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Roxane Hollosi

$840 current bid
1 Bid
FMV: $1200

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Roxane Hollosi

Habitat 1, 2023

Manipulated papers, Fabric, Nature Objects, Found Metals, Sewing

26 x 15 x2.5 inches; plexiglass box frame 28 x 20 x 4 inches

Courtesy of Muse & Co. Fine Art

www.musecofineart.com

www.roxanehollosi.com

Roxane is an Atlanta based, multi-disciplinary artist. Originally from the midwest, she was influenced by the Native American spiritual sensibilities and respect for the Earth she encountered there. Roxane is a 2020 Hambidge Fellow and a Grant recipient of the 2020 Fulton County Virtual Arts Initiative. Roxane earned a BFA from ISU where she received the Janice Peterson Anderson top design award. Roxane actively exhibits locally and nationally, some exhibits include: Artfields 2023, Denise Bibro Fine Arts, NYC; National Association of Woman in the Arts NYC; ARC Gallery Chicago; MOCA GA; EYPGallery100, Atlanta; Gallery 72; MESA Cont. Arts Museum AZ; Hudgens Center for the Arts; Artfields SC; Abernathy Arts Center, Atlanta. Collections include: City of Atlanta; Atlanta Office of the Mayor; DuPont Beijing; Broadway Crowne Plaza NYC; and numerous private collections including Darla Moore and Don Roman. My Art is a visual document of the emotional, social and environmental energies I encounter in that moment of creating. I express myself in 2D and 3D works. The foundation of my work is an exploration of the nature around me; and the energies it emanates. I want to encourage others to see something; investigate something; be curious about something; in order to make visual discoveries and open doors to spiritual ones. It advocates for taking a good hard look and consider realities beyond your own truth; to the participation in something bigger, more universal. My Breathe collection became a way to transform my fears, angers, and uncertainties into visually spirited collection of work. It is a response to our suffocating oceans and the continual dump of waste, it speaks to the time of Covid and "I Can't Breathe". The worlds social, environmental and political crises crashed together in that word, "Breathe"