ONLINE EXHIBITIONS

 

Kristen Joran, Feast, mixed media installation

Lilt: Philadelphia Sculptors

The Noyes Museum of Art of Stockton University, in collaboration with Philadelphia Sculptors. presents Lilt, a new, vibrant exhibition of contemporary sculpture at Stockton Kramer Hall in Hammonton, NJ.

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2022 Halloween Poster Contest

The Mays Landing Rotary Club hosts the 2022 Halloween Poster Contest. Entries include students from St. Vincent de Paul Regional School, Egg Harbor City Community School, and William Davis Middle School.

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Skeffington Thomas, Container in Black, Orange, Red, White, and Blue Stoneware

Skeffington Thomas: Bottles, Containers and Stelae

Skeffington Thomas is a potter and ceramic artist. Skeff utilizes visual elements such as pattern, color and texture to create these visually and physically stimulating ceramic art objects.

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Tali Margolin, Home is Where…, 2017, mixed-media

Tali Margolin, Home is Where…, 2017, mixed-media

Toshiko Takaezu, 3/4 Moon, glazed stoneware

Toshiko Takaezu, 3/4 Moon, glazed stoneware

Journey: Tali Margolin

Margolin’s mixed-media work crosses the boundaries between drawing, painting and sculpture.

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Toshiko Takaezu

Takaezu (1922-2011), a Japanese-American ceramic artist, was known for her closed vessels.

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Drew Griffiths, Untitled #17, acrylic and wax on plywood

Drew Griffiths, Untitled #17, acrylic and wax on plywood

Drew Griffiths

Griffiths makes use of color and texture to connect with the viewer’s subconscious.

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Bette Blank, Homage to Dr.Gitlin, oil on canvas

Bette Blank, Homage to Dr.Gitlin, oil on canvas

Bette Blank

Blank’s paintings capture the humor in a situation, as well as everyday experiences.

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A.J. Rudisill, The Yellowstone River/ Yellowstone National Park, WY, acrylic

A.J. Rudisill, The Yellowstone River/ Yellowstone National Park, WY, acrylic

A.J. Rudisill

Rudisill is one of New Jersey’s most celebrated realist painters and an advocate for preserving the National Parks. 

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Egbert G. Jacobson, Votes for Women, Poster

Egbert G. Jacobson, Votes for Women, Poster

Votes for Women: A Portrait of Persistence

Votes for Women: A Portrait of Persistence is organized by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service in collaboration with the National Portrait Gallery. This project received support from the Smithsonian American Women’s History Initiative. 

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Fred Winslow Noyes, Jr., Fishes & Flowers on Red Table, acrylic on board

Fred Winslow Noyes, Jr., Fishes & Flowers on Red Table, acrylic on board

Fred Winslow Noyes, Jr.

The founder of the Noyes Museum of Art was an artist, successful entrepreneur, and ardent collector of art.

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Ada Trillo, Leeway William Gonsalez, photograph

Ada Trillo, Leeway William Gonsalez, photograph

Ada Trillo

Trillo’s exhibition “If Walls Could Speak,” shows the harsh realities of refugees who are fighting to provide a better future for themselves and their families.

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Syd Krochmalny, Beyond the Value, 2017, acrylic on canvas

Syd Krochmalny, Beyond the Value, 2017, acrylic on canvas

Syd Krochmalny

Syd Krochmalny is an avant-garde and experimental artist and writer that focuses on the relationship between art, philosophy and civic engagement.

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Andrea Sauchelli, Untitled 2, acrylic on stick paper

Andrea Sauchelli, Untitled 2, acrylic on stick paper

Noyes Artist Members Exhibition: 2020

This annual exhibition showcases the work of eighteen artists creating outstanding artwork throughout New Jersey.  

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Stephanie Segal Miller, Peacock, watercolor

Stephanie Segal Miller, Peacock, watercolor

Stephanie Segal Miller

Stephanie Segal Miller is a watercolor artist and has a studio and gallery space at the Noyes Arts Garage in Atlantic City.

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Math professor Grace Hopper became one of the first programmers, writing code for the Mark I electromechanical computer.  In 1952, she invented pioneering “compiler” software that translated the instructions of human programmers into computer code. Courtesy of Smithsonian National Museum of American History.

Math professor Grace Hopper became one of the first programmers, writing code for the Mark I electromechanical computer.  In 1952, she invented pioneering “compiler” software that translated the instructions of human programmers into computer code. Courtesy of Smithsonian National Museum of American History.

Picturing Women Inventors

The stories on these posters illustrate that the creativity of women inventors ranges across diverse backgrounds and interests throughout American history.

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Borderless

Digital Practices in Changing Times

Twenty-one acclaimed artists with diverse identities, will be exhibiting their work – each is a major figure in the international art scene. These artists choose to communicate in this exhibition through digital art.

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2021 Rotary Poster Contest

The Mays Landing - Egg Harbor City Rotary Club presents the 2021 Halloween Poster Contest! This online exhibition features student work from St. Vincent de Paul Regional School, Egg Harbor City Community School, and William Davies Middle School.

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Michael Monaco

Michael Monaco became quadriplegic due to a serious car accident. As a very skilled artist, he exhibited his paintings globally including at the Spinal Cord Research Center at Rutgers University. He was part of the Association of Mouth and Foot Painting Artists (MFPA).

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Woman between tents, Resurrection City, Washington, D.C., 1968. Robert Houston, born 1935. Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Robert and Greta Houston, © Robert Houston

Woman between tents, Resurrection City, Washington, D.C., 1968. Robert Houston, born 1935. Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Robert and Greta Houston, © Robert Houston

City of Hope

Resurrection City & The 1968 Poor People’s Campaign: During the 1960s in the US, poverty prevents access to opportunities to people of every race, age, and region of the country.

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Watch the introduction video

 
Source: Sanborn Map Company. “Atlantic City, New Jersey (Overview)-Digital Maps and Geospatial Data.” Princeton University, The Trustees of Princeton University, maps.princeton.edu/catalog/ princeton-00000144n

Source: Sanborn Map Company. “Atlantic City, New Jersey (Overview)-Digital Maps and Geospatial Data.” Princeton University, The Trustees of Princeton University, maps.princeton.edu/catalog/ princeton-00000144n

Historic Ducktown

Ducktown, known as Atlantic City’s “Little Italy,” is a neighborhood that is home to a robust variety of culture, commerce, and historically important developments. Visit our online exhibit to explore the history of Ducktown, Atlantic City, New Jersey.

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Estell Sightseeing Tour

The Estell Empire online tour provides a glimpse into the history of the Estell family of New Jersey.

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Read the education guide

 

Selections from the Noyes Decoy Collection

This brief selection brings this utilitarian art to light, featuring decoys collected by Fred Noyes Jr. for South Jersey’s Noyes Museum of Art. Gary Giberson, who aided in the purchase of many of these decoys, describes each—Giberson is himself an expert carver.

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Peg Dittmar

Peg Dittmar is known as the “Painter of Birds.” Her fondness of the avian variety began in Key West where the birds would arrive at the docks in search of food. Many of the birds that Dittmar paints are found locally in her home of Cape May Courthouse, NJ.

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Gary Erbe’s Magical World

This collection of eye-catching oil-on-canvas and mixed media pieces created by Gary Erbe span over 40 years. While there are and will always be elements of Trompe l’oeil in his work, he has less of an interest in fooling the eye in favor of stimulating the mind.

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Quinton Greene

Quinton Greene is an NJ based artist whose work focuses primarily on African-American figures, using bright, vibrant colors. He began painting to help heal the PTSD he developed from his time in the Army.

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Chanelle René

The ‘Grant Street Beach’ series of paintings explores the history of the segregated beach in Cape May, NJ. Drawing inspiration from her own family photographs, the series portrays joyful everyday moments of African American beachgoers from the 1920s through the 1960s.

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