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Joseph Gregory Rossano Artist Talk: Portraits of the Divine

  • Museum of Northwest Art 121 1st Street La Conner, WA, 98257 United States (map)

Please join us for a 30-minute guided walkthrough of the exhibition followed by 15 minutes of Q&A with Joseph Gregory Rossano on his work in Portraits of the Divine.

This timely exhibition features a selection of large-scale works from three of Joseph Gregory Rossano’s ongoing series: At the Top of Her Lungs, Whitewashed, and Ivory. Rossano invites the viewer to reflect on the divine oneness between humans and nature. The artist’s work is a call to action in our present-day thinking, systems, and practice of human, animal, and earth care.

Be sure to visit us and check out this exhibition for yourself! And don’t forget to ask a MoNA docent to open the box to see the artwork in its entirety!

Photo Credit: Fabrizio Fenucci

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This event is made possible by MoNA Members.

*Please note this event was originally scheduled for an earlier date in August.


Cost: Free for members | Suggested $15 donation for non-members
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monamuseum.org/membership

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Questions? Email us at education@museumofnwart.org

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About Joseph Gregory Rossano:

JOSEPH ROSSANO, born to clinicians and research scientists, graduated from Louisiana State University as an artist. His path joined him, via mentorship, collaboration, and exhibition, with renowned artists and institutions including Dale Chihuly, Judy Pfaff, The Pilchuck Glass School, Waterford Crystal, Museum of Glass, the South Australia Museum, Google, and more. Integrating cutting edge technology and science with his art, Rossano engages and challenges the viewer to reflect upon humankind’s impact on our planet and its varied ecosystems. Much of his youth was spent exploring the North Shore of New York’s Long Island and hiking in the Catskill Mountains. These were formative years that evolved a life focused on creating environmental awareness through art.

Utilizing the spectacle of art to disarm an audience, Rossano opens that audience to truths about man and nature. On the surface, it appears as though he is manufacturing representational art; the reality is quite different. Butterflies made from fighter aircraft; whitewash and tar tell a story of human behavior refusing to disappear; and an 800-year-old tree serves as a historic reference to modern humanity, each realities employed by the artist.

​Through the use of contextually significant materials, Rossano relates an environmental truth hidden in plain sight. Engaging in intensively researched life science theory, he curates a narrative of his own manufacture, exposing viewers to that hidden truth and the theory it supports. Through a mutual desire to protect the natural world, he enlists prominent life scientists to, together, lead viewers to poignant, of the moment theories, represented in three dimensions.

​Until a recent shift in scale, the majority of his efforts reflected personal toil, crafted, conceived and researched by Rossano alone. Now, his large-scale installations in the homes of U.S. President’s, and more, expose ever larger audiences to the conceptual matrix surrounding his work and our world. These new works are created in association with other artists, corporations, and individuals, all willing to donate their time and materials to the causes he addresses and messages they deliver—a model of community collaborating for a cause.

The scientist, the environmentalist, and the conservationist constantly face the challenge of convincing an audience to care about their work, cause, etc. Rossano has chosen to make things that are about something bigger than ourselves, about individuals and creatures—whether they be human or other—that need our help.


General Amenities and Accessibility Information

  • The facility is wheelchair accessible and an elevator is available in the back of the building

  • A wheelchair is available for visitors

  • Limited seating is provided throughout the galleries and studio space

  • Restrooms are available on both floors of the museum. Changing tables are available in the restrooms on the 2nd floor and an all-gender restroom is available on the 1st floor of the museum

  • Please email us at info@museumofnwart.org or call us at (360) 466-4446 if you have questions or need additional information about accessibility

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September 21

Drawing in the Galleries with Jean Behnke

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September 28

Spoken Word at MoNA: An Open Mic Exploration of Portraits of the Divine