Leo "The Mimik" Alban, April Artist of the Month

Gallery on Main's Artist of the Month series features an exhibition of mixed-media work by New Jersey-based muralist and illustration artist Leo "The Mimik" Alban from April 1 through 30. Admission is free, and the paintings are available for purchase.

Join us for the opening reception on Saturday, April 6, from 5:00 to 7:00 pm.

The Mimik says, “I celebrate to explore and inspire all things FRESH by definition, and to continue to innovate and create.”

He was always doodling wherever he went: on napkins, paper, blackbooks, and eventually on walls. Being a huge comic book collector and Japanese anime fan—a style that fit in well to his graffiti adventures—The Mimik blended this fascination and use of watercolors into his drawings. It also led him to create personalized work with the talents of the WWE (World Wrestling Entertainment).

Adrienne Kurzawa, March Artist of the Month

Gallery on Main's Artist of the Month series features an exhibition of paintings and mixed-media work by New Jersey-based artist Adrienne Kurzawa from March 1 through 31. Admission is free, and the paintings are available for purchase.

Join us for the opening reception on Saturday, March 2, from 5:00 to 7:00 pm.

Adrienne Kurzawa works in acrylic paint and mixed media on canvas, paper, and wood. She began making art as a child and soon realized this was a way to escape some of the difficult emotions one experiences living in an alcoholic family. Later in life when studying psychology and art during her undergraduate years at Kutztown University, Adrienne learned that her work was not just an escape but a means of expressing and processing the inner emotional landscapes that words could not.

This began a journey towards understanding the relationships between the creative process, art making, and the psyche. In 1999, Adrienne began her master’s degree work at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York, studying the creative arts therapies, and at Seton Hall University studying mental health counseling. Later she became a Licensed Creative Arts Therapist and a Professional Counselor.

Today, Adrienne’s work represents emotional moments in time where she attempts, through mindfulness, to create a timestamp which involves the interconnectedness of materials, emotion, movement, and the psyche: the mind, body, and spirit coming together as in a yoga asana. The act of painting for Adrienne is much like a form of yoga, informed by her yoga training.

Teresa Bellion, February Artist of the Month

Gallery on Main's Artist of the Month series features an exhibition of drawings by central New Jersey-based artist Teresa Bellion from February 1 through 29. Admission is free, and the paintings are available for purchase.

Join us for the opening reception on Saturday, February 3, from 5:00 to 7:00 pm.

Teresa (aka Tracy) draws using graphite, charcoal, and ink. She says, “I used to draw portraits, but now I like to keep it creepy, taking inspiration from nature.”

Kylie McLaughlin, January Artist of the Month

Gallery on Main's first Artist of the Month exhibition of 2024 features an exhibition of paintings by New Jersey-based artist Kylie McLaughlin from January 2 through 31. Admission is free, and the paintings are available for purchase.

Join us for the opening reception on Saturday, January 6, from 5:00 to 7:00 pm.

Currently attending Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, NYC pursuing a bachelor's degree in Fine Arts, Kylie McLaughlin says, “A lot of my work pertains to a humorous take on natural oddities and accumulation of wonder.”

After graduating high school in 2020, she deferred a year for college due to the pandemic. During, that time she worked on commissioned custom apparel such as jackets and shoes. She has since developed her art, and says, “I now get to translate what I learned into my current studio practices. I pull lots of inspiration from natural oddities, animals, taxidermy, and overwhelming wonder of life. I'm excited to continue my journey and explore the surrealist future of my work.”

Brian Romeo, November Artist of the Month

Gallery on Main's Artist of the Month series continues with an exhibition of paintings by New Jersey-based artist Brian Romeo from November 1 through 30. Admission is free, and the paintings are available for purchase.

Join us for the opening reception on Saturday, November 4, from 5:00 to 7:00 pm.

Artist Brian Romeo specializes in oil-painted portraiture and still-life. He received his undergraduate degree in Art Education from University of Maryland and did his graduate work at Kean University under the guidance of renowned artist Joanna Wezyk. Romeo is currently a Visual Arts teacher for his hometown of Edison Township.

In his artwork, he is often guided by narrative, symbolism, and thoughtful observation of shared experience. His subjects and composition typically hint at common (but often overlooked) references to decay, corrosion, or loss of control. Romeo names Rembrandt and Lucian Freud as some of his strongest classical artistic influences.

His award-winning artwork is in many private collections and has been exhibited in numerous juried group shows throughout the United States. Recently, his painting “Self-Portrait as Daedalus” received Honorable Mention from acclaimed trompe-l’oeil artist Natalie Featherston.

Romeo loves creating art and has been doing so as long as he can remember. His mother was an elementary school art teacher, so, he says, “our home was always filled with creative media and art-making materials” and this experience led both him and his sister to pursue art as a career. In addition to his own art-making, he has spent the last 20+ years as a secondary art educator teaching middle schoolers how to create as well as appreciate the art around them.

Karen J. Waller, September Artist of the Month

Gallery on Main's Artist of the Month series continues with “Black at Night and Read Allover,” an exhibition of acrylic paintings by Karen J. Waller from September 1 through 30. Admission is free, and the paintings are available for purchase.

Join us for the opening reception on Saturday, September 2, from 5:00 to 7:00 pm.

In this exhibition, Waller continues to hail the imaginative highway architecture, luminous signage, and notable sites that managed to survive a seemingly concerted effort by developers to make everything, everywhere all at once look pretty much the same. From New Jersey backyards to backroads, significantly historical or simply hysterical, these sites were initially captured in more than two decades of Waller’s personal photographs. The resulting paintings, says Waller, “may challenge our notion of the traditional landscape by their lack of natural breadth and beauty, but there is no denying that these are indeed the enchanted backdrops that spoke so persuasively to us in our youth and still whisper words of comfort and joy to us as we quietly age alongside of them.”

Waller has also included a painting entitled “Lost Vegas No. III,” featuring the graphic design and sign-making that embodied mid-twentieth-century America. This work is part of a series inspired by the giant roadside advertisements for casinos, hotels, restaurants, and other entertainment venues venerated in the sandy backlot of the Neon Museum in Las Vegas, Nevada in what is deemed “The Boneyard.” Based on pre-pandemic photographs from 2019, Waller appreciated the irony of the gaily colored signs resolute in the middle of the desert waiting for visitors to ponder the inevitability of evolution and obsolescence as well as the promise of resilience, reinvention, and recovery.

Karen Waller received her Bachelor of Arts degree in 1978 from Montclair State College with a major in Fine Arts. After a hectic career in publication design and production as well as a stint as a muralist and decorative painter, she obtained her graduate degree in Studio Art from MSU studying with Peter Barnett and Amer Kobaslija. Recently retired from Bergen County Technical High School as an award-winning Visual & Graphic Design instructor, Waller is rediscovering her love of typography and acrylic landscape painting with an occasional dash of vintage found object collage work.

Waller was the recipient of a Governor’s Award in Arts Education in 2011 and an NEA Foundation Learning and Leadership grant in 2018. She counts among her painting highlights a large-scale, public mural donated to the Doo Wop Preservation League in Wildwood, New Jersey and her first one-woman show at the Belmar Arts Center entitled Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives.

Jennifer Troulis, August Artist of the Month

Gallery on Main's Artist of the Month series continues with an exhibition of pointillist paintings by Jennifer Troulis of Dunellen from August 1 through 31. Admission is free, and the paintings are available for purchase.

Join us for the opening reception on Saturday, August 5, from 5:00 to 7:00 pm.

A writer as well as a sculptor and painter, Jennifer’s love of creating started in her childhood. In her early twenties, she took her only art class, Water Color Painting for Beginners, and participated in her first art show, winning first place for a clay sculpture titled “Beat-up Sneaker.” Inspired by the books she had read to her twins at bedtime, in 2003 and 2007 Jennifer wrote, illustrated, and published the first two middle-grade chapter books in a series about twin sisters who are witches.

Years later, when COVID hit, she once again picked up her paint brush. Inspired by post-impressionist artists Georges Seurat and Vincent Van Gogh and neo-impressionist artist Paul Signac, Jennifer decided to try her hand at pointillism. “Not only did I love painting with dots,” says Jennifer, but for the first time in my life, I felt like I really belonged to this creative process and it to me.”

Steve Sopko, July Artist of the Month

Gallery on Main's Artist of the Month exhibition continues with paintings by award-winning artist Steve Sopko from July 1 through 31. Admission is free, and the paintings are available for purchase.

Join us for the opening reception on Saturday, July 1, from 5:00 to 7:00 pm.

Born and raised in Manville, New Jersey, Steve Sopko says, “My eclectic art is inspired by the Impressionists and the wonders I have witnessed throughout my life. I dedicate my art to my three children: Ryan, my angel in heaven, and Megan and Kyle, my angels on earth.”

Sopko donates paintings yearly to charity auctions on the island of Vieques, Puerto Rico, his “winter home” where his Caribbean-inspired art reflects the island paradise.

After graduating from Immaculata High School in Somerville, he attended the Spectrum Institute for Advertising Arts, majoring in illustration.

Jan ten Broeke, "Biomorphic and Geomorphic Phenomena," May Artist of the Month

Gallery on Main's is delighted to once again present paintings by our good friend, visionary painter Jan ten Broeke (1930–2019), whose “brush name” was Ten, from May 1 through 31. Admission is free, and Ten’s paintings are available for purchase.

Join us for the opening reception on Saturday, May 6, from 5:00 to 7:00 pm.

Born in the Netherlands, Jan ten Broeke painted and studied art his entire life. His work has been exhibited in New York, New Jersey, Philadelphia, the British West Indies, Germany, and Canada. Aside from art and art history, Ten also gained inspiration from the origin of life, prehistory, anthropology, geology, and astrology.

Ten titled his work with his name and the date of execution, instead of traditionally titling them, because he believed traditional titles confuse one’s perception of his paintings rather than clarifying it.

His work is characterized by biomorphic shapes and evolutionary forces, combining structures with forms typically found in nature. The fluidity of the shapes as they push and pull against each other give it a lifelike appearance of organisms from a prehistoric time. The colors used also give an indication of the tension between construction and biology. The smoky, hazy darkness in conjunction with the undulating forms gives Ten’s work a sort of bleak atmosphere. Within this smoky hue there is also this natural color of blues and greens illustrating organic forces.

See Shaun on Pawn Stars!

See our very own Shaun Daley, co-owner of Gallery on Main, on the recent “The Pawnerator” episode of Pawn Stars, the popular reality TV series on the History channel. Shaun traveled to Las Vegas to try to sell his find of a rare, Emerson Model 411 Mickey Mouse radio from 1936. He negotiated with Pawn Stars star Chumlee on a price for the radio, which originally listed for $14.95 back in the day. See an image of Shaun’s radio below, and watch the episode to see how much he got for it! Get a sneak preview.

See an example of a similar Emerson Model 411 radio and learn more about them.