Event Calendar

All events for The Shallow Act of Seeing
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…
The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing. Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of turned wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With…