New York, NY (Top40 Charts) We are very excited by this agreement. This is the first of what we believe to be many high profile and significant clients we will represent out of our Las
Vegas office.
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Louis Mamo & Company, a business solutions firm serving clients for more than 30 years and based in Pompano Beach, Florida with offices in Las Vegas, Nevada, announced today it has entered into an agreement to represent the upcoming world tour of the art exhibit "LIT: A Portrait of
Bob Dylan by Lesley Schiff."
The agreement calls for LMC to establish social media platforms for the exhibit as well as assist with publicity, promotion, marketing and advertising.
The exhibit kicks off
September 17 in Boston, with a private launch hosted by the Verb Hotel - a recently opened and critically acclaimed rock-n-roll theme hotel in the heart of the city's Fenway district and TheFenway.com; a hub for everything happening in The Fenway. The exhibit will feature new works never before shown to the public by pioneering artist Lesley Schiff.
Schiff pioneered the art of "painting with light" in 1975 using copiers and eventually laser printers to create stunning abstract paintings. Her work has since been acquired by major art institutions including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum, The Museum of
Modern Art, and many other prestigious museums and private collections.
According to
Ruben Sklar, a spokesperson for the exhibit, "We are very excited to have Louis Mamo & Company joining our team, along with our other partners and sponsors including the Verb Hotel, TheFenway.com, Canon, Hahnemuhle Paper, VH1's Save the
Music Foundation and
Music Drives Us."
"We are very excited by this agreement," said
Howard Brody, vice president and director of operations, Louis Mamo & Company. "This is the first of what we believe to be many high profile and significant clients we will represent out of our Las
Vegas office."
The exhibit will run from
September 18th through October 18th at the Van Ness Building, 1325 Boylston Street in Boston's Fenway district. A portion of the proceeds from the art work sold will go to the VH1 Save the
Music Foundation and
Music Drives Us. Both support student music programs in New England.