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Click thumbnail to view full image. Thumbnail may be cropped.
1. Please Turn to Channel 4, acrylic on canvas, 30” x 30”
2. The Future of Conic Sections, acrylic on canvas,
20” x 30”
3. I’ve Been Watching Too Much American Idol, acrylic on canvas, 36” x 18”
4. Mathman and his Cat, acrylic on canvas, 30” x 24”
5. Hope and Flowers, acrylic on canvas, 18” x 18”
6. Let’s Hula Party, acrylic on canvas, 24” x 18”
7. Monsieur Bourbaki, acrylic on canvas, 30” x 24”
8. 5 Babies and One Donut, acrylic on canvas, 30” x 24”
9. She Said Maybe Later, acrylic on canvas, 30” x 24”
10. Van Gogh and Lenin, acrylic on canvas, 30” x 30”
11. Lolly and Me, acrylic on canvas, 30” x 24”
12. Tropical Storm Isabella, so beautiful…, acrylic on canvas, 24” x 18”
13. Jellyfish, you will cause much trouble on account of your tongue, acrylic on canvas, 24” x 24”
14. TV Wants to Plug into Enchillada Casserole, acrylic on canvas, 24” x 24”
15. We Forgot Our Way Home, monotype, pencil, 12” x 18”
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Contact Information
343 N. West End Avenue
Lancaster, PA 17603
tel: 717-293-1299
e-mail: libby@half-full.org
www.half-full.org
Please contact artist for purchases, commissions, etc. |
Artist Statement
My current work dwells in the space between thought and expression;
between my most intimate details and the culture and history that
contains them. I explore how we interpret and record moments in
time that fade quickly on the surface, but linger much longer below.
Each piece begins with a moment in time—a baby shower in a Leninburg apartment, the dissolution of a group of french mathematicians, the loss of a childhood friend— and proceeds as a reinterpretation of that moment, a conversation between memory and imagination, between the real and the fantastical, between the past and future.
Beneath the bright colors and whimsical imagery exists a bittersweet confrontation of the difficult issues we struggle with in our search to understand ourselves within society the society within ourselves. The combinations of form, color and language emerge revealing a kind of code where the personal unexpectedly meets and confronts the public. How do we remember, present and explain our past? our history? How do we interpret (or misinterpret) the silent influences on our lives? How do we distinguish the difference between ourselves and our culture?
Both the process and the result seek the inexplicable beauty and melancholy that pervade the culture we live in but don’t always address—why it is that we must struggle to find out who we are, and what we believe, why we cry when we’re happy, and why our dreams begin to fade the moment we wake up. |
| Education
1998
The Creative Circus, Atlanta, GA
Certificate in Graphic Design and Advertising
1995
Princeton University, Princeton, NJ
BA, cum laude |
| Professional Experience
Half-full Design, Co-Founder
& Design Director
A design and communications studio supporting environmental and social justice.
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Awards and Honors
2004
Idealist Design Competition, Gold Prize
1997
Atlanta Advertising Awards, Certificates of Excellence |
Lectures
2001
“Activism in Advertising and Design,” Public lecture at the Creative Circus |
Publications
2000
“Apocalypse Already: a Museum for the New Age,” Speak Magazine, Winter 2000
1999
"Advertising Ethics: Why Ask Why Ask Why,” Speak Magazine, Fall 1999 |
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| Selected Exhibitions
2006
Endings and Beginnings, Rock Paper Scissors Gallery, Asbury Park, NJ
2005
Collaborative 32, 3rd Street Gallery, Philadelphia, PA
Welcome Gallery, Main Line Art Center, Haverford, PA
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Images copyright © Libby Kleine Modern
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