Featuring artwork in all different styles and media, the Hyaena Gallery is currently featuring a fantastic presentation entitled All Out of Bubblegum! A Tribute to John Carpenter.
Vastly diverse and unique works will be on display and available for sale throughout the month. The Opening Reception is Saturday, April 12.
The exhibit runs through April 30 with the Opening Reception running from 8 p.m. to midnight with free admission. The Hyaena Gallery is located at 1928 W. Olive Ave, Burbank, CA. For more info 'like' the official Hyaena Gallery Facebook page, check out Hyaena Gallery on Tumblr and follow Hyaena Gallery on Twitter (@hyaenagallery).
To view and purchase the artwork from this exhibit, please visit the official Hyaena Gallery website.
From the Press Release
The first haunting musical notes during the opening credits to the 1978 classic film Halloween literally send chills down your spine. You've just watched a six-year-old Michael Myers murder his sister,...
Vastly diverse and unique works will be on display and available for sale throughout the month. The Opening Reception is Saturday, April 12.
The exhibit runs through April 30 with the Opening Reception running from 8 p.m. to midnight with free admission. The Hyaena Gallery is located at 1928 W. Olive Ave, Burbank, CA. For more info 'like' the official Hyaena Gallery Facebook page, check out Hyaena Gallery on Tumblr and follow Hyaena Gallery on Twitter (@hyaenagallery).
To view and purchase the artwork from this exhibit, please visit the official Hyaena Gallery website.
From the Press Release
The first haunting musical notes during the opening credits to the 1978 classic film Halloween literally send chills down your spine. You've just watched a six-year-old Michael Myers murder his sister,...
- 4/11/2014
- by Scott Hallam
- DreadCentral.com
In January 2005, I met a clearly distressed young British journalist who told me of being beaten up by the Italian police during the G8 summit in Genoa in 2001.
Four years on, Mark Covell was still suffering from both the physical and psychological effects of that savage attack as he recounted his injuries: eight broken ribs, smashed teeth, a collapsed lung and internal bleeding. He lost consciousness and slipped into a coma.
He found it difficult to talk about what had happened and when he did try, he shook badly and often appeared close to tears. "You've never seen anything like it," he said several times.
Indeed, I had no conception of what had really happened to him and to more than 100 other young journalists and activists who decided to spend the night bedded down in the Armando Diaz school in Genoa on 21 July 2001.
Now, a further eight years on, I...
Four years on, Mark Covell was still suffering from both the physical and psychological effects of that savage attack as he recounted his injuries: eight broken ribs, smashed teeth, a collapsed lung and internal bleeding. He lost consciousness and slipped into a coma.
He found it difficult to talk about what had happened and when he did try, he shook badly and often appeared close to tears. "You've never seen anything like it," he said several times.
Indeed, I had no conception of what had really happened to him and to more than 100 other young journalists and activists who decided to spend the night bedded down in the Armando Diaz school in Genoa on 21 July 2001.
Now, a further eight years on, I...
- 5/22/2013
- by Roy Greenslade
- The Guardian - Film News
Diaz – Don't Clean Up This Blood: London activist tells how film brings it all back, but his fight to bring his attackers to justice is still going on
It was with understandable trepidation that Mark Covell travelled from his council flat to Rome last week for a preview of the film that dramatises the night he was savagely beaten and left in a coma by Italian police.
The film, Diaz – Don't Clean Up This Blood, which premieres on Sunday at the Berlin film festival – is the first portrayal of the horrific assault by police on activists attending the Genoa G8 summit in 2001 and comes as the Italian government finally negotiates damages for Covell, who was left with eight broken ribs, a mouthful of smashed teeth and a damaged lung.
"It was surreal and emotional to see myself in a coma, splattered with blood," said Covell, 44, who has ceaselessly campaigned for his aggressors to be jailed.
It was with understandable trepidation that Mark Covell travelled from his council flat to Rome last week for a preview of the film that dramatises the night he was savagely beaten and left in a coma by Italian police.
The film, Diaz – Don't Clean Up This Blood, which premieres on Sunday at the Berlin film festival – is the first portrayal of the horrific assault by police on activists attending the Genoa G8 summit in 2001 and comes as the Italian government finally negotiates damages for Covell, who was left with eight broken ribs, a mouthful of smashed teeth and a damaged lung.
"It was surreal and emotional to see myself in a coma, splattered with blood," said Covell, 44, who has ceaselessly campaigned for his aggressors to be jailed.
- 2/12/2012
- by Tom Kington
- The Guardian - Film News
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