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jointly presented their collection of sculpture/painting installations in an effort to draw attention to a pervasive threat to freedom and privacy.

"A Marriage of Colors" was an exhibition by husband & wife, Bernard Brooks with his fresh, vibrant watercolors and Gwendolyn Brooks with her mixed media pieces having an Afro-Caribbean feel; "Place Names" by painter, Ari Post in a series of paintings which provided a first look into the work of a young, ambitious painter, showing his striking "oil on board" figures, largely drawn from Jewish Shtetls.

2011 - Taking us from the end of 2010 to the beginning of 2011 was Iranian-born artist, Nurieh Mozaffari with her dynamic acrylic paintings entitled "Touch of Love" along with unique and fashionable jewelry which she also created. In February for Black History Month, The Anacostia River School of Photography© exhibited "Revealing the Treasures of the East" with their digital photographs by Bruce McNeil, Zandra Chestnut, David Harris, MelaniN Douglass, Marlon Norman, and James Holiday. For her second show at Parish Gallery, Sharon Geraci brought us her mixed media collages entitled "Cultural Landscapes," and for her second time, Lilya Dear with her "Enchanted Organic World"; Gabonese artist, Georges M'Bourou brought his unique style of oil on canvas paintings "Roots of Hope" which are essentially a quest into the mystery of light; to end the first six months of 2011 was an exhibition by five instructors of the Visual Arts Department of The Duke Ellington School of the Arts, Melchus Davis, Mike Easton, Bill Harris, Rod Little, and Jacqueline Maggi.