary obsessions. That said, it would be disingenuous not to admit that I am inspired by the works of other artists, often resulting from a ‘throw-back’ to works seen in museums, galleries, books, then trying to prove to myself “I can do that.” A spark ignited by another artist is then transformed into something derived from my own alchemy of psychological history mixing subject matter, color, design, etc., into something a little different, made up of other’s ideas, but resulting in ‘art’ which I am uniquely responsible for.

This explains why these works seem to lack any central style or theme. I like the challenge of “differences” and not just in art. So, if this exhibit represents anything more than viewers getting lost in the visual language of art, and escaping into something perhaps personally “meaningful,” let it applaud the theme of diversity – an openness to recombining concepts and how we think, transforming old ideas into something a little different, which inherently requires and welcomes sharing, a process which often brings about something positive and worthwhile because it emanates from a collective inspiration. I am happy to share this work, a small contribution, created during my time of ‘being a part of humanity.’

Bob Allen
June 2026

 B.O. / Jack Arthur Wood ?>

 B.O. / Jack Arthur Wood

RECEPTION SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20th 4-9pm


The Fordham University Galleries
Lipani Gallery
August 5 – October 31, 2025
Fordham University at Lincoln Center map
113 West 60th Street at Columbus Avenue
New York, NY 10023
fordhamuniversitygalleries

In a garden, I kick at a cobblestone path. I ignore the other children and move toward my favorite plant. My licking leaf tree. I pull one of the leaves away and raise it to my mouth like a question. I turn it over, feeling the hairy side with my thumb as I run my tongue over the back of the leaf until it is floppy and creased, relishing the magic of sensation, absorbing fascination through my mouth and fingertips. Having always explored my world sensorially, I build spaces of color, light and material through multilayered painted and collaged surfaces.

The nature of things is more or less based on a binary. In my work I explore the inseparable combination of anxiety and joy I feel while anticipating the nature of things oscillating between two points, visualizing a way that binary space can be punctured and trespassed. Paint becomes an object when I cut from the cloth or page allowing me to try endless placements. Working symmetrically means each mark becomes conversational, and the subject or figure can
rest behind the static. All of the swatches affixed to my paintings and installations bring the body and mind into question as structures of bondage. I imagine the compulsively wrapped and strapped edges of my paintings as corporeal and contemplative armatures that hold spectral displays inside, visions of transcendence, clarity through chroma.
JAW


Artist Bio

Born, 1990 in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States

Jack Arthur Wood Jr. is a visual artist, writer, curator and educator based in Ridgewood, Queens. Wood studied at Guilford College, in Greensboro, NC, receiving a BA in printmaking in 2012, and earned an MFA in printmaking from Texas A&M University — Corpus Christi in 2017. Wood received a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in painting in 2024. He has been a resident at The Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture, The Wassaic Project, The Jentel Foundation, Little Bear Hill, and Tiger Lily Press. Wood has had solo / two-person presentations at Rachel Uffner Gallery, New York, NY; My Pet Ram, New York, NY; Conduit Gallery, Ridgewood, NY; His work has been exhibited at Chozick Family Gallery, New York, NY; Chart, New York, NY; Geary Contemporary, Millerton, NY; The Wassaic Project, Wassaic, NY; Soloway Gallery, Brooklyn, NY; 5-50 Gallery, Queens, NY; Field of Play Gallery, Brooklyn, NY; Ortega Y Gasset Projects, Brooklyn, NY; No Place Gallery, Columbus, OH; Heaven Gallery, Chicago,IL. He currently teaches at Montclair State University, in New Jersey.