Opening Reception—Clarissa Tossin: Stereoscopic Vision
Tuesday, January 31, 2017 at 4:30pm
Ezra and Cecile Zilkha Gallery
FREE!
Opening Reception: Tuesday, January 31, 2017 at 4:30pm
We see in stereo: each eye registers something different, and the information contained in each is then stitched together in our brains, resulting in a three-dimensional visualization—something more complex, and greater in meaning, than when read as two separate images. Stereoscopic Vision, the Brazilian-born, Los Angeles-based artist Clarissa Tossin's first solo exhibition in the Northeast, features key objects in photography, sculpture, and video from several bodies of work to highlight the dualities between natural and manufactured; two and three-dimensions; co-dependent economies; intention and actuality; and the United States and Brazil.
Support for this exhibition provided by Wesleyan University's College of the Environment and the Department of Art and Art History.
The exhibition is on display through Sunday March 5, 2017. Click here for more information about the exhibition.
Image: Clarissa Tossin, When two places look alike, 2012-2013, photograph series, 40" x 27", courtesy of Samuel Freeman Gallery.