I have always loved making unique postcards but had never printed a full edition prior to this holiday season.
In 2008 I amazingly found the time to print Peace, Love, Joy an edition of 130 holiday cards featuring two turtle doves in a winter tree.
I sent the cards to friends, family and individuals on my art-blast list who requested a card. I loved this experience and hope to print and send more limited edition cards in the near future. If you received one of my cards this holiday season, I hope you enjoyed it.
If you would like to receive a limited edition cards in the future please email me your name and address and I will be more then happy to include you.
-Rossi
rossitza@charter.net
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Monday, November 10, 2008
395 South Exhibit at the Investment Gallery November 3, 2008 - January 31, 2009
395 South, an exhibit of drawings on paper, inspired by my daily commute between Reno and Carson City, will be on display at the Investment Gallery November 3, 2008 through January 31, 2009.
The Investment Gallery located on the third floor of the Fitzgerald Student Services Building, on the University of Nevada, Reno campus.
For the last three years I have been commuting from Reno to Carson City. The hour and a half commute is not easy and it weighs on me physically and emotionally. Having a job that I love keeps me from dreading my early mornings but it is the landscape sweeping by my windshield that I look forward to each day.
Driving out of Reno on 395 South I leave the land of suburban sprawl and enter the high desert. I speed trough valleys and over hills. The meadows open and lengthen at each turn. Halfway through my journey Mt. Rose emerges and begins to tower as a snow capped giant and at her feet a new monument is raising, that of an un-built bridge. Pillars stand as ionic columns and images of a Greek tomb and Athenian hilltops rush to the foreground of my mind. The water of Washoe swells and subsides with every passing and the strip of road between the mountain and the lake brings with it the pleasure of speed and the straight open road. It creates one line connecting what-was to what-is-to-come. At the end of the path is Carson City, my destination for the day. The road beckons, “go faster,” “press on the gas,” and like a Siren’s call I am enchanted. The speed pushes on 70, 75, 80 mph. But with the speed comes danger even on this straight road, for the wind is traitorous, and the snow spins whiteouts, it eats up sound and blinds me with fog. Once I breach the hill and look down into the small capital city, tucked into the folds of the Sierras, I descend as a crusader having pushed my car and myself though another 30 miles. Though I repeat my journey to the count of 300 miles a week the road of 395 South between Reno and Carson City is never the same twice. It inspires my depiction of the road, movement, travel and unpredictable road ahead.
Special thanks to the Sheppard Fine Art Gallery, School of the Arts, Department of Art, and the University of Nevada, Reno.
Investment Gallery located on the third floor of the Fitzgerald Student Services Building, building number 94, connected to the Brian J. Whalen parking garage, and located just north of the Church Fine Art Building. Map
Visit my new website to view a gallery of my artwork. www.rossitza.net
The Investment Gallery located on the third floor of the Fitzgerald Student Services Building, on the University of Nevada, Reno campus.
For the last three years I have been commuting from Reno to Carson City. The hour and a half commute is not easy and it weighs on me physically and emotionally. Having a job that I love keeps me from dreading my early mornings but it is the landscape sweeping by my windshield that I look forward to each day.
Driving out of Reno on 395 South I leave the land of suburban sprawl and enter the high desert. I speed trough valleys and over hills. The meadows open and lengthen at each turn. Halfway through my journey Mt. Rose emerges and begins to tower as a snow capped giant and at her feet a new monument is raising, that of an un-built bridge. Pillars stand as ionic columns and images of a Greek tomb and Athenian hilltops rush to the foreground of my mind. The water of Washoe swells and subsides with every passing and the strip of road between the mountain and the lake brings with it the pleasure of speed and the straight open road. It creates one line connecting what-was to what-is-to-come. At the end of the path is Carson City, my destination for the day. The road beckons, “go faster,” “press on the gas,” and like a Siren’s call I am enchanted. The speed pushes on 70, 75, 80 mph. But with the speed comes danger even on this straight road, for the wind is traitorous, and the snow spins whiteouts, it eats up sound and blinds me with fog. Once I breach the hill and look down into the small capital city, tucked into the folds of the Sierras, I descend as a crusader having pushed my car and myself though another 30 miles. Though I repeat my journey to the count of 300 miles a week the road of 395 South between Reno and Carson City is never the same twice. It inspires my depiction of the road, movement, travel and unpredictable road ahead.
Special thanks to the Sheppard Fine Art Gallery, School of the Arts, Department of Art, and the University of Nevada, Reno.
Investment Gallery located on the third floor of the Fitzgerald Student Services Building, building number 94, connected to the Brian J. Whalen parking garage, and located just north of the Church Fine Art Building. Map
Visit my new website to view a gallery of my artwork. www.rossitza.net
Friday, September 12, 2008
Burn on the Black Rock Playa Exhibit
September 10 – 28, 2009 at the Truckee River Gallery
Reception, Saturday, September 20th from 4 to 7pm.
The Burning Man festival is a celebration of creativity. For one week each year art of every kind fills the playa of Black Rock Desert, but it doesn’t end there. In celebration and response to the artwork that Burning Man inspires, the Truckee River Gallery in Downtown Reno hosts Burn on the Black Rock Playa, an annual exhibit of drawing, painting, photography, printmaking and sculpture.
Phoenix, featured on the left, is on display at the Truckee River Gallery’s Burn on the Black Rock Playa exhibit. Phoenix is a part of a series of etchings and drawings depicting two headed woman with wings of fire. This work was created in the fall of 2002 after my first visit to Black Rock City. The woman represents an inter struggle of spirit and passion divided between two worlds of creativity and reality. Burning Man and the temporary city of Black Rock (BRC) inspire the same internal divide. For one week attendees are set free from the restrictions of the everyday life (money, cell phones, cars etc.) and are flung into a world of creativity and art. However, we are only visitors, and no one can stay in BRC forever. The city disappears with flames when the Man and Temple are burned. From the ashes the plan for the year ahead is formed and a population of 50,000 will come together to create it all again the following August.
Join us on Saturday, September 20th from 4 to 7pm at the Truckee River Gallery for the reception and help us celebrate art and to bridge the divide between BRC and reality.
Visit my new website to view a gallery of my artwork. www.rossitza.net
Reception, Saturday, September 20th from 4 to 7pm.
The Burning Man festival is a celebration of creativity. For one week each year art of every kind fills the playa of Black Rock Desert, but it doesn’t end there. In celebration and response to the artwork that Burning Man inspires, the Truckee River Gallery in Downtown Reno hosts Burn on the Black Rock Playa, an annual exhibit of drawing, painting, photography, printmaking and sculpture.
Phoenix, featured on the left, is on display at the Truckee River Gallery’s Burn on the Black Rock Playa exhibit. Phoenix is a part of a series of etchings and drawings depicting two headed woman with wings of fire. This work was created in the fall of 2002 after my first visit to Black Rock City. The woman represents an inter struggle of spirit and passion divided between two worlds of creativity and reality. Burning Man and the temporary city of Black Rock (BRC) inspire the same internal divide. For one week attendees are set free from the restrictions of the everyday life (money, cell phones, cars etc.) and are flung into a world of creativity and art. However, we are only visitors, and no one can stay in BRC forever. The city disappears with flames when the Man and Temple are burned. From the ashes the plan for the year ahead is formed and a population of 50,000 will come together to create it all again the following August.
Join us on Saturday, September 20th from 4 to 7pm at the Truckee River Gallery for the reception and help us celebrate art and to bridge the divide between BRC and reality.
Visit my new website to view a gallery of my artwork. www.rossitza.net
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Black and White Exhibit at the Truckee River Gallery August 19 - September 7, 2008.
Two of my new drawings are on display in the Truckee River Gallery’s Black and White exhibit. This multi-medium show about black, white and all shades of gray features photography, drawings, paintings and sculpture by Christopher Blum, Dean Burton, Steve Cerocke, Amelia Currier, Mark Hammon, Sally Hanrahan, Maria Partridge, Andrew Sinclair and myself.
The Truckee River Gallery is located in the heart of downtown Reno on Sierra Street next to the Riverside Movie Theater.
For more information visit www.truckeerivergallery.com or www.rossitza.net.
Please stop by to take a look.
Thank you for all the support.
The Truckee River Gallery is located in the heart of downtown Reno on Sierra Street next to the Riverside Movie Theater.
For more information visit www.truckeerivergallery.com or www.rossitza.net.
Please stop by to take a look.
Thank you for all the support.
Monday, July 28, 2008
www.rossitza.net
I have a new website and I would love for you to check it out.
To visit, just click on the links below or paste the URLs into your browser.http://www.rossitza.net
To visit, just click on the links below or paste the URLs into your browser.http://www.rossitza.net
Take a look and let me know what you think!
Add www.rossitza.net to your favorites list and check back for new artwork, announcements on upcoming exhibits, and art inspired experiences.
Exhibit Opening at the Truckee River Gallery, Reno, July 25-26, 2008
Exhibit Opening at the Truckee River Gallery July 25-26, 2008
Please join me for an Exhibit Opening at the Truckee River Gallery on Friday July 25 and Sat July 26 from 4-7 pm in Downtown Reno.
Three of my drawings are featured in the current exhibit along side other regional artist’s drawing, printmaking, and mixed media artwork.
This exhibit is on display July 22-July 27, 2008. See you on Friday and Sat.
For more info visit: http://www.truckeerivergallery.com/
Please join me for an Exhibit Opening at the Truckee River Gallery on Friday July 25 and Sat July 26 from 4-7 pm in Downtown Reno.
Three of my drawings are featured in the current exhibit along side other regional artist’s drawing, printmaking, and mixed media artwork.
This exhibit is on display July 22-July 27, 2008. See you on Friday and Sat.
For more info visit: http://www.truckeerivergallery.com/
Thursday, June 26, 2008
We he(ART) Bikes Art Show, Gray Space Gallery, Reno, April 26, 2008
Grayspace Gallery and Holland HQ We he(ART) Bikes Art Show The Reno Bike Project presents its second annual bike art show and fund-raiser.
Join us at Grayspace Gallery and Holland HQ and enjoy a variety of bike-themed art. Purchase paintings, photos and multi-media pieces from artists such as Ahren Hertel, Chris Carnel, Candace Nicol, Rossitza Todorova and many more. Profits help support Grayspace, The Holland Project and the Reno Bike Project, a nonprofit group that encourages cycling in the Truckee Meadows.
We will be auctioning off a bicycle rack made by Anthony Alston out of an organ.
Support provided by the Sierra Arts Foundation, the Nevada Arts Council and New Belgium Brewing.
When: 6 p.m. Sat., April 26.
Where: 26 Cheney St. Turn east at Recycled Furniture on South Virginia Street; next door to Salon 7.
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Chalk the Walk, Harrah's Plaza, Reno, June 19 - 21, 2008
Chalk the Walk
Harrah’s Plaza, Reno June 19 - 21, 2008
By Jessica Santina
This article was published in the Reno News and Review on 06.19.08.
As founder and director Erika O’Malley explains, street painting is an Italian Renaissance tradition in which artisans (madonnari) painted religious depictions on the streets in front of city churches. Street painting has enjoyed a resurgence in recent years, due in part to successful events like Santa Barbara’s I Madonnari Street Painting Festival. After O’Malley, an art historian and native of San Antonio, Texas, moved to Reno a couple of years ago, she came to believe such an event could succeed here.
“We have so many talented artists here, and they’re always looking for ways to get their art seen by the public,” she says. “And we have great weather.”
After securing a sponsorship from the Reno Rodeo, several prominent regional artists were commissioned, and by the summer 2007, the inaugural Chalk the Walk kicked off at the City Plaza downtown.
This year’s festival runs three days, June 19-21, and will take place at Harrah’s plaza. Portions of the nearly 12,000 square feet of chalk-able space will be allotted to six commissioned artists, with the remainder being available to anyone who wants to participate, from accomplished artists to families looking to get outside together. Public plots range from 2 feet to 8 feet across; commissioned spots are 8-feet-by-12-feet. Always a western-themed event, this year’s festival celebrates “Where Art Meets West,” honoring artists of the American West, such as Georgia O’Keeffe and Ansel Adams.
Several commissioned artists are returning this year, including Genna Panzarella, an acclaimed international artist and teacher whose street paintings won top prize in a 2002 international competition in Italy. Also commissioned are Reno’s Youth ArtWorks organization; Wes Lee, a local artist and UNR instructor; Derrick Jackson of Sacramento; and Larissa Soklova, a Reno-based artist whose 3-D illusions have earned her two awards at the Tahoe Arts Festival Street Painting Competition.
Additionally, local artist Ray Valdez will return. With more than 30 murals throughout Nevada and a successful fine art gallery in Reno, Valdez is a certified art instructor who recently led a free pre-festival workshop on basic street painting techniques.
Street painting, Valdez explains, takes enormous physical stamina. It involves hours upon hours, knees on cement, with the hot summer sun beating down on your back as you sit hunched over.
“It’s hard work,” says Valdez, “You’re gonna get beat up a bit. I’ve seen artists use gloves, but when it gets down to it, your fingers are best. So they’re gonna get raw.”
Such physical issues, as well as artistic tips, were subjects of the workshop.
Valdez himself has been planning his own piece for weeks, intending to complete it before the morning of Saturday, June 21, and the Reno Rodeo Parade. The idea of such a grueling task makes one wonder: Why invest so much time and energy on something that’s only temporary?
To illustrate, he likens street painting to the Native American tradition of ceremonial sand painting.
“For ceremony, they grind the stone by hand to get those vibrant colors, and that’s even more work. But then, after they pray on it, they give it away. It doesn’t hurt to let it go. It’s about the experience, and it’s not meant to be permanent. It’s about the process of giving of yourself.”
Copyright (c) Reno News and Review. All rights reserved.
Harrah’s Plaza, Reno June 19 - 21, 2008
By Jessica Santina
This article was published in the Reno News and Review on 06.19.08.
Around Reno, artists have spent weeks getting their bodies into tip-top shape. Hopefully, they’ve stocked up on gloves, sunscreen, hats and knee-pads. Because they’re about to spend three days performing a labor of love for the second annual Chalk the Walk Street Painting Festival.
As founder and director Erika O’Malley explains, street painting is an Italian Renaissance tradition in which artisans (madonnari) painted religious depictions on the streets in front of city churches. Street painting has enjoyed a resurgence in recent years, due in part to successful events like Santa Barbara’s I Madonnari Street Painting Festival. After O’Malley, an art historian and native of San Antonio, Texas, moved to Reno a couple of years ago, she came to believe such an event could succeed here.
“We have so many talented artists here, and they’re always looking for ways to get their art seen by the public,” she says. “And we have great weather.”
After securing a sponsorship from the Reno Rodeo, several prominent regional artists were commissioned, and by the summer 2007, the inaugural Chalk the Walk kicked off at the City Plaza downtown.
This year’s festival runs three days, June 19-21, and will take place at Harrah’s plaza. Portions of the nearly 12,000 square feet of chalk-able space will be allotted to six commissioned artists, with the remainder being available to anyone who wants to participate, from accomplished artists to families looking to get outside together. Public plots range from 2 feet to 8 feet across; commissioned spots are 8-feet-by-12-feet. Always a western-themed event, this year’s festival celebrates “Where Art Meets West,” honoring artists of the American West, such as Georgia O’Keeffe and Ansel Adams.
Several commissioned artists are returning this year, including Genna Panzarella, an acclaimed international artist and teacher whose street paintings won top prize in a 2002 international competition in Italy. Also commissioned are Reno’s Youth ArtWorks organization; Wes Lee, a local artist and UNR instructor; Derrick Jackson of Sacramento; and Larissa Soklova, a Reno-based artist whose 3-D illusions have earned her two awards at the Tahoe Arts Festival Street Painting Competition.
Additionally, local artist Ray Valdez will return. With more than 30 murals throughout Nevada and a successful fine art gallery in Reno, Valdez is a certified art instructor who recently led a free pre-festival workshop on basic street painting techniques.
Street painting, Valdez explains, takes enormous physical stamina. It involves hours upon hours, knees on cement, with the hot summer sun beating down on your back as you sit hunched over.
“It’s hard work,” says Valdez, “You’re gonna get beat up a bit. I’ve seen artists use gloves, but when it gets down to it, your fingers are best. So they’re gonna get raw.”
Such physical issues, as well as artistic tips, were subjects of the workshop.
Valdez himself has been planning his own piece for weeks, intending to complete it before the morning of Saturday, June 21, and the Reno Rodeo Parade. The idea of such a grueling task makes one wonder: Why invest so much time and energy on something that’s only temporary?
To illustrate, he likens street painting to the Native American tradition of ceremonial sand painting.
“For ceremony, they grind the stone by hand to get those vibrant colors, and that’s even more work. But then, after they pray on it, they give it away. It doesn’t hurt to let it go. It’s about the experience, and it’s not meant to be permanent. It’s about the process of giving of yourself.”
Copyright (c) Reno News and Review. All rights reserved.
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Selections from Dada Motel
Selections from Dada Motel
UNLV Marjorie Barrick Museum, Las Vegas Jan 25 – March 21, 2008
UNLV Marjorie Barrick Museum, Las Vegas Jan 25 – March 21, 2008
Visitors to UNLV’s Marjorie Barrick Museum will have a chance to experience the work of Northern Nevada artists who took over downtown Reno last summer for what they called “a celebration of Reno's unlimited potential for absurdity.”
“Selections from the Dada Motel” features the work of 28 artists—representing media ranging from photography and animation, to sculpture and eggs—who participated in an independently organized three-day celebration of Reno art, dubbed “The Dada Motel,” last summer. Participants rented hotel rooms in and around the El Cortez Hotel in downtown Reno and organized eclectic displays of their work by turning the rooms into impromptu art galleries.
The exhibit runs from Jan. 25 through March 21 and is curated by Dada Motel participant Chad Sorg.
Friday, February 22, 2008
Bridges and Lakes, Backseat Gallery, Carson City April 1 – April 30, 2008
Bridges and Lakes Backseat Gallery, Carson City, April 1 – April 30, 2008
“Bridges and Lakes” an exhibit of small landscape drawings on paper by Reno artist Rossitza Todorova will be on display at the Backseat Gallery April 1 – April 30, 2008.
An Artist Reception will be held on Wed, April 2, 2008 from 5-7pm.
The Backseat Gallery is located inside Comma Coffee in Carson City's historic downtown district at 312 South Carson Street, across from the State Legislature Building
“Bridges and Lakes” an exhibit of small landscape drawings on paper by Reno artist Rossitza Todorova will be on display at the Backseat Gallery April 1 – April 30, 2008.
An Artist Reception will be held on Wed, April 2, 2008 from 5-7pm.
The Backseat Gallery is located inside Comma Coffee in Carson City's historic downtown district at 312 South Carson Street, across from the State Legislature Building
Thursday, February 7, 2008
Sheppard Gallery Valentine’s Day Art Auction
Show some love
Sheppard Gallery Heart Art Auction
By Cherie Louise Turner
This article was published in the Reno News and Review on 02.07.08.
Every other year for the past 18, a special event has taken place around Feb. 14 that has everything to do with heart, art and giving, but nothing to do with awkward dates or diamond jewelry. It’s the Valentine’s Day Art Auction, a silent auction and raffle to benefit UNR’s Sheppard Gallery. It’s the gallery’s only fundraiser.
This year, for the ninth biennial auction, roughly 90 artists are represented. All work is currently on show at the gallery. Most of the artists, like Eunkang Koh, Tamara Scronce, J. Damron, Robert Brown, Anthony Alston, Ahren Hertel and Rebekah Bogard are from Northern Nevada, though a handful of out-of-towners, like Polly Apfelbaum and Fawn Krieger, have contributed as well.
Each artist has donated an original piece of work that will go to the highest bidder, with the proceeds going to Sheppard Gallery.
Though artists are allowed to create whatever they wish, many stuck to a heart theme. Works range from handmade books to sculpture, paintings to prints.
Larry Williamson’s piñon pine creation, “Hearts ‘o’ Plenty–Great Basin Cupid with a Little Touch of the Devil,” is a wood-carved wall sculpture featuring red hearts and a figure with arms open and placed at center.
Hertel’s painting, “Puncture” depicts a hummingbird poking at the bubbly output of a tentacled water creature. Apfelbaum created the flowery, “Valentine Bouquet.”
Leah Ruby donated a handmade book titled Wallpaper Sample Book for Couples. The pages resemble Rorschach inkblot tests—mirror images joined in the middle.
A limited edition print by artist and UNR professor Michael Sarich will be put up on the block.
The artist Renate’s piece, “Delicious,” is “a series of five sets of wax lips on which shiny little beads have been carefully adhered.”
A number of pieces point toward the harsher, darker side of the emotional scale; several featuring bullet imagery. Among such fierce works is Damron’s “Untitled,” from the series Red Lips, War Paint, Half a Horse, which makes its pointed statement with a finely crafted spike atop a beautiful block of oak.
Bidding starts at $45. At the last auction, the highest winning bid for any work was $400. Given the quality of the work and résumés of the artists represented, such cash outlays practically constitute a fire sale.
Not surprisingly, this is a great event at which to cut your art-buying teeth, and for the more involved art collector, it’s a fabulous chance at some stunning buys. To win, you should be present and ready to bid, though you can send a representative, or give the gallery your highest bid in cash or check beforehand.
Event organizer Kathy Wood expects a crowd of 300 or more and, she says, the bidding gets wild up to the last seconds.
Raffle prizes include dinner at the Peppermill or Sushi Pier 2, a gift certificate to Se7en Teahouse, Steamboat Springs, or a bottle of wine from Whispering Vine.
Bidding goes all week starting Feb. 4, with the auction, raffle and party starting around 5:30 p.m. on Feb. 8.
copyright © 2008 Reno News and Review
Sheppard Gallery Heart Art Auction
By Cherie Louise Turner
This article was published in the Reno News and Review on 02.07.08.
Every other year for the past 18, a special event has taken place around Feb. 14 that has everything to do with heart, art and giving, but nothing to do with awkward dates or diamond jewelry. It’s the Valentine’s Day Art Auction, a silent auction and raffle to benefit UNR’s Sheppard Gallery. It’s the gallery’s only fundraiser.
This year, for the ninth biennial auction, roughly 90 artists are represented. All work is currently on show at the gallery. Most of the artists, like Eunkang Koh, Tamara Scronce, J. Damron, Robert Brown, Anthony Alston, Ahren Hertel and Rebekah Bogard are from Northern Nevada, though a handful of out-of-towners, like Polly Apfelbaum and Fawn Krieger, have contributed as well.
Each artist has donated an original piece of work that will go to the highest bidder, with the proceeds going to Sheppard Gallery.
Though artists are allowed to create whatever they wish, many stuck to a heart theme. Works range from handmade books to sculpture, paintings to prints.
Larry Williamson’s piñon pine creation, “Hearts ‘o’ Plenty–Great Basin Cupid with a Little Touch of the Devil,” is a wood-carved wall sculpture featuring red hearts and a figure with arms open and placed at center.
Hertel’s painting, “Puncture” depicts a hummingbird poking at the bubbly output of a tentacled water creature. Apfelbaum created the flowery, “Valentine Bouquet.”
Leah Ruby donated a handmade book titled Wallpaper Sample Book for Couples. The pages resemble Rorschach inkblot tests—mirror images joined in the middle.
A limited edition print by artist and UNR professor Michael Sarich will be put up on the block.
The artist Renate’s piece, “Delicious,” is “a series of five sets of wax lips on which shiny little beads have been carefully adhered.”
A number of pieces point toward the harsher, darker side of the emotional scale; several featuring bullet imagery. Among such fierce works is Damron’s “Untitled,” from the series Red Lips, War Paint, Half a Horse, which makes its pointed statement with a finely crafted spike atop a beautiful block of oak.
Bidding starts at $45. At the last auction, the highest winning bid for any work was $400. Given the quality of the work and résumés of the artists represented, such cash outlays practically constitute a fire sale.
Not surprisingly, this is a great event at which to cut your art-buying teeth, and for the more involved art collector, it’s a fabulous chance at some stunning buys. To win, you should be present and ready to bid, though you can send a representative, or give the gallery your highest bid in cash or check beforehand.
Event organizer Kathy Wood expects a crowd of 300 or more and, she says, the bidding gets wild up to the last seconds.
Raffle prizes include dinner at the Peppermill or Sushi Pier 2, a gift certificate to Se7en Teahouse, Steamboat Springs, or a bottle of wine from Whispering Vine.
Bidding goes all week starting Feb. 4, with the auction, raffle and party starting around 5:30 p.m. on Feb. 8.
copyright © 2008 Reno News and Review
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