- Welcome
- Exhibitions
- Artists
- Joseph Anastasi
- Tim Brown
- Mark Bush
- Anthony Davenport
- Roselle Davenport
- Stephen Fessler
- Dennison Griffith
- Paul Hamilton
- Babette Herschberger
- Manuel Hughes
- Heather Lynn Kyle
- James Mason
- Michael McGinn
- Geer Morton
- Martina Nikova
- Aminah Robinson
- Karen Snouffer
- Jeff Stahler
- Milisa Valliere
- Laurent Vialet
- Joan Wobst
- Pam Workman
- John Worthington
- Erin Wozniak
- Contact
- Reviews
Various Gallery Articles and Reviews:
Current Show; Inspired by Music: New Works by Milisa Valliere: “Exhibit Review: Hammond Harkins Gallery: Musical Muse Inspires New Direction” The Columbus Dispatch. October 2011
Current Show; Inspired by Music: New Works by Milisa Valliere: “Painting by Numbers; musical numbers, that is” The Other Paper. September 2011
Past Show; Blossom: The Art of Fruit and Flower: “Artistic Evolution in Bloom: Gallery’s Blossom Explores the Still Life Genre” City Scene Magazine. April 2011
Gallery Artist Paul Hamilton: “Painting Ohio’s Poetry: Paul Hamilton Depicts Narrative Behind Landscapes” The Columbus Dispatch. June 2010
Gallery Artist James Mason: “The Visionary Behind the Vision” The Topiary Park.org.
“It seems that nothing can stance the flow of narrative art produced by Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson, whose richly embellished subjects run from ancient Africa to her birthplace, Columbus, Ohio, and who celebrates her heritage in materials that range from leaves, bark and twigs to buttons and cast-off clothes…Besides its sheer visual pizazz, what’s compelling about Ms. Robinson’s art is that in its own garrulous, very personal way it ruminates on the history of black migration to, and settlement in, the United States from early times to the present.”
- Grace Glueck, The New York Times
“Griffith, president of the Columbus College of Art & Design, uses the natural world as inspiration for his lyrical, abstract paintings. The panels of “Botanica” are enveloped by large, dark, rhythmic hues. Against the somber backgrounds emerge splashes of color and playful calligraphic lines…Indeed, the entirety of Griffith’s show, “New Paintings for a New Decade,” seems to speak the language of surface and texture. And equally important is what lies beneath that surface.”
-Amy Davis, The Columbus Dispatch
“McGinn captures nighttime street scenes of storefronts, restaurants and taverns he has viewed at different times of the day and year in Columbus and other cities…Open Road, a picture of railroad tracks in Columbus, is unexpectedly magnetic, with the tracks glistening in the dark and signal lamps glowing along the roadbed.”
-Bill Mayr, The Columbus Dispatch
