![]() With labor shortages and changing needs for skills sets, this trend has changed. In the past, people made long careers within the industry, and it was more difficult to gain entry if you had not started your career in it. I’ve also seen a greater movement of people in and out of the industry. This has created opportunities for people to move from other industries into oil and gas where transferrable experience and skills are needed. My first professional job was in oil and gas, and I’ve stayed in the industry for over 20 years because I’m proud to be a part of sector that solves complex problems through innovation, is constantly adapting to change, and creates job opportunities for so many people.ĮW: What are the major changes you’ve seen during your time in the industry?ĭK: Adoption of energy transition technologies and investments in digital technologies and robotics have been major changes in the industry, which has brought about new jobs that require different skill sets. ![]() I wanted to work in an industrial environment with a company that had a global footprint. During the 1970s, Hall was a part of T.R.Uthco, a multi-media, performance art collective based in San Francisco.įor further information and photographs, please contact the gallery at 415.781.4629 or The gallery hours are Monday – Friday, 9:30-5:30, and Saturday, 10:30-5:00.Dawn Keske: I happened to join the oil and gas industry by happenstance as I was doing my master’s degree in HR. de Young Memorial Museum and the CAPP Street Project, San Francisco. Her work has been included in multiple group exhibitions at venues such as the Russian Museum, Leningrad, the M.H. For over two decades she has been featured in more than two dozen solo and group exhibitions, primarily in New York and California. Hall has won several prestigious awards such as the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture Award. She studied art at Sophie Newcomb College in New Orleans and received her M.F.A from the Hoffberger School of Painting, at The Maryland Institute of Art. Hall shows, once again, she is as much the observer and interpreter of her habitat as she is recipient and guardian of its phenomena.ĭiane Andrews Hall lives and works in the Bay Area and was born in Dallas, Texas in 1945. This technique, and the absence of white glaze, is integral to the idea of portraying our perception of light's nuances. ![]() The artist uses layers upon layers of glaze in order to achieve the pervasive translucent quality apparent in the blurred backgrounds, fluttering wings, and the late afternoon reflection on the waves' surface. The artist focuses her attention on capturing a single fleeting moment in nature with works that unveil her interest in translating photography to the painted canvas. While these are familiar themes from Hall, light, in all of its variations and subtleties, has become the formal subject of this new series. Drawing on coastal scenes and views from her own backyard, Hall demonstrates her equal interest in the enduring presence of the ocean as well as the fragility and brevity of a hovering hummingbird. An opening reception will be held on June 3, from 5:30-7:30.Īs Diane Andrews Hall's third solo exhibition with John Berggruen Gallery, New Work reveals the artist's intuitive connection with nature and her immediate surroundings. ![]() New Work will open Thursday, June 3rd, and will run through Saturday, June 26th. John Berggruen Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of recent paintings by Diane Andrews Hall. ![]()
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