adam belt

HOMING IN – An Exhibition of 50 San Diego Artists

May ’09Jul
2925

HOMING IN: An Exhibition of 50 San Diego Artists

The work of San Diego’s top tier contemporary artists hasn’t been seen in the same place at the same time since 1985, when the La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art presented  “A San Diego Exhibition: Forty-Two Emerging Artists.”  

Quint Contemporary Art brings this long drought to an end with HOMING IN: An Exhibition of 50 San Diego Artists. The show presents paintings, photographs, video and sculpture; features abstraction and representation; and offers moods ranging from hot to cool – all in formats less than 24” wide due to the limited space available.  

Some of the exhibition’s artists are in their fifties, sixties and older; and were part of the La Jolla Museum’s survey nearly a quarter century ago.  The exhibition’s younger artists, those in their twenties, thirties, and forties may have no recollection whatsoever of that earlier survey.   

This exhibition is organized by gallery director Ben Strauss-Malcolm and in a move that’s unusual in the competitive world of contemporary art galleries he invited many artists affiliated with other local galleries to participate in order to make the exhibition more reflective of the full gamut of work coming out of studios in the San Diego region.  

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Adam Belt

Adam Belt – Condensation

Jul ’07Sep
131

Adam Belt, Glen Canyon Dam, 2006, acrylic paint, graphite on paper, 29-3/8" x 45-3/8"
Quint Contemporary Art is pleased to present an exhibition of recent paintings by San Diego artist Adam Belt. This will be Adam’s first solo show at Quint Contemporary Art. There will be a public reception on July 13 from 6 to 8 pm. The artist will be in attendance.

Condensation express’s Adam’s interest in the inherent properties of materials and their potential to reveal the unseen forces that shape our physical world. He explores these properties in his drawings of man-made dams. Adam views the dams as physical embodiments, manifestations of our interaction with the landscape culminating in structures defined by the voids they fill and shaped by the physical forces they are built to contain.

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