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Ms. Florence Neal

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    www.kentlergallery.org/pages/tickets2007.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2007    Last Visited: 3/28/2007  

    Florence Neal
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    Florence Neal Executive Director

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    www.brooklynlibrary.org/calendar/exhibitions/screen_mem - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 2/28/2002    Last Visited: 3/26/2003  

    Wendy Walker and Florence Neal
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    Installation by Wendy Walker & Florence Neal
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    In "Screen Memories" Brooklyn artist Florence Neal and Manhattan writer Wendy Walker have collaborated on a show centering on the enigmatic figure of Constance Kent.Kent was a British woman who confessed in 1865 to the brutal murder of her three-year-old half-brother in 1860, when she was sixteen.This notorious crime had gone unsolved by Scotland Yard; it dominated the news and became material for both Charles Dickens' last novel and his friend Wilkie Collins' great masterpiece The Moonstone.Kent served twenty years in prison and then went with her naturalist brother to Australia, where she lived another sixty years, working as a nurse under a new name and dying at 100 in 1944.

    The most extraordinary aspect of her story, however, is the near certainty that her confession was false.Her story does not tally with the facts established by forensic evidence which made it far more likely that the murderer was her father and the little boy's.Around the mystery of this confession Walker wrote a book, Blue Fire: Confessing Constance Kent (designed by Neal), incorporating hundreds of contemporary texts and documents including accounts of the inquest, the letter in which Dickens showed how he would solve the crime, prison records, passages from "the Sydney Document" (the unsigned letter Kent wrote from Australia correcting details in a book published in the ‘20's), and passages from authors Kent read or admired such as Walter Scott and Florence Nightingale.On the basis of this sensational case Neal has created black and white prints on 7' paper screens for which Walker has chosen accompanying texts.Within the space created by the life-size screens, the audience enters into a visual dialectic of light, dark; consonance, dissonance; innocence and guilt.

    Walker's long interest in visual/verbal art led her to seek out Neal's collaboration on her recent book, where many photographs of sites and characters are combined with text in a mosaic of word and image.This compositional method was inspired by the writings of Paul Metcalf but even more by the mosaics that Constance Kent, while in prison, designed for several English churches, including the crypt of St. Paul's Cathedral in London.For Walker this seems the truest way to represent the facts of a life whose central fact is open to doubt, by juxtaposing "bits" that read each other instead of being explained by the author.Neal's interest in the case centers on its protagonist.
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    Neal has worked with linoleum prints for over twenty years to represent accelerations, bafflements, bursts of energy, lines of flight, interpenetrations and overlays.Her forms constitute a personal take on a universal iconography.They entice the viewer to explore, to remain open to the chance recognition of memories, ideas and connections.These forms seem to her suited to a rendering of Constance Kent's complex psychology.

    Wendy Walker and Florence Neal wish to thank the Brooklyn Public Library for the opportunity of creating a site-specific collaboration in "Screen Memories".Wendy would like to thank the Richard Lounsbery Foundation of New York for its generous support in making it possible to visit the places where Constance Kent lived.Also thanks go to Hofstra University for its administrative assistance to the Lounsbery Foundation.
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    Florence Neal was born in Georgia and moved to New York in 1977.In 1985 she started Everglade Press and in 1990 was co-founder of the Kentler International Drawing Space in Red Hook, Brooklyn.Since 1980 she has exhibited her work in local, national and international venues including: Erie Art Museum Art Works Gallery, Erie, PA; National Ornamental Metal Museum, Memphis, TN; Willis Gallery, Detroit, MI; Monastery Plasy, Czech Republic; L5 Kunstinitiatief, Roermond, The Netherlands, Hanalei Gallery, Hawaii and White Columns, New York.Recently she created a set for Postindustrial Players, New York.

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    www.franklinfurnace.org/goings_on/goings_on/07_02_06.ht - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 2/6/2007    Last Visited: 6/3/2008  

    contact: Florence Neal, Executive Director info@kentlergallery.org

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    www.wsworkshop.org/popups/_Gallery/FNeal/FNeal.txt.htm - [Cached Version]
    Last Visited: 8/26/2009  

    Florence Neal

    Florence Neal moved to Brooklyn, New York from Georgia in 1977. Sculptor, painter, printmaker and graphic designer, Florence?s current work focuses on prints, drawings and public installations. Her work references nature, architecture and the human form. Material use is an important aspect as she develops each work individually, sometimes becoming part of a larger series. Her interest in public art has led to commissions such as the steel wind sculpture installation entitled "Dance of Life" at the University of Alabama in Birmingham. She has collaborated with writer Wendy Walker on a number of print/text projects. ?Screen Memories? at Brooklyn Public Library and "...a different forest", is a public art commission for the Omaha Public Library. Florence founded Everglade Press in 1985 in her Brooklyn Water Street studio. She is the co-founder and director of a non-profit gallery dedicated to drawings and works on paper, the Kentler International Drawing Space, established in 1990, in Red Hook, Brooklyn.

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    2006 Benefit - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 9/1/2009    Last Visited: 9/1/2009  

    Florence Neal
    ...
    Florence Neal Executive Director

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    2006 Benefit - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 9/1/2009    Last Visited: 9/1/2009  

    Florence Neal
    ...
    Florence Neal Executive Director

    • THE $125 TICKETS ARE SOLD OUT •

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    About Kentler - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 9/1/2009    Last Visited: 9/1/2009  

    Florence Neal
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    Florence Neal Executive Director :

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    Alabama celebrates talents of its homegrown artists |... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 10/1/2006    Last Visited: 1/25/2007  

    Florence Neal, an Auburn alumna, will be the juror of the exhibition.Neal is co-founder and executive director of the Kentler International Drawing Space in Brooklyn, N.Y. Neal is an accomplished artist with works in collections at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; New York Public Library Department of Prints; The Brooklyn Museum of Art and Alliance Capital Management Corporation, New York.Other awards and grants Neal has received include the Pollock-Krasner award. Neal will give an artist talk at Biggin Hall Feb. 19 and a juror's talk at The Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art Auditorium Feb. 20.All events are free and open to the public"In recent years, drawing as an art form has received new interest as a contemporary artistic endeavor," Neal said.
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    Because so much interest has been given to this competition already, Bondy and Neal are expecting a large number of participants and ask each participant to submit no more than two pieces.
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    "I'm looking forward to seeing work by artists in Alabama using the medium of drawing," Neal said.

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    B61 Productions - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/25/2006    Last Visited: 3/12/2008  

    But I'm pleased that people are paying attention to Red Hook," said Florence Neal of the Kentler Gallery.
    ...
    Neal said Sone's plan was "a chance to keep the neighborhood together.

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    BAM_Selections from The Kentler Flatfiles - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 2/9/2006    Last Visited: 9/1/2009  

    Red Hook's Kentler International Drawing Space was selected by artist/BAM Trustee Danny Simmons and artist Meridith McNeal, to present an exhibition curated by Director Florence Neal, entitled Selections from theKentler Flatfiles: Variations in Black and White .

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