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	<title>Kelley Roy Gallery</title>
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		<title>Jae Hahn</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/home-page-pictures/jae-hahn-2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 10 Feb 2012 22:02:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Home Page Pictures]]></category>

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		<title>My Little Man</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Feb 2012 19:49:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Exhibitions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jae Hahn]]></category>

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		<title>&#8220;Ribbons of Steel&#8221; A Lecture by Albert Paley</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/events/ribbons-of-steel-a-lecture-by-albert-paley/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Jan 2012 19:15:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>

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		<title>Human Boundaries Extend Exhibit</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/ramon-carulla/human-boundaries-extend-exhibit/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Jan 2012 19:53:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ramon Carulla]]></category>

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		<title>Neltje- Untamed Rhythms</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/neltje/neltje-untamed-rhythms/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Jan 2012 19:45:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Neltje]]></category>

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		<title>Ribbons of Steel hosted by Kelley Roy Gallery</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/albert-paley/ribbons-of-steel-hosted-by-kelley-roy-gallery/</link>
		<comments>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/albert-paley/ribbons-of-steel-hosted-by-kelley-roy-gallery/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Jan 2012 19:33:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Albert Paley]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[January 19th, 2012 at 6pm a lecture given by renowned fabricated steel sculptor Albert Paley at Kelley Roy Gallery. Please RSVP to Stephanie@kelleyroygallery.com]]></description>
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		<title>Heriberto Mora o la creación lúdica y luminosa</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/heriberto-mora/inner-journey/</link>
		<comments>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/heriberto-mora/inner-journey/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Jan 2012 17:11:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Heriberto Mora]]></category>

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<h3 class="byline">ADRIANA HERRERA</h3>
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<h3 class="credit_line">Especial/El Nuevo Herald</h3>
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<div id="hnews-vcard" style="display: none;"><span class="byline author vcard"><span class="fn">ADRIANA HERRERA </span></span> <span class="creditline source-org vcard"><span class="org fn"> </span></span></div>
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<p>El arte de Heriberto Mora (La Habana, Cuba, 1965) encarna el poema de John Keats,  <span class="italic">A thing of beauty is a joy for ever</span>, de un modo que demuestra cómo puede crearse una obra perdurable sin beber de las fuentes del cinismo donde se abreva esta era sin “sueños dulces” que olvidó lo que “crece amorosamente”, la luz, la armonía, y la contemplación.</p>
<p><span class="italic">Inner Journey</span> (Jornada Interior) en Kelley Roy Gallery, reúne un grupo de bellas obras recientes de Mora donde hay una serie de pinturas blancas que evocan una expresión del místico Juan de Escoto: “…de allí que esta fábrica del mundo sea un grandísimo resplandor”. También hay otras obras en las que el artista se afianza en objetos de colores fuertes -terracotas, azules, verdes- combinándolos con vastos espacios monocromáticos y recreando formas que “dominan la oscuridad de la materia” como querían los neoplatónicos. En ambos casos hay una luminosidad que más que cubrir los objetos ordinarios (tapices, cuerdas, poleas, construcciones, vanos de ventanas) irradia de éstos. Estamos ante el raro caso -para este siglo- de un artista místico que, a partir de elementos perfectamente reconocibles y a menudo muy concretos, ha logrado convertir sus cuadros en parajes de conexión entre la cotidianidad y la visión de lo sagrado.</p>
<p>Una de las más bellas pinturas en blanco es  <span class="italic">Sukiya</span>, 2011: en esta composición, una enorme tetera circular hace las veces de universo y a un lado, en posición diagonal a ésta -sugiriendo una línea de intersección- Mora dibuja dos humeantes tazas de té. Eso es todo. Pero la pintura contiene en esas formas simples una visión profunda y conmovedora del vacío y de la plenitud, y la imagen del vapor en las tacitas es tan nutricia como el ritual de la cálida bebida tomada en compañía.  <span class="italic">Atelier para Perico García</span>, 2011, contiene esos mecanismos de objetos corrientes que Mora transforma en maquinarias metafísicas. Aquí los colores capturan una imagen entrañable de la primera memoria de su infancia: el ambiente que rodeaba al viejo carpintero de su barrio cuyo sobrenombre rescata el título y donde descubrió, entre encolados y jaulas de pájaros de madera, la emoción de tener un “taller para la imaginería”. El mecanismo que estructura la composición se inspira en una máquina de coser zapatos muy antigua.</p>
<p>En su obra, máquinas de coser e hilo son reiterativas, y a menudo aluden al tejido de la realidad que abarca una jornada interior en la que todas las arquitecturas -incluyendo las más íntimas- están abiertas hacia el universo, y, de modo paralelo las geografías alusivas a su isla de origen, refieren a la insularidad de una humanidad que busca rutas de navegación en medio de la deriva.</p>
<p>En  <span class="italic">Meditación cubista</span>, la alineación de las casas insinúa la línea costera de Cuba. Las pequeñas construcciones rodeadas de un mar blanco -o de un gran campo monocromático contenedor del vacío- son “cubos blancos” que refieren a lo que está por ser exhibido en una galería que paralelamente puede ser la de la historia. Mora admite que en esa pieza está presente “la Cuba profunda, espiritual”, desde un modo de silencio que contiene el espacio por venir de lo posible.</p>
<p>Como los ropajes o los ganchos de colgar en otras obras, las casitas son sucedáneas del cuerpo que puede aparecer solitario o como forma innumerable alusiva a las multitudes. Torres o estructuras verticales son igualmente omnipresentes y metonimia del mismo ser humano que vive -y transita- en una dinámica incesante entre lo intangible y lo tangible, entre el cielo y la tierra. Casi todas estas estructuras se alzan sobre pedestales (pocas veces aparece el suelo) y poseen una luminosa ventana en arco, y mecanismos de conexión al exterior con hilos o cuerdas que tensan formas geométricas esenciales -como la pirámide blanca o el denso círculo azul petróleo de la obra  <span class="italic">Intiution</span>-; que también son símbolos.</p>
<p>Cada cuadro de Heriberto Mora insinúa, como he dicho, un espacio de pasaje y figuras tan prosaicas como las autopistas de vías rápidas, son enlazadoras de mundos. Pero igualmente, cada cuadro es un campo de juego que ofrece, a cambio del caos de la realidad, un espacio ordenador en el que hay un orden lúdico -no hay que olvidar que Mora ha construido maravillosos juguetes de madera- y en el que el artista cumple una especie de acto de suspensión de la realidad para proponer una visión de lo posible.</p>
<p>En  <span class="italic">Logbook</span>, su “rueda de Chicago” contiene libros que giran sobre un cielo nocturno en perfecta espiral doble, de modo que el juego del conocimiento es un divertido mecanismo ordenador. En  <span class="italic">Su-real State</span>, deposita humorísticamente el reordenamiento del mapa de los Estados Unidos en las manos de una pareja. Y lo hace sin mordacidad. Casi como si el espacio de las transformaciones surgiera del ámbito íntimo. De hecho, lo que retoma es el antiguo motivo de los juegos cósmicos en donde el gesto más pequeño cambia el curso de lo más grande. El sentido lúdico en la obra de Heriberto Mora, artista de luminosidades y de geografías del sueño.•</p>
<p><span class="italic">Adriana Herrera es curadora y crítica de arte. Colabora con galerías y museos, y asesora publicaciones especializadas. </span></p>
<p><span class="italic">‘Inner Journey’de Heriberto Mora, Kelley Roy Gallery, 50 NE 29. Hasta el 28 de enero. (305) 447-3888.</span></p>
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<div style="padding: 10px 1px 20px 1px; float: left; width: 300px;">Heriberto Mora o la creación lúdica y luminosa &#8211; Artes y Letras &#8211; ElNuevoHerald.com</div>
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		<title>Miami Artist Sebastian Spreng Amazing Multi-Tasker</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/sebastian-spreng/miami-artist-sebastian-spreng-amazing-multi-tasker/</link>
		<comments>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/sebastian-spreng/miami-artist-sebastian-spreng-amazing-multi-tasker/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Dec 2011 21:29:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Sebastian Spreng]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[&#160; Miami Artist Sebastian Spreng Amazing Multi-Tasker &#160; Posted on December 21, 2011 by elisa.turner&#124; Leave a comment &#124; Subscribe to RSS Miami Artist Sebastian Spreng Amazing Multi-Tasker &#160; &#160; I started this blog entry in Sept. 9, 2011, and actually now today is December 20, 2011.Sebastian Spreng is not only an accomplished artist but [...]]]></description>
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<h1 class="entry-title">Miami Artist Sebastian Spreng Amazing Multi-Tasker</h1>
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<div class="entry-meta"><span class="meta-prep meta-prep-author">Posted on</span> <a title="11:10 am" rel="bookmark" href="http://artcircuits.com/2011/12/miami-artist-sebastian-spreng-amazing-multi-tasker/"><span class="entry-date">December 21, 2011</span></a> <span class="byline"><span class="meta-sep">by</span> <span class="author vcard"><a class="url fn n" title="View all posts by elisa.turner" href="http://artcircuits.com/author/elisa-turner/">elisa.turner</a></span></span><span class="comments-link"><span class="meta-sep">|</span> <a title="Comment on Miami Artist Sebastian Spreng Amazing Multi-Tasker" href="http://artcircuits.com/2011/12/miami-artist-sebastian-spreng-amazing-multi-tasker/#respond">Leave a comment</a></span> | <a href="http://artcircuits.com/2011/12/miami-artist-sebastian-spreng-amazing-multi-tasker/feed">Subscribe to RSS</a></div>
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<div><a href="http://artcircuitsartcentric.blogspot.com/www.artcircuitsartcentric.blogspot.com">Miami Artist Sebastian Spreng Amazing Multi-Tasker</a></div>
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<div>I started this blog entry in Sept. 9, 2011, and actually now today is December 20, 2011.<strong>Sebastian Spreng</strong> is not only an accomplished artist but an accomplished music critic as well–I believe I even saw his byline on the Knight Arts Blog. Very pleased that I could review his show at<strong>Kelley Roy </strong>gallery in Miami for the Sept. 2011 issue of ARTnews. So more about Sebastian soon in this blog post. . . . I have been so busy with writing gigs that actually pay, plus of course with teaching at Miami Dade College, that I just have not had the time to sit down and blog.</div>
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<div>As of course everyone in Miami’s art community knows, Baselmania is quite exhausting and takes a toll!! Very nice that this year I was hired to give <strong>Miami Art Museum </strong>docents (now, THERE’s a story in what is happening with that museum’s name!!) a 45-min tour of blue-chip art at Art Basel Miami Beach this year. It went well, though I must say I was a bit nervous about planning and executing it because I have never done this before. Still, it was nice to make some $$ at the fair this year with the knowledge I had used to earn a living at <strong>The Miami Herald</strong> for so long. Many Many Thanks to my BFF <strong>Rosie Gordon-Wallace </strong>for making that gig possible!!!</div>
<div><strong>First things first: More visual arts news in Miami</strong></div>
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<div>I missed soo many things this year at Basel Miami. Here is info about just two events I wish I had been able to attend. 1) The Daily Breakfast on Thurs. Dec. 1 at <strong>CIFO </strong>during which <strong>Miralda </strong>was featured in a Kreemart program called “Digestible NEWS.” I must say that Miralda is surely one of the most charming men on the face of the earth, plus quite a terrific artist. Miralda and I go WAY BACK. For more info about Miralda, pls check my blog archive to see my July 2010 post, “Miralda and Ishmaelita Meet in Miami.” 2) “On the Edge of Light”at <strong>Maor Gallery</strong>, 3030 NE Second Ave, ph. 305-573-9995, <a href="http://www.maormiami.org/">www.maormiami.org</a> <strong>Tina Spiro</strong>, whose painting “Aurora Amada” is featured on the post card announcement, emails me from Jamaica that she was quite pleased with the attention that this group show received during Basel week. (Also in the show: <strong>Janet Slom, Fernando Calzadilla, Paul Stoppi, Yasmin Spiro, Prof. Hans Evers, and selected sculpture students of DASH, Design &amp; Architecture Senior High in Miami; curated by Arthur Dunkelman and Tina Spiro</strong>) Among the visitors: curator <strong>Elvis Fuentes of El Museo de Barrio</strong>in New York. Very glad that this show will be on view through Jan. 31, 2012. Also note the upcoming Chanukah celebration Wed. Dec. 21 at this gallery from 7:30 t0 9:30 pm. At this event, you are invited to collaborate in building a Menorah with recycled materials to honor art, light, and unity. What’s NOT to like about that??!!</div>
<div>Now, a few words about Miami NOW, AFTER Basel: Look for exhibition of drawings by <strong>Ramon Carulla, </strong>on view through Jan. 15, at the West Art Gallery, Miami Dade College, West Campus, 3800 NW 115 Ave., Doral, FL. So nice to hear from Ramon again! I have followed his impressive work for years. He emails me this tip about seeing the show: “When you arrive you must check with the Security Guard to get the gallery open.”</div>
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<div><strong>Adalberto Delgado, </strong>another terrific artist I’ve known for years, emails me that his Little Havana exhibition<strong> </strong>space, <strong>6th Street Container </strong>(<a href="http://www.6thstreetcontainer.com/">www.6thstreetcontainer.com</a> ) recently had its first anniversary of doing a show every month, alternating between older artists and younger ones without representation. Also that it has been mentioned in more than half a dozen publications, including, he says, “my old alma mater,” The Miami Herald. This LiHa space is, he notes, an “out of pocket endeavor;” however, HURRAH for Adalberto, because he adds, “It has been very hard work but worth the effort!”</div>
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<div>On my calendar for sure: “Miami Dade Community College 1970s Faculty Exhibition” at <strong>Bridge Red Studios / Project Space</strong>, 12425 NE 13th Ave, #5, North Miami, now through Jan. 29, 2012. Hope I get to catch the free and open to the public Sunday brunch pre-closing reception from noon to 4 pm on Jan. 8. If you miss that, call 305-978-4856 for an appt or email <strong>Kristen Thiele </strong>at<a href="mailto:kt@letter16.com">kt@letter16.com</a> This promises to be a fascinating look into the Miami art scene in the 1970s, when very talented artists were working and teaching here–there was, of course, no Basel hoopla and hype to create an infrastucture of galleries to exhibit and sell their work, and of course Miami museums were not really interested in what the artists here were doing. As <strong>Robert Thiele </strong>told me once for the Herald about those pre-Basel days, he and other artists here “were doing our work but not aiming at a larger audience, when museums. . . .generally had a hands-off policy in terms of the homegrown product.” Artists whose work is presented in this exciting historical look back at Bridge Red Studios / Project Space: <strong>Duane Hanson, Robert Thiele, Shirley Henderson, Jim Couper, Elmer Craig, David Gossoff, Charles Hashim, Michael Klezmer, John Kokko, Salvatore LaRosa, Mark Lynch, Peter McWhorter, Ron Mitchell, Gary Monroe.</strong></div>
<div>Look for “Fly Over” by totally fab artist <strong>Teresa Diehl, </strong>now through Jan. 14, at <strong>Praxis International Art, </strong>2219 NW 2nd Ave, Miami; ph 305-573-2900 or <a href="http://www.praxis-art.com/">www.praxis-art.com</a> ; for more info contact <strong>Julian Navarro </strong>at <a href="mailto:wynwood@praxix-art.com">wynwood@praxix-art.com</a> Teresa was born in Lebanon, grew up in Caracas, Venezuela, and now lives and works in Miami. She’s shown all over the map, including Mexico and the Czech Republic.</div>
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<div>News from another totally fab artist: <strong>William Cordova </strong>recently emailed me that he received an exceptionally terrific award.Way to go William! Why am I NOT surprised! He is one of 25 to receive the 2011 Painters and Sculptors grants in the amount of $25,000 each from the <strong>Joan Mitchell Foundation</strong>. For more info, see <a href="http://www.joanmitchellfoundation.org/">www.joanmitchellfoundation.org</a><strong> </strong><strong> </strong></div>
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<div>Today I am going to blog about Sebastian Spreng. This is my March 1995 Miami Herald profile about Sebastian Spreng.</div>
<div><strong>WRITING AND PAINTING ABOUT CHAMBER MUSIC: ARGENTINE ARTIST ONLY BOUND BY WHEELCHAIR by Elisa Turner</strong></div>
<div>In this porous city, swirling with the accents and customs of many cultures, Sebastian Spreng seems especially at home: a man with a porous imagination who moves freely among the worlds of music, painting and language, multicultural in a way most of us never dream of becoming. “Chamber Music,” Spreng’s show of oil paintings through April 5 [remember, dear readers, that this was in 1995] at the Americas Collection in Coral Gables [he is now represented by Kelley Roy Gallery in Wynwood, 50 NE 29th Street, <a href="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/">www.kelleyroygallery.com</a> ], is a splendid example of that rich confluence. His work features atmospheric landscapes with fabulous gardens seen from a distance and shimmering with expanses of water in which a solitary swimmer often floats. They speak of interior worlds where the imagination roams free.</div>
<div>Spreng, who has been confined to a wheelchair since he was diagnosed with muscular dystrophy at age 14, acknowledges that these swimmers are references to the free movement that eludes him except in the water. But, he is quick to add, the landscapes are meant to be poetic metaphors.</div>
<div>“I paint my interior landscapes. By coincidence, [they are] landscapes I’m living now,” he says, referring to Miami’s tropical luxuriance and his attraction to its “strange, oneiric” summer nights. “It’s like what I have inside.”</div>
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<div>Even though his work is at times more sweet than compelling, Spreng wields a restrained vocabulary with great sensitivity. And the pieces are, indeed, analogous to the chamber music of the exhibition’s title: intimate and subtle with finely etched repetitions and variations.</div>
<div>The parallels highlight Spreng’s wide-ranging knowledge of classical music. A native of Buenos Aires who moved to Miami in the late 1980s, Spreng, 38, is the Miami correspondent for the glossy magazine Clasica, published in Buenos Aires by Radio Clasica, S. A. (Florida Philharmonic fans may be already familiar with his paintings, which appear on five of the orchestra’s nine playbills this season.)</div>
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<div>Even the catalog for the show begins with a poem from James Joyce’s youthfully romantic collection, Chamber Music. The opening lines of the first poem–”Strings in the earth and air / Make music sweet”–inspired American composer Samuel Barber’s 1935 song, whose title is taken from that line; it was one of many songs Barber set to lyric poetry during his career.</div>
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<div>“They are exquisite pieces of music,” Spreng says. Making a reference to the lovely, bittersweet quality of the 1935 song, as he does in this show, was a way of putting together music, painting, and literature.</div>
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<div>It’s a synthesis Spreng deals with daily, spending some eight hours listening to classical music while painting. And, of course, there is his work for Clasica, which includes interviewing visiting musicians such as violinist Pinchas Zucherman and soprano Barbara Hendricks. “It’s fascinating,” he says of these interviews. “You are in contact with another world. When you by chance mention that you are an artist, that you paint, the whole thing is much more relaxed. I’m not trying to do a critique but to have an interchange of ideas.” What’s equally fascinating is the way music and water have shaped Spreng’s own artistic sensibility. He recalls visiting Teatro Colon, Buenos Aires’ turn-of-the-century opera house, as a high schooler.</div>
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<div>“We toured the bowels of the theater. It was like Phantom of the Opera,” he says. “The orchestra was 10 meters above us, playing Wagner, and the music was like water, falling over us, as if you could touch it.</div>
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<div>“My love of music started there,” he says. “It was so important in cultivating a sensibility.”</div>
<div>If his feelings for music developed during high school, Spreng’s longing for marine vistas began much earlier, during his childhood in the Santa Fe province. “I was always fascinated by the ocean, always,” he says. “In Argentina I lived in the middle of an ocean of wheat, the pampas.” As a child, he drew and painted obsessively, making maps of imaginary countries. There was much time for these solitary pursuits since Spreng had had trouble walking from the age of 3. For years it was thought he had cancer or tuberculosis; it wasn’t until he was 14 that the MD diagnosis was made.</div>
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<div>Only when pressed will he talk about his disability–and then he recounts, in a thin, tense voice, a harrowing tale of a narrow escape from Argentine police during the turbulent 1970s.</div>
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<div>Spreng prefers to talk about his newest work, a group of nine 24-inch-by-24-inch paintings commissioned by Metro-Dade’s Art in Public Places program. The works, to be unveiled this fall, will hang in the Stephen P. Clark Government Center as a memorial to George Armitage, a local advocate for the disabled who died in 1991 at the age of 66.</div>
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<div>“There will be three levels of three paintings to form a puzzle–like a big painting because I cannot paint big,” Spreng says of his serial composition. “This disadvantage gives me an advantage. I try to see my whole life like this. . . .The lower levels are like webs, labyrinths, jails. The figure inside is very dark. In the upper level, you have this magnificent ocean.” In the ocean Spreng will paint a swimmer, a reference to the one activity in which he himself can move freely.</div>
<div>He’s not concerned that his work will hang in this specific context. “Everybody has some kind of handicap,” he says, adding that the series is really about “the path from darkness to light.” Vivian Rodriguez, executive director of Art in Public Places, agrees. The commissioned works, she says, will make a poetic statement about “dealing with universal disabilities, whether they are physical or from being an imperfect human being.”</div>
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<p>Copyright Artcircuits 2011 | Elise Turner</p>
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		<title>Heriberto Mora through January 28, 2012</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/exhibitions/heriberto-mora-through-january28-2012/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Dec 2011 23:21:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
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		<title>Albert Paley Sculpture through January 28th, 2012</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Dec 2011 17:16:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
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		<title>Light up your holiday with sculpture</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Dec 2011 16:48:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
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		<title>In Wynwood, art proves more than passing fancy</title>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Dec 2011 17:25:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
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<p>In Wynwood, art proves more than passing fancy &#8211; Biscayne Corridor &#8211; MiamiHerald.com</p>
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<h1 class="storyHeadline entry-title">In Wynwood, art proves more than passing fancy</h1>
<div id="hnews-vcard" style="display: none;"><span class="byline author vcard"><span class="fn">BY ANDRES VIGLUCCI </span></span> <span class="creditline source-org vcard"><span class="org fn">The Miami Herald </span></span></div>
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<h2 class="subheadline">After years of hope and hype, Wynwood’s once-forlorn warehouse district gains a solid foothold as as an arty, walkable urban neighborhood, though it remains a work in progress.</h2>
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<h3 class="byline">BY ANDRES VIGLUCCI</h3>
<h3 class="creditline"><a href="mailto:aviglucci@MiamiHerald.com">aviglucci@MiamiHerald.com</a>&nbsp;</h3>
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<p>Eli Papir, 30 years in the hosiery and textile wholesale business in Wynwood, survived when others around him didn’t, operating out of a.block-long, windowless warehouse painted a sickly green.</p>
<p>He switched to supplying fabric to furniture makers as the clothing industry that once sustained the industrial district vanished, and he minded his business as something strange began to happen in the neighborhood: Dodgy young artists’ studios and art dealers and collectors began occupying the dreary blocks of cheap, vacant warehouses, cheek-by-jowl with body shops and discount footwear distributors. Dubious banners went up proclaiming the graffiti-marked collection of derelict warehouses an arts district.</p>
<p>For a long time, he waited for more to happen.</p>
<p>Today, after fits and starts of hype that struck some outsiders as oversold, something real is finally jelling in Wynwood. The whole daring collective enterprise of transforming a dying warehouse district into an arty, walkable urban district appears to have taken on a long-elusive — if still far from complete — solidity.</p>
<p>Seizing on the intense if passing flurry of attention on the district each December during Art Basel week, veteran urban revivalist Tony Goldman and his family purchased a set of warehouses across the street from Papir’s business, opened one and and then a second restaurant, creating a destination for visitors. In a burst of color and inspiration, they incorporated the neighborhood graffiti as their brand, turning their properties into oversized canvases for museum-quality street art and generating reams of publicity for Wynwood.</p>
<p>Now, on the blocks around Goldman’s restaurants and Wynwood Walls, properties are being renovated, and two new coffehouses, one tavern and at least two retail shops have moved in, joining neighborhood art galleries, some long struggling, that are for the first time enjoying a measure of daily foot traffic. A few blocks away, O Cinema, a funky art movie house in — what else? — a renovated warehouse, has opened to rave reviews. Chef Jimmy’z Wynwood outpost, on the ground floor of a new mid-rise residential building on North Miami Avenue, draws a steady clientele. Monthly art walks are so mobbed by partiers that some gallery owners and merchants have actually complained.</p>
<p>So this year, as Art Basel time once again rolled around, Papir decided to hop on the bandwagon. The facades of his warehouse are now covered in massive, and spectacular, spray-paint murals by street artists from California and Brazil, recruited by Wynwood street-art entrepreneur Aric Weis.</p>
<p>This time, Papir and others believe, the action won’t vanish, Brigadoon-like, after Basel.</p>
<p>As renovations and new uses expand beyond galleries and art studios to retail and restaurants, radiating from main corridors into still-forlorn side streets, Goldman and others say, the district’s separate islands of redevelopment are gradually coalescing into a whole.</p>
<p>“Why Wynwood? It’s pretty easy,’’ said Mauricio Gomez, who moved his designer-furnishings shop, elemental, from Miami Beach to Northwest Second earlier this year. “It’s all creatives. It’s all artists. It’s perfect for what we do.</p>
<p>“It’s going to become a real neighborhood, just like New York.’’</p>
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<p>But Goldman, an early investor in New York’s SoHo, cautions it  will take time, patience and investors &#8212; not speculators — willing to  nurture and preserve Wyndood’s arts bent and low-scale character.</p>
<p>“We  can really develop a beautifully organic neighborhood,’’ said Goldman,  who has amassed two dozen properties in the district. “But you can’t  push the process. We want to maintain the cool factor forever.</p>
<p>“Wynwood is at a point now where the change is visible, and we are  seeing much more interest from tenants wanting to be there.’’</p>
<p>Case  in point, he said: His Wynwood Building, an old warehouse mall once  home to discount clothiers, has been painted entirely in zebra stripes  is is undergoing conversion into business spaces for creative  enterprises. Goldman said he expects to start moving in tenants within  months.</p>
<p>The district’s budding transformation rests on several  pillars stretching back far more than a decade, when the Bakehouse Art  Center took over an old bakery and, years later, when prominent art  collectors Martin Z. Margulies and Don and Mera Rubell bought nearby  warehouses to display their art to the public. Then developer David  Lombardi began buying and renovating warehouses and storefronts, and  built Wynwood Lofts, live-work studios for artists and other creative  types.</p>
<p>The warehouse district, however, has one significant  drawback: it contains little housing, and the warehouses — unlike SoHo’s  lofts — are largely unsuited for residential conversion.</p>
<p>Most of  Wynwood’s longtime, working-class residents live on adjacent blocks of  single-family homes, small apartment houses and neighborhood bodegas,  still largely untouched by renovation or gentrification. While that  means few have been pushed out by redevelopment, some residents feel  excluded.</p>
<p>Margulies, a developer with no business interests in the  area, warns against overblown hopes. He says the Wynwood transformation  will remain incomplete without an influx of residents, a deeper,  year-round art market, and banks eager to lend.</p>
<p>“There is  definitely progress, but what’s lacking is people living there to make a  neighborhood. I don’t think anyone’s going to move in there because  Shepard Fairey made a wall, though it does create excitement,’’ he said,  alluding to the famed graffiti artist’s Wynwood mural. “There’s a  definite need for reasonably priced housing in that area. The future of  Wynwood is young and affordable.’’</p>
<p>The galleries, too, he said,  face an uncertain future. There is substantial turnover &#8212; a French  gallerist, Emmanuel Perrotin, opened a gallery in Wynwood to great  fanfare only to close a few years later &#8212; and talented artists in  Wynwood must look to sell elsewhere to survive, he said.</p>
<p>“Some of  the artists are very good and very frustrated,’’ Margulies said. “A lot  of the galleries are struggling, but it’s not for lack of tying. It’s a  tough market here.’’</p>
<p>Goldman says he plans to develop new  live-work housing inside the warehouse district within two years, a goal  the city of Miami has supported. Its new Miami 21 zoning code and a  recently created cafe district lifted commercial-only restrictions in  the district to encourage development of residences combined with work  space for artists and entrepreneurs, and propelled the opening of the  new restaurants, cafes and watering holes.</p>
<p>But some business  owners say the city needs to do much more. Sidewalks remain a cracked-up  mess, streets are potholed, and the district lacks trash cans, creating  a garbage mess after the monthly art walks that business owners must  clean up.</p>
<p>While rubbing up against the raw streetscape is  undeniably part of Wynwood’s appeal, stroll a few blocks down any side  street, and it quickly begins to feel sketchy, especially after dark.  There are still long stretches of abandonment, lots of graffiti of the  non-authorized tagger type, and mysterious activities behing the gates  of crumbling warehouses.</p>
<p>There is some street crime and drug  trafficking remains a neighborhood problem decades after the killing of a  drug dealer by police spawned days of rioting. Earlier this year, the  entire clientele at Joey’s, the Goldmans’ Italian restaurant, was held  up at gunpoint.</p>
<p>Still, Wynwood gallery owner Susan Kelley says she  feels secure enough at age when others are retiring to consider moving  into the neighborhood from the Beach. And though her gallery would have a  hard time without the Art Basel week spike, business is good.</p>
<p>“We’re  seeing more sophisticated visitors to the gallery, and it’s really fun  to see people on bicycles and strolling around,’’ she said. “I’ve even  said to my husband, it would be really cool to come live here.’’</p>
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		<title>Sebastian Spreng &#8211; Artmiami.tv</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/sebastian-spreng/sebastian-spreng-artmiami-tv/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Nov 2011 19:07:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
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		<title>Exploding the Image In A Sophisticated Manner</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/mira-lehr/exploding-the-image-in-a-sophisticated-manner/</link>
		<comments>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/mira-lehr/exploding-the-image-in-a-sophisticated-manner/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Nov 2011 19:06:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Mira Lehr]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[&#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; Published on 04 November 2011 by Anne Tschida in All Communities, Miami &#160; &#160; &#160; &#8220;Frozen in the Fire&#8221; by Mira Lehr. Miamians might not be that familiar with the paintings of Mira Lehr, even though she is a long-time resident of Miami Beach. Her work has been shown more [...]]]></description>
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<p class="meta">Published on 04 November 2011 by <a title="Posts by Anne Tschida" rel="author" href="http://www.knightarts.org/author/anne-tschida">Anne Tschida</a> in <a title="View all posts in All Communities" rel="category tag" href="http://www.knightarts.org/category/community">All Communities</a>, <a title="View all posts in Miami" rel="category tag" href="http://www.knightarts.org/category/community/miami">Miami</a></p>
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<p class="wp-caption-text">&#8220;Frozen in the Fire&#8221; by Mira Lehr.</p>
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<p style="text-align: center;">Miamians might not be that familiar with the paintings of Mira Lehr, even though she is a long-time resident of Miami Beach. Her work has been shown more often elsewhere — for instance, in a spring show at her New York gallery, Flomenhaft. Fortunately, the <a href="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com" target="_blank">Kelley Roy Gallery</a> is giving her a local hearing, with paintings almost all made this year, and including a funny video on the art process and another on the movement of vertebrae.</p>
<p>Lehr’s work has always been lovely, with abstract yet distinctly flowery imagery and pronounced Japanese influence. But here she literally ignites the canvas. She has incorporated gunpowder and lit-fuse cords to the resin, dye, wood-work and Japanese paper that go into the incredibly textured works. Nature is almost always apparent — some loom like a forest, others look like a garden or even encased, school-age insect boxes. But the paintings can also look quilted, sewn up, patched together. It’s an amazing total effect.</p>
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<p class="wp-caption-text">&#8220;Sulfur and Ice&#8221; by Mira Lehr</p>
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<p>But back to the explosive elements. Lehr lit the fuses laid on the canvases (with a minder with a water bottle to control the fire) and let them burn an image. She also ignited gunpowder applied to the surface. The overall effect results in a grainy quality, which is then contrasted with some incredibly vibrant colors created from dye and then set in resin. In a few of the paintings, the resin pieces fall off the bottom or the side of the frame. Adding to the Asian feel, a few of the frames are lacquered.</p>
<p>The combination and conflict in these pieces work very well. The burned and scarred canvas highlights, in a sense, the frozen resin parts that are pasted on; fire and ice. Yet ever aware of space and composition, Lehr has not let these paintings become noisy or messy — once again, a very Japanese sensibility.</p>
<p>In a separate room, three projectors deliver images of vertebrae — actually a film of a sculpture crafted from a bike chain. In one projection, a performance artist tries to mimic the artificial spine’s movement. Overall, beauty, levity and a contemplative essence combine to make “209 Ignition” a complete and satisfying exhibit, one that oozes a maturity that Miami is finally realizing it needs.</p>
<p><em>“209 Ignition” by Mira Lehr through Nov. 20 at the Kelley Roy Gallery, 50 N.E. 29th St., Wynwood; kelleyroygallery.com.</em></p>
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		<title>ARTNews September 2011 Review</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/sebastian-spreng/artnews-september-2011-review/</link>
		<comments>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/sebastian-spreng/artnews-september-2011-review/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Nov 2011 18:56:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
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		<title>Cuisine &amp; Vins presents Salad Bar</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/sebastian-spreng/luigi-bosca-presents-salad-bar/</link>
		<comments>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/sebastian-spreng/luigi-bosca-presents-salad-bar/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Nov 2011 15:33:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
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		<title>ARTE AL DIA INTERNATIONAL Review</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/sebastian-spreng/arte-al-dia-international-review/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 28 Oct 2011 19:41:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Sebastian Spreng]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[In the case of Sebastian Spreng, a single landscape is rendered ad infinitum: the interior of a poetic imagination that gives rise to rivers, seas, ships enveloped in mist, hazy mountains and woods, moons and thresholds of architectures that are spatial-temporal vortices where the modes of creation converge.]]></description>
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<div class="where">Thursday October 27, 2011</div>
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<div class="attribute-nombre">Sebastian Spreng</div>
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<div class="attribute-titulo">Kelley Roy, Miami</div>
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<div class="attribute-autor">by Adriana Herrera</div>
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<p>Borges, an inhabitant of libraries that broadened his imagination to the point of showing him the possibility of the Aleph, which concentrates in a minimum diameter all that has been, is, and will be, did not allow novelty to impress him. Besides, he understood that every creator produces a single work over the course of his/her life, and that variations do not annihilate its essential oneness.</p>
<p>In the case of Sebastian Spreng, a single landscape is rendered ad infinitum: the interior of a poetic imagination that gives rise to rivers, seas, ships enveloped in mist, hazy mountains and woods, moons and thresholds of architectures that are spatial-temporal vortices where the modes of creation converge.</p>
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<p>Increasingly focused on a small dimension, those paintings of his, which are not informed by an external territory but by the reveries of “a painter who knows (a lot) about music,” give us access to more recondite passageways leading to a poetic iconography modeled by his relationship with this orphic art. Play and mystery or lightness and transcendence might be the signs characterizing his exhibition “Salad Bar” at Kelley Roy Gallery, featuring an installation composed of 240 small-format paintings that may be reorganized into different combinations.</p>
<p>In fact, the installation incites classification. The viewer may notice <em>leitmotifs</em>, such as the recurring figure of a solitary tree on the horizon appearing once and again in a manner of reiteration that evokes that of the melodic phrases that accompany the reappearance of a person or situation, as in Wagner’s operas. And this reading − linked to the possible reorganization of the installation − might allow the creation of successive paintings of trees charged with an archetypal meaning associated to the myths of all times − the figure that connects the subterranean and the celestial − but that are also a type of self-portrait. Spreng admits that the tree he carves with slow movements burying a burin in the fresh paint is “a hymn to the survival of man and to my own survival.”</p>
<p>The last tree he painted in this open series into which he incorporated suggested birds or flowers to the light of his rivers and seas or of solitary fortresses in the open country, was entitled − like Mahler’s composition − <em>The Song of the Earth</em>. But this “earth” is much more than nature; it is a land mediated by the universe of symbols of different cultures, by the history of art itself, and by Spreng’s cognitive relationship with the aforementioned.</p>
<p>In terms of the contemplation of the landscape, we would have to go back to his admiration for the romantic Gaspar David Friedrich and follow along those lines to reach the moon Gerhard Ritcher represented in his monotypes of the <em>Elbe </em>series, or the way in which the latter utilizes his characteristic ‘blur’ to fuse artistic mediums and genres. What is blurred in Spreng’s work is the distinction between reality and reverie, and beyond forms, what he intends to bring up − like music itself − is a time drive. He can contain it in a polyptych featuring the four phases of the moon in colors that refer the viewer to different cultural universes. There is also a temporality − in a way that fuses with his formal explorations − in the gradual blackening of figurative horizons that end up in absolute black or white, those paths towards worldly silence and pictorial construction. In both cases the process is achieved, as in Reinhardt, through the juxtaposition of layers containing a buried memory of color.</p>
<p>A triptych inspired by water contained in rectangles − the swimming pool − is now a grid multiplying light. <em>“There are no swimmers any more, no more water, just the web that light forms at the bottom,”</em> Spreng says. Perhaps what he seeks to attain in his paintings is the drive of the time of myth, in which initiation and the symbolic mediation with life is represented time and again.</p>
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		<title>Albert Paley</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/artistsworks/albert-paley/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 28 Oct 2011 15:42:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Artists Works]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ALBERT PALEY BIOGRAPHY PRESS EVANESCE Steel, Wood Base 50&#8243; x 19&#8243; x 16&#8243; 180 lbs. ARTIST WORKS]]></description>
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		<item>
		<title>Albert Paley Exhibition</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/albert-paley/albert-paley-exhibition/</link>
		<comments>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/albert-paley/albert-paley-exhibition/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Oct 2011 20:22:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Albert Paley]]></category>

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		<item>
		<title>Complot Magazine Sebastian Spreng Salad Bar</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/sebastian-spreng/complot-magazine-sebastian-spreng-salad-bar/</link>
		<comments>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/sebastian-spreng/complot-magazine-sebastian-spreng-salad-bar/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 22 Oct 2011 17:56:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Sebastian Spreng]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/?p=1261</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
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		<title>Wynwood Art Fair</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/events/wynwood-art-fair-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/events/wynwood-art-fair-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Oct 2011 17:02:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/?p=1248</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
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</a></p>
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		<title>Human Boundaries at Miami Dade College</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/events/human-boundaries-at-miami-dade-college/</link>
		<comments>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/events/human-boundaries-at-miami-dade-college/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Oct 2011 16:03:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ramon Carulla]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/?p=1229</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/ramon.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-large wp-image-1233" title="ramon" src="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/ramon-1024x678.jpg" alt="" width="1024" height="678" /></a><a href="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/ramon2.jpg"><br />
</a></p>
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		<item>
		<title>Kelley Roy Gallery Invites You to 209 Ignition</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/exhibitions/kelley-roy-gallery-invites-you-to-209-ignition/</link>
		<comments>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/exhibitions/kelley-roy-gallery-invites-you-to-209-ignition/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Oct 2011 21:10:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Exhibitions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mira Lehr]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/?p=1214</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Mira-Lehr-E-Blast1.jpg"><img class="size-large wp-image-1217 aligncenter" title="Mira Lehr E-Blast" src="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Mira-Lehr-E-Blast1-744x1024.jpg" alt="" width="744" height="1024" /></a></p>
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		<slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>209 Ignition Press Release</title>
		<link>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/mira-lehr/press/</link>
		<comments>http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/mira-lehr/press/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Oct 2011 20:42:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>krgallery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Mira Lehr]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/press-blog/mira-lehr/press/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[MIRA LEHR 209 Ignition &#160;]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style="float: right; width: 48%;">
<h1><span style="color: #3366ff;"><strong><span style="color: #0f9ec7;">MIRA LEHR</span></strong></span></h1>
<h1><span style="color: #3366ff;"><strong><span style="color: #0f9ec7;">209 Ignition<br />
</span></strong></span></h1>
<h1><span style="color: #3366ff;"><strong><span style="color: #0f9ec7;"><br />
</span></strong></span></h1>
<hr style="border: 1px solid #C0C0C0;" />
</div>
<div style="width: 100%; clear: both; padding-top: 20px;">
<hr style="border: 1px solid #C0C0C0;" />
<div style="width: 100%; clear: both; padding-top: 20px;"><a href="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/lehr-ignition.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-large wp-image-1213" title="lehr ignition" src="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/lehr-ignition-1024x665.jpg" alt="" width="936" height="607" /></a></div>
<p><a href="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209Ignition_ARTnews_Ad_HP_1B1.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-large wp-image-1187" title="209Ignition" src="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209Ignition_ARTnews_Ad_HP_1B1-1024x687.jpg" alt="" width="961" height="644" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209-PAGE-2.jpg"><a href="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209-PAGE-21.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-large wp-image-1225" title="209 PAGE 2" src="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209-PAGE-21-791x1024.jpg" alt="" width="791" height="1024" /></a><br />
</a></p>
<div style="width: 100%; clear: both; padding-top: 20px;"><img class="alignleft size-large wp-image-1207" title="209 IGNITION press release _Page_3" src="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209-IGNITION-press-release-_Page_3-791x1024.jpg" alt="" width="791" height="1024" /></div>
<div style="width: 100%; clear: both; padding-top: 20px;"><a href="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209-IGNITION-press-release-_Page_4.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-large wp-image-1208" title="209 IGNITION press release _Page_4" src="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209-IGNITION-press-release-_Page_4-791x1024.jpg" alt="" width="791" height="1024" /></a></div>
<div style="width: 100%; clear: both; padding-top: 20px;"><a href="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209-IGNITION-press-release-_Page_5.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-large wp-image-1209" title="209 IGNITION press release _Page_5" src="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209-IGNITION-press-release-_Page_5-791x1024.jpg" alt="" width="791" height="1024" /></a></div>
<div style="width: 100%; clear: both; padding-top: 20px;"><a href="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209-IGNITION-press-release-_Page_6.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-large wp-image-1210" title="209 IGNITION press release _Page_6" src="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209-IGNITION-press-release-_Page_6-791x1024.jpg" alt="" width="791" height="1024" /></a></div>
<div style="width: 100%; clear: both; padding-top: 20px;"><a href="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209-IGNITION-press-release-_Page_7.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-large wp-image-1211" title="209 IGNITION press release _Page_7" src="http://www.kelleyroygallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/209-IGNITION-press-release-_Page_7-791x1024.jpg" alt="" width="791" height="1024" /></a></div>
<h3><span style="color: #3366ff;"><strong><span style="color: #0f9ec7;"><br />
</span></strong></span></h3>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
</div>
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