Recent Exhibits

The Artist

Gallery

Shop

Guests

Exhibits

Links

E-mail

Home

2001 Virtual solo exhibit, Sunflower Cablevision, "Home & Away," televised     
  feature, Lawrence, KS
2000 Juried Exhibit, Woman Made Gallery, "The Garment Show", Chicago, Illinois
2000 Documentation Exhibit, "Rats and Mice - Think Twice,"  Berlin, Germany
2000 Juried exhibit, Galeria D'Art Zero, "Summer 2000," Barcelona, Spain
2000 Juried exhibit, Galeria D'Art Zero, "Art in Direct," Barcelona, Spain
2000 Juried exhibit, Woman Made Gallery, "Fairy Tales," Chicago, Illinois
2000 University of California at Berkeley, "Women at the Millenium"
2000 Juried exhibit, Osceola Gallery, "These Are A Few Of My Favorite Things," Emeryville, CA
1999 Solo exhibit, Mambo-Mambo, Oakland, California
1999 Virtual solo exhibit, Hotel Libertador, Cuzco, Peru
1999 Solo exhibit, Potrero Brewing Company, San Francisco, California
1999 Oscelola Gallery, Emeryville, California
1999 Sticks Gallery, Berkeley, California
1998 Juried exhibit, The Museum of Arts Downtown Los Angeles, "The Still Small Voice of Conscience," Los Angeles, California
1998 Juried exhibit, The Center For Visual Arts, "The X Exhibit," Oakland, California
1998 Juried exhibit, The Center For Visual Arts. "Dream Art," Oakland, California

   The following is a recent review of my work by Don Lambert who is a freelance writer and curator based in Topeka, Kansas. His stories have appeared in the Saturday Review, American Artist, and dozens of national and regional publications. Exhibits he has curated and organized have been in nearly 400 art museums, art centers and libraries across the country, including the National Museum of American Art in Washington, D.C.

  "While the fact Laura Epler's art does not fit into a specific category may seem a weakness, it is actually a strength. The paintings do not need categorization; they are beyond that need in both their emotional content and their technical ability.

  The paintings move back and forth from hints of subject matter to abstraction, from didactic to spiritual. One senses she started where Rothko and Pollock ended, infusing them with post-modernist concerns of journalizing, mysticism and feminism.

  The results are paintings, which can be read only on a solitary level, requiring intelligence and intuition. Gazing into the paintings, almost falling into them, one feels the layers of paint symbolic of expression and discovery. Then, upon realizing the connectedness of it all - essentially life and art - the satisfaction arrives.

  Watching these paintings evolve, I have seen the artist take a lifetime of self-exploration and translate it onto canvas. The work continues to amaze me as it reveals painterly and spiritual sensations far beyond the limits of expectation."

Click Here!