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CONTACT: Beth L. Lorow Aughinbaugh Gallery at Messiah College exhibits work of three adjunct faculty
GRANTHAM, Pa. (Sept. 15, 2006) —Adjunct faculty members in Messiah College’s department of visual arts will display their work in the college’s Aughinbaugh Gallery. An artists’ talk and reception featuring photographer Andrew Bale, printmaker Brenton Good and painter Young Won will be held Oct. 6 from 7 to 9 p.m. The three artists’ work, though created in diverse media, shares a finely wrought sense of subtle expression and delicate movement. The Aughinbaugh Gallery is located on the ground floor of the Climenhaga Fine Arts Center on the college’s Grantham campus. The gallery is open Mondays through Thursdays, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; on Fridays from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; and on Saturdays and Sundays from 2 to 5 p.m.
About the Artists Andrew Bale teaches photography at Messiah College. Bale graduated with a bachelor of fine arts in photography from the Savannah College of Art and Design and has professional experience with known fine art photographer Chuck Henningsen and local company, Socolow Photography. Bale works primarily with an 8x10 view camera and develops photographs using the silver gelatin print process. Brenton Good is an alumnus of Messiah College’s visual arts department. Good’s specialty is printmaking, and he earned his master of fine arts degree in printmaking from the University of Dallas. Young Won is a painter who has exhibited in group shows locally and abroad. Won is a graduate of the Maryland Institute’s College of Art and teaches at both Messiah College and Harrisburg Area Community College. About the Aughinbaugh Gallery Located on the lower level of the Climenhaga Fine Arts Center on Messiah College’s Grantham campus, the M. Louise Aughinbaugh Gallery exhibits the work of internationally recognized artists from around the world, as well as faculty and students. The gallery features new exhibitions on a monthly basis ranging from traditional studio areas and the fine crafts, to conceptual art and installation. Gallery programming supplements campus classroom instruction by bringing practicing artists to campus to demonstrate techniques in classes and by organizing special evening lectures and afternoon gallery talks. The gallery also functions as a hands-on teaching laboratory for students in the college’s course on museum studies. # # # ARTICLE DATE: SEPTEMBER 15, 2006
ARTICLE NUMBER: MC-063-06 |