June 10 through October 15, 2006
Fred Beans Gallery, Doylestown
Diane Burko is one of the Philadelphia area's most celebrated contemporary
landscape painters; she has often traveled to exotic, far-away places to
find inspiration for her dramatic landscapes.
This exhibition featured paintings and photographs that focus primarily on
spectacular and panoramic landscapes of volcanoes, craters, waterfalls,
and glaciers from the Alps, Iceland, Italy, Hawaii, and Costa Rica.
A part-time resident of Bucks County, Burko has also explored the more
pastoral Pennsylvania landscapes of Geddes Run Creek and Wissahickon Creek,
several of which are included in the exhibition.

Diane Burko, Wissahickon Reflections, East Frieze #1, 1997, oil on canvas,
H. 65 x W. 92 inches. Collection of the Artist, Courtesy of Locks
Gallery, Philadelphia, PA
Flow was jointly organized by the Michener Art Museum and the
Tufts University Art Gallery, and was curated by Amy Ingrid Schlegel, Ph.D.,
director of galleries and collections at Tufts University, Medford,
Massachusetts. This exhibition focused on Burko's recent work, and was the
fourth in an ongoing series at the Michener that features contemporary
landscape painters.
Burko is an uncommon artist-explorer of the majesty of the land and
its psychological and spiritual effects on us. Her work hones in on ever-present,
if not always visible, natural processes and states of lava as well as
water's transformation between solid, liquid, and ether, and this
exhibition examines these intertwined subjects of flow and transformation.

Diane Burko, Halema'um'a'u Crater #3, 2000, oil on canvas,
H. 60 x W. 84 inches, Collection of the Artist, Courtesy of
Locks Gallery, Philadelphia, PA
Diane Burko received her BFA from Skidmore College in 1966 and her
MFA in painting from the University of Pennsylvania in 1969. Born and
raised in Brooklyn, she has lived in Philadelphia since 1966. Burko is the
recipient of awards from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Rockefeller
Foundation, the Lila Acheson Wallace Foundation, the Leeway Foundation,
and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts.
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