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This was sent to us by Vermont painter, engraver, and muralist Sam Kerson. Click on the image to get a larger, readable version.
The Spanish below says, "And you go back to Ireland, blondie?"
by Darby Parsons
Chris Papillo’s “things you wanted to make real” is on display in Burlington at Maple Street’s JDK Gallery through August 13.
“As a young maiden he dreamed of his bright amethyst future. His rosy, flour-powdered cheeks would sparkle in the black forest…” This line from a handmade paper piece of Papillo’s leads me to believe the entire show is an autobiographical, larger than life collage. Multi-media pieces fill an entire gallery wall. Artifacts salvaged by the adult from his childhood’s stream of conscious. Trail of Teas is reminiscent of a wind chime with used tea bags trailing down from a rusty antique spool of sorts that is stuffed with bird wings. A framed color pencil drawing of a bunny is scrawled over with “a shilling for a soul”. The largest center piece is a massive, handmade piece of paper called The Red Flame Bird. The paper is filled to the edges with a personalized and dramatic color-wheel. The entire thing is written over in color pencil with a poem that begins with; “The red flame bird of blood red wings flies across the sea to ((rome)) all alone lust for you and me.”
From photographs to glassed in bird wings the range of materials used is nearly limitless yet the eclectic collage forms a cohesive sense of tone and sentiment. Chris Papillo’s imagination and personal mythology are at work and play here to a fantastic extreme. “Things you wanted to make real” at JDK Gallery, Burlington, until August 13.
This July 31st come experience the seventh annual Old North End (O.N.E) Ramble. This vibrant and hard working community has been coming together to create a day full of mirth and merry making for seven years now! The posters say rain or shine but the day is bound to shine either way with musical performances at the Ramble Round Up at 247 N. Winooski, and multiple artists on display at the Rose Street Gallery, Jade Lotus, and Viva Espresso. If you haven’t experienced the Ramble NOW IS THE TIME. Bumble around the O.N.E this Saturday to enjoy performers of all sorts and activities fit for family and friends including yard sales, potlucks, tea parties, crafting, bike rides and block parties oh my! The day is sure to be an adventure when you set your feet toward the old north of Burlington this weekend. Check it out at http://www.theramble.org/.
Of her bevy of local exhibitions, Moriarty says, “I’ve always liked showing my works in local business and community venues. One of my best friends calls me an ‘exhibitionist’ because I show my work in so many local venues. I relate strongly to small business owners and non-profit organizations. There’s the mythology of the lonely artist working all alone, but it’s almost never been true. Artists have always been working for and with organizations that value art, that want their walls and space to say something meaningful and to support a handmade thing. The people and organizations with which I collaborate have this reverence for handmade life and work.”
Moriarty’s life, too, is steeped in her art, particularly after a long battle with breast cancer in 2007 inspired her to shift her priorities to enable her growth as an artist. Now, “I'm either painting or thinking about painting,” she says. “It's the mechanism through which I process information and experience. I see the Gulf of Mexico oil spill and it makes me think even more sharply about paint disposal, and not use any toxic solvents in my work. I can't solve the big things happening, but I can live my life along the same axis of decision-making. It’s very satisfying to respond to inspiration or to a visual problem, and just work intuitively. I don't really plan. I respond to what I feel with a paintbrush. I'm still the same ready-fire-aim person I've always been. ”She adds, “At first I was just happy to put a mark on the canvas. Frankly, I still am. But I also have an agreement with myself about what matters to me in the construction of a piece, and that is inner life. Either that brushstroke or color contributes to the inner life of the painting, or I brutally take the palette knife to it. A fair amount of paint gets scraped off. Sometimes the paintings that look the most spontaneous are the ones that have suffered major attacks by the palette knife. And then there are those drawings completed in six minutes that say everything that needs to be said. When that happens, and it's not very often, I'm just grateful.”
Visit vimorpainter.wordpress.com for more information about Moriarty, her work, these exhibits and five shows opening in nearby Berkshire County, Mass., in the next five months.
Images 1 & 2: "Nude on Guest Check 1" and "Nude on Guest Check 2" by Viola Moriarty are included in “Recent works, 2010” at South Street Café, 105 South Street in Bennington, Vt., in a month-long show beginning Sunday, August 1. Join Moriarty in an artist’s reception at South Street Café on Friday, August 13, from 5 to 7 p.m.
Image 3:"Flowers in bottles on red tablecloth" by Viola Moriarty is included in “Recent works, 2010” at South Street Café, 105 South Street in Bennington, Vt., in a month-long exhibit beginning Sunday, August 1.
Join Moriarty in an artist’s reception at South Street Café on Friday, August 13, from 5 to 7 p.m.
Image 4:“La tortuga y la planta” by Viola Moriarty is now on view at the in the North Bennington Train Station Museum on Main Street / Route 67, North Bennington, Vt. Moriarty is one of 50 exhibiting artists in the 13th annual North Bennington Art Park, which opened on July 17 and runs through Sunday, October 10.
All images courtesy Viola Moriarty
This summer at Lake Champlain Maritime Museum travel back in time 100 years to see Otter Creek and downtown Vergennes Through the Eyes of Custer Ingham, on view through August 15. Working with guest curators William Benton and Greg Hamilton, LCMM has assembled over 40 works by this little-known Vermont artist from private collections, most of which have not been on public view since the 1960s and 1970s. Born during the Civil War and named for General George Armstrong Custer, Ingham began in the 1880s to paint scenes of daily life in the Champlain Valley, including Lake Champlain’s Westport Sail Ferry, a baseball game on the banks of Otter Creek, and the family farm. The falls and the basin below on Otter Creek were favorite topics and several of the paintings in the show are views of this area with boats, fisherman, swimmers and perhaps even Ingham himself as subjects in the landscapes.
Early in his career, Ingham studied at the National Academy of Design in New York for two years; later, a brief visit to Europe in 1914 was cut short by the outbreak of World War I. Although he chose a realist approach, many of Ingham’s works demonstrate his interest in experimenting with the artistic movements of his era, evoking the trompe l’oeil paintings of William Harnett, landscapes of the Barbizon and Hudson River schools, and the colors and atmospheric effects of the Impressionists.
A full color illustrated catalog of the exhibition is available, thanks to a generous gift from People’s United Bank and a publication grant from the Marian S. Ware Charitable Lead Annuity Trust. Through the Eyes of Custer Ingham is on view through August 15. Lake Champlain Maritime Museum at 4472 Basin Harbor Road is open daily from 10-5, and the exhibit is included with admission (museum members and children 5 and under get in free). For more information call 802 475-2022 or go to www.lcmm.org.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 802.362.1405
July 15, 2010
CELEBRATE THE COLORS OF SUMMER:
NEW SOLO ART EXHBITIONS OPEN JULY 24 AT SVAC
Manchester, VT – All the colors of a Vermont summer are on display both indoors and out at the Southern Vermont Arts Center, which will introduce its exhibiting July artists at a free Opening Party on Saturday, July 24th from 4pm to 6pm in the Yester House galleries.
The July Exhibitions feature works by Penny Viscusi, Susan Abbott, Ken Rush, Bev Walker, Lawrence Lee, Max Stern, Gillian Pederson-Krag, Carolyn Webb, Anne Dibble, and Robert O’Brien. All exhibiting work is offered for sale. The July Exhibitions will continue through August 24.
Additionally, the Outdoor Sculpture Garden is displaying wonderful works by Gregory Smith, David Tanych, and Wendy Klemperer.
The free opening party is a perfect opportunity to meet the artists, mingle with friends, and enjoy live music, hors d'oeuvres and a cash bar, all within the exquisite architecture of the storied Yester House mansion. Supervised children’s activities will also be offered in the Madeira Education Studios; advance registration is required as space is limited. For more information, visit www.svac.org or call (802) 362-1405.
The Southern Vermont Arts Center is a non-profit educational institution whose mission is to make the visual and performing arts an integral part of the life of the community and region. SVAC is open Tuesday-Saturday from 10am to 5pm and on Sunday from 11am to 5pm.; there is free admission on Sunday (closed Monday). Café Mamie at Yester House features the Vermont-sourced signature dishes of Chef Mariah Macfarlane. Reservations are suggested and can be made by calling (802) 366-8298.
Southern Vermont Arts Center * West Road, Manchester * (802) 362 1405 * www.svac.org
image: Susan Abbott, Vineyards and Grapes, Oil, 12" x 36", triptych, $4,000
By Stephen Orloske
The producers of our objects seem bent on reducing every tool to a bare minimum. Apple, the current maestro of such design, lauds the feeling that their computers seem to disappear when in use. Actually delivering such ethereal magic, Microsoft recently unveiled Kinect, which does away with touch all together, now you simply gesture to the air. While this march toward invisibility seems, with its elegance, inevitable, the trouble is that once they reach the point where they become irrefutable with their inventiveness and are always on and always present, then they also always demand our attention. And if they have no body, then how can we grasp the distance which separates human from machine? How does one even acknowledge a ghost?
Perhaps the scary part is how naive those marketing the future seem. Their great promise is a synthesis between human and machine. A synthesis which will herald unimaginable, immediate pleasures and that these pleasures will be like our own, only greater, but they fail to acknowledge the subjectivity of a machine. A machine does not have desire proper where, like humans, an irrational, emotional desire is, hopefully, brought to fruition by our cognitive means, rather a machine programs its desire, it uses cognition to know what it wants. (Take Bina48 as an example. Compiling interviews and factual data, she is ever more becoming an exact digital replica of her original, human Bina. As is her programing, her greatest desire to be more like the real Bina, a position no human can truly have, for we can only fantasize about another and it is our irrational fantasy which we truly desire, while Bina48 actually desires to be Bina. Yet, as we all know, we hardly know ourselves. Our family often draws a better description of us since they can actually watch what we do. Which opens up the horrific scenario that, since Bina48 can know, in fact desires to know, what Bina's parents and lovers know, she becomes more Bina than Bina herself.) The moment people are altered to be subjectively like a robot is the moment we think toward desire rather than desires creating our thinking. And the moment when our self enters the miasma of our tools, the moment the desires we are all familiar with become impossible and the nightmare of droll labor being the only thing we can desire becomes possible.So go to Robots and Ray Guns at the S.P.A.C.E. Gallery in Burlington and see what other courses technology could take. There are unabashed influences in much of the work, from steampunk to The Jetsons. Robots wink and cringe in proletarian tableaux. Play dolls emanate quasi enlightened splendor from their eyes. But spelling it out further misses the whole point of the show. This isn't art for the hoity-toity, rather it's cheeky fun the whole hoi polloi can enjoy, which is an element missing from the tech savvy world. They forget that humanity is not at its best when interacting with the invisible, it is better when it has something real to grasp. And if more of our tools are becoming autonomous then better they manifest concretely, better we have something to lay hands upon and know who controls what, rather than the accepted norm which is fast reaching the moment where we simply sit warily in a haunting presence.
Robots and Rayguns is up through July 31st. The S.P.A.C.E. Gallery, located at The Soda Plant Building on Pine Street in Burlington (266 Pine Street, Suite 105) is open Thursdays through Saturdays 11-4, though they say they are always around, so you can drop in anytime or call first at (802) 578-2512.
Sculpture installations for exposed 2010: Installing outdoor sculpture is always an adventure, given the variety of materials and installation concerns. The sculptures for Exposed are currently being installed at Helen Day Art Center, around the Village of Stowe, and on the Recreation Path.
Jordan Pratt's 'Earth Cubes' are now installed on the recreation path. The four cubes range from 2 to 3 feet square and are made of grass sod over an armature. They lift the grassy landscape from "rolling and organic" into something eye-catching and engineered. It appears that the earth itself is forming large crystals adorned with grass.
Another piece, by Nadine Faraj, has made its way through customs at the border and now graces the front lawn of the Art Center. Nadine's one thousand pound concrete egg has been delivered from Canada and rests on the lawn of the Helen Day Art Center.
The corner of Main Street and School Street has sprouted a beautiful stone work: Tom Douglas' White marble sculpture entitled "Optical promise" was installed there on Friday
Over this week another dozen pieces will be placed in town by the Curator, Meg McDevitt, the artists and Helen Day's two interns from University of Vermont..
Exposed 2010:
Our annual exhibition of outdoor sculpture, now celebrating it's 18th year, is curated by UVM sculpture professor Meg McDevitt. It features over 20 individual works by artists from around the region, extending from the Helen Day Art Center to Stowe Kitchen and Bath and Chittenden Bank on the Mountain Road, and on the Stowe recreation path. A marquee event on Stowe's summer calendar, the exhibition attracts an estimated 75,000 visitors during its annual 3 month run.
The feature of the opening is the artist-led Walkabout tour of Exposed 2010.This year's exhibition includes works by regional and international artists, including Nadine Faraj (Canada), Joel Fisher (England/ USA), Kenji Endo (Japan), among others.
The Walkabout tours the show with the majority of the artists attending and sharing reflections on their work. List of participating artists: Leila Bandar, Jon Black, Tyler Buswell, Mireille Clapp, Kat Clear, Chris Curtis, Tom Douglas, Kenji Endo, Nadine Faraj, Joel Fisher, Rob Hitzig, Bruce Hathaway, james Irving, Harlan Mack, Jordan Pratt, Peg Smith, Piper Strong, Denis Versweyveld, Catherine Ward.
Contact:
Meg McDevitt, Curator, Exposed 2010
802 635 9349
Image: Tom Douglas Installation