Visions on Elm by Cedric Cox, 48x48 inches, acrylic on stretched canvas

Visions on Elm by Cedric Cox, 48x48 inches, acrylic on stretched canvas

Check out A.C. Frabetti’s review of Urban Rapture, my exhibit of new paintings that’s currently on view at The Carnegie Visual and Performing Arts Center in Covington, KY:

Though Cedric uses the term ‘quilt’ to describe in part his approach to his paintings, they could just as easily be mosaics, or even stained glass, given their use of dark lines separating the colors.

Read the rest here, on the Aeqai: Adumbrationes arts blog.


Soul within Structure Opening at the CAC

On Monday, 1 Feb, 6-8pm, join the Cincinnati teaching artist, Cedric Cox as he discusses Soul within Structure, his first Contemporary Arts Center UnMuseum® exhibition. You will have the opportunity to gain firsthand insight into his painting methods and subject matter. Then, Cedric will demonstrate some of his favorite classroom lessons. This is a chance to give your students some hometown pride by highlighting one of Cincinnati’s artists.


Back to School

09Jan10

This past fall I had the privilege and honor to visit Westwood Elementary School and Mt. Airy Middle School as a guest artist. At Westwood Elementary I was the instructor for the Cincy AfterSchool Art Club. For four weeks I worked with students on lessons in drawing, painting and collage. Continue reading ‘Back to School’


I am pleased to announce my latest painting exhibit, Urban Rapture, at The Carnegie Visual and Performing Arts Center. The opening reception is Fri 8 Jan, 6-ppm, and the exhibit will be on view through 19 Feb 2010. The Carnegie is located at 1028 Scott Blvd. in Covington, KY. Poster design by Maya Drozdz/VisuaLingual.


Untitled by Paul Klee

Untitled by Paul Klee

Over Thanksgiving holiday while visiting friends and family in New York I went to the Museum of Modern Art. On the sixth floor of the museum the exhibition Bauhaus 1919–1933: Workshops for Modernity was going on. Bauhaus, or house of building, was a School in Germany that was famous for its unique workshops that forged new disciplines in design, architecture, fine art and crafts that contributed advances in modernist architecture and art. Continue reading ‘Klee Versus Cox’