Agora Art Gallery – Contemporary Art Dealers


Jacqueline Rosenberg

Indian Queen, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, PhotographyIndian Queen, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, Photography
Stones in Heaven, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, PhotographyStones in Heaven, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, Photography
Hiding, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, PhotographyHiding, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, Photography
Purple Eye, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, PhotographyPurple Eye, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, Photography
Indian Queen
Mixed Media Print on Canvas
70.5" x 47"
Stones in Heaven
Mixed Media Print on Canvas
82" x 55"
Hiding
Mixed Media Print on Canvas
47" x 31.5"
Purple Eye
Mixed Media Print on Canvas
47" x 31.5"

Lips, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, PhotographyLips, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, Photography
Do Not Tell, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, PhotographyDo Not Tell, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, Photography
Big Eye, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, PhotographyBig Eye, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, Photography
Silver, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, PhotographySilver, Mixed Media Print on Canvas, Photography
Lips
Mixed Media Print on Canvas
47" x 31.5"
Do Not Tell
Mixed Media Print on Canvas
35.5" x 23.5"
Big Eye
Mixed Media Print on Canvas
47" x 31.5"
Silver
Mixed Media Print on Canvas
49" x 31.5"

Tripping the Light Fantastic: The Fine Art Photography Exhibition
Reception: Thursday, November 29, 2007 6-8 PM
Exhibition Dates: 11/20/2007 - 12/11/2007

 
Press Release

 

“The beauty of people in photography goes beyond the reality,” Jacqueline Rosenberg states, “but that's why we love it.”  Rosenberg’s  two decades as a fashion photographer served as a sort of vocational training for her artistic career; and her trade has now been fully converted into passion.  She takes as her subject matter women of varying types—but all strong, all emancipated in their femininity. Before transferring her photos onto canvas, Rosenberg superimposes upon them images of beads, jewels, geometric figures, out-of-proportion body parts from other photos—a practice that results in framing the internal discourse of each piece, allotting a viewing experience that is more than the sum of its parts.  

Her approach reminds one of Picasso and how his distortions were always meant to convey information, to guide the encounter.  If there’s a message Rosenberg hopes to convey, it’s that we should accept people of all kinds, and that we ourselves should be* *independent and free in our self-expression, our passions, and our joys.



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