Coming soon to Ro2 Art! Marilyn Waligore: Post-Convenience, & Cynthia Giron: Playing in Bewteen

Marilyn Waligore
Post-Convenience

OPENING RECEPTION
Saturday, May 25
7-10 PM

ON VIEW
May 25 – June 29, 2019

RSVP

ABOUT THE ARTIST




Ro2 Art | Downtown Pop-Up
1508 Commerce
Dallas, TX 75201


Ro2 Art is proud to present new works by artist Marilyn Waligore. Stop by our Downtown Pop-Up from 7-10 PM for the artist reception at 1508 Commerce, Dallas TX 75201..
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Marilyn Waligore creates images using reclaimed aluminum forms to develop new sculptural structures in an absurd comment on the potential possibilities for the reuse of post-consumer waste. Her work in Post-Convenience forges a link between photography and sculpture and reflects on our societies complex relationship with consumption. The artist collects her aluminum objects during walks through her neighborhood, seeking materials with characteristics that resist manipulation, yet remain malleable. Waligore presents her images in a high-resolution format, often found in product photography and portray objects as something of value. Post-Convenience emphasizes an embrace of conservation, and compels a reconsideration of our daily habits and their global impact.


Cynthia Giron
Playing in Between

OPENING RECEPTION
Thrusday, May 23
6-8 PM

ON VIEW
May 22 – July 2, 2019


RSVP

ABOUT THE ARTIST



Ro2 Art | The Magnolia Theatre
3699 McKinney Avenue, St 100
Dallas, TX 75204

Ro2 Art is proud to present Cynthia Giron’s solo exhibition Playing in Between. The show will run from May 22 through July 2, 2019. There will be an artist reception at Ro2 Art at The Magnolia Theatre located at 3699 McKinney Avenue, Suite 100, Dallas TX 75204 from 6-8 PM on Thursday, May 23.
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My work is about play.

By focusing on personal narratives and my experiences of growing up as a first-generation American, I touch on themes of nostalgia and th e in-between. I create as a way to make a space for myself. Here I am free to explore memories, now that I have the language to describe them. The work is manifested in paintings that combine recognizable objects and parts of the body, especially hands. I use hands to represent the ties I have in both of my cultures. At times, they are just snippets or combined recollections. I see them as a puzzle, where I am carefully attempting to line up each piece to make sense of the whole picture.