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Teresa Cole

Hoop Skirt Press

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The Depth of Paper: Teresa Cole at WhiteSpace

March 10, 2016

From Burnaway
By Terri Drilling
Reviews

Everyone is familiar with paper, but not necessarily with how it is made. Teresa Cole’s current exhibition, “Depth of Surface,” atWhitespace brings paper to the forefront and will definitely cause you to think more about the methods of creating handmade paper, Read more…

Woodcut prints dazzle at Detroit Artists Market

April 5, 2015

From The Detroit News
By Michael H. Hodges
Reviews

This six-person show documents the breadth of the woodcut technique, with striking images. The season opener at Detroit Artists Market, “Abstraction and Landscape: Contemporary Woodcut,” reminds us of the breadth this particular printing technique encompasses. If your memories of woodcut Read more…

Migratory Language: Teresa Cole and Kelly Cloninger at Whitespace

June 13, 2012

From Burnaway
By Brian Hitselberger
Reviews

Travel as a practice occupies varying roles in the life of each individual who embraces it–some are perfunctory, some are poetic. That artists so often lead double lives as travelers comes as no surprise, nor does their habit of keeping Read more…

Suspending Reliefs: Teresa Cole at Whitespace Gallery

May 30, 2012

From Pelican Bomb
By Amy Mackie
Reviews

In her solo exhibition, “Between Origin and Present” at Whitespace Gallery in Atlanta, Teresa Cole appears to have given birth to something magical, some kind of other worldly creature, indefinable in rudimentary terms. The vortex of this mystical energy emanates Read more…

Ink and Imagery: Blue Sprial 1 takes on Printmaking

June 8, 2011

From Mountian Express
By Erin McWhorter
Reviews

Melding together the ideas of interpretation, representation and traditional practice, Blue Spiral 1’s current exhibition, Ink and Imagery features the works of both well-noted and emerging artists in the field of printmaking. Mountian Express (June 8, 2011) (Ashville, NC) p. Read more…

Transfer prints by Teresa Cole

July 6, 2010

From The Gambit Weekly
By D. Eric Bookhardt
Reviews

Teresa Cole’s Transfer expo recycles Victorian-era trends into the globalized present. In Victorian England, the art of paper cutting became a domestic style obsession. Cutout paper silhouettes of family members and elaborate, highly stylized landscape scenes adorned fashionable parlors all Read more…

There is a Story Behind Every Pattern

March 20, 2010

From Review Arts, The Telegraph
By Soumitra Das
Reviews

It is difficult to ignore the sheer beauty of the colonial ambience when one organizes an exhibition in the Harrington Street Arts Centre. It is a presence that is captivating and perhaps even intimidating at the same time. Instead of Read more…

Pattern Recognition

February 6, 2007

From The Gambit Weekly
By D. Eric Bookhardt
Reviews

It’s one of those cybernetic things — pattern recognition is about programming computers to classify random data according to statistical or hypothetical patterns. Why? So they’ll know, that’s why. Know what? So they’ll know if you’re a terrorist or not, Read more…

Making a Splash

August 23, 2005

From The Gambit Weekly
By D. Eric Bookhardt
Reviews

Galleries come and go; that much we know. Yet, in this city, there always seem to be more coming than going. Still, it came as a shock when Galerie Simonne Stern closed its doors in December 2002 after owner-director Donna Read more…

Attraction of Opposites

April 22, 2003

From The Gambit Weekly
By D. Eric Bookhardt
Reviews

It is said that opposites attract, but do they really? Not always; it depends on how you look at it. Not only do opposites not always attract, many aren’t even really opposite if you think about it. Like travelling to Read more…

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From the Blog

Cicadas, Paper Pulp and a typhoon

December 13, 2014 Filed Under: Art, Japan, Papermaking, Travel Tagged With: Japan, papermaking

The word washi translates as Japanese paper, and contrary to popular belief Japanese paper is not made from rice. Most sheets are produced from the inner bark of Mulberry trees, that are grown as large shrubs and harvested once the Read more…

© 2025 Teresa Cole.