November 1 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
event
Friday, November 1, 6–8 pm
tickets
$20.
Includes light snacks and refreshments
Please note that this event is now sold out.
Gallery 263 invites New England-based artists, arts administrators, and curators of all experience levels to expand their creative network at our second-ever Boston Arts Community Speed Networking Night. Join us for a fun and casual evening, where you will meet others in the arts community through a combination of timed and free form networking. For this event, we are pleased to welcome special guests Michael Rose and Patrick Goguen. This event is hosted by the staff and board of Gallery 263.
With Special Guests
Michael Rose
Michael Rose is an art gallerist and writer based in Providence, Rhode Island. Since 2014, he has served as Gallery Manager at the historic Providence Art Club. He also authors the popular weekly “Inside Art” column for local news site GoLocalProv.com, profiling artists and reviewing exhibitions around the state. Additionally, he juries shows, advises artists, and teaches courses throughout New England. With over a decade of experience in the visual arts, Michael has worked with hundreds of artists and thousands of works of art.
Michael earned a BA in Art History from Providence College and a Certificate in Appraisal Studies in Fine and Decorative Arts at New York University. In his spare time he enjoys reading, traveling to museums and galleries, and sampling cocktails in dimly lit bars.
Patrick Goguen
Patrick Goguen is a Boston-based interdisciplinary artist, art installer extraordinaire, and community arts advocate. He is leading the development of the gallery at Artisans Asylum launching fall 202Patrick Goguen is a Boston-based interdisciplinary artist, art installer extraordinaire, and community arts advocate. He leads Gallery A2 at Artisans Asylum. He has curated and installed artworks throughout New England, built an elephant toy, timber-framed in Poland, TA’d Human Anatomy & Mold-Making, and spent 6 years running a non-for-profit bicycle shop. In his sculpture he works with the human form participating in the canonization of societal iconography condensing multi-faceted narratives into physical form.
Patrick works in the figurative tradition he creates emotional depth to his work by offering two distinct experiences. The physical experience of seeing it in person and a secondary abstracted emotional queue through poetry, providing narrative scaffolding, without directly telling viewers what to think.