Museum of Art at the University of New Hampshire

‘Collide and co-exist’

Work by Jennifer Moses in her show “In Brightest Day in Blackest Night,’’ at the Museum of Art at the University of New Hampshire, Durham.

The museum says:

“Jennifer Moses explores opposing visual and conceptual themes which both collide and co-exist—the comic vs. the tragic, line vs. shape, and flatness vs. the illusion of space. Moses's work combines abstraction and representation, most recently shifting from personal reflection to political expression.’’

Making 'one's own masculinity'

"Calice,'' (vintage motorcycle jacket, vintage hanger, wire), by  Caleb Cole, in the group show "Made Masculine,''  Aug. 30- Oct. 15, at the Museum of Art at the University of New Hampshire, Durham. The museum says: "The thirteen contempor…

"Calice,'' (vintage motorcycle jacket, vintage hanger, wire), by  Caleb Cole, in the group show "Made Masculine,''  Aug. 30- Oct. 15, at the Museum of Art at the University of New Hampshire, Durham. The museum says: "The thirteen contemporary artists in this exhibition accept the framework that masculinity is made, fashioned, and modified generation to generation. Selected works of art explore the artifice of masculinity through themes such as strength, desire, and intimacy while posing the question: What does it mean to be made masculine or to make one’s own masculinity?'