Victory Arts Projects presents
Constructions in the Sunken Garden
Sculpture at Mack-Cali Atrium, Harborside 3, JC
September 29th to October 17th
-a part of the Jersey City Artists Studio
Saturday and Sunday, October 3-4, 2009, noon to 6pm  
hours 7am to 7pm Mon-Fri
                                                                             
“You can stroll along a sunlit plaza, peer through leafy plants and encounter pyramids, pass a bridge that goes nowhere, see a street sign that listens,…” All
this and more happens at Constructions in the Sunken Garden-Sculpture at Mack-Cali Atrium Harborside 3.  A showcase for Jersey Area sculptors, the
beautiful waterfront atrium will be a garden of fantastic creations this fall. The sculpture fills the central plaza and sunken garden area and provides an
enchanting respite for the many shoppers and business people passing through.  The exhibit is produced by Victory Arts Projects, the non-profit that started
the Victory Hall Cultural Center.    
Mack-Cali Atrium is one of the premier public business spaces in the city. The ground-floor glassed-in greenhouse sits between the Hudson River and the
Trump Tower and is visited by thousands of people at work and play every day.    It’s not often that 3D artists get to show their major works in such an
evocative setting.  Tree limbs and mechanical systems interact in Joe Chirchirillo’s kinetic structures and Maggie Ens weaves complex networks of artificial
and natural materials; tangles of childhood mementos and  homey and industrial parts that make meaningful connections from familiar merchandise. Artists
include  Jeff Macaluso, Matt Miller, Raul Villarreal, Bill Rodwell, Albert Pedula, Bill Rybak, Carol Schwartz and Arcady Kotler.
Works by Arcady Kotler, Carol Schwartz, Bill Rybak, -top: Raul Villarreal, Bill Rodwell, Maggie Ens.
THIS PROGRAM IS MADE POSSIBLE IN PART BY FUNDS FROM THE NEW JERSEY STATE COUNCIL ON THE
ARTS/DEPARTMENT OF STATE, A PARTNER AGENCY OF THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARTS,
ADMINISTERED BY THE HUDSON COUNTY OFFICE OF CULTURAL AND HERITAGE AFFAIRS,
THOMAS A. DEGISE, COUNTY EXECUTIVE, AND THE BOARD OF CHOSEN FREEHOLDERS.
See Atrium Exhibit 2007
victory arts projects