Pixel Perfect, is a fascinating exhibition of digital artwork by artists who push the boundaries into unexplored realms of expression. The latest technology is often combined with traditional mediums to express a unique and enchanting body of work. This year's Pixel Perfect exhibition provides a riveting experience for audiences, bringing together talented digital artists from around the world with exceptional talent and visions of altered states of reality.

October 26, 2007 - November 15, 2007
Reception: Thursday, November 01, 2007, 6:00pm - 8:00pm

Gallery Location: 530 West 25th St, Chelsea, New York
Gallery Hours: Tues - Sat, 11am - 6pm

Vlatko Ceric  Marco Eychenne  Martin Fox  Warren Friedman  Jasmin Hunter  Keith Kovach  Massimiliano Lattanzi  
Robert Leach  Angelina McCormick  Jere Newton Jr.  NOAH G POP  Scott C. Taft  Taro Uesugi  

Vlatko Ceric

This is a new millennium, a new age, one in which Art need no longer do battle with Science. Instead of existing in opposition, a beautiful synthesis between the two can be achieved. This lesson is perhaps taught best by Vlatko Ceric, who has blended the science of mathematics with artistic expression using specially self developed software that utilizes algorithms to transform idea into image.

Born in Zagreb, Croatia, Vlatko Ceric trained as a scientist working in the field of computer modeling and simulation, and today is a full professor of Informatics at the University of Zagreb. Vlatko first began producing images via computer in the 1970's, making use of the relatively primitive technology of printed symbols to create strikingly beautiful, yet orderly images that soon came to be in high demand. Through many years experimenting with images and image manipulation, Vlatko's works have reached new heights, and have been exhibited across the globe. There is a spirit in the machine, and Vlatko Ceric has freed it.


 

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"Spectral Variations 6"


"Spectral Vriations 5"

Marco Eychenne

Marco Eychenne, born in Lyon, France, was a cartoonist by age 8 and a publicity poster producer (for his actor father) a few years later. He later spent over 10 years in Paris, a city that has had a profound impact on his art. Mr. Eychenne refers to himself as a “human sponge” - diverse influences such as French hip-hop, Japanese movies, landscaping and bonsai can be detected in his work, where beauty isn’t just skin deep.  Marco Eychenne’s style radiates sensuality, intrigue, delicacy, and symbolism.  He wishes his art to engage one’s eyes and to agitate one’s mind.  Mr. Eychenne utilizes photography as the raw material for a unique technological graphic process. His digital collages are the result of a journey that begins with his imagination and ends with a contribution to a changing world.

Marco Eychenne received a Master of Fine Arts from the National Superior School of Decorative Arts in Paris, and currently lives in Sydney, Australia.  He has provided campaigns for Fujitsu and Volkswagen, and Mr. Eychenne’s designs have been commissioned by various French performing artists.

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"Jungle Ghost"


"Enfant Africain (African Child)"

Martin Fox

The subconscious and the surreal, the dance of what might be, and of what lurks in the depths of the mind. These are the territories that Martin Fox travels through when he creates his works. Using a variety of media, Martin imparts through his images a sense of emotion and feeling that is belied by the outwardly abstract appearance of the works themselves.

As a child, Martin spent much time wandering the great rooms and halls of New York's museums and galleries. These experiences left with him a lasting passion for art, one that has survived through a life full of artistic and practical obstacles to be presented to viewers in his works. Martin posses a Masters in Arts, has lectured in the field,and has also served as an art director for more than a decade.
Not merely pretty pieces to enjoy, Martins pieces cause the mind to work on them, with them, as the viewer discovers their own meaning within the subtle nuances of shadows and light.


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"Visions of the Dance in Blue"


"The Individual Dream"

Warren Friedman

Warren Friedman incorporates the social realism of his street photography into surreal montages. Against a neutral, but symbolic background, he experiments with a wholly unconventional arrangement of visual elements, juxtaposing images with abstract graphical elements. His goal is to "reach beyond the single image and express, in a new way, the narrative impulse that motivates much of my work."  Yet while embracing technological innovations, he has not lost touch with the importance of presenting images of ordinary people and daily life.  

Inspired by photographers and photojournalists like Cartier-Bresson, Robert Frank, Dorothea Lange and Eugene Smith, Friedman is also strongly influenced by decades of involvement in movements for peace and justice. This mix of artistic innovation, personal history and commitment to social change informs Friedman's work and inspires him to focus on and assert the value of the individual

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"Untitled (Broken Symmetry #1)"


"Untitled (Broken Symmetry #4)"

Jasmin Hunter

Beauty lies in every atom, yet these human eyes are so limited in their perception. We see only the surface of things, yet with delicate skill and infinite care, even the weightless light can be teased from its hiding place and revealed in a new glory. This is the work of Jasmin Hunter. With a passion for photography and nature, Jasmin Hunter has taken the science of imaging and developed it to an art form. Born in Port Jefferson, New York, she discovered photography as a child, and in her subsequent training as a Microbiologist, she found the mystique of electron microscopy. Combined with her skill, these two sciences and art forms create photographs that gift the viewer once in a lifetime views of the world.

Light. We bathe in it daily, sometimes taking the luminosity of the world for granted. Jasmin brings new light to the lives of her viewers with images that remind us that the world we each live and breathe in is art itself

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"Hollywood Blv."


"Abstract Light"

Keith Kovach

Keith Kovach creates digital prints that peel away and tear apart social convention and delineated artistic genres alike. He creates images of nature and the human body which mirror the decomposition of form. His women metamorphose into thick-scaled reptiles; his faces crack into assemblages of skin and shards. The viewer is implicated and asked to contend with notions of struggle and transition because the evocative works depict luminal moments of irreversible transformative processes. Because these changes are violently imposed upon the human body and familiar elements of nature, the viewer must put aside complex feelings of discomfort and reflect on the underlying challenges of Kovach's representation. Revealing a remarkable mastery of digital manipulation, these works not only offer visual examples of Jacques Derrida's meditations on Deconstruction but function as cultural criticism in and of themselves.

In 1986 Keith Kovach received his M.F.A. from the University of South Florida. Working as a free-lance artist for over ten years, he has specialized in multimedia development, animation, and commercial photography. A senior Fulbright Scholar in Media Studies, Keith Kovach has taught at the University of Central Florida, the National University of Fine Arts in Bucharest, Romania, and at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI).

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"WhiteOnWhite"


"Surprised"

Massimiliano Lattanzi

Childhood walks among the ruins of Ancient Rome and structural remains that time has separated from the wholes they once were, left a deep impression on Massimiliano Lattanzi. More inspiration came from the cosmos, which drove him to design telescopes and to establish a private astronomical observatory, which he maintains even to this day. These atemporal and decontextualized apprehensions of the creations of man and the universe inform Lattanzi's approach to photography. He says he does not seek to shout a message but to convey in a whisper "to let the observer immerse himself in a dimension of silence, where the artist disappears and each viewer can see his own reflection, and in this manner begin a process of self- exploration, and eventual self-recognition." His digital prints on canvas mix starkness and vibrant light with such intensity that their subjects are made ancillary, challenging the observer to empathically interact with the work itself. This is why Lattanzi labels his art, first and foremost, spiritual. "Stop rushing!" Lattanzi and his images exhort. "Stand still, breathe, and listen to yourself."

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"Athmos #06"


"Istos #07"

Robert Leach

Jubilation and introspection mark the fantastic paintings of Robert Leach. His painterly works, employing a brilliant color palette, feature the street scenes, landscapes, and people that engendered his creative life. Leach began painting in 1978 at the age of 45, with a range of experiences already blooming and coming to life in his mind. In explaining his creative impetus Leach states that he would like his paintings to "open the minds of all people to the beauty of human nature." Leach’s paintings are alive with the people and energy of New York City and flow together seamlessly with his love of the natural world.

His success as an artist was as instantaneous as his immersion in the visual arts. His first one-man show in Harlem sold every piece, and provided him with portrait commissions in addition to local acclaim.
Leach is also deeply involved in educational and humanitarian work, such as Art Without Borders and Habitat for Humanity. Robert Leach lives and works in New York.

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"Man with Yellow Hat"


"Old San Juan"

Angelina McCormick

Photographer Angelina McCormick captures the fleeting beauty of the world around her through the lens of the camera. Transfering these images from reality to film, she negotiates her inner emotions, conflicts, and thoughts. Although her photographs always portray external subjects, they originate within her spirit, existing as concrete representations of her interior thoughts.  Working from the concept that art is dependant on contradictions: light and dark, hard and soft, still and moving, McCormick's photographs possess a sophisticated sense of balance, illustrated in her masterful use of negative space.  Each subject, be it a human figure or a single flower, gracefully intertwines with empty spatial fields, creating visually stunning and graphic shapes imbued with an almost spiritual organic quality.

 

Born in Ontario, Canada, Angelina McCormick is continually inspired by the experiences and emotions of her daily life.  After graduating with honors from The School of Photographic Arts in Ottawa, McCormick now shares her deep artistic knowledge as an instructor of the highly regarded institution.

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"Gerbera Daisy No.1"


"Rose No.1"

Jere Newton Jr.

Jere Newton Jr’s hypnotic swirls of color propel you toward a higher consciousness.  With a belief that “Art is our poetry on how we see life,” he forgoes traditional depictions for more abstract renderings that verge on the emotional and spiritual.  His work enables you to break free from the obvious to perceive things in a new light.  Using mixed media and a computer, he stretches hermit crabs, Orcas, cats, and crowds of people beyond their normal shapes and sizes. Nevertheless, his digital photography takes on a painterly quality from his long, broad sweeps of blues, purples, and blacks.  Says the Mississippi-based artist: “Art is a mystic realm, and is related to God, I take no credit for my art, I’m essentially a channel, and some times I’m astonished at how my art turned out, and say my God did I do that?”  

The centripetal motion inherent in his work resonates with the artist’s personal belief in eternity being a continuous flow from life. He says that artists never die: “They just paint away into the next life.”

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"Orca"


"Waiting"

NOAH G POP

Digital art has become the voice of a new generation.  Noah Greenspan - aka “NOAH G POP” - constantly reinvents and redefines the limits of this burgeoning art form with his unique fusion of digital photography, pop expressionism and the finesse of past masters creating true manifestations of endless possibilities.

A Brooklyn native, Noah is much more than a talented artist.  Trained as a cardiovascular and pulmonary specialist, his works reflect a lifetime of schooling, meticulous attention to detail and a wholly unique perspective on the heart, mind and soul. From his first look through the lens, Noah seeks the true essence of his subject.  For him, the medium is much more than the mere message.  Instead, the medium is a catalyst that heightens and transforms the message in magnificent and imaginative new dimensions.  Stunning, innovative and incomparable, Noah's works are vigorously sought after…so, come view his art and find a new reality in today’s continually-evolving cyber-age.

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"Bliss"


"Shakti"

Scott C. Taft

What a gift is it to be able to look at life once more with the eyes of a child, seeing it unfold in new glory with surreal and vibrant colors that fire the imagination and call the soul. Scott C. Taft is a master of the art of photo impressionism, a form where raw photographs are taken and enhanced with digital technology to create stunning works of art. Since early childhood, Scott had a passion for photography, beginning with his mother's Kodak Brownie Hawkeye when he was just in the third grade. He later received his BFA, and in the course of his studies discovered his primary influences in Impressionism and Fauvism.

Scott's pictures blur the line between art and photography, between fantasy and reality. Color is the key to his work, the tool with which he draws the sublime from the mundane. Scott's art is emotion perfectly balanced with finely honed technique, and his works are a delight to the eye, mind, and spirit.

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"Autumn Series 1"


"Autumn Series 2"

Taro Uesugi

With floral-inspired icons, geometric shapes, and futuristic symmetry, Taro Uesugi's digital psychedelia melds cutting-edge technology and traditional Japanese design. He creates virtual collages, slicing up familiar, contemporary textures like stripes, dots, and numbers, and composes strong visual lines of squares or triangles. He also creates futuristic spectrum waves, with cubes floating on a matrix of dots, blinding starlight, and deep blue waves.

In addition to the unique technological skill apparent in his work, the wide range of styles through which Taro Uesugi engages us reflects his sensitivity to the artistic traditions of the past. To view Taro Uesugi's art is to rediscover op-art, abstraction, and the organic shapes of Japanese nature images. He makes use of these traditions to serve his unique vision, one attuned to popular, contemporary styles as well as the foundations of his cultural history.

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"06"


"Pyramid"

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