Scott Recker
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“Wild in the Streets” features creations from more than 20 artists that consider and challenge the boundaries between street art and fine art.
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Each artist in the group show “Made You A Mixtape” picked one song to inspire a work of visual art. The exhibition runs through March 17.
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In his exhibition at Louisville Visual Art, Lance G. Newman II transforms found objects and Black & Mild cigar materials into deeply personal moments in time. The show runs through Feb. 3.
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Mark Anthony Mulligan, who died at the age of 59 last November, is currently being celebrated with a retrospective exhibition titled “Share a Little of Things of Yourself” at the newly opened Outsider Art Museum and Gallery in the Portland Neighborhood.
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In his latest exhibition, local artist Andy Perez uses his signature bold, cut-and-paste style to be vulnerable about sometimes feeling disconnected from his Puerto Rican roots. The show blends complex feelings — insecurities, joy and searching — into a beautiful statement.
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The Paste-Up Mural Project (PUMP), which features the photography of numerous local artists on outdoor walls, is a first-time extension of the Louisville Photo Biennial. The people behind it hope that the project inspires interest from those who might not usually go to galleries.
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Alicia Little’s solo exhibition at Louisville’s Houseguest Gallery mesmerizes with mazes of bright colors and unpredictable structures. “Slow and clunky decision making” runs through Saturday.
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The renowned visual artist is widely known as a sculptor, but in his latest exhibition, "My Muse-ic," at Moremen Gallery, William Duffy shares the passion project he’s been working on for the last half century: drawings of iconic jazz, blues and gospel musicians.
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Two exhibitions at KMAC explore the impact of spirituality and mythology on humanity. The works of Masako Miki, a guest artist from California, as well as curated selections from the contemporary museum’s collection, take a look at the lasting power of the stories that we tell.
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FifteenTWELVE’s Common Gallery hosted two impactful exhibits from several cutting-edge artists. And they are tied to the seven-story Muhammad Ali mural emblazoned upon the YMCA on Chestnut St.