O'Connor Art Gallery
The mission of the O’Connor Art Gallery is to present the º£½ÇÉçÇø academic community with timely, relevant and focused contemporary art exhibitions that foster critical and thoughtful dialogue across disciplines. Located in Lewis Hall, steps away from many of the art department’s studios and classrooms, the gallery is particularly accessible to art students as a space for intimate engagement and reflection. In addition to curated exhibitions, the gallery is the site of an annual juried student show and senior thesis exhibitions.
The gallery is open to the public during the academic year.
- Monday–Friday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
- Saturday by appointment.*
Free and all are welcome.
For information, please contact Jennifer Mannebach, director, at galleryinfo@dom.edu.
Location: Lewis Hall, Fourth Floor.
*Please note that guests may have to access Lewis Hall through the side entry of the library on Saturdays.
ON EXHIBIT
Something in the Air
Featuring artists from Arts of Life and Little City Foundation
January 14–February 18
Reception: Wednesday, January 14, 4:00–6:00 p.m.
Artists Talk: 4:30 p.m.
Image Clockwise from left: Joe Flasch, Untitled 13; Charles Beinhoff, Flying Shoes; Andrew Sloane, Boathouse in Maine; Bill Lilly, White Snake; Susan Pasowicz, Something in the Air
Featured Artists
Ariée, Charles Beinhoff, Tarik Echols, Joe Flasch, Cole Fox, Harold Jeffries, Brian Kaplan, Marcus Imani Kennedy, Bill Lilly, Susan Pasowicz, Angelo LaPietra, Jeanne Reindl, Andrew Sloan, Luke Tauber
PAST EXHIBITS
Palpable
Julieta Beltran Lazo, Vesna Jovanovic, Bobbi Meier, SHENEQUA
November 12–December 17
Reception: Wednesday, November 12, 4:00–6:00 p.m.
Artist Talk: 4:30 p.m.
Images (clockwise from upper left):
Jovanovic, Fan Dancer
Meier, Decorum
SHENEQUA, Red Wine Drip
Beltrán Lazo, Ghosts Come in Pairs
Uncertain Contours
Steve Reber and Deb Sokolow
September 17–October 22
Reception: Wednesday, September 17, 4:00–6:00 p.m.
Artist's Talk: 4:30 p.m.
By means of different vocabularies, the works of Deb Sokolow and Stephen Reber help us make space for uncertainty and states of discomfort with an economy of language and perfectly pitched humor. Practices of drawing, painting, sculpture and text become scaffolding for idiosyncratic subjective responses, holding both memory and expectation. The work reminds us of the somatic presence that transforms spaces and objects, often through granular attention paid to what is sometimes considered marginal.
Sculptural installation left: Steve Reber; Drawing right: Deb Sokolow