Sculpture show has nature on its mind

Henry Hudson on the Half Moon

 He stands 10 feet tall, with a body of iron beams and welded scrap metal. His face is a bicycle wheel, with nuts and bolts are riveted to his hat and various water-faucet handles serving as shirt-buttons.

 ”Henry Hudson and the Half Moon,” a sculpture that looms at the water’s edge in Kingston’s Rotary Park.

Gallagher, 25, is the curator of the 2009 Kingston Sculpture Biennial exhibition, and she called the sculpture, created by miChelle Vara, “powerful yet whimsical.”

“With the quadricentennial, it’s such a great centerpiece,” Gallagher said, referring to the 400th anniversary of Henry Hudson’s voyage up the river that bears his name.

The theme of this year’s biennial, the ninth, is “Go Green and Keep the Hudson Clean.” It focuses on work that pays homage to the Hudson River’s impact and uses natural or recycled materials.

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About miChelle

The Ballard Road Art Studio is home to artist miChelle M. Vara- Vara’s gallery art displays intriguing patterns of positive and negative space, light, shadow and texture, extending a rhythm achieved by the configuration of shapes in balance, capturing flow and motion. Her continual quest to capture vibrational concepts in metal and paint are evoked by her endless energy of life force. Vara offers 30 years of metal and paint with hundreds of commissions and an endless portfolio of diverse clients. Vara has an expanded background working with grants offered from state and federal facilities. She works tirelessly to meet the needs of corporate and individual clients. Vara’s progressive attitude offers the unique opportunity of working artist, business and communication; for the outcome of endless dimensions though art.

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