Tag Archives: Gruppe Gallery

Finding Resilience Through Art

“The studio is a laboratory, not a factory. An exhibition is the result of your experiments, but the process is never-ending. So an exhibition is not a conclusion.”     ~ Chris Ofili

Last week, on my way to deliver my pieces to the Gruppe Gallery for our show “Tucked In”, it felt a bit like moving day. The back of my car was filled to the brim with work made in 2020/21 to mark many sides of Covid as I had experienced them: ten dyed and embroidered houses supported by foraged branches and a dozen framed portraits of friends who’d graciously shared selfies of themselves at a time when getting together socially, let alone for in-person drawing sessions, wasn’t possible.

Left Corner

One view of the exhibit, with Leslie Roth’s “Tick Eater” in the foreground on the left.

More than 15 months ago, Dianne Shullenberger, Leslie Roth and I began to scheme about putting together this exhibit of the work we’d been making since lock-down began. In the face of so much despair dominating the past couple of years, we wanted to offer some good news.

Selection of Portraits

This selection represents half of the portraits I have on view.

A frequent topic of discussion between us had been how grateful we all felt that we’d had our art practices to help us get through this crazy time. It seemed important to share with others that hopeful perspective and the sense of resilience we gleaned from our work. The end product of those discussions is  Tucked In: Resilience in Small Moments.

Right Corner

Another view that includes my houses, a couple of portraits, and one grouping of Dianne Shullenberger’s watercolors on the right. These photos don’t get close enough to show the finer details of all the work in the exhibit. I hope you will come to the gallery to take in those nuances in person.

It wasn’t just the fact that going to the studio offered regularity and purpose – although it did and that was huge – but our work also became an outlet providing solace and even something of a protective shield of normalcy against the chaos brewing outside our studios where everything seemed so topsy-turvy and out of control. This show is a feel-good manifestation of how we each, in our own way, found and tapped into pockets of positivity in the face of a global pandemic — through our homes, our gardens, our friends and our wildlife neighbors. The common denominator being our art practices.

And while what you will see at the Gruppe Gallery through June 19th is a culmination of the work of a specific time, it is also an example of how (certainly in my case, by branching out into 3-D work) those months were, as Chris Ofili’s quote references, a time of experimentation. His words remind me that every exhibit is just another mile marker along a path, not the end of a journey.

Please join us for the reception on Sunday, May 15 from 1-3pm if you can. 

I don’t consider myself a birder, but I am definitely a color-lover.
I have been reading The Feather Thief by Kirk Wallace Johnson. It’s part natural history lesson, part true-crime, nestled under the umbrella of the world and art of fishing flies.  I keep running to Google to check out alls sorts of unfamiliar birds mentioned in the book.
These spectacular photos, and this link, will give you an idea – as they did me – of what the fuss is all about.

Banded Cotinga

Banded Cotinga

Lovely Cotinga

Lovely Cotinga

Spangled Cotinga

Spangled Cotinga

 

Exhibits of Spring

Did you hear the collective sigh of relief this past week as the sun emerged from hiding? It brought with it welcome warmth and cheer that seemed to put all of Vermont in a good mood.

I was so glad to finally pull back the burlap from one of my raised beds to expose the tiny garlic shoots that are valiantly making their way up and out of the dark. My arugula, lettuce and chard seeds are now planted between the rows of subterranean heads, and it’s reassuring to know that eventually the garlic’s leaves will shade the tender greens from the sun’s strength, so they will last far longer before bolting than if left unprotected.

Garlic Sprout

It’s been a great week for art viewing, with several shows to recommend for those of you in, or near to, Vermont. I was so caught up in each exhibit that I didn’t even think to take photos to share, which hopefully will only reinforce how good the work was.  They all have less than a month left in their runs, so don’t delay.

First, the Fleming Museum has two excellent exhibits that exist independently, yet at the same time provide the perfect counterpoint to each other. Make sure you make time to see both if you go.

Self-Confessed! The Inappropriately Intimate Comics of Alison Bechdel

Honoré Daumier’s Bluestockings

Despite the obvious disparities between artists, eras of creation, and social messages conveyed, the pairing of these works, albeit in separate galleries, emphasizes their combined strengths, not the least of which is the technical beauty and finesse of each.

A trip to the Northeast Kingdom for a sunny walk along Caspian Lake brought the unexpected delight of discovering a wonderful exhibit at the Highland Center for the Arts in Greensboro.

Muse, features the work of three artists, Jess Polanshek, Amanda Weisenfeld, and Kristin Richland. Their enchanting work, also technically stunning, is irresistible — especially to any animal lover.

Muse

And finally, a reminder that my exhibit, Drawing Threads: Conversations Between Line & Stitch, at the Emile A. Gruppe Gallery, will close on May 6th. If you haven’t had a chance to visit yet, I hope you will consider making the trip to Jericho to cap off any other shows on your list.