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What Once Was Lost Must Now Be Found: Chronicling Crimes Against Nature Works by Pam Longobardi - 2013 Hudgens Prize Winner

What Once Was Lost Must Now Be Found: Chronicling Crimes Against Nature


Works by Pam Longobardi - 2013 Hudgens Prize Winner


On view: April 16 – June 28, 2014

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Pam Longobardi of Atlanta, the winner of the prestigious $50,000 Hudgens Prize in 2013, opens her solo exhibition,
What Once Was Lost Must Now Be Found: Chronicling Crimes Against Nature,
at the Hudgens Center for the Arts in Duluth on Wednesday, April 16.  The exhibit will be on view through June 28. 

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Longobardi’s exhibit will be a continuation of her interdisciplinary international
Drifters Project, an ongoing environmental art intervention involving photography and installation.  Begun in 2006, the
Drifters Project looks at the material
artifacts of global consumer culture, the floating plastic object, its
impact on the natural world, and the nature of change the interconnected
world is now experiencing. 


 

Also on view

To Feel the Clouds….the Photography of John Slemp


Selected Works from the Permanent Collection


 


Reception & Family Day
Saturday,
April 26th  2 - 4pm (Free admission all day)


Artist’s Talk - Pam Longobardi
Saturday,
June 21st 1pm (Free for members; cost of admission for non-members)


Waterway Clean-up Program – see website for details

Programs presented in partnership with Gwinnett Clean & Beautiful

           


 


For additional programming & more information please visit our website: www.thehudgens.org


Hudgens Hours: Tues – Sat  10am – 5pm

 


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