ARTmonday: Jaime C. Knight and Lena Wolff

I’ve been hanging on to these mixed media works by artists Jaime C. Knight and Lena Wolff since last year (I probably discovered them on The Jealous Curator). This bright and clear summer day seemed like the perfect time to post them. Knight is a grad student at the University of Iowa studying printmaking, and Wolff earned a degree in printmaking at San Francisco State University back is 2003. They showed together at Lake Gallery at San Francisco. First Came Love, which also blogged about the pieces, included a statement from Wolff about the exhibit:

“In the Beginning” features a body of new work and collaborations made by Jaime Knight and I in 2010. Leading up to the show, Jaime and I shared a studio space and worked in response to each other both on individual and jointly made pieces that communicate back and forth in a symbolic narrative. The exhibit includes paper collages, graphite drawings and a light sculpture which draw upon existing and imagined creation myths. Working with elements of light, reflection and patterns of layered collage using a palette of whites, graphite gray and an array of metallic and iridescent surfaces, the work depicts biomorphic mountains, the force of a comet, a haunting tree of life and clusters of expansive constellations.” 

What Was, Is and Always Will Be

(My) Morning Star

Gold Feather

Paper Mountain
paper collage with iridescent oil stick, varnish, mica, and hole punch

ARTmonday: Catalina Viejo’s Letter Collages

I pinned one of Catalina Viejo’ letter collages to my Abstracts board on Pinterest the other day, not knowing anything about her. Turns out, that although born in Marbella, Spain, raised in the Canary Islands, and educated in Ireland, Viejo is now basically in my backyard. When I went to her site and saw she was exhibiting on Newbury Street, I thought it must be another Newbury Street, maybe in England. Well, turns out that Viejo attended Montserrat College of Art on the North Shore, and stuck around.

In her artist’s statement she says this about her collages:

I can recall where I have found every piece of paper and I hide information within them. I prefer to use worn papers, which have been stepped on or damaged in any other way, it shows that they already had a history by the time I found them.

The letter collages turn literal words into shapes of color, and specific palettes and structures arrive in each letter. . .  Just like any letter, I think about what I want to say and who I am saying it to. I create a psychological portrait . . .

The collages remind me a bit of Lauren DiCioccio’s Color Codification Dot Drawings, but I guess I haven’t blogged about her yet. (Jen Bekman sent me “Vogue 2010” from 20×200 after I featured her in a column on Design MIlk and The Inside Source.)

Letter to the Flowers , 2009

Letter to God, 2008

Letter to my Body, 2009

Letter to Spain, 2010

Letter to Those Who Think Outside the Box, 2009

Letter to Hans Hoffman, 2008

Letter to my Sisters, 2011

Letter to the ones we’ve Lost, 2010

Letter to a Poet, 2008

Letter to Summer, 2008

ARTmonday: Pablo Manga

I first blogged about Pablo Manga two years ago when I discovered his work at Farm Gallery in Wellfleet. Working with many colors of semi-transparent tape that he layers on sanded wood panels prepared with gesso, this Oakland-based, Berkeley-trained lawyer (!) turned artist creates compelling slashes of color and monochromatic stillness. Gone are the horizontal rays of 2010. Last year he moved into diagonal plaids. His show, “Bold As Love” opened at Farm this weekend.

Mucho Sudor

So It Was

Bold As Love

+  +  +  

P A B L O   M A N G A  at  M Y  H O U S E 

When my husband and I  purchased Pablo’s work two summers ago, we propped it on on the dining room sideboard in Truro.  We recently hung it in our Boston living room, alongside a similarly colored wild landscape  by my mother-in-law. The area has since been littered with all sorts of other art distractions, which I plan to pare down this fall. (That tends to be the resting place for most of our art without a permanent home.)

 

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:
• ARTmonday: Farm Gallery 2012
• ARTmonday: Pablo Mango at Farm
ARTmonday: Tim Donovan at Farm

 

ARTmonday: 13 Artworks of Women In Water

I’ve noticed a lot of images of women and water, many under water, on Pinterest lately and have been diligently pinning them to my Photography board. Over the weekend, I delved in and pulled some out for you.

Iris Anam Cara
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Irene Moray
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Elijah Majeski
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Cristina Prat Mases
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unidentified
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Ariko Inaoka
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Kelsea Kosko
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Elif  Sanem Karakoc
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Sølve Sundsbø
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Alex Prager
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Brendan George Ko
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Olivia Larrain Heiremans
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Phoebe Rudomino

ARTmonday: Farm Project Space + Gallery July 2012

Today is part 2 of my stint as guest blogger at New England Home, and the subject is Farm Project Space + Gallery, in Wellfleet, MA. Owner/gallery director Susie Nielsen has flawless taste and intuition about what will work in a town that is better known for pretty landscapes that appeal to tourists than crisp abstracts that speak to the more permanent community, which is actually known for its artists. While Nielsen agrees the work she shows are more about ideas than creating a representation of the physical world, her choices are accessible. I love what I see. I hope you’ll click over to my blog post on NEH, and scroll down for lots more images.

Brooklyn-based artist M.P. Landis puts postage stamps directly on the back of each piece (mixed media on wood), and sticks them in the mail addressed to Farm.

Jill Vasileff  “Pink Hum,” acrylic on tree branches from “Around the Day in Eighty Worlds” at Farm this past June. It’s actually a bunch of individual pieces (Nielsen is selling them for $100 each or $3500 for all). It’s on the cover of this month’s Artscope Magazine.

Detail, Tony Orrico, Penwald: 3: circle on knees (studio impression 1), 2010, graphite on paper.
Tony Orrico uses the geometry of his own body to create intricate forms through repeated actions. The marks left behind reveal minute shifts in his position.  This detail was the centerpiece of last week’s exhibit “In Our Wake,” which featured concrete representations of dance performances. Nielsen mounted the show in conjunction with The Movement Party.

Katie Schetlich, co-director of The Movement Party and  Emma Hoette, dancer.

The exhibit was part of the larger “Fleet Moves” dance festival that took place in Wellfleet July 5th to 8th.

Jill Vasileff, No 05, from the series “A Mies is a Mies is a Mies”
This is my favorite piece. The series was inspired by Vasileff’s the play of sunlight in a Mies van der Rohe house—she grew up in one. It’s acrylic on board, but looks like encaustic. I love the  fluorescent pink drips of paint on all the edges.

M.P. Landis, WD Series, mixed media on folded paper

M.P. LandisWD Series, mixed media on folded paper

Betty Carroll Fuller, Unraveling, prisma color pencil on paper

Susan Lefevre, Warrier, oil and pencil on paper.

Left: Judith Trepp, untitled, ink on Indian paper
Right: Julia Salinger, untitled, mixed media on paper

Julia Salinger wearing a starfish fascinator of her own creation. Fresh off a fellowship in Italy, she opened her new studio space, Mermaid’s Garage in Wellfleet this week. 


Nielsen was working on a postcard for the upcoming Pablo Manga show (7/7 – 8/8) when I stopped by early last week.

Tim Donovan at the opening of SundayMondayTuesdayWednesday on Saturday evening. I blogged about one of his photos I bought a few summers ago. He’s now represented by Gallery Kayafas in Boston, where he had a show last fall. The piece in the background is by Sam Trioli.

Tim DonovanUntitled: Archive UE562.
Notice the bubbled plexiglass.

Marie Lorenz, Mill Basin (purse), 2010, collograph on Rives deLin Edition Varie 1 of 5.
These prints illuminate objects Lorenz encountered while navigating waterways in New York Harbor. These items serve both as landmarks in her own journey as well as a trace of movements by unknown visitors who leave these items behind. These were part of the “In Our Wake” show.

Local artist (and Dorchester, MA native)  Peter Scarbo Frawley. Earlier this summer, someone from MoMA came in and purchased 15 of his pieces. These types of works are called “concrete poetry.”

Peter Scarbo FrawleyCorona typewriter on paper, 1970

Detail, Phyllis EwenSplit Africa, sculptural drawing

Nathalie Ferrier

Art mag Plazm,founded in Portland, OR, where Nielsen used to live.

The guest book.

The view out back.

My past posts about Farm:
Tim Donovan
Pablo Manga