Most Popular
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Sexual Healing
Sad stories and otherwise freaky tales from Florida's last sexual surrogate
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Backbreaker
A half-kilo of blow, machine-gun blasts, and a millionaire chiropractor. Does this make sense?
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Switch Hitter
Before swinging a bat in a lesbian softball league, pick a side. Gay or straight? Or something else?
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To Hug a Porcupine
Three little boys set out to destroy the parents who loved them. This isn't how adoption is supposed to work.
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Awfully Wedded Wife
Bigamy charges and dozens of busts for sham marriages.It must be South Florida.
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Body & Soul
Claire Chafee may be the perfect playwright for Sol Theatre
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Art Finds a Way
Shattered mirror, raining jellyfish, delicate entrails: harsh images made beautiful at the Museum of Art
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Fuzzy, Fuzzy Fuzz
The Women's Theatre Project's True Blue leaves us truly blue. And confused.
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Use Your Illusion
Punk rock in operatic clothing at Palm Beach Dramaworks
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Dark Knight on IMAX
Batman Goes Big
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Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Michael Mills
What? No gators or hibiscus flowers? Boca's All Florida show goes global.
Shattered mirror, raining jellyfish, delicate entrails: harsh images made beautiful at the Museum of Art
Nathan Sawaya's LEGO creations levitate into the eerie and the supernatural
MOA's Cuban show is an edgy but comfortable mix of Calle Ocho and New Havana
Art and Culture Center's diversified space brings down the art
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Habatat Galleries
Published on February 28, 2008
You could be forgiven for wondering whether you're in an art gallery or a plant nursery when you come upon the work of glass artist Debora Moore, now on view at Habatat Galleries in the Gallery Center art mall in Boca Raton. Such is Moore's mastery of her medium. She has been quoted as insisting, "It's not my intention to be a realist. What I make is my interpretation." Don't believe her. Moore's beautifully wrought orchids, not to mention the mossy glass logs to which they're attached, are so amazingly realistic that you halfway expect to see dew glistening on the petals or to smell the moist earthiness of the mosses and lichens. The Seattle-based Moore has been working in studio glass since the late 1980s, and she has built her reputation on her orchids, which, whether mounted on the wall or freestanding, are invariably dazzling. Her efforts paid off last year when New York's prestigious Corning Museum of Glass commissioned her to create a new work for its collection. Moore is currently one of the featured artists at Habatat, where her work is perfectly complemented by that of Thomas J. Boone, who creates similarly realistic oil paintings of plants, fruits, and vegetables. (Ongoing at Habatat Galleries, Gallery Center, 608 Banyan Trl., Boca Raton. Call 561-241-4544.)