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Gallery in Princeton exhibits four distinct artistic voices

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“Intersection: Four Voices in Abstraction” features the work of Hunterdon Museum member artists Terri Fraser, Jim Irvine, Florence Moonan, and Catherine Suttle.

Each has a history of receiving awards, selection for multiple exhibitions, and being acquired for private collections.

“Intersection” is on view now through Friday, Jan. 27 at The Gallery at Berkshire Hathaway Fox & Roach, 253 Nassau St., Princeton, N.J. An artist reception is slated for 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 4.

“With this group of four very distinct voices, I wanted to not only explore the more tangible intersection of their vocabulary through materials and technique, but also the broader context of how we all commune at the crossroads of our collective, creative unconscious as audience, critic, curator and creator,” said Curator David Lawson. “I believe that in that space, there is a shared conversation that connects, engages and elevates us. I do hope you’ll enjoy the collection from this viewpoint and find your own ways of connecting the myriad elements at play.”

Fraser shares stories through visual art. She loves the interrelationship between nature and humanity and is forever looking for new ways to reveal their influences on each other.

Irvine’s goal is to create art that engages the viewer, by exploring tension between opposing forces of the natural and abstract, the emotional and representational – as well as that between layers of paint, color, white space and mark-making.

The driving force behind Moonan’s work is a narrative drawn from her personal history, the natural world, travel, and above all, music.

Suttle draws from painters of the mid-20th century, primarily Abstract Expressionists.


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