Retrospective
Mar.1 – Mar. 29
Lea Lackey-Zachmann
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Artist-run co-op gallery in the heart of downtown Winston-Salem since 1984
JUST-U.S.
Not Just for U.S. But JUSTICE for ALL
Owens Daniels and Perviz Heyat
Exhibition Dates: February 2, – March 1, 2025
Reception and talk February 23rd 2-4 pm.
DADA Gallery Hop: Friday, 7, 7-9 pm
Throughout history artists have used their creative strength to draw attention to the divisive socio-political conditions of its community. Through a variety of two-and three- dimensional media, artists utilize their art to critique the power structures of culture, religion, and human rights. JUST-U.S. is a provocative exhibit by two artists that use visual arts and mixed media to examine this topic in different ways.
Owens Daniels uses photography and text to examine the lives of everyday people who choose to use their voices to create dialogue, build bridges, and promote cultural exchanges about these critical issues. Perviz Heyat works in the neo-expressionist style of painting to depict elements of social injustice and restriction of basic human rights and freedom, which leads to crime and imprisonment, affecting families in ways that create a vicious cycle of crime through future generations.
Owens Daniels’ photographic career started at the U.S Army Photographic School of Cartography, learning the basics of photography and photo printing. In addition to his formal training, he continues to work as a freelance photographer with a distinctive and intimate photojournalistic signature style in visual storytelling which has led to various opportunities that include Artist in Residences, Fellowship of American Art, Public Art Installations, and Grants and varied other commissions.
Perviz Heyat is a multimedia artist and a professional photographer, currently lives in Winston Salem, NC. Originally from Istanbul, Turkey, he received classical training from Professor A. Sumer of the Istanbul Academy of Art. He moved to the United States in 1982 and has exhibited his work in numerous locations in Virginia, Washington DC and New York. He moved to Winston-Salem in 2011 and started experimenting with new styles and discovering new techniques. He has been a member of Artworks Gallery for several years and exhibits regularly.
This exhibition is free and open to the public.
Looking for a unique holiday gift or a fresh addition to your art collection? Artworks Gallery is thrilled to present our holiday show, featuring stunning creations by local artists.
We’re also proud to support Art SHAC, a nonprofit that provides affordable, gently used art supplies to the community. This holiday season, 10% of all holiday show sales will be donated to Art SHAC to promote sustainability and creativity.
Learn more about Art SHAC: https://www.theartshac.org/
Event Details:
Artworks Gallery – 564 N. Trade St.
Open Hours – Tues.–Fri., 11 am–5 pm & Sun., 1 pm–4 pm
Free Drop-In Crafting Sessions:
Holiday Card Making: Fri., Dec. 6, 11:30 am–1:30 pm
Vision Collage Boards: Sat., Jan. 4, 1 pm–3 pm
(Start 2025 with creativity!)
All supplies provided—just bring your imagination!
Subject to change, please check exhibition listings for the most recent information on 2025 exhibits.
January
December continuing exhibit
February (Feb. 2 – Mar.1)
Owens Daniels, Perviz Heyat
March (Mar.1 – Mar. 29 )
Lea Lackey-Zachmann retrospective (one-person)
April (March 30 – April 26)
Betti Pettinati-Longinotti, Marion Adams
May (April 27 – May 31)
Karen Kopf, Steve Mizel
June (June 1 – June 28)
Seth Moskowitz, Cheryl Powell
July (June 29 – July 26)
Wendell Myers solo
August (July 29 – August 30)
Kim Varnadoe, Jim Gemma
September (August 31 – Sept. 27)
Kathy Schermer-Gramm, Marybeth Chapman
October (Sept. 28 – Nov. 1)
Mona Wu, Elizabeth Kelly, Sujata Aher
November (Nov. 2 – Nov.29)
Jessica Tefft, Nanu LaRosee
December (Nov. 30 – Dec. 27)
Group Holiday Show
Artworks Gallery Presents:
Perviz Heyat: “The Industrial Revolution”
Exhibition Dates: October 27 – November 30, 2024
Opening Reception: Saturday, November 9 , 2 – 4 pm
Open for DADA First Friday
Gallery Hop: November 1, 7 – 9 pm
And Art Crush: Friday, November 15, 7- 9 pm
Perviz Heyat is a multimedia artist living in Winston Salem, North Carolina. He began his art training at the age of six and his formal training at the age of 14 in Istanbul, Turkey. He had his first solo show at the age of 17 in Istanbul.
Heyat approaches his art with belief in complete freedom of expression. He believes that every person has art within them and that we all use art every day. The choices we make in our lives reflect the artistic direction of our existence, with a delicate balance of the opposing forces of rules and freedom. This balance of opposing forces is a necessary part of being human.
Perviz has travelled across the United States working in big cities and on Native American reservations throughout the past 35 years. His experiences are the subject matter of his paintings, which address the social unrest, inequality, and alienation inherent in a modern society focused on economic and technological progress.
Perviz had several exhibitions in private galleries in Istanbul before he moved to the United States in 1982. He has exhibited his paintings in galleries in Wheeling, West Virginia. His paintings were also featured in the Sony Pictures Classics release, Whatever, which debuted at the Sundance Film Festival in 1997. He had regular solo and group exhibits in Washington, DC at the Studio Gallery, and in Manhattan, New York, at the Phoenix Gallery between 2002- 2011.
Perviz moved to Winston Salem in 2011 and started experimenting with new styles and discovering new techniques. Evolving from a realistic style, he painted in “pop art” style for several years until he adopted the abstract expressionist style he employs in this exhibit.
His current show called the “The Industrial Revolution” represents the abstract expressionist force behind this revolution and is influenced by the American masters from the fifties and sixties.
The exhibits are free and open to the public.
Artworks Gallery, the longest-running cooperative art gallery in Winston-Salem, is thrilled to announce its 40th-anniversary exhibition. In addition to its regular group show, all member artists will create unique, small, framed artworks available for purchase at a special anniversary price of $40 each. All proceeds from these sales will go directly toward supporting the gallery’s daily operations, ensuring that it continues to be a pillar of the local arts community for years to come.
An opening reception and party will be held on Sunday, October 6th, from 2–4 pm. All are welcome to join in the celebration, including a champagne toast at 2:30pm.
Exhibition Dates: Sunday, September 29th –Saturday, October 26th, 2024
DADA Gallery Hop: Friday, October 4th, 7 – 9 pm
Art Crush: Friday, October 18th , 7- 9 pm
Closing Party: Saturday, October 26th, 2-5pm
Artworks Gallery Presents:
Karen Kopf, “The Woods: Paintings of and on Wood” and Kathy Schermer-Gramm, “Earth(L)y Discoveries: Botanicals on Paper”
Exhibition Dates: September 1-28, 2024
Artist Reception & Gallery Talk:
Sunday, September 15, 2-4pm, talk begins at 2:30
Also open for:
Gallery Hop: Friday, September 6, 7-9 pm
Art Crush: Friday, September 20, 7-9 pm
While living on a river, Karen Kopf became fascinated by the stumps of trees dredged out and left on the river bank. She has delved into the many shapes within these forms and depicted them realistically and abstractly using a textured technique called decalomania. The forms swirl and crest like waves of wood. Then the artist began painting on wood itself and sometimes created images based on what she saw in the grains and sometimes created images with the grain of the wood encapsulated in the strokes. This part of the exhibit includes flat panels of wood as well as other formats such as triptychs.
After studying painting in Austria for a year, Karen Kopf established a studio in Marbella, Spain on the Costa del Sol. Five years under the bright Spanish sun added an intensity to the colors of her palette and a wide range of experiences and exhibitions to her career as a professional artist. Her works from this period are all over the world. Upon returning to the U.S., she painted in upstate New York, where she was resident director of Guy Park State Historic Site. Eventually she moved to Winston-Salem where she earned a Master’s Degree from Salem College and worked for twenty years as a teacher while she and her husband raised two sons. She currently exhibits at Artworks Gallery in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Karen Kopf, “Female Form in Nature”
Kathy Schermer-Gramm, the botanical illustrator, is an obsessive observer of plant life, a visual documenter of that which grows from the soil, dwelling on identifying species and describing it with imagery. Kathy’s interpretations expand upon this. She does not look for the classical plant portrait based on Carl Linnaeus’s system of taxonomy where the focus is on the reproductive cycle. Still the documentarian, staying true to her subject, she searches out random remnants of life found on her daily woodland walks. The artist finds fascination in the smallest of details, the wonders of natural architecture created with plant materials, and the effects of seasonal changes in the environment. This is the botanically inclusive artist who uses the fine point of a pencil or brush to render those minute details and textures through a slow meditative process.
Kathy Schermer-Gramm is a Society of Botanical Artists Fellow who was raised in Southern California earning her master’s degree in illustration from California State University, Fullerton. Her career includes that of book and magazine illustrator, nature educator, and college art professor. She has been a core instructor in the North Carolina Botanical Garden Botanical Art Program (UNC) for over twelve years, where her teaching expanded to include online courses with students from around the globe. Her botanical art, focusing on Southeastern flora and edibles, has been juried annually into the American Society of Botanical Artists, Guild of Natural Science Illustrators, Society of Botanical Artists, and Birds in Art international exhibitions.
Kathy Schermer-Gramm, “Pine Rust Galls”
This exhibit is free and open to the public.
Artworks Gallery Presents a three-person exhibition:
Mary Beth Blackwell-Chapman, Alix Hitchcock and Lea Lackey-Zachmann
Exhibition Dates: July 28-August 31, 2024
Artist Reception & Gallery Talk:
Sunday, August 11, 2-4pm, talk begins at 2:30
Also open for:
Gallery Hop: Friday, August 2, 7-9 pm
Art Crush: Friday, August 16, 7-9 pm
Alix Hitchcock received her MA in painting from NYU, and her BFA in printmaking and painting from UNC Greensboro. She is a retired Instructor in Drawing at Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC after 24 years. She was the Winston-Salem Artist of the Year in 1998, and is a founding board member of Artworks Gallery. Her current exhibit consists of one-of-a-kind prints with colored pencil additions exploring themes of nature.
Alix Hitchcock, “Spring Breeze”
Lea Lackey-Zachmann has lived in Winston-Salem for many years. Her love of nature, gardening and wild habitats makes living right across from the 70-acre Washington Park always an interesting place to live. She holds an MFA in painting and art history and a graduate teaching degree in art education from UNC Greensboro. She is retired from teaching at High Point University for 29 years, Salem College for 10 years and other regional schools in Virginia and South Carolina. She is a founding member of Artworks Gallery and has exhibited there each year since 1985. The subject matter of most of her work concerns the nature of consciousness. This new work shows a realism concerning the idea that the consciousness of a cell might retain the memory of having been once a part of a butterfly, a snake, or anything physical.
Lea Lackey-Zachmann, “Cellular Memory: Frog”
Mary Beth Blackwell-Chapman received a BA in English Literature from Goucher College and an MA from Northwestern University in Motion Picture. She has attended studio art classes at UNC Greensboro and several workshops at Penland, and Arrowmont. In addition to raising three children with her husband, she has worked as a Montessori teacher, a dance instructor, and a yoga teacher. Her current exhibition presents abstract landscapes painted on linen and silk with soy milk and natural pigments. They are evocative, subtle works that may give feelings of quiet and peace, of connection of the natural world.
Mary Beth Blackwell-Chapman, “Coastal Marsh”
This exhibit is free and open to the public.
Artworks Gallery Presents a two-person exhibition:
Marion Adams: “Simplicity Observed”
and James Gemma: “Exploring Color/Shape Relationships”
Exhibition Dates: June 30-July 27, 2024
Also open for:
Gallery Hop: Friday, July 5, 7-9 pm
Art Crush: Friday, July 19, 7-9 pm
Marion Adams is inspired by master colored pencil artists, particularly Janie Gildow and Cecile Baird. Adams is drawn to the beautifully composed still life arrangements with their details and dramatic lighting, however Adams seeks simplicity in her works. Utilizing the pattern in fabric or the design on a plate in contrast to a 3-dimensional piece of fruit on china, she emphasizes the beauty of simple observation in her still life pieces and her flower drawings.
“Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.” — Leonardo da Vinci.
Marion Adams, “Pears on a Plate”
James Gemma’s abstract art is a visual and conceptual exploration of the artistic relationships that can be created among and between colors and shapes. In this exhibition, his works utilize geometric elements and other dynamic visual forms as support for these explorations. Some of these works have strong and even surprising combinations of color. Some have sharp and angular shapes, while others have a more flowing quality. Despite its conceptual nature, his intention is for this art to have a strong aesthetic and perhaps even an exciting or emotional appeal. He has created these original art works using digital technology and archival paper and inks.
James Gemma, “Color Crossing”
Marion Adams is a retired Middle School Science and Math teacher. She has taught art history, painting and drawing on the high school and college levels. She holds a master’s degree from Georgia State University. She has been a member of Artworks since 2015.
James Gemma graduated from The Ohio State University and has had careers as university professor and consumer research professional. He has studied art and printmaking at Salem College and Wake Forest University, and has participated in multiple art workshops including at Penland and the Huntington Museum of Art. Mr. Gemma is a member of Artworks Gallery, Artfolios, and Associated Artists of Winston-Salem.
This exhibit is free and open to the public.
Artworks Gallery Presents a two-person exhibition:
Owens Daniels: “Something Bold: The Art that Broke the Mold”
and Seth Moskowitz: “Sounds of Spring”
Exhibition Dates: June 2-29, 2024
Also open for:
Gallery Hop: Friday, June 7, 7-9 pm
Art Crush: Friday, Friday, June 21, 7-9 pm
Artists’ Reception and Gallery Talk: Sunday, June 9, 2-4 pm
Freedom. That is what art is, it’s the something inside of everyone given the chance will break the rules, stand out and boldly go when you would dare not. Owens Daniels’ new collection of works, “Something Bold: The Art That Broke the Mold”, has the ability to provoke, uplift, and transform. It is Daniels’ intention to ignite a sense of curiosity and wonder in those who encounter it.
Owens Daniels, “Uncle Remus”
Ultimately, Daniels’ artistic journey is about pushing boundaries, embracing vulnerability, and celebrating the limitless possibilities of creative expression. In a world that often demands conformity, this new work stands as a testament to the enduring spirit of courage and the profound impact of daring to be different.
Owens Daniels, “Body and Soul”
Owens Daniels’ photographic career started at the U.S Army Photographic School of Cartography, learning the basics of photography and photo printing. In addition to his formal training, he continues to work as a freelance photographer with a distinctive and intimate photojournalistic signature style in visual storytelling which has led to various opportunities that include Artist in Residences, Fellowship of American Art, Public Art Installations, and Grants and varied other commissions.
Seth Moskowitz calls his show, ‘Sounds of Spring,’ but you won’t hear any music, birdsong or any of the other sounds you might associate with spring. Unless you have synesthesia, a condition that causes some people to see shapes or colors when they hear music, or taste foods when they read or see shapes or patterns.
Seth Moskowitz, “Who Let the Dogs Out”
None of that happens to the artist. However, this spring Moskowitz noticed that the splendor of the world reawakening from winter filled him with the same type of emotions and sensations experienced when he was captured by music. This work represents an effort to recreate some of what he felt while wandering around Winston experiencing the season in bloom.
Seth Moskowitz, “Ta-da!”
Seth Moskowitz is a Winston-Salem based artist who creates and combines photographic images into artworks that rarely resemble photography or the images that they incorporate. He made a living for more than four decades immersed in a constant chatter of written and verbal communications. Seth began to create visual art in 2004 as a way to enter a peaceful, magical place that is literally, beyond words. He has been a member of the Artworks Gallery since 2017, and a member of Associated Artists of Winston-Salem since 2005. Since his retirement in 2019, he has devoted himself full-time to appreciating the beauty of the natural world, exploring and creating art, and helping to encourage, nurture and promote the growth of local artists and their artwork.
This exhibit is free and open to the public.