Flyway Gallery: June

Silent Mist 24x30

    The quiet, awe-inspiring beauty of nature as captured by painter David Buckbinder is on display at the New Jersey Meadowlands Commission’s (NJMC) Flyway Gallery this month.

 The show, “Local Landscapes By David Buckbinder” runs now through June 29. A reception for the artist is scheduled for 1 to 3 p.m. June 7.

   Click "Continue reading…" for more examples of Buckbinder's paintings, and for more information about the exhibition and gallery.

   Click here to see earlier Flyway Gallery exhibits.

The Thinker 40x50  

     Buckbinder, a Fair Lawn resident, takes inspiration from the magnificence and constant change of the natural world. “I might catch a glimpse of a moving cloud, or a flash of fall foliage near a pond that takes my breath away,” the artist says. “For me, painting becomes a silent prayer to the splendor of nature in its myriad moments.”  

     Buckbinder studied fine art at the Art Students League of New York and art history at William Paterson University. He has won awards at several juried shows, including the Ridgewood Art Institute’s Liquitex Art Award, the Fair Lawn Art Institute’s Da Vinci Award for Oil Painting, and the Ringwood Manor Association of the Arts’ First Place in Oils and Acrylics. His works also hang in many private collections.

    The NJMC created the Flyway Gallery to help foster the cultural identity of the Meadowlands District by providing a space to showcase the talent of local artists. Recent exhibits have included nature paintings by North Bergen resident Lissanne Lake, photographs by Melissa Buesing and Jonathan Glick of Rutherford, and drawings of the Meadowlands by students in Hudson County’s Gifted and Talented Consortium.

      The gallery is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Admission is free. The gallery is located in the Meadowlands Environment Center, 2 DeKorte Park Plaza, Lyndhurst. For information, please call (201) 460-8300 or visit www.njmeadowlands.gov/ec.

                  Vermont Snow 20x24

 

2 thoughts on “Flyway Gallery: June

  1. buy viagra

    Modern geomorphology focuses on the quantitative analysis of interconnected processes, such as the contribution of solar energy, the rates of steps of the hydrologic cycle, plate movement rates from geophysics to compute the age and expected fate of landforms and the weathering and erosion of the land. The use of more precise measurement technique has also enabled processes like erosion to be observed directly, rather than merely surmised from other evidence. Computer simulation is also valuable for testing that a particular model yields results with properties similar to real terrain.
    Primary surface processes responsible for most topographic features include wind, waves, weathering, mass wasting, groundwater, surface water, glaciers, tectonism, and volcanism.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *