SEMI-SIMPLE: DOT (point), LINE, SURFACE, COLOR AND LIGHT

I use a combination of UV resistant industrial epoxy resin, graphite and acrylic paint on archival tempered wood panel, or acrylic glass panels. The primary intention for this body is to manipulate the basic elements of dot (point), line, color, surface (plane), form and light to create maximum visual impact. My work is mainly inspired by nature, time, space, color, sound, movement, and composition. Lighting plays an important role in the presentation of my work for it maximizes the viewing experience...

COLOR IS APPROXIMATE :: Please note that the colors of the images posted on this blog may be slightly off compared with the original artwork. I strongly encourage you to see the work in person if possible.

Friday, March 12, 2010

A MUST-SEE EXHIBIT

Treat yourself, go see this exhibit before it ends on April 7.


LINEAR curated by Kathleen Hancock is on view at the Grimshaw-Gudewicz Art Gallery at Fall River’s Bristol Community College through April 7. I am very grateful for having the opportunity to show at this superb art gallery with two other artists, Cynthia Swanson and Hannah Verlin. The presentation of my work is one of the best I've had in a gallery setting.

Thank you so much, Kathleen and your team, for all the hard work and creativity put in in presenting LINEAR!


For more info, go to this posting.

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A Must-See Show! LINEAR at Grimshaw-Gudewicz Art Gallery in Fall River... thru April 7, 2010


Kathleen Hancock, director/curator of the Grimshaw-Gudewicz Art Gallery.


LINEAR

curated by Kathleen Hancock
features the
works by Cynthia Swanson, Sand T and Hannah Verlin

You're cordially invited to an opening reception for the LINEAR exhibition on Thursday, March 11, from 6-8pm. Exhibition Dates: March 11 - April 7, 2010. Gallery hours: Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday 1-4 pm; Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday 10 am - 1pm. Admission is free and open to the public. For more information, please call 508-678-2811 ext. 2631 or visit website. Directions: The Grimshaw-Gudewicz Art Gallery is located in the Jackson Arts Center at Bristol Community College. 777 Elsbree Street, Fall River, MA 02720. Click for Google directions from your location.



ABOUT THE SHOW

All forms of art-making embrace the word linear – it is an essential element of visual language. Words such as logic, perception, and thinking seem to be a perfect mate to our notions of line. Terms like value, shape, form, edge, and contour provide the structure through which we can evaluate and interpret art forms and are elemental to our understanding of line. The next show at the Grimshaw-Gudewicz Art Gallery explores these terms through sculpture.

The exhibit opens on Thursday, March 11, with a reception and is free and open to the public. The show will be available until April 7.

Two- and three-dimensional works of art share ideas about line albeit in somewhat different ways. Both exist in time and space, can be viewed from various vantage points – but sculpture unlike drawing cannot be seen in its entirety at any given time. What one knows from one vantage point may not be perceived from in the same way from another.

Materiality plays an important role in the works in this exhibition. It serves to reveal aspects of line, place, time, and space. Whether temporal or permanent, metaphoric or objective, each artist carries these ideas and forms into her works.

Cynthia Swanson (Providence, RI ) writes, “Philosophers use metaphors of space and geometry to describe how the world exists and how we think about it. Metaphors turn ephemeral thoughts into tangible images so we can see the implications of these spaces and geometries we imagine. My sculptures are 3-dimensional drawings that turn ephemeral thoughts of order and disorder into tangible structures. Her primary geometric form is the square, which works as a metaphor for order.

Swanson holds a Master of Fine Arts in Sculpture from Tyler School of Art at Temple University, Philadelphia, PA and Bachelors of Fine Arts from Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA. She recently co-authored along with J. Barton, and D. Sawyer, They Want to Learn How to Think: Using Art to Enhance Comprehension, Language Arts, 85(2), 125-132. Recent exhibition include Eclectic Abstraction, Spirol Gallery, Quinebaug Valley Community College, Danielson,CT; Paper Dialectics, The Art Gallery, Kent State University, Trumbull Campus, Warren, OH; Talking Papers, Mazmanian Gallery, Framingham State College, Framingham, MA; Elusive Geometries, Chazan Gallery, Wheeler School, Providence, RI.

Sand T (Malden, MA) makes works that she says creates a simple visual experience utilizing the basic elements of dot, line, color, surface and light. “I feel the pieces suggest concepts of time, concentration, and the meditative energies of motion. The reductive aesthetic in my work is an overlapping of decidedly contrary visual elements: fluidity vs. structural, opacity vs. transparency, and formalistic vs. introspective,” she said. Her work, at first look, appears to be rather simple. However, upon closer inspection, it turns out they are not quite simple, but semi-simple.

Sand T earned a Master of Fine Arts degree from Tufts University and the Museum School. Awards include the 2009 New England Art Awards awarded by the New England Journal of Aesthetic Research in February 2010; an Exceptional Work Award from TLGUTS in June 2009, a Solo Exhibition Award by Caladan Gallery in May 2009; a First Place award given by Nicholas Capasso, curator of the DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park for her submission to a juried show at Clark University in November 2007. Sand T’s work resides in public and private art collections world-wide. Her works have recently been added to the permanent collection of the National Art Gallery in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. She operated artSPACE@16 in Malden and S.T Gallery in Boston's Fort Point district from 1998-2008. Her artSPACE@16 gallery was awarded The Best Of Boston ® Home Award 2008 by Boston Magazine, and voted Best Art Gallery for A-List 2007 conducted by WBZ-TV and CityVoter in Boston.

Hannah Verlin (Somerville, MA) says that “The form and content of my work varies from one project to the next, but I take the same approach to each. When possible I use simple, often recycled or repurposed, materials. I use equally simple construction techniques. A single set of mechanical operations that can be performed repeatedly and that become beautiful through repetition.”

Hannah Verlin received a Bachelor of Fine Arts from School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA in affiliation with Tufts University, Medford, MA.

Recent exhibitions include Transformers, Boston Sculptors Gallery, Boston, MA; Interstitial, Boston Sculptors Gallery, Boston, MA; Artist Residency Exhibition, Ferencvarosi Gallery, Budapest, Hungary; Brookline First Light, Brookline, MA; and Artist Residency Exhibition, Mucius Gallery, Budapest, Hungary. She is a member of Boston Sculptors Gallery, Boston, MA and was recently in the International Artist in Residence Program, Hungarian Multicultural Center, Budapest, Hungary, July-August 2008.

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Show Invitation



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Installation view:










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Opening reception on Thursday, March 11, 2010








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February 27, 2010 - - Delivered my artworks to Grimshaw-Gudewicz Art Gallery in Bristol Community College this morning. Can't wait to see the show up!





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Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Malden's Sand T is People's Choice

An article by Alix Roy, In the Boston Globe, March 2, 2010 ... read on