Mile Square City Realty displays its own "Private City" July 1993
There is something very appropriate in having Susan Hogan's
show "Private City" hang on the walls of Mile Square City Realty.
While there is nothing realistic about her work other than the sense of space
it creates, little stages upon which moods are acted out in paints and bits of
glass, the architectural influence is unmistakable.
"We wanted to keep it somewhat related to what we do
here," said David Williamson, director of Mile Square City Realty.
"This fits in perfectly."
Hogan, who described her work as "theatrical,"
said she was playing with moods, seasons and states of mind.
"Things that come into vision then disappear," she
said, but noted she liked the backdrop of the realty office, equating it with
the real world. "It's very related to the work. A realty office is the
ideal place."
Combining some pieces with found objects and mixed media,
like glass, Hogan plays with texture and sense of perspective. In some
paintings, she uses colors for a push-pull effect like Matisse, but with strict
definition to her lines and shapes. Many of her works achieve a dreamlike
quality that is not often found in this style of painting.
In what seemed to be a tribute to the realty and town,
"Crossing our River" decorated the store's real wall, built upon
found material but with a shimmering silvery-bronze painted over it. In a way,
it captures the deterioration and rebuilding of the river front in a startling
three-dimensional way.
Thirty-five to forty people attended the opening on July 16,
despite the distraction of the film crew shooting a Ford automobile commercial
just outside. Hogan said she has a few tentative dates for future shows in the
area. This show will run until August 15 and is the first in a series for Mile
Square City Realty which is booked up until Christmas.
Williamson said filling up the walls with art attracts
people who might not otherwise come in. He sees this and future shows as part
of the local tradition. He and his wife, Louise, are both Hoboken natives whose
families have lived in Hoboken for 80 years.
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