Category Archives: Exhibitions

Eyes on the Land

There’s nothing that compares with fall in Vermont. We have been spoiled with a couple of lovely, bright and crisp days this week, making the drive to the Shelburne Museum to view the ‘Eyes on the Land’ exhibit all the more enjoyable.

Museum Entrance1If you live in the area, you will want to be sure to add this show to your calendar — and happily, you have until January 3rd to do so. Briefly, the exhibit contains the creative responses of 13 Vermont artists who were invited to participate by the Vermont Land Trust. Each artist was paired with a conserved parcel of land within the state, and given a year to complete their work.

Poster1In combing over the artists’ statements it is apparent that, although working independently from each other, many of them were struck by the divisions and boundaries they found during their year of study.

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Last Year’s Corn ©2015 Susan Abbott

Susan Abbott states that she concentrated on the “intersection of man-made and natural” in her paintings created at the Johnson Farm.

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Winter Edge II ©2015 Neil Riley

“The boundaries between many of the meadows and the woods…” became the subject of Neil Riley’s oils, painted at the Virginia Stranahan Memorial Town Forest in Marshfield.

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Butternut Mountain Farm, Sugarbush at Twilight, Johnson Farm ©2015 Caleb Kenna

And Caleb Kenna’s photographs explore the dichotomy between the traditional “time-honored old-fashioned way” of sugaring at the Russell Farm in Hinesburg and the “very modern” operation that utilizes state of the art equipment at Butternut Mountain Farm sugarhouse in Johnson.

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Tenalach ©2015 Cameron Davis                                                                      Davis notes in her statement “Tenalach is “Old Irish for a deep connection with the land, air and water that allows one to literally hear the earth sing – John O’Donahue”. The hard cider on the table is made with Champlain Orchards’ apples.

But considering borderlines is just one point of departure while viewing; you may find another approach that resonates more with you. The work is expansive and diverse, including video, collage, painting, conceptual art, environmental sculpture and photography. And, it is spaced throughout the gallery such that it doesn’t feel cramped. You can immerse yourself without being distracted by nearby pieces — a quality I find lacking in many shows.

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I chatted briefly with the gallery attendant before leaving and because I was so enthralled, asked about the general response, fully expecting a glowing report. I was shocked when he said that it was about 50/50, that there were plenty of folks who had been disappointed because they were expecting “real art”!    Really?!

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Angus Baldwin, Vermont Farmer (paper collage) in front of Three Crows Farm, Jeffersonville, Vermont (cotton, sewn) ©2015 Bonnie Acker

While beauty may be in the eye of the beholder, the key to art and its gift to viewers is an opportunity to think and observe with new eyes. I can’t think of a better way to further awareness of our collective responsibility to the land we are only borrowing than to allow 13 Vermont artists free reign to connect and respond with the precious terrain of this state in their individual ways.   The idea behind the show has, as the promotional literature says, produced “a full harvest of artworks in a variety of styles, techniques and processes”. What could be more “real” than that?

Participating artists: Susan Abbott, Bonnie Acker, Brian Collier, Cameron Davis, Charlie Hunter, Karolina Kawiaka, Caleb Kenna, Mark Nielsen, Neil Riley, Gowri Savoor, Dan Snow, John Willis, Matan Rubinstein, Tyler Wilkinson-Ray

 

Art & Family

This has been a week to enjoy family.

Our daughter and my MIL have been visiting, which has spurred meet-ups with my father and one of my husband’s cousins as well. All four are highly creative by nature, so there has been no want for interesting conversation and ideas.

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Head by Ria Blaas, one of many in “Community”

One of our field trips brought us to the Path of Life Sculpture Garden in Winsor, VT. Created by Terry McDonnell, who was inspired by Tully, Ireland’s famous Japanese garden “Life of Man”, it’s a lovely, wide-open space nestled in the rolling landscape by the side of the Connecticut River. Sculptural forms made from stone, wood, and even berry bushes reference various stages we all experience in the circle of life.

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“Union”,  with the “Maze of Adventure” in the upper background behind it

To add to the fun, there is a full-size hemlock maze where you could definitely lose your way if you aren’t paying attention.

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Listening to the Moon at the Hartness Library                                                 ©Elizabeth Fram

On our way to the sculpture garden, we stopped at the East Gallery of the Hartness Library in Randolph, VT to view my current show Listening to the Moon, which consists of pieces that are a reflection of my long-held interest in Japanese gardens. The library is a gem of a building and worth visiting in its own right, set on a hill with lovely views from the adjacent parking lot. The large windows in the gallery open the room up to the surrounding, overhanging trees, bringing the outdoors inside, extending the sense of garden. I think the quiet, contemplative nature of the venue suits my work well, while also offering plenty of indirect natural light for viewing.

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©Elizabeth Fram

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©Elizabeth Fram

If you decide to make the trip to see the show, don’t miss John Snell’s beautiful nature photographs which are exhibiting concurrently in the library’s West Gallery. The aspirations of the pieces in each show complement those of other, so you might think of a trip to see both as a creative “two-fer”.

Would you like to see more photos of the Path of Life Garden? The Dreamy Idealist has a great post.