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Animal Magnetism (read)

By D. Eric Bookhardt 
May 15, 2007
Desire in America: Paintings by Elizabeth Fox


Vapid Curiosity  (read)

Elizabeth Fox's substantial 'Desire in America' exhibit embraces a nation's obsession with style over substance  
Friday, May 18, 2007 
By Doug MacCash 
Art critic


Funny, sexy, smart  (read)

Somewhere between an Italian TV commercial and a 
Jetsons cartoon is the icy vision of Elizabeth Fox 
Friday, November 12, 2004 
By Doug MacCash 
Art critic


ART REVIEW (excerpt) By D. Eric Bookhardt  (read)
December 21, 2004
WHAT: Glamazon: Paintings by Elizabeth Fox
WHEN: Through Dec. 31
WHERE: Barrister's Gallery, 1724 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd, 525-2767

"Not-Your-Mama's-Jazz-Fest-Poster"
Barrister's Gallery; 1724 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., NOLA 70113, (504) 525-2767 - March 6-April 24

From the Times-Picayune review of the show:  "The group exhibit "Not Your Mama’s Jazzfest Poster," now on display at Barrister’s Gallery, is a selection of tongue-in-cheek alternatives to the popular festival souvenir, created by artists who are probably too far out for the staid Jazzfest to consider.  ...No future Jazzfest poster will feature a striking scantily clad female fan zealously consuming a sloppy roast beef po-boy like Elizabeth Fox’s scintillating design does, either." – Doug MacCash, Times Picayune (4-16-04).

"Not-Your-Mama's-Jazz-Fest-Poster"
Barrister's Gallery; 1724 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., NOLA 70113, (504) 525-2767 - March 6-April 24
From the Gambit Weekly review of the show:
"...considering how weirdly off the mark the official Jazz Fest poster is this year (its ostensible depiction of Harry Connick Jr. somehow looks more like Warren Beatty, or maybe his phantom love child), this show makes for a refreshingly offbeat contrast.
  Take, for instance, Elizabeth Fox's Jazzfest With the Locals, a pop-social realist slice of life featuring a scantily clad babe stuffing her face with a long, drippy po-boy as a tranced-out, Quintron/Miss Pussycat-like duo onstage waxes rhapsodic with a keyboard and maracas. In fact, they all seem tranced out, probably for good reasons. Succinctly simple, it's a commentary on consumer culture, local garden variety, as if Hogarth or Daumier had been reborn into the MTV generation." - D. Eric Bookhardt, Gambit Weekly (4-27-04).

"No Dead Artists" - Jonathan Ferrara Gallery, 841 Carondelet St., New Orleans, juried exhibition, Judges: David S. Rubin, Visual Arts Curator, Contemporary Art Center, New Orleans; Don Marshall, Director UNO Arts & Administration Program; Erik Neil, Director of the Newcomb Art Gallery, Tulane University; Ann Zatarain, Gallery Director of the Jonathan Ferrara gallery, and Jonathan Ferrara. 
From the review of the show: "Elizabeth Fox's absolutely marvelous 'Greek Goddess Shoe Shopping' is a gorgeous bit of magic realism, as meticulously painted (though not as busy) as a Douglas Bourgeois - no kidding." – Doug MacCash, Times Picayune (9-12-03).

Foxy Feet

Article in Shuz Magazine
by Don Pederkin
Spring 2001
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