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Celia Eberle, Sexy Beast, 2015

Celia Eberle

Sexy Beast, 2015

ceramic, acrylic

18h x 12w x 12d in

CE046

Celia Eberle, Love Me Two Times, 2015

Celia Eberle

Love Me Two Times, 2015

ceramic, acrylic, howlite

18h x 13.50w x 7.50d in

CE048

Celia Eberle, Love Machine, 2015

Celia Eberle

Love Machine, 2015

ceramic, acrylic

22h x 13.25w x 7.50d in

CE047

Celia Eberle, Altar, 2015

Celia Eberle

Altar, 2015

ceramic, acrylic, perfume

3.50h x 15w x 8d in

CE049

Celia Eberle, Hero, 2015

Celia Eberle

Hero, 2015

ceramic, wood, music box mechanism

16h x 6.75w x 17.25d in

CE050

Celia Eberle, The Night Has a Thousand Eyes, 2015

Celia Eberle

The Night Has a Thousand Eyes, 2015

pit fired raku clay, glass, brass

dim. variable | $300 each

CE051

Celia Eberle, Secret Ceremony, 2015

Celia Eberle

Secret Ceremony, 2015

wood, metal, glass, snowflake obsidian, coral, music box mechanism

47h x 48w x 12d in

CE052

Celia Eberle, Formula L, 2015

Celia Eberle

Formula L, 2015

natural essential oils, tinctures, extracts, ambergris

CE053

Press Release

Cris Worley Fine Arts is excited to announce The Mythology of Love, a solo exhibition by artist, Celia Eberle. The exhibition will open with an artist’s reception on Saturday, January 9th from 6 – 8 pm, and will be on view through February 13, 2016. In this latest body of work, Eberle explores the myriad aspects of love by referencing songs & poetry, movies & music, animals, scents, and the love goddess herself. 

Celia Eberle is a Dallas-based multimedia artist, with a near cult-like following, who describes her artistic pursuits as both “inexorable” (that which cannot be changed) and “inevitable” (that which always happens). She often employs natural materials such as clay, stone, coral and wood to investigate the mythologies of humankind. Her subject matter: dark and steeped in meaning is deftly executed with charm and wit. The more one delves into the complexities of the work, the concepts, and materials, the deeper the narrative evolves. 

Art critic Christina Rees wrote about the artist, “…[Eberle] is very much a Texas artist who taps into a kind of grim legacy that people in our state don’t always admit is part of its inception and inheritance. But hers is not art about Texas specifically. It is art by a freakishly perceptive Texan who sees a million miles into the past, the future, and into the collective criminal mind of humanity…If this scares a few people, so be it.” 

Celia Eberle has exhibited extensively throughout Texas as well as in Chicago, New York and Oregon. Most recently, Eberle is a 2015 Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant recipient. Likewise, she is an inaugural recipient of the Nasher Sculpture Center Artist Microgrant. In 2014, Eberle’s mid-career retrospective, In the Garden of Ozymandias, debuted at the Art Museum of Southeast Texas. Her work is housed in the collections of: The Dallas Museum of Art, the J. Wayne Stark University Gallery at Texas A&M, the Longview Museum of Fine Arts, and the Art Museum of Southeast Texas.

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