Time flies. Days slip by, sometimes almost surreptitiously, until decades have passed. Angela King noticed that recently as she realized that her gallery was 30 years old. She has been its director for decades, starting when it was called the Hanson Gallery and featured work that was to contemporary art what "easy listening" is to FM radio. After buying it from its California-based owner ten years ago, King included art that, while still accessible, has more psychological or spiritual depth. The current Marlene Rose expo of cast glass sculptures is decorous while resonating the timeless aura associated with the African masks, Buddha heads, totems and ancient artifacts. Local art buffs will note some parallels with the cast glass concoctions of local maestro Mitch Gaudet, whose surreal works often feature martyred saints whose suffering on behalf of others reflects traditional Roman Catholic notions of empathy. Both studied glass sculpture at Tulane, but Rose's serene Buddha heads like Purple Lotus Buddha, above, evokes a meditative sort of empathy meant to transcend suffering itself. Royal Street's highly competitive distractions can be daunting, but King's humanistic focus makes her offerings personable.
Belgian artist Eddy Stevens' dreamlike portraits, painted in a magic realist style reminiscent of van Eyck, Lucian Freud and our late, local barfly genius, Noel Rockmore, evoke characters from fantastical fiction while looking oddly at home in the French Quarter. Local artist Aaron Reichert's manically dynamic and sinewy gestural paintings of historical figures like Abraham Lincoln and Albert Einstein also hark to
