Through her acclaimed portrait series, "Women of Courage: Beyond Boundaries," fine artist Andrea Harris opens windows to a world where the meekest seeming among us transcend those assumptions. Harris captures fearlessness in women: cancer patients turned cancer survivors, downtrodden souls winning at drug recovery, Bangladeshi sex trade victims determined to rise against the odds.
Harris's largely unknown subjects tap the same power that's led iconic women such as Rosa Parks to take a stand against racial discrimination and environmental journalist Stephanie
Danielle Roth to save the homes of thousands of Romanian families. The portrait artist has captured on canvas these and other heroines; each beautifully painted 24" x 24" likeness
instills in viewers a greater sense of self.
Harris's solo exhibition of "Women of Courage: Beyond Boundaries" will open at the Visual Arts Complex Gallery at Temple College in Temple, Texas. The 21-piece art show begins on
September 27 with a 7 p.m. Gallery Talk event, and continues through November 8, 2007. Additional information about the Temple College art exhibit is available online at
http://andreaharris.com
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Andrea Harris's passion for painting the figure was her initial step toward integrating the connection between humanity and nature, often exploring the subtle relationship of the human
form. "It's a perception that each of us is unique in the universe," the artist believes. "Shape, form and color remind us that we, too, are elements in nature. It's this natural beauty,
the work of art that we are, that I hope to capture."
Harris's artwork is centered on observations of nature and humanity. Because people are elements of society, the work also examines cultural roles, particularly pertaining to current
events. She has approached this theme often. It is evidenced not only in "Women of Courage," but also in her "Veil Series" and "Liberty Series," all of which have evolved into traveling
exhibitions.
ENVIRONMENTAL ACTIVISM THROUGH ART
Andrea Harris is a founding board of directors member for the Global Alliance of Artists, a non-profit organization that harnesses creativity to impact positive social and environmental
change. This leadership role, along with her humanitarian-focused statements, recently resulted in a special honor: She is among the artists selected to contribute public art for "Cool
Globes: Hot Ideas For a Cooler Planet."
A high profile, 123-works art initiative in Chicago, Cool Globes involves the public in helping stem the effects of climate change. Titled "Facing the Earth," the globe designed by Harris
pays homage to environmental heroes and forests around the world. Her five-foot, fiberglass orb is among those installed at the entrance to the Field Museum, a major sponsor of the Cool
Globes public art exhibit.
"We're pleased that Andrea's globe, 'Facing the Earth,' greets our visitors," says Laurel Ross, Urban Conservation Director for Environmental & Conservation Programs, Field Museum.
"Her Cool Globe complements the Museum's own conservation work and research. Not only in the Chicago area, but in South America and beyond."
Created to raise awareness for innovative Earth-protecting efforts, the Cool Globe by Andrea Harris highlights environmental activists through a series of 30 photo narratives. The
eco-heroes featured on "Facing the Earth" include Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., founder of the Waterkeeper Alliance; 2004 Nobel Peace Prize winner Wangari Maathai, whose Green Belt Movement
succeeded in the planting of 20 million trees in Africa; and Sister Dorothy Stang of Brazil, an American missionary who died while trying to protect the Amazon rain forest from Brazilian
ranchers and loggers.
Artists from around the world including Jim Dine, Yair Engel, and Tom Van Sant created climate change-themed globes for the exhibit. Displayed outdoors along Chicago's scenic lake front,
the "Cool Globes: Hot Ideas For a Cooler Planet" public art exhibit continues through September 30, 2007. For more information, visit: http://petleopard.com