Here's a snippet of a review of the show via Hyperallergic today...
Bill Rice's paintings ... are glimpses of East Village life — the old East Village of crime, abandonment, and cruising, of obscure figures with good muscle tone, surreptitious oral favors in the parks and alleys, stoop-front sales, and hanging out. His surfaces are slowly built up from thin layers of oil paint with an occasional putty-like vector or a colored stripe or, at times, a skeletal architecture or diamond-shaped fence pattern. Looking at his works we are moving constantly, roving, scanning the neighborhood where he had lived since 1953, when rent controls were still in place and you could get by on a few welfare checks and some decent luck.
Rice lived on East Third Street for more than 50 years and opened a gallery there in the 1980s.
The show runs through May 13. Hours: Wednesday to Saturday, noon-6 p.m. or by appointment.
2 comments:
Nice work!
Nice to see that Bill's unique gifts as a painter are not forgotten. Joe Fyfe's review is right on. I hope lots of people will go to see the exhibtion. I understand that Howl Foundation received Bill's archives. Hopefully a show of Bill Rice and Friends highlighting his varied interests and friendships is in the planning.
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