![]() ![]() Original art works from Inferno were also exhibited at the Esther Rauschenbush Library at Sarah Lawrence College where the artist presented the project to the campus community. More recently, at his solo show at 153 Coffey Street in Brooklyn, NY, Cochrane exhibited the first seven chapters of Long Time Gone, and his new illuminated manuscript of Dante’s Inferno (printed by Thornwillow Press) along with a series of paintings and additional works on paper. In addition, the first three chapters of his autobiographical graphic novel Long Time Gone debuted in 2009 at Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (MASS MoCA), North Adams, Massachusetts and in 2010 the Tweed Museum of Art, Duluth, Minnesota, exhibited Chapter 4. His graphic novel work has appeared in various publications, such as ESOPUS and BOMB magazines. His oil paintings, drawings, and prints have been exhibited at numerous venues, including Guild Hall, East Hampton, New York Morris Museum, Morristown, New Jersey Momenta Art, Brooklyn, New York Repetti Gallery, Long Island City, New York and Galerie Martin Kudlek, Cologne. from Hunter College, City University of New York. His art training began at the Cambridge School in Weston, Massachusetts and continued at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, New York, where he received his B.A. Born in 1971 at an American army hospital in Fürt, Germany, Cochrane grew up in Dublin, New Hampshire. George Cochrane is an artist and Professor of Studio Art at Fairleigh Dickinson University. ![]() His work can currently be seen on the large wood panels that cover SoHo boutiques, and on Instagram, He is an MFA candidate at Cranbrook Academy of Art. Jay Moses is a digital collage artist and a photographer currently based in Brooklyn, NY. ![]() Cochrane uses the more traditional media of the comic strip to tell personal stories - this time recounting a trip to FiveMyles on beautifully drawn, large paper sheets. He playfully twists the message of advertisement billboards, magazine spreads, and instagram posts, resulting into works that reflect his keen and at times humorous sense of observation. Through digital collage, Moses superposes images and creates unexpected narratives. The two artists included in this exhibition use their own, idiosyncratic visual language to tell stories. ![]()
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