Thomas Lail: Notes for the Future continues at Omi International Arts Center





Notes for the Future: recent xerography paintings, works on paper and concrete sculptures by Thomas Lail, continues at Omi International Arts Center (1405 County Route 22, Ghent, New York) through Summer 2013.  The exhibition includes two permanent works sited in the Architecture Omi fields. Omi International Arts Center is open for Winter hours Thursday through Monday 11am-4pm.
According to Peter Franck, the director of Architecture Omi, “Lail’s work follows in the tradition of history painting, but clearly speaks with the language of architecture.” Lail’s large-scale collages chart the persistent dream and tragedy of our lost Utopias.  The artist works look to a better, once-dreamed future—perhaps a regained past that never was—to map a fleeting dream of Utopia.
Thomas Lail was born in New York in 1967 and currently lives and works in New York City and Kinderhook, New York. His work has been internationally exhibited in such prestigious venues as: Galéria Jána Koniarka, Trnava, Slovakia; ArtCologne, Cologne, Germany; Economy Projects, London, UK;  Galéria Cypriána Majerníka, Bratislava,Slovakia, Lawndale Art Center ,Houston, TX; Spaces, Cleveland, OH; White Columns, New York, NY.  He is represented by Masters&Pelavin, New York 
Architecture Omi is conceived to facilitate projects exploring the intersection of architecture, art and landscape. The program fosters the development and production of physical installations and theoretical musings in a sixty-acre laboratory-style setting.
About Omi International Arts Center
Omi International Arts Center works to foster creative exploration, professional development, communication and exchange among visual artists, writers, translators, musicians, composers, dancers, choreographers and architects from around the globe. Through its artist residency programs, Omi demonstrates that cultural exchange and engagement through creative work leads to knowledge and understanding that transcends political and cultural boundaries. Through public exhibitions and education programs—including The Fields Sculpture Park, Charles B. Benenson Visitor Center & Café, and Camp Omi —Omi offers visitors an opportunity to learn about and share in the creative process.
To find out more visit www.artomi.org