SAMPLE REVIEW OF WORKS
“Marcia Neblett’s charcoal image of a fanged and rabid-looking Little Red Riding Hood encountering her wolf is a memorable addition to the recent spate of fairy-tale imagery in art.”
Holland Cotter, Art Critic, The New York Times
“Her wood block prints convey the genre of still life as well as fairy tales. By arbitrating through a medium as wood block – a labour intensive process – Marcia has interfaced her creativity, which metamorphoses as expressive statements.”
Ashrafi S. Bhagat, Art Critic, The Hindu
“Neblett is a witty woman who says many of the characters of her drawing are self-portraits, taking on the characteristics of the personalities of the subject at hand.”
Janet Martineau, Critic, The Saginaw Times
“It is a pleasure to see work that both plays homage to masterful printmaking gof the past, but which also is very much of it’s own time and sensibility. These delightfully quirky images, a unique blend of daffiness along with darkness and occasional doom, conjure up the surreality of everyday life (often mistake for a Grimms’ Fairy Tale).”
Roberta Waddell, Curator, The New York Public Library
“Marcia Neblett’s work will also catch our eye. Here stunning charcoals of Little Red Riding Hood are bound to amaze. Neblett looks at the classic fairy tale in an innovative way that some will find definitely refreshing.”
Jimmy Ford, Critic, The Stony Brook Statesman
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