SoMo Galleries: Difference between revisions

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'''SoMo Galleries''' was an art gallery located south of [[Powell Avenue]] on the second floor of the building at 2229 [[1st Avenue South]]. Opened in May [[1989]],as a venue for new and established artists to exhibit and experiment with new methods and materials, the gallery, was owned by [[Doug Moore]].
'''SoMo Galleries''' was an art gallery located on the second floor of the building at [[2229 1st Avenue South|2229]] [[1st Avenue South]] ('''So'''uth of '''Mo'''rris Avenue). The gallery opened in May [[1989]] as a venue for new and established artists to exhibit and experiment with new methods and materials. It was owned by [[Doug Moore]].
 
The 1898 building had previously housed a boarding house for railroad workers, [[Birmingham Casket Co.]], [[Child Furniture Co.]] and a brothel.


For the inaugural exhibition by the [[Flood and Mystic Chamber Salon]], [[SoMo Galleries]] was physically and symbolically linked to [[Space One Eleven]] with surveyors tape and surprise objects along sidewalks and above streets to connect the two galleries and provide a path for gallery patrons to follow.  
For the inaugural exhibition by the [[Flood and Mystic Chamber Salon]], [[SoMo Galleries]] was physically and symbolically linked to [[Space One Eleven]] with surveyors tape and surprise objects along sidewalks and above streets to connect the two galleries and provide a path for gallery patrons to follow.  


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 12:06, 5 July 2018

SoMo Galleries was an art gallery located on the second floor of the building at 2229 1st Avenue South (South of Morris Avenue). The gallery opened in May 1989 as a venue for new and established artists to exhibit and experiment with new methods and materials. It was owned by Doug Moore.

For the inaugural exhibition by the Flood and Mystic Chamber Salon, SoMo Galleries was physically and symbolically linked to Space One Eleven with surveyors tape and surprise objects along sidewalks and above streets to connect the two galleries and provide a path for gallery patrons to follow.

References