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Sunday, December 14, 2025 |
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| Betsy Eby explores sound, color, and healing in new exhibition Chromatic Frequencies |
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Betsy Eby, Chromatic Frequency No. 9, 2025, Encaustic and oil on panel, 47.5 x 47.5 inches.
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NEW YORK, NY.- Winston Wächter Fine Art is presenting Chromatic Frequencies, a new body of encaustic paintings by Betsy Eby exploring the visualization of sound and harmonic connection. As both a painter and musician, Eby brings a rare sensitivity to her practice, drawing on her heightened perceptual gifts, creating correspondences between color, rhythms and sound.
Chromatic Frequencies emerges from Ebys recent personal journey. Following major neurosurgery, she turned to Solfeggio Frequencies, soundscapes rooted in hertz frequencies known by researchers to have healing properties on the brain and bodys neural networks. An evolution of her lifelong practice of painting nature based abstractions, this body of work explores themes on a quantum level at once read micro and macroscopically, bringing together Ebys love of music, colorfield painting, rhythmic line and materiality. She builds resonant color fields representing harmonic systems then disrupts those systems with the embodiment of gestural line work. The lines bury, recede and emerge, hovering amidst luminous fields. One painting to the next explores analogous or contrasting color worlds, decisions affecting their resulting moods.
Eby speaks of the Japanese process, Kintsugi, or golden repair, a tradition in which broken vessels are mended with precious metals, celebrating scars as markers of resilience. The act of painting is a recognition of the beauty found through survival, with each painting being a record of systems disrupted then renewed, Eby states. Chromatic Frequencies reflects Ebys belief in the healing power of sound translated into material form.
Betsy Eby earned her BA in Art History at the University of Oregon in 1990 and has since exhibited her artworks widely, showing across the United States and Europe. Her works are held in numerous public and private collections including the Tacoma Museum of Art and the Columbus Museum of Art. She and her husband, painter Bo Bartlett, split their time between studios in Columbus, Georgia, and Wheaton Island, Maine. A native to Oregon, Eby cites her early influences in the Northwest mystics, Pacific Northwest modernism and atmospheric abstraction.
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Today's News
December 14, 2025
MoMA explores Pan-African subjectivity through photographic portraiture in Ideas of Africa
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William I. Koch collection headlines historic Christie's auction of American Western masterpieces
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New exhibition explores Alberto Giacometti's intimate portraits and alpine origins
Shilpa Gupta brings migrant voices and collective memory into motion
Painter Janet Fish, celebrated for her luminous still lifes, dies at 86
Artcurial presents the 7th edition of A Moroccan Winter
Exhibition at Aalto2 Museum Centre explores Central Finland's role in shaping the modern map
$6.96 worth of 2025 pennies bring $16,764,500
The Renault Icons: Artcurial Motorcars achieves a spectacular "white-glove" sale of nearly €12 M
Ling Jian examines transformation, ritual, and hybridity in new works at Eli Klein Gallery
Betsy Eby explores sound, color, and healing in new exhibition Chromatic Frequencies
Whispers, Hubbub and Paradoxes brings together artists and activists to question dominant narratives
A City of Philadelphia leader, Foster Hardiman, named as Penn Museum's Senior Director, Finance and Facilities
National Portrait Gallery announces winners of its 2025 Teen Portrait Competition
Rijksmuseum Twenthe acquires Calculating Empires by Kate Crawford and Vladan Joler
Louvre Abu Dhabi launches second call for Fellowships and Grants Programme proposals
Organic and geometric forms converge in Eilis O'Connell's solo exhibition
Christie's announces strong results for design and Tiffany auctions, totaling $27 million
MMCA publishes new research volume examining publicness in art and museums
Untitled (after) offers an overview of Jelena Bulajić's painting and sculpture practice
Chus Martínez to curate Danish Pavilion at the Venice Biennale 2026
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