Aghast in the Gallery
6:00 pm to 9:00 pm
From Friday, October 9, 2009 to Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Aghast in the Gallery
Art from the Underworld and Afterlife
   | October 9 – November 3 Opening Reception:
October 9th 6-9pm 

Opening Reception Photos by Pons MaarOpening is part of the Estuary Art Attack – 2nd FridaysPaintings by Kevin Evans, Anna Noelle Rockwell, and Honey McMoney, installation by Terrance Graven and Heather Ciriza, altar by Ratka Mira Popovic of Nectar Studios, Video by Ed Holmes. 

Kevin Evans is a native Californian, born in San Luis Obispo, and resident of the San Francisco bay area for over 24 years. Chosen mediums are painting, printmaking, sculpture and digital media. Since 1995, Kevin has worked as an artist in the CGI/computer games industry. In 1990 Kevin, along with John Law and the Cacophony Society, assisted in the successful relocation of The Burning Man Project from Baker Beach, San Francisco, to the Black Rock desert in Nevada. The effigy was to be a centerpiece of a Cacophony Society event Law and Evans had planned “Zone Trip #4, Bad day at Black Rock”. From 1990 to 1995, Kevin was one of the participating artists contributing to the early creation of the “theme camps” and “creative” target ranges, as well as miscellaneous events associated with the San Francisco Cacophony Society.

Anna Noelle Rockwell lives and works in San Francisco, California and received a degree in cultural anthropology and fine art from Bennington College in 1995 (in addition, she attended Parsons School of Design, NYC and San Francisco Art Institute). Her solo exhibitions include Merrin Gallery, Half Moon Bay, California and numerous group exhibitions include Bert Green Fine Art and La Luz de Jesus, Los Angeles, California, Elaine Benson Gallery, Bridge Hampton, New York and Art Inc., Ballston Spa, New York. She is currently working on a series referencing dark matter, string and particle theories as they might apply to an understanding of “the self.” She continues to produce fine art and commissions for her clientele.

Honey McMoney, now age 39, lives in Uncanny Valley, San Francisco. The following media sometimes convey the message: watercolor, graphite, googly eyes, friends’ faces, shit on the street, and paper – lots and lots of paper. Honey won his first award for art at a playground in 1976. “It’s all downhill from here.”