This week, Otis College expands its Charles White scholarship to two underrepresented artists, previews for upcoming openings, and an exhibition up the coast highlights the women artists in the Bay Area's Abstract Expressionist scene.
The four-year Charles White Art and Design Scholarship will be given to two underrepresented artists from anywhere in the country. | Matt Stromberg Become a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Halina Kliem and Daniel Rothman, “The Ballona/Waachnga Project” (2022) (courtesy the artists) This year’s Fulcrum Festival, an annual series of talks, workshops, performances, and exhibitions exploring the intersection of art and science, is based around the theme of “Deep Ocean/Deep Space,” looking to both celestial and aquatic wonders. The Long View amply demonstrates that Jay DeFeo and Joan Brown may be the best known Bay Area women artists who worked in abstraction, but they were far from alone. | John Seed Eyvind Earle (American, 1916-2000), "Concept Art" (1958), from Sleeping Beauty (Walt Disney Productions), Hilbert Collection (© Disney Enterprises, Inc., courtesy the Getty Center) ON VIEW IN MUSEUMS & GALLERIES |