Christopher Art Gallery Christopher Art Gallery Photos

For additional information, please contact Jan Bonavia at (708) 709-7844. You can also contact her by e-mail: jbonavia@prairiestate.edu


"Synergy"
Photos

"PSC Graduating Student Exhibition"
Photos

"Insight: A Survey of
33 Collective Gallery Artists"

Photos

"Photographer of the Year"
The 2009 Annual Student Exhibition
Photo

"Thinking Again"
Photos

"As Time Goes By"
Photos

"We the People Who
Are Blacker Than Blue"
Photos

 

Christopher Art Gallery | Board of Directors | PSC Foundation | Prairie State College Home Page

The current exhibit is
"Creative Vision"
March 8 - April 8

As Time Goes By


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Robert Kameczura

Robert Kameczura’s work frequently presents old themes, like “The Birth of Venus” or “Pandora” into entirely contemporary contexts.

Karena Karras

Karena Karras explores the world of fantastic dreams, often in context with poetry, in finely painted, jewel like, miniature oils.

Kim Laurel

Kim Laurel does multi-media pieces, often mixing printed images, painting, and application of cloth and objects. Her work often touches on animals and their symbolic meanings as well as exploring the way our inner consciousness focuses and reshapes elements of meaning.

Diane Levesque

Diane Levesque draws on a wide range of subject matter; war and peace, chaos and rationality, and often with reference to literary and artistic subject matter.

James Mesple

James Mesplé highly colorful paintings blend old myths and figures from sources both ancient and contemporary into theatrical tableaux.

Christine O'Connor

Christine O’Connor’s work focuses on humanistic themes, often exploring the psychology of various personalities ranging from Sigmund Freud to Albert Einstein.

Steve Sherrell

Steve Sherrell’s work has two facets, one is his computer based work which sometimes explores themes related to fantastic mysterious landscapes, or monumental goddess like figures in strange dress. The other aspect of his work explores painterly themes, sometime involving Zen like meditations in which the paint surfaces seem to have strange organic life of their own.