Five-Minute Tours: “Earl Staley: The Machine” at Sabine Street Studios

by Glasstire September 24, 2024
A non-figurative abstract painting with bright colors.

A work by Earl Staley

Note: the following is part of Glasstire’s series of short videos, Five-Minute Tours, for which commercial galleries, museums, nonprofits, and artist-run spaces across the state of Texas send us video walk-throughs of their current exhibitionsLet’s get your show in front of an audience.

See other Five-Minute Tours here.

Earl Staley: The Machine,” at Sabine Street Studios’ North Gallery. Dates: July 18 – August 31, 2024.

Via Sabine Street Studios:
“The artworks chosen for this exhibition are large, densely colorful paintings on canvas that highlight Staley‘s variety of approaches to image-making, mark-making, and his range of techniques. Even at this stage in his long career, Staley continues to experiment, attempting new and different ways of building and finishing a work of art. The paintings all exist somewhere on a wide spectrum of abstraction and pictorial quality, as well as physicality. Though landscapes are evident in his work, no subject is off the table for the artist. For Staley, the most important considerations are that his pictures be “visually delightful, intellectually stimulating, and tell an interesting story.”
Earl Staley grew up in the suburbs of Chicago, Illinois, and resides in Houston, Texas. He is an artist and teacher with more than 60 years of experience. Mr. Staley holds Bachelor of Fine Arts and Master of Fine Arts degrees. He taught at Washington University in St. Louis, Rice University in Houston, and the University of St. Thomas in Houston, where he was chairperson of the Art Department. Today he teaches in the Fine Art program at Lonestar College in Tomball, TX. Mr. Staley is the recipient of three grants from the National Endowment for the Arts. In 1981 he received the Rome Prize in Painting from the American Academy in Rome, Italy and he resided in Rome for 4 years. Mr. Staley‘s paintings look back to his artistic roots and forward to new interpretations of the myths and symbols embedded in his life.”

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1 comment

Craig Bunch September 26, 2024 - 04:56

Great to see Earl’s recent work in such colorful profusion!

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