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Charleston Reporter

Saturday, November 23, 2024

Charleston launches Prototype for a Landscape gallery exhibition, reflecting ‘shared humanity’

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The City of Charleston Office of Cultural Affairs recently announced “Prototype for a Landscape," the city’s next gallery exhibition. | File photo

The City of Charleston Office of Cultural Affairs recently announced “Prototype for a Landscape," the city’s next gallery exhibition. | File photo

The City of Charleston Office of Cultural Affairs recently announced “Prototype for a Landscape," the city’s next gallery exhibition. 

According to a press release, the gallery will shine a light on the unspoken connections that hold communities together.

“Portraits of healers, agricultural field maps, celestial constellations and molecular forces reveal the deeper threads that bind us to our land and to each other,” the release states. “With more than 50 new artworks ranging from small black and white photographs to large, bright print work and gilded paintings, the show reflects a shared humanity and reveals that there is much more to a landscape when we consider the connections beyond the surface.”

Prototype for a Landscape opened on Friday, Oct. 22 at 34 Prioleau St. and will remain on view through Sunday, Dec. 19.

The gallery exhibition will feature work by artists Alice Keeney, Mary Stuart Hall and Kate Hooray Osmond as they explore themes of power, transcendence and generation, the release states. Artists Keeney and Osmond are based in Charleston, while Hall is based in Atlanta.

Due to ongoing COVID-19 concerns, the release requests City Gallery guests reserve free tickets for timed admission to the gallery ahead of their visit. While inside, face masks will be required for all guests and staff.

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