The Connector
The Connector

By Gray Chapman

bsteel_cgallery.jpgSCAD-Atlanta will host several new exhibitions this fall, featuring a variety of works and subject matters. The first to open was “Inside Outside,” a dual exhibition featuring the contrasting work and styles of two SCAD professors, Deborah and Steven Mosch. The exhibition will highlight the differences between each professor’s choice of subject matter and medium. According to the online press materials, “Deborah Mosch’s paintings and drawings present abstractions of her thoughts and emotions, while Steven Mosch’s panoramic photographs capture views of the outside world.” The exhibition will take place in the Trois Gallery at SCAD-Atlanta, from Sept. 8 to Thursday Nov. 20.

Opening shortly after “Inside Outside” was “Madama Butterfly,” an exhibition of work by
Japanese sculptor and painter Jun Kaneko. “Madama Butterfly” features Kaneko’s costume and set design drawings for the Opera Omaha’s 2006 production of Giacomo Puccini’s opera, “Madame Butterfly.”
According to online press materials, “These drawings reveal the complex interplay of space, movement,
musical score and light in an opera production, as well as Kaneko’s dedication to nurturing this creative
experience.” The exhibition opened on Sept. 12 and will run through Thursday, Nov. 20 in SCAD-Atlanta’s Gallery See.

On Sept. 19, The Factory debuted “SCAD@Large,” an exhibition exclusively featuring work by SCAD illustration, sculpture, painting and photography students. The various pieces exhibited in “SCAD@Large” are all large-format works that are too large to be exhibited on the SCAD campus. According to press materials, work by SCAD students Morgan Alexander, Yana Dimitrova, Harrison Fraley, Suzy Maier, Charles Parham, Seana Reilly, Richard Robbins, Brandon Sadler, Whitney Stansell, Cynthia Taylor, Yukari Umekawa and Whitney Wood will all be featured. The exhibition will take place at The Factory, a 6,000 square foot space with 25-foot ceilings located at 300 Martin Luther King Drive.