PREVIEW CRITIQUE

by Carmen A. Morin

 

Her energy bursts forth from the canvas treating your eye to a feast of color and design, grabbing your attention with the dancing reds and whites of “Afternoon in the Orchard” or leading you in procession from rich blues into the mist in “Mist of Early Morning.”

Mazzucato

classic art — contemporary vision

Exhibit Review - Morin/Miller Galleries (New York, U.S.A.) - October 1989

Listen to your eyes. Hear the anger of apartheid in “Voices” or share the silent communication of friends as they listen to a bird's song in “Hark, the Nightingale.” Feel yourself pulled into the dance of “Street Rhythm” or join in the refrain of “Evening Songs.”


The landscapes invite you into nature—into a particular moment captured in color.


The figures are as jubilant as “Harvest Celebration” or as silent as “Shadow,” as festive as “Parasols” or as pensive as “Morning Glories,” but all are strong vibrant expressions of a woman touching her own powerful spirit and letting us share it through her work.

Carla Carli Mazzucato

Afternoon in the Orchard

Voices

Street Rhythm


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