Neoteric Art Celebrates One Year

Neoteric Art would like to thank all the readers, artists and all the other folks who have contributed to the success of our first year. It’s been a blast. We hope you have enjoyed the articles, interviews, reviews and the “One Question” segments. We plan on bringing you a lot more during our second year. Thanks again!
To celebrate our one year anniversary, Neoteric Art will be having a get-together during the Open Studios at The Cornelia Arts Building in Norbert Marszalek’s studio 205-B (William Dolan will also have work on view) – 2nd floor on Friday, April 24th from 6-9pm and Saturday, April 25th from 11am-5pm.
The Cornelia Arts Building is located at 1800 West Cornelia Avenue, two blocks South of Addison Street.
Hope to see a few of you there!
Category: Events 9 comments »

April 19th, 2009 at 10:34 am
Thank YOU Norbert and Bill for bringing us such an informative and insightful venue. Best wishes to your continuing success.
April 20th, 2009 at 1:19 pm
Congrats!!!! … You guys are doing an awesome job…Looking forward to many more years of Neoteric Art.
April 20th, 2009 at 2:17 pm
Norbert & Bill: I like what you guys are doing very much and wish the next year to be even better. I’m passing the word…
Tom
April 20th, 2009 at 11:05 pm
Thank you!!
April 21st, 2009 at 3:01 pm
Congrats on the anniversary.
April 25th, 2009 at 9:54 am
Congrats, fellas! Keep going strong and bringing us the info from Chicago!
April 25th, 2009 at 7:43 pm
Stumbled into your studio on Cornelia St. Kinda richocheting, but actually lucid conversation about painting. Then, came to this site. It’s good to know there’s such stuff around!
April 27th, 2009 at 10:08 pm
Already! Congrats and thank you…love it.
May 1st, 2009 at 6:24 pm
Congratulations on completing a year of good contributions to the art scene. There is a need for intelligent and open-minded discourse among artists, especially when it comes to finding opportunity without loss of integrity.
The Chicago scene is very diverse yet the “official” recognition of that diversity — and the quality it fosters — is puny and demeaning. And yet, ironically, Chicago has always favored strong individualist go-it-alone- artists, writers and musicians, at least, and some of them have altered the history of modernist life.
In recent decades the sensibility of the individualist “Chicago Style” — not a regional but a universal trait — has been almost destroyed by a marketer-cum-curator partnership that nourishes facile, soup-of-the soup “international” trends as genuine innovation. Strong original art is easily overlooked in such a climate.
I applaud your efforts to give artists a stronger voice through your site.