Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Bridges, Cars, & Pumps (and a few African Rumps)

Photographer Sarah Alexander opens at Foundry Gallery June 30

Exhibit Dates: June 30 - August 1
Hours are Wednesday-Friday, 1-7pm and Saturday-Sunday, 12-6pm.
Reception is Friday, July 9, 6-8pm.


When I take photographs, I like to focus on details - just parts of a scene.  I often frame my images in ways that are unusual – from behind or above, very close, or maybe only a segment of the subject. . . I like to leave viewers with questions... What is this?  How does that fit together? What has this texture? What does the rest of that look like? When I take photos, I like to capture the mystery, but never solve it. 


The show in the main gallery concentrates on the intricacies of bridges, antique cars, and old gas pumps. The foyer also hosts some interesting photos, but these focus on only one specific part . . . Enjoy. -Sarah Alexander

Foundry Gallery
1314 18th Street, NW
http://www.foundrygallery.org/

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Interview with Artist Nancy Frankel


In her solo show, Summer Steel +, Nancy Frankel’s new steel sculptures combine the interplay of space and form, delicate balance, and playfulness. Also on display are her fired clay reliefs, which grew out of an experience two years ago in a Plein Air group with Russian and Bulgarian artists in Bulgaria.


June 23 - July 17, 2010. To see Water Falls and Nancy’s other wonderful work on display, drop by Studio Gallery during one of the receptions and talk with this wonderful artist who has given so much to the local arts scene.


First Friday Reception (as part of the Dupont Circle Galleries openings): July 2, 6 - 8 pm
Reception: Friday, July 9, 6 - 8 pm
Artist's Reception: Saturday, June 26, 4 - 6 pm

Q: What's your favorite work from the show and why?

A: Usually my favorite piece is the one I’ve just finished but that isn’t the case this time. The frame for Water Falls had been given to me in the past and had been in my studio for a year. I like that it’s using color, and that it’s curvilinear. Water Falls wasn’t created in the typical way I work -- I didn’t plan it ahead of time, and I had to create it by bending and curving the steel then attach the steel to the frame. I had no preconceived idea about what it would look like completed. My steel pieces have to be thought out ahead time, even though when working with wax and playing with sketches I can be spontaneous until something takes hold. Once I get the specific idea down, I then have to be very careful about the model. With Water Falls, I could take a very different approach.

Q: What kinds of opportunities have you had as artist in the DC area during your career?

A: I’ve been in DC a long time -- 40 years -- and have been active as an artist with several organizations during this period. I’ve been with Studio Gallery since the 1980s, and it’s been a great place for me to connect with other artists and get good exposure. Here, there is no dictation about what to display or what sells. I’m also a part of the Washington Sculptors Group, and they exist to provide opportunities to show and make connections. I’m also a member of a group of women artists who meet once a month -- the First Sunday Group. It’s a fluid group with a solid core.

Q: If you could wish for one major change in the local art scene, what would it be?

A: The DC art scene’s shortcoming is the lack of attention to given to arts and lack of respect for local artists. The local papers often ignore local artists. Maybe this lack of interest is due to the fact that we’re surrounded by national galleries and also how close we are to New York. I wish people would pay attention to the vibrant art scene here, which unfortunately seems mostly underground.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Studio Gallery Reviews - Carolee Jakes


While most people would think to express music with the aid of an instrument, Carolee Jakes expresses music through her series of screen prints. Inspired by her fascination of human interaction with animate and inanimate objects, as well as a musical family, Jakes found people's interactions with instruments to be particularly intriguing.
Her prints feature a variety of musicians playing violins, guitars, and in one case, a xylophone. In this particular print, Trio 3, a man shrouded in a warm purple hue intently plays his xylophone. His connection to the instrument is evident in the imminent dropping of the mallets in his hands, as well as his facial expression, which emanates both pleasure and an intense focus. With a deep black ink, Jakes layers a melodious medley of shapes and lines which resound from within the xlyophone to the white border of the print. As in many of her prints, in Trio 3 Jakes skillfully manages to visually realize the music of the xylophone, an inanimate object that is brought to life through the expressive connection with its player and partner.


One of Studio Gallery's newest members, Carolee Jakes is a graduate of the Corcoran. Her work is currently on display as part of this months New Members Exhibition.

Mark Lamberton
Intern
Studio Gallery School of Artistic Brilliance '11

Thursday, June 17, 2010

An Interview with Lori Anne Boocks, Studio Gallery Artist



Semblance of a Responsible Life
Acrylic and Charcoal on Canvas
36 x 50 inches
2010


Work by Lori Anne Boocks will be featured in the upcoming new member show Explorations at Studio Gallery June 23 - July 17, 2010, along with members Pam Frederick, Elizabeth Grusin-Howe, Carolee Jakes, Flora Kanter, Peter Karp, Eugene Markowski, Veronica Szalus, and Angelika Wamsler.

First Friday Reception: July 2, 6 - 8 pm
Reception: Friday, July 9, 6 - 8 pm
Artist's Reception: Saturday, June 26, 4 - 6 pm

Q: What's your favorite piece from the show and why?

A: My fave from the show is Remediation (I will not do the wrong things) . I’ve just gotten back into painting in the last 16 months or so, and this piece really pulled together a lot of the themes and techniques I’d been attempting to bring full circle. Plus the title has a lot of meaning for me: I will not do the wrong things, but that doesn’t necessarily mean I always do the right things.

Q: Do you have a specific process that you go through while creating your work?

A: Creating my work involves washes of color, mark-making with charcoal, and removing partial layers of paint before fully dry, so there is a process I work through. It’s just different for each piece. If it’s a humid day, I may have to adjust my timeline to get the effect I want. When I write text in charcoal, I need the layer beneath to be at a certain stage in the drying. Sometimes I scrape through dried paint. As I work with a piece, I steer the process but there’s definitely a co-dependent relationship happening where I have to play off what the latest layer of paint has become.

Q: We understand that text is a major part of many of your pieces. Can you explain how you tie together your painting with the text?

A: It may seem like the text is only a backdrop for color and other elements of my paintings, but it’s the really framework that pulls it all together for me. The tone of the hidden story fragment influences the palette and the energy of the marks made by hand or brush. I build up layer after layer of washes and pure paint, then tear it back down in places just as I do with writing, scratching out or obscuring, then rewriting. My work is essentially about understanding my present and future through reanalyzing the stories of my past. The layers of text are these memories as well as the lens through which I experience the remembering.

Q: Do you usually paint abstractly or were you working in a new style for this collection?

A: With very few exceptions (some self-portraits), my style lies along the non-objective/abstract continuum, and the pieces in this show reflect the love I have for that type of work.

Q: What's your favorite part about being a Studio Gallery member?

A: There’s a wealth of experience and talent at Studio Gallery, and this community of artists is always willing to share. I’ve learned so much from talking with fellow members about their work and their experiences.

Q: How do you come up with the titles for your works?

A: The words for my titles are almost always buried in the painting as part of the story fragments that build up the mark-making.

Q: If you could wish for one major change in the local art scene, what would it be?

A: People aren’t afraid to drop money on concerts and other live entertainment experiences, but I sense that, in this area rich in galleries and affordable art, people are either intimidated by art or hesitant to invest in it. Sure, there are collectors who buy certain names at a certain price point, but do they dig deep enough in the scene to support emerging artists creating high quality work? The average Metro DC resident who likes a piece of art, are they affected by the recession or are other factors at play? I worry that people don’t value the experience they have with art the same way they value a night on the town. If you happen to see a piece that moves you, there’s value in that experience. And if you can afford it, buy the work and don’t worry if that artist is going to be famous one day. The value is in the living with it, the experiencing it every day whether it matches your couch or not. There’s a myriad of wonderful galleries in this area offering an amazing range of quality work. Go be a part of it. Even if you don’t buy something, your life will be richer for making a connection with local art.

Studio Gallery Intern Review


Yvette Kraft's portfolio contains mostly colorful figurative drawings done on paper in various mediums. The piece that caught my eye was one done in pencil and caran d'Ache of a what seems to be female figure. It is mainly made up of very simple yet extremely expressive lines that vary in length and thickness. Although the lines are simple, they really capture a specific expression that works well with the unique combination of colors. Another important characteristic of the piece that I find brings a lot of interest to it is its finished/unfinished quality; the face and the left corner of the background is more colored in and given more attention to detail, which creates a great balance with the looser lines that extend throughout the rest of the page, defining the figure's body. Whenever artists use a figure as their main subject in their work, I always tend to think about the relationship between the two and ponder questions such as "how are they related?" or "how does the artist feel about the figure?". I feel like Yvette is especially answering a lot of these types of questions about the people in her work.

Susan Cho
Studio Gallery Intern
Rhode Island School of Design '12

Studio Gallery Intern Review


Sidney Lawrence has intricately documented his travels, from Budapest to Bogotá and beyond, in the form of drawings and digital prints. Born in San Francisco, Lawrence eventually landed in Washington, D.C. where he worked at the Hirshhorn Museum for twenty-eight years. A veteran of the D.C. art scene, Lawrence is currently showing his work as a guest artist at Studio Gallery. On display are digital prints “Washington Face,” “DC Panorama,” and his journal-style artist book, Ink Cities. Lawrence's marks, although precise, are gestural and energetic. In his shockingly detailed black and white drawings, it is evident that Lawrence observes everything a city has to offer. Bridges, towers, trees and traffic are all incorporated to reflect the constant movement and spontaneity of a city. His work truly exhibits the enthusiasm of an explorer. D.C., San Francisco, Manhattan, Münster, and Cadiz are personified to resemble parts of the human body. Lawrence emphasizes the way in which all of the world's cities are alive with a distinct personality and “face.” Ink Cities encourages you to consider the lively cities you have met along life's journey.

Mary Okoth
Studio Gallery Intern
Oberlin College 2014

Studio Gallery Art of the Day



At the top of the stairway on the way to the third floor of the gallery I was captivated by one of Suzanne Yurdin's mixed media works, "Carnivale." This vibrant painting has an intense energy established by the strong contrast of cool and warm tones of color. The different textures created by the incorporation of what seems to be pieces of wallpaper, newsprint, and paper cut outs add to the activity going on in the painting. The shapes and lines move forcefully in juxtaposing directions and kept my eyes bouncing around the entire canvas as I took in the many elements of the work.

Alana Arslan
Studio Gallery Intern
American University 2011

"ArtDefined"

Foundry Gallery, 1314 18th St, NW, 202-463-0203, Opens with "Art Defined." An experiment that explores how we understand art, what it means, and how it is used in our daily life. "ArtDefined" will exhibit pieces defined and valued as art by their owners in their own homes. Witness the ordinary to the extraordinary. "Art Defined" will bring art out of the house and into the gallery. Lea-Ann Bigelow from the National Gallery of Art will facilitate the program. Show runs June 20 through Jue 27; opening reception June 20, 5 to 8pm. Gallery hours: W- F, 1 to 7, Sat & Sun, 12 to 6pm.


Foundry Gallery
1314 18th Street NW
Exhibit Dates: June 20 -27 (closed Monday and Tuesday)
Hours: Saturday & Sunday: 12-6 pm; Wednesday - Friday: 1-7 pm
Reception: Sunday June 20, 5-8pm

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

New Member Show: Explorations



Studio Gallery
2108 R Street NW
www.studiogallerydc.com
202-232-8734
info@studiogallerydc.com

An exhibition of works by Studio Gallery's new members: Lori Anne Boocks, Pam Frederick, Elizabeth Grusin-Howe, Carolee Jakes, Flora Kanter, Peter Karp, Eugene Markowski, Veronica Szalus, and Angelika Wamsler will be on display.

Explore two floors of work from new Studio Gallery members.

EXHIBITIONS: June 23 - July 17, 2010, 2010
First Friday Reception (as part of the Dupont Circle Galleries openings): July 2, 6 - 8 pm
Reception: Friday, July 9, 6 - 8 pm
Artist's Reception: Saturday, June 26, 4 - 6 pm

Nancy Frankel: Summer Steel



Studio Gallery
2108 R Street NW
www.studiogallerydc.com
202-232-8734
info@studiogallerydc.com

Nancy Frankel's interest in the interplay of space and form, in delicate balance, in playfulness, all come into play in her latest steel sculptures. Her fired clay reliefs grew out of her experience two years ago in a Plein Air group with Russian and Bulgarian artists in Bulgaria.

EXHIBITIONS: June 23 - July 17, 2010, 2010
First Friday Reception (as part of the Dupont Circle Galleries openings): July 2, 6 - 8 pm
Reception: Friday, July 9, 6 - 8 pm
Artist's Reception: Saturday, June 26, 4 - 6 pm

Friday, June 11, 2010

Interview with Artist Thierry Guillemin

For his portion of a duo show with Micheline Klagsburn, fellow Studio Gallery artist Thierry Guillemin talks about why the work for this show Something in Common is different from his past pieces. Be sure to stop by and see his energetic paintings, up through June 19th at Studio Gallery.

Q: What's your favorite piece from the show and why?

A: My favorite piece in the show is “Into the Mystic”. I am very much in tune with what it reflects and at the same time it surprises me, which I expect every strong work to do. It is a very interesting synthesis. I made it in a very physical way, and yet it has the serenity of inner silence and the transparency of water. I “action painted” it but many people who see it tell me that it reminds them of Monet. Water lilies? My childhood in little villages of the “France profonde” must be coming back to me, in quite unexpected ways. The title of this work comes from a song of Van Morrison that I love and listened to continuously when I painted this work.

Q: Do you paint intuitively, with a hardcore plan, or somewhere in between?

A: I paint intuitively and try to be open to what happens. A plan would interfere with the attention that is needed and would waste precious energy. The quality of the work depends entirely on the quality of my attention. If I am present to my work, the work has a good chance to be alive. If I lose myself in plans, or any other intellectual day dream, life is drained from the painting and it begins to lie, and at some point to die.

Q: Who is your biggest influence and why?

A: I am certainly influenced by many things: lights, perfumes, places, strong emotional moments, people I love, music, poems, personalities, sincerity, honesty, energy. Many great artists, whether writers, painters or musicians have been a strong source of inspiration when I was younger: Nabokov, Matisse, Coltrane, Hendrix, and a very long list of contemporary painters. But a lot is happening now. I keep discovering amazing artists who create now. Gabriela Proksch in Austria, Jean-Francois Provost and Jean-Pierre Lafrance in Canada, Eeva-Leena Airaksinen in Finland are all incredibly strong and original abstract painters who fascinate me.

Q: For this show, did you do anything differently... new techniques, subject matter, palette, etc.?

A: This is a little show with 6 pieces, 4 of them very recent. I let energy flow much more freely than I used to, the paints I use are more fluid “soft-body” type, the colors richer and I use more elements of language, like projections of paint or long black lines. There is a watery quality to my most recent work, more depth and transparencies. These are directions I feel compelled to explore, there is more to find there.

Q: What's your favorite part about being a Studio Gallery member?

A: My favorite parts of being a Studio gallery member are the friendship of many artists, the love and energy Adah Rose gives us all, and the blessing of being part of a group where the main ambition and focus is to make our art grow and develop.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Micheline Klagsbrun Review




Micheline Klagsburn's mixed media painting "Lotus/Lotis Light" expresses the beauty of nature by sensuously combining the natural form of a female figure within the delicate petals of a lotus flower. This erotic hybrid form in soft hues of green, pink and yellow set against the dark blue background creates an inviting, luring appearance of three dimensional depth. The strong sense of light caressing the form adds to this effect as well. This evocative presence of the sun entices the viewer to experience this original, organic, fluid work of extraordinary art.

Kara Sines

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Trix Kuijper Review




Trix Kuijper's mixed media piece titled "The Spectators" makes an intriguing juxtaposition of intimacy and gore; roughly one square foot and hung at eye level, the sculptural painting beckons the viewer to step into its space. On the surrounding edge of the canvas, bits of flesh-colored paint show through reddish-brown drips and smears, calling to mind a grizzly, unattended injury. The most likely source of the profuse bleeding is the center of the canvas, where a hole has been cut and wire netting crumpled and stuffed. There, peering back at the viewer, nestled cozily in a gash in the netting and pools of dark red paint, are seven larvae-like faces. The viewer wonders if they are sinister beings like their surroundings who feed off the wound, or whether are they are victims seeking shelter and companionship.

Kate Brooks
Studio Gallery Intern
Maryland Institute College of Art, 2011, Illustration

Permanent Impermanence curated by Larissa Leclair @ WPA HQ this Friday 6-8 pm

June 11 - July 9, 2010 at WPA HQ
Permanent Impermanence
a Coup d'Espace exhibition curated by Larissa Leclair

featuring photographs by Christopher Colville, Todd Hido, Kate MacDonnell, David Maisel, Curtis Mann, and Doug + Mike Starn.
maisel
David Maisel, History's Shadow GM16, 2010, archival pigment print
17" x 22", courtesy of the artist/Von Lintel Gallery NY/Haines Gallery SF

Exhibition Dates: June 11-July 9, 2010
Opening Reception: Friday, June 11, 2010 6-8pm
Exhibition Hours: Monday-Friday 11am-5pm

Permanent Impermanence explores fundamentals of the photographic medium, through artistic expression in both subject and process. On view are photographs by Christopher Colville from his "Emanations" series; Todd Hido from "A Road Divided"; Kate MacDonnell from "100 Ways"; Curtis Mann from "Modifications"; David Maisel from "History's Shadow"; and Doug + Mike Starn from "alleverythingthatisyou.

Larissa Leclair is an independent photography writer and curator. Visit her web site at: www.larissaleclair.com

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

VOICES @ HILLYER



Have you heard about the V.O.I.C.E.S event that happens at Hillyer Art Space, the second Thursday of every month?

Well its time for another one of these events that are designed to raise funds and awareness for grassroots organizations across the globe that support youth empowerment, development and leadership. If you haven't been to V.O.I.C.E.S, its one of the most unique and progressive events in the city.

Looking for something to do after work? Come out and enjoy an eclectic mix of music, drink and food, and network with like-minded people interested in activism, international development and social change. DJs spinning global hip hop and international tunes and then settle in for a multi-media presentation on a cutting edge, grassroots organization working to help youth through music, arts and culture. Round out the evening listening to some skilled lyricists and emcees sum up the experience with a hip hop cipher.

This month we will be highlighting the work of Hip Hop Harmony Africa, an organization that is fostering the growth of Urban Culture to be a force for social and economic change in Northwest Africa.

THURSDAY, June 10, 2010

6 - 8:30 PM

HILLYER ART SPACE
9 Hillyer Court NW
Washington, DC 20008
~ Dupont Metro Stop ~
http://www.artsandartists.org/hillyer/voices.html

Music, video, wine and food with live performances and information highlighting the work of Hip Hop Harmony.

$5 ADMISSION [you can also contribute any additional monetary donations]

Please join us for an entertaining and informative evening and help us support this progressive organization and its efforts on the ground.

Hip Hop Harmony's goals are to build bridges by clustering Hip Hop movements in countries otherwise separated by politics, languages and culture and reinforce Hip Hop as a platform for social transformation.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Studio Gallery Intern Review


On a hallway wall of thirteen small-scale pieces, Suzanne Goldberg's "Music and Line III" is impossible to ignore. The drawing features a colorful cluster of pastel marks. One's eye cannot help but dance around the energetic yellow lines that dominate the vibrant peaches, purples, greens, and blues. Goldberg's pastel creature takes on a personality of its own amidst the simplicity of a brown background. The depth of Goldberg's marks demand the presence of space in what would be an otherwise flat background. One is intrigued by the drawing's confident spirit in the same way that one is captivated by music's rhythm. So, what is it? Caterpillar, bundle of fur, or abstract landscape? Rather than attempting to recognize, simply respond to Goldberg's playful portrayal of the relationship between movement and space.

Mary Okoth
Studio Gallery Intern
Oberlin College 2014

Studio Gallery Intern Review


Juan Hernandez's "Dark City: Escalator" displays the cold and segregated reality of city life. The work depicts three figures riding an escalator during their daily commute. The figures stand rigidly with their eyes pointed sharply toward the ground in an attempt to avoid any contact with each other. A dim light from the top of the escalator allows only the impressions of their facial features to show through the shadows. The anonymity of the figures reflects the sad truth that in a city of so many people, social contact is so rare. Hernandez's use of dark colors and blurred images adds to the impersonality of the emotionless figures. "Dark City: Escalator" is one of two of Hernandez's "Dark City" works on display on the third floor of Studio Gallery, so please stop by and take a look.

Brannon Holman
Studio Gallery Intern
The George Washington University 2013

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Studio Gallery intern review



Part of Kat Kronick's solo show on the main floor of Studio Gallery, "Oceanfront: Wildlife" wonderfully represents the focus of the show on transferring experience into art. The abstract forms and colors of the piece really capture the liveliness and strong sensations associated with the ocean. By showing the layers of sky, sections of water, and sand from background to foreground give the painting a slightly greater sense of the real than some of the her other works. There is a balance to the painting, established by the contrast of the more simple horizantal lines bordering the swirling and thrashing lines of the waters and wildlife. These intense contrasts are characteristic of Kat's works. Come check out this painting and other similar works by Kat Kronick at the gallery this month!

Alana Arslan
Studio Gallery Intern
American University 2011

Studio Gallery Art of the Day


Located on the top floor of the Studio Gallery, Elizabeth Grusin-Howe's "Venice Canal" is a screen print of a pleasant landscape. What gives this piece great interest is the contrast of the strong, rigid, and vertical architecture to the painterly quality of the color application. For example, the sky is built up with light blue brush strokes that create a great sense of space which also complements the perspective created by the architecture. The lively and saturated colors say a lot about the mood that the artist strives to capture in the landscape.

Susan Cho
Intern Studio Gallery
Rhode Island School of Design 2012