WPB Magazine 2017 Summer Edition | Page 34

a rts Artist’s Profile Roly Chang Barrero Palm Beach Arts Renaissance Man By Sandra Schulman WPBMagazine Senior Writer | Arts & Entertainment Photos: Addiel Perera, WPB Magazine WPB Magazine Editor S happen. I don’t think the word “no” is in his vocabulary. We soon started working on projects together as I became more involved in Art Synergy and with his numerous galleries.” haking up the Palm Beach art scene for the past few years, artist/activist/organizer/curator Roly Chang has taken on project after project. As a working artist, he maintains a studio in Boynton Beach Arts District which he founded, as well as one in the back of The Box Gallery in West Palm Beach, where he is director, curator and owner. He co-created Art Synergy, a county wide organization that hosts booths at Art Palm Beach and Art Boca Raton Fairs to promote and exhibit regional mid-career artists. “I know Rolando both from a business perspective and as an artist and he is one of the few people I know that I can count on to get the job done, whether it is curating a show, creating an entirely new event or doing basic business paperwork. He is tireless. As an artist, he is always creating both his own work and motivating and helping others in creating and promoting their art. He has been a powerhouse in the art community from the time he first came here from Miami and has changed the face of the local art community and I am sure he will continue to do so.” At The Box Gallery he has been curating up a storm with wildly imaginative shows with themes of patriotism, environ- mentalism, activism and more. Solo shows have spotlighted the works of Don Shearer and Andrew Reid. Currently he is working on organizing Art Festivals for Danieli ArtWorld, a major new district in West Palm Beach that will combine art booths with music, food and elegant charity events. “I met Rolando about five years ago when he first moved to the area and as the saying goes, it was love at first sight!,” says Ilene Gruber Adams, his partner in Art Synergy. “There was such a great energy about him.  No matter what he does, he is excited about it and motivated to make whatever it is, wpbmagazine . com All this energy came from a serious health issue Rolando had, in 1993 he was told he had a terminal brain tumor and there was nothing doctors could do. So he sat around waiting to die for 10 years. Then he didn’t and they performed surgery on him that saved his life. Before this he had been a very active artist in the South Miami Beach scene, where his hyper productive creative life 34 wpbmagazine • j u ly t h r u s e p t e m b e r 2017