• Staff Photo
  • Museum Staff

    January 10, 2019
Feature Image Yoga in the Galleries

Third Thursday Scheduled for January 17 around Athens

Note

The next Third Thursday — the monthly evening of art in Athens, Georgia — is scheduled for Thursday, January 17, from 6 to 9 p.m. All exhibitions are free and open to the public.

This Third Thursday will offer one event in addition to the exhibitions. None of the venues will be closed.

Third Thursday was established in 2012 to encourage attendance at Athens’ established art venues through coordination and co-promotion by the organizing entities. Rack cards promoting Third Thursday and visual art in Athens are available upon request. This schedule and venue locations and regular hours can be found at 3thurs.org.

Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia

Yoga in the Galleries, 6 p.m. — Join us for a yoga class surrounded by works of art in the galleries. Led by instructors from Five Points Yoga, this program is free and open to both beginner and experienced yogis. Space is limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis; tickets are available at the front desk starting at 5:15 p.m. Yoga mats provided.

On view:

“The Reluctant Autocrat: Tsar Nicholas II” — This exhibition focuses on the reigns of the last two Romanov rulers: Alexander III (1881–1894) and his son and successor Nicholas II (1894–1917).

“Out of the Darkness: Light in the Depths of the Sea of Cortez” — Artist Rebecca Rutstein uses UGA marine sciences professor Samantha Joye’s research to create an interactive sculptural installation and several large paintings.

“Richard Hunt: Synthesis” — This exhibition will focus on formative periods in the career of American sculptor Richard Hunt.

“One Heart, One Way: The Journey of a Princely Art Collection” — Russian fine and decorative arts dating from ca. 1660 to 1952 from the family of the Russian Princes Belosselsky-Belozersky.

Permanent Collection — Thirteen galleries house a large portion of the Georgia Museum of Art’s collection, including many of the 100 American paintings that made up Alfred Heber Holbrook’s founding gift.

Lamar Dodd School of Art Galleries, University of Georgia

“La Mostra: Cortona 2018” — La Mostra, or The Show is a continuation of a 49-year-old tradition exhibiting artwork produced by students and faculty during their sojourn at UGA’s residential center in Cortona, Italy. Works produced by Cortona program participants during spring, summer and fall programs of 2018 will be displayed at the third floor of the Dodd Galleries.

Lyndon House Arts Center

"Sitting with the Elders: Stories of Black Athenians,” an exhibition by Broderick Flanigan — When an elder dies, it’s as if a library has been burned to the ground. The stories, the voices, the history, the places and the legacy that were held inside all disappear. “Sitting with the Elders” uses art and story to capture the spirit of voices long gone and to amplify the voices of those still among us whose lessons we need today. The exhibition preserves a legacy that is vanishing, and it reminds readers of the messy, challenging, difficult obstacles in life we face in order to become thoughtful and engaged citizens of our communities and country.

“Antoine Stewart” — Painting show in the Lounge Gallery.

ATHICA: Athens Institute for Contemporary Art

“ATHICA’s Annual Members’ Showcase” — Featuring the work of ATHICA’s membership, which has helped to sustain the all-volunteer organization for over 18 years. Open 4 – 9 p.m.

Ciné

“Cameron Lyden: The Wave Tamer’s Lullaby and Other Artifacts” — Cameron Lyden is an Athens-based artist who uses his work to construct a narrative for the viewer by creating fictional tools with ambiguous and fantastical functions. It is his goal to offer the viewer an opportunity to feel a sense of childlike wonder as they explore the faux history of these objects.

Hotel Indigo, Athens

“Solar System (dad, you came to earth a long time ago)” — A new installation by Trevor Reese at the GlassCube. Known for his room-filling sculptural works, Reese has turned the GlassCube into a hospitality suite of miscellaneous furnishings ready to take off into outer limits. Conventional objects, ladders, chairs, stools and tables, stacked in an orderly fashion, each have their own personal multi-colored stylish disco ball. A hodge-podge of mirrors, mined from friends’ basements and collected from thrift stores, reflect the environment day and night. Working within a practice of exposing what is usually hidden, Reese’s installation is as if you have opening your storage shed and found a space age dance party.

“Color & Comp” — Just in time for the start of school, “Color & Comp” includes artists playing with form, placement, hue, shade and pigment. Featured are shaped canvasses by Jason Matherly, the wonderful Lego compositions by Mike Landers, Shawn Campbell’s photo works of isolated football players on a field of gold, Jaime Keiter’s “Memphis”-inspired ceramic wall pieces,James Wilson’s paper collages and In Kyoung Chun, plexiglass domestic scenes.

The Classic Center

“Stitch” — A brand new, colorful, texture-filled exhibition of contemporary quilts is on view in Classic Gallery I. Featuring the smoky industrial-scapes of Elizabeth Barton, the obsessive geometric precision of Barbette Houser, the vibrant sewn gardens of Cleo Ward, the magic and mischief of Danielle Lasker and the meditative devotion of Anne Marie Vencill.

“Jaquelynn Faass” — A solo exhibition in Classic Gallery II of close-up, detailed portraiture.

Contact: Michael Lachowski, Georgia Museum of Art, mlachow@uga.edu.