Tuesday, April 10, 2012

PRESS RELEASE: Harriet Wood at River Arts Center, Morrisville



The Gallery at River Arts is pleased to present OCCUPY Space, work by Harriet Wood at the River Arts Center in Morrisville, VT, April 26 – May 25. An opening reception will be held on April 26, 5:00 – 7:00 p.m.

Visual artist Harriet Wood worked as a political protest (anti-war) artist and expressionist figure painter until around 15 years ago when she turned to abstract expressionism. Wood explains that "...even though it's no longer like jumping into the abyss like it was in the fifties, I find it still a relevant genre, drawing me in with more and more complexities and challenges."

Abstract expressionism has, in Harriet's words, "... offered me the physicality and emotional connection with my work that I needed and along with formal considerations has proved to be a psychically integrative process. My communication with the painting continues until it leaves my studio. For me, there is a connection between writing poetry and painting out of my unconscious, in the sense that both are grabbing the moment and distilling the emotions."

Wood attended the Art Student's League and Pratt Institute. She graduated from Goddard College with a major in art history. In her twenties she was part of a social protest group, the NO! Art group and showed in their gallery on Tenth St., the March Gallery, as well as the Coda Gallery. More recently she has shown at the Neue Gesellschaft Fur Dildene Kunst, Berlin, Germany, the Block Museum of the University of Illinois and the Chelsea Museum in NYC. She is in the collection of the Neue Gesellschaft and the Boris Lurie Foundation, NYC. She has shown in many venues throughout Vermont.


The Gallery at River Arts is located at the River Arts Center, 74 Pleasant Street in Morrisville, VT. Gallery hours: Monday-Friday, 10-2. For off hours, please call River Arts: 802-888-1261. Admission is free. For more information, call or visit their website at www.riverartsvt.org.

image:"Untitled"by Harriet Wood

Thursday, April 5, 2012

PRESS RELEASE: Harry Bernard at Two Rivers Printmaking Studio in White River Junction

The monoprints of Harry Bernard will be featured at Two Rivers Printmaking Studio in White River Junction from April 6 - 30, 2012. There will be an opening reception on Friday, April 13, from 6 -- 8pm.

Harry Bernard, an award-winning art director/creative director and figurative expressionist painter, has recently turned to printmaking where he explores the medium of monoprint as an extension of his exploration of "our transitory, vunerable lives." Using a variety of printmaking techniques including monotype, solar plate etching, carborundum, and chine colle, Harry's work is layered and complex in a way that complements his large-scale paintings.

His painting, Mom Returned as a Little Girl with No Hands and No Feet and Won't Eat/Was Here 3.2 won first prize in the 2011 Annual Juried Show at AVA Gallery and Art Center in Lebanon, NH. Juror Katherine Hart wrote that his work was "a painting of complexity and nuance...one becomes aware of its layers and delicacy, in contrast to the disturbing power of its imagery."

Harry states, "From a more narrative context my work evolves toward the exploration of privacy and intimacy juxtaposed with the public domain in which we live. The process begins with research and collection, which usually involves much walking with a camera stashed and ready. The result is a studio that resembles a museum of urban detritus. I sometimes make photographic transfers from photos I've taken, and incorporate them, along with other modes of technology and found materials, with traditional painting methods.

The impulse, I believe, arises from observation of the human predicament revealed through the disparate and often unexpected: anonymous spills, droppings, and stains on a sidewalk that hint at human and animal forms; crushed cans; lost gloves; markings in uncured concrete. Recalling primitive imagery, these random objects and images of the city serve, for my purposes, as archaeological evidence of habitation."

Image: monoprint, Hail! Hail!

CALL TO ARTISTS: Amerigo Vespucci and Travel at Colori del Levante Fiorentino Online

Recently we got an intriguing email from a small non-profit community center for the visual arts in Italy called Colori del Levante Fiorentino. I have corresponded with Annalisa Bati, their president, and it looks like a good idea born of enthusiasm and with no money involved. Here is her original email communication, followed by a more structured call. Their language is Italian, so everything going back and forth between us has been filtered through Google Translate http://translate.google.com/ She sent her query in English, and, to be polite, I translated my response into Italian (with the English underneath) to send to her at coloridellevante@libero.it I hope some Vermonters will want to get involved in her project. I think the idea is that they will put up images on their website and in their gallery, and she would be happy if someone here would do a corresponding online exhibit (which should be easy enough in Blogger or on Wordpress...). I am willing to be a point person for a bit, if you want to copy me at janetvanfleet @ fairpoint. net in your correspondance. – Ed.

FIRST COMMUNICATION
We are a small non-profit association of painters, near Florence, Italy. Some of us are also plein air painters (most nonprofessional, amateur). During 2012 we want to organize an event about 500 years from the death of Amerigo Vespucci, the Florentine who gave the name to America, who died in Sevilla.

We would like to ask painters to express themselves on this theme, particularly on the theme of exploration and travel. We would like to find an association in America which will respond to the invitation with a similar project – a virtual twinning for this event. We are still defining the project, and we are open to suggestions. Of course it is not necessary to come in Tuscany, though we would be happy to have you come to Florence. We are not asking any money for this project; we do all this only for our pleasure to do a beautiful project.

You can contact us at this address coloridellevante@libero.it



SECOND COMMUNICATION

After Easter we will present our project, officially, to our friends and associates, in order to arrange an exposition after this summer (the place and the period is not yet decided).

The project, dedicated to Amerigo Vespucci, is named:

PLUS ULTRA
The big travels.


Plus ultra is the Latin for "go beyond, overcome the limitations, the things known to explore the unknown..."

We plan to divide the exposition in four sections:
  1. Vespucci and his world. In this section we will put all the works about this person, representationsof his house, of himself, etcetera...
  2. The new world. Section dedicated to America... and also to the Native Americans, in order to reflect on the difficult relationship with the other
  3. The big explorations.Section dedicated to all the efforts to discover new places, to the means of explorations (ships etc...), reminders of big enterprises...
  4. The meaning of the travel.All the reasons to travel: emigration, scientific travel (Darwin for example...), religion (pigrimage), imagined travels,and so on...

For now, these are our ideas. If you and some of your friends are inspired from one of these categories and want to participate. simply send a photo of the work which you have done to coloridellevante@libero.it , and you are welcome in the group. If you have ideas for how to do a twin project in Vermont, we would like to have your ideas and involvement.

PRESS RELEASE: Sarah Bush in the In the S.P.A.C.E. Backspace Gallery in Burlington

We're Not Made of Metal:
galvanized steel work by Sarah Bush

In the Backspace Gallery
April 6 - 28
Gallery Hours: Thursday - Saturday 11-4pm
First Friday Art Walk: April 6 from 5-9pm

We're Not Made of Metal by Sarah Bush, is an interactive group of sheet metal sculptures that explore and express an internal concern with the societal movement toward mechanical ways of being and how this movement inherently negates the importance and value of the individual. The idea developed during a time when Sarah was losing herself in a push toward mechanization and achievement, while forgetting about the importance of rest and laughter. She hopes that her work will inspire an audience to consider the reality of this modern issue and the way it can lead us away from our true selves.

Image: Galvanized steel sculpture,
Figure 1 & 2 by Sarah Bush

PRESS RELEASE: work by the Book Arts Guild of Vermont in the S.P.A.C.E. Gallery in Burlington


In the S.P.A.C.E. Gallery
April 2 - 28

Shaping Pages
work by the Book Arts Guild of Vermont

First Friday Art Walk: April 6 from 5-9pm

Shaping Pages challenges the traditional form of books and the written page in general. The exhibit is a compilation of fine bindings and artist books that explore the essential foundations of art in their shape, composition, content, color and more. We invite you to get lost in the pages throughout April, made possible by the members of the Book Arts Guild of Vermont.

Gallery Hours: Thursday - Saturday 11am-4pm

Image: He Chirps Before Fire, by Maryann Riker

PRESS RELEASE: Cheryl Daye Dick at Kellogg Hubbard Library in Montpelier

Kellogg Hubbard Library 2nd Floor

Birmingham and Beyond
Through April 23, 2012

Expressions and impressions from Cheryl Daye Dick’s recent travel through Civil Rights history and sites in Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi

“My work is essential to me and comes from a deeper place than even I understand. It is simply essential for me. I paint these American men and women and their 'historic experiences' as African Americans. The joy of each completed work is bringing them into the light with love and reverence.”

Image: Get off the Bus, Anniston, Alabama

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

PRESS RELEASE: Beth Pearson at Left Bank Home & Garden in Burlington

Left Bank Home & Garden is currently featuring an exhibit of paintings by Vermont artist Beth Pearson through the end of May.

Beth Pearson is known for her playful and mysterious abstractions in oil, mixed material and printmaking. Her work is recognizable for its surfaces, rich with layered history, and poetic compositions with titles that empower even timid viewers to interpret them. She has exhibited widely throughout Vermont and New England for the past 20 years.

An opening reception will be held during Burlington's First Friday Art Walk: Friday, April 6th from 6 - 8PM.

Left Bank Home & Garden
127 Bank Street (between St. Paul & Pine Streets)
Burlington, VT 05401
802.862.1001

Image: Beth Pearson, Like the Moon, mixed material on wood

CALL TO ARTISTS: Annual Spring Members' Show at The Carving Studio and Sculpture Center in West Rutland

The Carving Studio and Sculpture Center announces their Annual Spring Members' Show, May 19-July 1, 2012 at the Gallery, 259 Marble Street in West Rutland.

All members of the non-profit arts education organization have the opportunity to show their work in this popular exhibition. An eclectic mix of techniques and media are always represented and artists of all levels have the chance to exchange ideas after the often-solitary winter. There will be a reception for the artists, open to the public, on Saturday, May 19, 5-7 PM.

Space in the exhibit is limited, so members who plan to participate should let the Carving Studio and Sculpture Center know of their intentions as soon as possible. The deadline to receive works is Friday, May 11, 2012. Membership must be current to exhibit, please phone (802) 438-2097 or email info@carvingstudio.org to renew or become a member.

Image: Members and friends at the opening reception for the Carving Studio and Sculpture Center Annual Members' Show in 2011.

CALL TO ARTISTS: s-EYE-nce: at Studio Place Arts in Barre

s-EYE-nce:
a science/visual arts fusion


Lots of the visuals that come out of scientific inquiry, like photomicrographs of the mouthparts of tiny insects or traces of elementary particles like quarks, are both beautiful and compelling. Some artists are using and modifying such images; others are using the techniques (recording transformations), processes (such as repeating sequences and patterns), and methods (observation and replication) of science to inform their art. Artists are encouraged to explore the evolution and discoveries of science from all sides: existing and emerging sciences and fantastical takes on science. Cool gadgets and equipment get bonus points!
Show Dates: June 5 - July 7, 2012
Deadline: April 20, 2012

Submitting to SPA
Applications should include:
  • " Artist name and contact information
  • Description of proposed work (dimensions, materials, date, retail price [65% to artist])
  • Images (send digital images via email [info@studioplacearts.com] - please use jpeg format and limit file size to less than 3MB total, slides, copies of drawings, prints, other relevant materials) of work. Please include a written summary of this information and label the images/slides for ease of review. Include dimensions, material, date & retail price.
  • SASE for return of materials
  • $10 application fee (waived for SPA members)
Mail to:
Studio Place Arts
201 N. Main Street
Barre, VT 05641
If you have questions, please send us an email at: info@studioplacearts.com

CALL TO ARTISTS: Art on Main in Bristol seeks exhibitors

Art on Main in Bristol, a welcoming, artist-friendly, non-profit cooperative Gallery seeks submissions for new exhibitors for the 2012-2013 season. Our spring 2012 Jury session is Saturday April 21, 10am-2pm. The application, as well as the consignment contract and fee information, is available for download at www.artonmain.net/forms.html.

All media are welcome, though we are particularly looking for sterling jewelry, metalwork, book arts, and home crafts (rugs, lamps, etc.) to add to our varied collection. Unfortunately, we do not have space to accept any new two-dimensional work at this time. We look forward to the opportunity to see your creative work and hope that it can find a place here with us.

Bristol is a thriving community with dedicated local shoppers, as well as visitors from around Addison County and beyond. We enjoy a busy tourist season from May through October, and are sustained by our loyal locals at the holidays and throughout the winter. Artist members who choose the working option help us staff the Gallery year-round by working one four-hour shift each month greeting, chatting with, and taking care of our customers.

Please RSVP ahead of the jury date, so that we can plan for our session. You are welcome to drop off or mail your application and work anytime in the 2 weeks leading up to a jury date. Winter Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday 10am-6pm. You may also both drop off and pick up your work on the day of the jury if you will be traveling from a distance; in this instance, it is helpful if you can send the paperwork ahead of time. Work is available to be picked up anytime after the jury is finished meeting.

If you have any questions, contact the Gallery Manager, Carolyn Ashby, at info@artonmain.net or 802-453-4032. You can learn more about Art on Main at our website www.artonmain.net or by visiting us on Facebook, www.facebook.com/ArtonMainVT.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

CALL TO ARTISTS: Digital Art Show at Village Frame Shoppe & Gallery in St. Albans

Village Frame Shoppe & Gallery
72 North Main St.
St. Albans, Vt
Digital Art Show
June 5-JUNE 30
Go online now to register at www.vtframeshop.com

This show is open to artists creating their artwork in a digital environment. All artwork must have been produced on a computer. This is not a show for digital photography. iPhone and iPad work will be accepted. Please visit our website at www.vtframeshop.com for more info and registration form.

Theme: All artwork must have been made digitally on a computer.
Exhibition Dates: June 5 - June 30, 2012
Dropoff Dates: Friday and Saturday June 1,2 from 1:00-4:00pm
Reception Date: Friday June 15, 6-8pm
Pickup Dates: Saturday June 30, 1:00-4:00pm
Artwork Limit: 2 pieces no larger than 20" x 26" framed.

Image: Gossamer, 2012, by Melvin Harris

PRESS RELEASE: John Brickels and Wendy James at the Governor’s Gallery in Montpelier


Work by John Brickels and Wendy James will be exhibited at the Governor’s Gallery, on the 5th floor of the Pavilion Office Building from April 5 - May 32, 2012.

There will be an opening reception on Monday, April 16, from 3-5 PM.

The Pavilion Building is at 109 State Street in Montpelier. Please note that, for security reasons, a photo ID is required for entry into the building.

Image: Window Stop by Wendy James

PRESS RELEASE: Mildred Beltré at Gallery II at Vermont Studio Center in Johnson

Mildred Beltré will be showing new mixed media works on paper at the Vermont Studio Center Gallery II, Wolf Kahn Barn.

The show runs from March 31-April 27, 2012.
Opening reception is on Friday April 6, 2012 at 7pm.


Born and raised in New York City, Mildred Beltré received her undergraduate degree at Carleton College, in Northfield, Minnesota. She continued her tour of the midwest by studying at the University of Iowa (Iowa City, IA) where she received an MA and MFA in printmaking and photography.


Currently traveling between the Queen City and Kings County, Mildred Beltré is an artist, a professor at the University of Vermont, and popular education facilitator. She has shown at Five Myles Gallery in Brooklyn, NY; Dartmouth College in NH, Load of Fun Gallery in Baltimore to name a few. She has been awarded a New York Foundation for the Arts grant in printmaking and drawing as well as a residencies at the Lower East side printshop and the Vermont Studio Center. She has received grants from The Citizen's Committee and the Brooklyn Arts Council, For the Brooklyn Hi Art! Machine a collaborative interactive art-making project exploring community that takes places on the sidewalk outside her building

Her work explores the idea of the schematic to talk about things that are too big to talk about. Borrowing imagery from disparate sources (West African religion, past and current radical political movements, and sports) she attempts to describe relationships in the world both as they are and how they might be.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

PRESS RELEASE: Michael Strauss at the Emile A Gruppe Gallery in Jericho


Letting Go, a new exhibition of acrylic paintings by Michael Strauss continues at the Emile A Gruppe Gallery, through April 29. Struass's paintings are reminiscent of the era of the California colorists, bold and vibrant. Also on display are his paintings on glass with similar motifs, which radiate with (when)the sun streaming through them.

Strauss's work illustrates the poetry of Tony Magistrale in the their book "Letting Go." Tony Magistrale is chair of the English department at UVM and Michael Strauss is a professor emeritus of chemistry at UVM and now teaches art at UVM.

Gallery hours are Thursday through Sunday from 10 am - 3 pm or by appointment 899 - 3211 www.emilegruppegallery.com.

PRESS RELEASE: Bone Structures at The Chaffee Art Center in Rutland



The Chaffee Art Center opened a new exhibit on Friday March 23 called Bone Structures, an exhibit of work informed by the body, curated by Michael Winslow. The exhibit features sculptures by Mary Alcantara, Glenn Campbell, Barbara Carris, Andrew DeVries, Kevin Donegan, Christopher Gowell, Eric David Laxman, Don Ramey, Stephen Schaum, Nora Valdez, and Michael Winslow, as well as 2D artwork by Emily Carris, Andrew DeVries, Hunter Eddy, Katherine Clarke Langlands, Janet McKenzie, and Mare Vaccaro.

The curator Michael Winslow is a Chaffee Art Center board member and former Executive Director of the Carving Studio and Sculpture Center in West Rutland. Bone Structures is sponsored by the Rutland Regional Medical Center.

Image: Soul Dance by Andrew DeVries

PRESS RELEASE: Ella Skye Mac Donald at Townsend Gallery at Black Cap Coffee in Stowe


Townsend Gallery at Black Cap Coffee proudly presents the art work of Ella Skye Mac Donald from April 1st to April 30th. A reception will be held on Friday April 6th from 3-5 pm.

April is "Autism Awareness Month." Autism Spectrum Disorder effects 1 in 110 children worldwide. Autism is a complex disorder of brain development. People with autism can display difficulties in social interaction, verbal and non verbal communication and repetitive behaviors. Most obvious signs tend to emerge between 2-3 years of age.

Ella Skye MacDonald was diagnosed with autism at age 3 while living in England. It was around the time of her diagnosis that Ella's family started to realise that her drawings in pre-school were alot different than her peers. Ella and her family returned to the States in 2009 in search of better treatment. Ella is now a second grader at Stowe Elementary School with the help of an amazing full time behavior interventionist and team of teachers and therapists that help with every aspect of her day.

Ella is learning to communicate better with the help of a voice generating device called a DynaVox. In the meantime, a lot of what we learn about Ella comes through her art. Her teachers also use Ella's ability to draw to show them if she comprehended a story. If she gets frustrated and cannot verbally communicate something her aide will ask her to draw it for her. We also know through her drawings that she loves animals, likes to have fun, is happy and has a good sense of humor.

Ella's art is a valuable tool in gaining understanding and narrowing the large social gap between her and her peers. The kids learn that Ella might be very different from them in a lot of ways but she can also draw some pretty cool things. When a classmate wears a t-shirt with one of Ella's designs she usually runs up to them with a big,approving smile.

Ella has a great love of music. Her music taste ranges from Thomas The Train Sing Along to Moby. She loves to ski with the help of Stowe Adaptive Sports and loves walking in the woods.

Black Cap Coffee is located at 144 Main Street in Stowe, VT. Call 802-279-4239 for more
information. www.blackcapcoffee.com

PRESS RELEASE: Works by Robert Kasper in Regional Artists’ Gallery at Bennington Museum

My approach…I attack art-making with the intensity and improvisational antics of a free form jazz virtuoso. In so doing I struggle, really struggle, to remain mindless, being all at once attached and detached suspending judgment, letting it flow. -- Robert Kasper

On view in the Regional Artists Gallery at the Bennington Museum are works by Robert Kasper, artist, designer, educator, and creative theorist. With over four decades of a storied global career, Kasper currently focuses his considerable attention and energy on personal and visual expression and offers his expertise to businesses and corporations worldwide. Regardless of the time, place, media, or reason, the connective tissue that runs through all of his work is the diversity of visual expression itself. Always the creator and explorer, searching for tension and aliveness, Kasper remains committed to being uncommitted to a style or theme. This exhibition opened on March 24 and is on view through May 6.

Working in varied mediums, in the early 60’s Kasper had the great fortune to have studied painting with Raymond Hendler and color theory with Sewell Sillman at Parsons School of Design. He continued his visual studies at The Sorbonne, in Paris. After graduation, having parallel interest in painting/graphic design and art direction, he accepted an entry level position at DDB where he had the opportunity to work alongside some of the industry’s most luminary art directors, designers, film producers, directors and writers. Years later, Kasper began work with Richard Avedon on a collaborative project for Chesebrough-Ponds. Receiving recognition for outstanding work, he was recognized as a creative leader in the industry, and a person who took his greatest pride in being respected for his successes in nurturing creative individuals and organizations. In 1987, Kasper launched his own design group KasperDesign, selecting international talent to match with the firm’s prestigious client group which spanned a vast variety of media.

Kasper’s activities, past and present, culminate in his studio work as he remains compelled to create his own visual language. A body of personal visual work spanning four decades fills his Berkshire studio today. He has never stopped working on his personal visual expression, continuing to execute works in a broad range of materials, from more traditional ones like graphite and Conte Crayon on paper, to the more experimental including dipped textiles, found objects, fired roofing material, electrical supply remnants, waste paper and packing cartons. On his exhibited work, Kasper states “The materials found in the included works are often scraps, remains or remnants of human behavior and activity gathered together, manipulated, and composed. The three dimensional works in paper were originally inspired by toppled trash bins of discarded newspapers. Crushing paper with little or no forethought, I fold, bend and crease it to choreograph a never-ending dance between form, shape, and plane, light and shadow.”

The Bennington Museum is located at 75 Main Street (Route 9) in Bennington. Regular admission is $10 for adults, $9 for seniors and students over 18. Visit the museum’s website www.benningtonmuseum.org or call 802-447-1571 for more information.

Images:
Lost, 2009. 42” x 51”, Acrylic on corrugated box with tape
Chaos #1, 2006. 44” x 60”, Tempera, colored, pencil, pastel, ink and marker on paper

PRESS RELEASE: Ed Epstein at Central Vermont Medical Center in Berlin

Ed Epstien’s exhibit, Stories, is aptly named. His art really does tell stories, stories of people, places and things.

Ed Epstein says, “it's great to see the work on the walls. This is an interesting space. In hanging the show I realize you have lots of people coming through most of the day - people who may not expect to see art as part of their visit. I like having people see the work.”

There are many facets to Ed’s life. “I have played music most of my life – as a young pre-teen until now: country, then folk, then classical (cello), and eventually Calypso steel band.”

After moving to Vermont, he spent 10 years building “Dynamite” wood-burning stoves and furnaces of his own design. Then, Ed started building boats in 1985, learned to sail, and in 1998 launched a 36 foot schooner he’d spent 5 years building in his shop. He cruised her single-handed in the Caribbean until she was lost in a collision with a submerged container off the coast of Grenada in 2006.

“The only positive effect of losing my boat is that I found my way back to painting again after a hiatus of more than 40 years,” said Ed. “People ask me if I enjoy painting again. My answer is ‘no, it’s a hard struggle, I’m agonizing my way through it.’ "

"Most are surprised when I say that almost every painting is a disappointment. Only artists understand what I’m saying: the struggle toward perfection, by definition, is unreachable. Mesmerized by the magnificent and the trivial, painters attempt to capture the essence and spirit of things, an endlessly frustrating chore, though occasionally achieving something remarkable and real. I take the frustrations for granted and push on. I find the painting process exciting, energizing, mysterious, and downright terrifying. It is exhausting, but exhilarating.”

For decades I told myself I’d return to it “when I’m old.” Well, I must be old. Painting seems to fit me like an old glove. Now I can’t stop. These paintings tell some of the stories of my life.”

Ed Epstein grew up in New York City and came to Vermont in 1969. He lived in Middlesex and now lives in Montpelier. He is a self-taught artist. For more information on his art, go to www.edepstein-fineart.com. The exhibit at CVMC is on display through April 30, 2012.

Images: Self Portrait, drawing of Leonard Biesebecke.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

ESSAY: "Anarchist Art"; Susan Calza at Johnson State College


by Leila Bandar


In 1917, almost 100 years ago, a breakthrough in sculpture occurred; The Russian Revolution gave rise to a group of open-minded, passionate, and socially-aware artists known as the "Russian Constructivists". Prior to 1917 Tsars in Russia (and political elite in other countries, too) commissioned sculptors to create pieces representing political ideals and wartime achievements. Sculpture was often limited to men on horseback, depictions of military stories, and war memorials – or -- depictions of mythology and portraits of the wealthy. After the Russian Revolution, Constructivists as they were defined by Pevsner and Gabo would have a large impact on what we view as sculpture today - not just in Russia.


Using everyday materials - like plywood, cardboard, and plastic - Constructivists' artwork often exhibits an elegant, orderly look. One of piece which comes to mind from 20th C. Art History is by Alexander Rodchenko oval hanging construction #12 located in the Museum of Modern Art. Although the plywood is flat, the creativity of the sculptor transforms it to a mobile that seems to reference something grand as the Universe. A building material is transformed to make something sublime – a profound statement. It is also a political statement for social change: non-precious materials can allow proletariat hands to access the beauty, joy, and lifein everyday things.


Calza's work is about materials. It is about finding a material, something lost-then-found, learning about the material, and combining the material with other elements to make the piece reflect a memory and produce a feeling. Her drawings give voice to awkward, vulnerable, and uncomfortable emotions. Rather than feed into sculptural stereotypes of the last 100 years, hers quietly rejects authority, power, and control. In this way, Much acquainted...missing is a non-authoritarian body of work. It is everything opposite of coercive control and authority. It is a show that gives power to the non-dominant in the most literal way: she uses her non-dominant hand for all of her drawings. To me, it could be called "Anarchist Art". Instead of speaking of things that are in control and have the ability to control others, Calza calls on wobbly authenticity. Her left hand is allowed to feel, touch, experience what the right hand is generally in charge of! Her non-dominant hand cannot hide behind confidence, knowing, and exactitude. Instead, it is allowed to reveal its own squirm – lack of strength becomes a strength through repetition.


When Calza gives voice to the "non-dominant" she gives voice to the parts of all of us which are humble enough to acknowledge powerlessness rather than assert control. Rather than authority she presents authenticity. Humility allows her to accept ALL of her emotions - from the golden-bird-truth-seeker to hungry-ghost-mouths. Her work is more in-line with Louise Bourgeois, Eva Hesse, Louise Nevelson and Kiki Smith - female heroines who share a sense for wholeness, softness, and bold risk-taking. In Calza’s own words: “For my money…the real revolution in sculpture was Eva Hesse....”. Other artists on Calza’s short list of influences are Richard Tuttle and Ree Morton. Nothing in Much acquainted… missing points to the male peers of her generation who produced monumental steel pieces, such as the work of Mark di Suvero or Richard Serra.


"Anarchist Art" is a term I would like to see used when an artist is does not seek control or express authority. I would like to see it used when a person explores a personal truth with genuineness and audaciousness; when an artist seeks to directly communicate raw, gut feelings; rather than "edit-out". Calza seems to "edit-in" which means: owning-up.


Part of “owning up” is acknowledging Calza's one mis-truth. She claims this body of work is about travel, but what we find are hundreds of deeply personal versions of self-portraiture. What about travel? What we find is not ABOUT travel but HOW to travel. Ultimately, it shows that to travel-with-oneself unmasked yet unafraid is what it means to be a good companion! And to be a good companion to others, one must be a good companion to oneself.


The grouchy, quarrelsome, and fussy inner-voices telling us "the weather isn't great", or "breakfast wasn't tasty enough", or "the plane ride is too long and bumpy" - all get a chance to speak - and by acknowledging those voices (calling them out) they become tame. Much Aquainted...missing has much to offer. And the best lessons are how to fully accept oneself, not to control others, to face the squirms of weaker parts of ourselves, and the demons too – they are ALL along for the ride.

--------------

Susan Calza’s Much Aquainted… missing at Johnson State College will be on exhibit through March 30, 2012.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

PRESS RELEASE: Nancy Taplin at BigTown Gallery in Rochester


BigTown Gallery is pleased to present new paintings and collages by Nancy H. Taplin. Her solo exhibition at BigTown in 2007, marked a beginning of what we see culminating here with this selection of her most recent abstract paintings.

In this fully fledged realization of her move away from the representational reference, to an evolutionary language defined and clarified by the artist's intimate daily routine, we see imbued a celebration of her more than forty years at the easel. These paintings, both large 12' and small, exude a lively and lifelike breadth of emotion; simultaneously at ease and “on stage.”

The brushwork in these new paintings–quick-released or controlled for density–moves with seeming effortlessness toward lucidity–swiping, shaping, erasing–enveloping the gestural activity within a field of tinted white paint–pushing, stretching the movement of color–building to voluminous expressions of form; liberated by an arresting complexity of sensuous color, both moody and bright. Of this new work the artist states: “As in the past, my paintings are gestural in nature, using movement of line, shape, and color to create energy... In my new works I am exploring the communication between these various elements, as though it were one big operatic argument or conversation.”

These are paintings of emotional declaration; reinterpretations of discoveries over time. Throughout, the sonorous rhythms pull the viewer in, push the viewer out beyond the painting's boundaries, and into a suite of symphonic variation; a record of sorts of the gesture given and taken away. This, combined with the now predominantly all-over working of high stamina calligraphic brushwork, forms the new Taplin signature.

This exhibition of oils on canvas and paper will be on view in the main and center galleries through April 29, 2012.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

PRESS RELEASE: Figurative Paintings Group Show at Furchgott Sourdiffe Gallery Shelburne



Furchgott Sourdiffe Gallery will be showing "Clothing Optional: Figurative Paintings by John Lawrence Hoag, Cameron Schmitz, David Smith, and Frank Woods", March 30-May 1, 2012. There will be an opening reception with the artists on Friday, April 13th, 6-8 p.m.
The four artists approach the representation of the figure in distinctly individual ways. Hoag's oils are heavy with emotion and psychological ambivalence. Schmitz' clothed figures of women and children have the dreamy atmosphere of the solitary spaces they inhabit. Smith's nudes and head studies have the freshness and immediacy of work done in close observation within a life drawing setting, while Woods' work down in the same setting reflects his interest in abstraction.
Furchgott Sourdiffe Gallery is located at 86 Falls Road, in Shelburne Village. Hours are Tue-Fri 9:30-5:30, and Sat 10-5.
For more information call 985-3848, write:
mail@fsgallery.com, or visit
the website at
www.fsgallery.com

image: John Lawrence Hoag. Father and Child - 181/2"x18" - Oil on Linen

PRESS RELEASE: Sara Katz at Vintage Inspired Lifestyle Marketplace, Burlington


Burlington, VT: (March 14, 2012) Vintage Inspired Lifestyle Marketplace on Flynn Avenue in Burlington is pleased to announce an exhibition in April and May of work from Vermont artist Sara Katz, who creates abstract and industrial landscapes in oil. The exhibition opens with a reception on First Friday, April 6th from 5-8pm, and runs through May. Vintage Inspired, A vibrant new marketplace for antique dealers, artists and craftspeople, is located at 180 Flynn Avenue, and is open Tuesday – Saturday from 10am to 5pm, Sunday from 12pm to 4pm and closed Mondays.
Vermont painter Sara Katz’ landscapes are often inspired by a sense of the landscape passing by as the viewer travels, resulting in images of roads, bridges and the streaking scenes on the edges of highways. As she says in her artist statement, “these subjects let me paint in a style that I enjoy the most--loose and active. I try to achieve a paint quality that suggests a fleeting memory, and use bold colors to turn the desolate or banal into a pleasantly nostalgic moment.” The paintings in this exhibition will feature primarily small works of abstract and industrial landscapes.
Sara received a degree in Fine Art from Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, New York. She is currently the Assistant Director at Burlington City Arts. Her work has been exhibited all over the Burlington area, including The BCA Center, The Maltex Building, The Burlington International Airport and more. Sara will be a featured artist at the Edgewater Gallery in Middlebury, Vermont in July of 2012. Sara grew up in Cabot, Vermont on a vegetable farm/greenhouse and nursery. “Growing things is closely connected to the simplest skills in making art: it requires observation, a connection to color and texture, and a willingness to experiment with materials until the desired results are achieved,” says Katz. More information about the artist can be found at www.saraskatz.com.
Vintage Inspired Lifestyle Marketplace on Flynn Avenue in Burlington, VT is a funky & accessible source of vintage goods for inspired lifestyles. It is a delight for shoppers wanting to combine a love for antiques, curious goods and art. Owner, Mary Heinrich Aloi has a truly inspired eye and her shop is a destination for in-the-know pickers, collectors, and art lovers. For more information and directions to the Marketplace, please visit www.vintageinspired.net

Friday, March 16, 2012

Press Release: Laura Heijn: Paintings at Martinetti Gallery of Johnson State College


Leonardo da Vinci is credited with “discovering” blue tones give the perception of distance – what Laura Heijn has done in her work is combine this theory with texture. What occurs is something new and unique. Skies are violet-blue and painted as if you could feel them. Painterly brushstrokes make us feel we can touch the sky.

Take, for example, Hill Top in Winter with Soft Trees. Everything about this painting suggests touch (not just the title). The sky is sculpted. The trees are “soft”. The yellow hay is bright and spiky.

Touch is also the quality we feel in Winter Barn #6. Wiry trees feel as if we could bend them like pipe-cleaners. The background is distant. Then she pulls us in with dark-blue-brown and wispy-red-orange to get us up one hill and down another. Behind the trees we find a roof which becomes a structural element over several paintings.

Heijn’s ‘perfection’ is her ‘imperfection’. Human qualities of light touch and subtle wobble make her landscapes feel near, alive, and comforting. Layers of color and hundreds of humble brushstrokes produce paintings that are charming and intimate.

Deep empathy (or acceptance) is also part of this work. Looking at Apple Tree with Dandelions, we see a patchwork of grey behind green fields dotted with yellow dandelion. It is Johnson, Vermont; it is spring; it is May.

There is a children's book called The Tomten in which a creature speaks in a language only animals and children can understand. To the horses he sings: "Winters come and winters go, summers come and summers go, soon you will be in your clover field." In Heijn’s work we see the seasons change, as well, and harmonies of color and texture that add up to something fondly cared-for and reassuring.

With Heijn: you can get there from here; you can touch the sky; there is perfection in imperfection; everything changes; and perhaps we can accept all that.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

CURATOR'S ESSAY: Storytime at Studio Place Arts (SPA) in Barre



by Janet Van Fleet

When I made a commitment to curate Storytime at Studio Place Arts (where I have my studio, and am on the Gallery Committee) I was interested in exploring the human impulse to construct narratives. I have noticed that even when people are looking at abstract work, they often see images and construct stories about what's going on. We need to make things make sense -- and not only descriptively (what it looks like), but also narratively (what's happening).

When I called for and selected work, I expected more pieces with words and text -- lots of comic books, drawings, collages, etc. That just didn't come in, even when I solicited it, but what I got is truly fascinating and of amazingly high quality. I think this is one of the best exhibits I've curated at SPA, where I've put together eight major exhibits over the last eleven years. The Storytime theme is a rich one, and the work in the show includes stories about such diverse topics as violence, family, animals, and the high seas. There's humor, charm, and insight, and the pieces relate to other work in the show in interesting ways.

The thirty-six artists whose work is included in the exhibit hail from Oakland, CA to New Hampshire and they tell stories through video, sculpture, painting, drawing, digitally- manipulated images, watercolor, and collage. The exhibit also features a Publications Area, with original comics, 21 books and booklets by Peter Schumann from the Bread & Puppet Press, as well as unique artist books. Most of these stories feature people in the title roles. Very large paintings of people in interesting contexts by four different artists dominate the Main Gallery. Fly Boy, by Salem, MA painter Jill Pabich, shows a young boy leaping, almost coming out of his jacket, into the sky above a field of wind turbines. There is a piece on paper by Janet Fredericks, from her Minute Particulars series, about which she says "In a recent waking vision, I was visited by a brother who died when he was ten years old. Charlie…appeared with a swarm of bees hovering over him." Fredericks felt the bees could be speaking to Charlie, and maybe it was important to pay attention to what they could be saying. A large double-sided piece by Dana Walwrath explores the dementia of her mother, Alice, in The Aliceheimer's Project. And, in a cultural nod to Scheherazad, a big drawing, August 2010, from Valerie Hird's Maiden Voyages project, depicts Middle Eastern women who kept a journal of their activities on the same date each month for one year. Then Hird, without ever meeting or seeing these women, produced large drawings that are a pastiche of that month's experiences.

A photograph by Kate Bieschke, of Oakland, California, shows two figures wrestling on the grass. Nearby, a sculpture by Phil Whitman, The Historic Berkshires: Prisoner Pile Along the Waloomsac, with historically-accurate costumes (both on -- and removed from -- the prisoners captured in 1777 during the American Revolution), references the events at Abu Grahib, but with Americans and German mercenaries in the place of Iraqis.

Four videographers show work that ranges from the playful, through the ambiguous, to the mock-horror genre of Slasher, by a collective from Brooklyn called Cereal Lab, that presents a young woman in a sexy Heavy Metal outfit wielding a machete and axe to slash, decapitate, impale, and ultimately drink the "blood" at a dolls' teaparty. Nancy Dwyer contributed two short pieces, Brains and Trancecart, presented in self-contained 7 inch players.

Also in the Main Gallery are three ocean-themed pieces - John Douglas's double-exposure of 3 oil platforms and three sailing vessels, another sculpture, Triska Decka, in Evanston, IN artist Rob Millard-Mendez's series of ships and boats (begun in 2008, after The Boat Show that I curated at SPA), and Adelaide Tyrol's huge painting Kraken, showing a mythological sea-monster squid surrounded by lamps from the deep.

The exhibit continues on SPA's second floor, with images that feature animals and animal stories: nine of Burlington artist Jude Bond's prints of original collages that superimpose heads and jewels from Bazaar magazine on drawings from a period children's book of the Cat Family (Lions, Leopards, and Lynxes, Oh My!), two large mixed-media sculptures by Rachi Farrow (Chimeras in Burkas), a photograph by Jack Rowell showing a stuffed moose in Currier's Market in Glover, and a touching mixed media painting by Kristin L. Richland (Creature and Healer).

Our stories carry our explanations, however incomplete or provisional, for why things are here and why things happen. Narrative tries to answer the great WHY, though not always without ambiguity. What is wonderful about the objects in this exhibit is that by embodying the questions, they evoke from us the narratives that struggle toward answers, and the viewer who pays attention – as should be the case in the visual arts – is providing much of the story.

Storytime: The human impulse to construct narratives is explored through painting, video, sculpture, photography, and published materials
Studio Place Arts, 201 North Main Street, Barre, VT
Exhibit Dates: March 6 - April 7, 2012