STAY IN THE LOOP
WITH CANDELA ARTIST AND EXHIBITION FEATURES
End of Year Wishes
A letter (three, actually) from Candela founder, Gordon Stettinius, as we wrap up 2023 and look to 2024.
EXHIBITION CLOSING RECEPTION: Conjuring the Composition
Candela Gallery is pleased to announce Conjuring the Composition, a photography and painting exhibition by Richmond artist Willie Anne Wright, opening November 3, 2023.
EXHIBITION: Conjuring the Composition
Candela Gallery is pleased to announce Conjuring the Composition, a photography and painting exhibition by Richmond artist Willie Anne Wright, opening November 3, 2023.
EXHIBITION: Altered
Through various meticulous assemblage techniques, ALTERED features fabricated environments, imaginative dialogues, and memorials while examining alternative approaches to image-making.
EXHIBITION: Angle of Draw
Through the lenses of the natural landscape and propaganda imagery, Angle of Draw examines the intersections of power, sustainability, and whiteness in the United States. Bush draws from propaganda imagery from the 1960s and 1970s to create starkly lit black-and-white photographs in the studio and the physical landscape. Throughout his process, Bush considers the impact of the fossil-fuel industry on the natural environment, local economy, and future prospects of those left behind by corporations.
EXHIBITION: All Consumed
Candela Gallery is pleased to announce ALL CONSUMED, a photography solo exhibition by Colorado-based artist Gary Emrich, opening May 12, 2023.
EXHIBITION: Next to Myself
Candela Gallery is pleased to announce Next to Myself, a mixed media photography solo exhibition by artist Liliana Guzmán, opening May 12, 2023.
Machine Vision Artist Feature: Corinne Vionnet
Machine Vision Artist Feature: Corinne Vionnet
Machine Vision Artist Feature: Drew Nikonowicz
Machine Vision Artist Feature: Drew Nikonowicz
PRESS: Machine Vision
“Machine Vision” at Candela Gallery is a sobering look at what that revised reality and its new cultural artifacts are shaping up to resemble. The survey of tech-based artists features photographers using robotics, artificial intelligence, and public surveillance cameras, as well as unconventional cameras such as scanners, computer monitors, X-rays and digital composites of appropriated, web-based images. By Karen Newton for Style Weekly