Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Susan Roth: Black Is A Color, at The Sam & Adele Golden Gallery, New Berlin NY October 12 2019 - March 13 2020


A quick look at the show in video taken during the opening event.



Art becomes an adventure again. Armed with Jean Hoefler designed German spaceman from 1968 marketed under the "Plong!" brand for courage we head back to New Berlin, to see what there is to see. Just like the bear going over the mountain.


Newly designed entry to the Golden Artist Colors main facility. I still have yet to go see the mixing vats! but try to never miss an art exhibit at the big Sam and Adele Golden Gallery housed within. And this was a marvelous show to get back into the swing of things with. We go to look for ideas to apply to our own methods, ways to strengthen the game. Learn from what they have figured out, and Susan Roth was a great teacher for the hour or so I was present for the exhibit's opening reception event.

For more information on the exhibit please visit the SAAG website at https://www.thesagg.org/

For information on The Golden Foundation for the Arts and their world-class Artist in Residence program visit https://www.goldenfoundation.org/

And for the latest on the miraculous materials being produced by Golden Artist Colors visit https://www.goldenpaints.com/



"St. Jerome's Library", 1987, acrylics on canvas and correctly placed smack-dab in the middle of the Hero Wall to get that immediate reaction. Susan had an instant fan in me at the way her works defy the squared off corners rule which most painters feel obliged to follow. These careen beyond the "square" of focus onto the walls in an organic manner. Confining them to a squared off perimeter wouldn't work. They'd bust the frame apart.


"Amethyst Necklace (V)", 1990. My favorite of the batch, and what looks like it might be cookie dough is a specially blended acrylic Volcanic Pumice Gel ...


I get moonscapes out of it. I get moonscapes out of everything which encourages my brain to concoct something on its own, and savored the encounter.




Trying to demonstrate how much stuff is troweled onto this, yet it's only just the right amount. Any more and it'd be too much, any less it'd be unfinished.



"Two Cities", 1989 with acrylic and fiberglass on canvas.


Enjoying the aluminum architectural struts used to house the energy.


"Don Juan", 1987. The dry, arid plain of Spanish Almeria.



The other "Show-stopper from across the room" ...


39 Steps, 2019, with as much drawing packed into it as a Piranesi prison view. I'm getting 19th century landscape photography out of that upper left corner ...


Susan's surfaces are all about a shifting interplay of texture and line, with one usually overlapping the other, drawing the viewer's eye across the landscape of the canvas' breadth.


"Temptations of the Heart", 1987 and something of a collage with canvas being applied upon the canvas and flavored with the acrylics. For that matter I found Susan's works to be totally cross-discipline in nature without being demonstrative about it: They are both paintings and sculptural, or physical in nature. You occupy space with them as much as you look at them, and they certainly aren't flat.


"John of the Cross", 2017 and another work employing collage technique without saying so.


"Malta", 1989.


Islands.


Bays and mooring piers.




"Figure of Speech", 1987 and from the name of the show I'd anticipated a gallery of these. Imagine my surprise.



Gotta bolt that thing on in there or else that stuff's going flying across the room. Put an eye out with that heavy canvas duck I bet.


"Pandora's Box", 1987 and I get more cartography out of this. Reminds me of looking at a thermographic map of NYC.


Rivers and channels.


And the hat! "Cezanne's Hat" in fact, 1989. Troweled on slicks of acrylic gone dry into a glossy sheen of rainbow sherbet ... Not sure why dessert foods entered into this but there you go.



Delicious. I want a dish of that to go please.




Susan at left with hands in pockets. We did get to chat for a minute (place was packed) and she confirmed that the works were created & allowed to take shape long before their aluminum sided housings were contracted to contain them. She spoke of the freedom to pursue the forms as the paintings evolved, confirming my suspicion that as squared off regular four-sided polygons they would have forever been unfinished.


"Masters of War", 1996. We need this painting now more than ever. 



Laying a wreath of flowers.


The show must be seen in person to truly experience the magnitude of the ideas the works contain, and runs until Friday March 13 2020, open during the GAC facility's regular business hours. Catch a plant tour as well while you're at it ... I want to see them mixing vats! pumping out that Pumice Gel.

Visit the SAAG website at https://www.thesagg.org/ for gallery details and start planning the trip.


It's the Propeller Barn! On the way back to my Utica NY studio ... A couple years back I had a vision of this barn in flight powered by the giant fans there at center right, cows in space suits and all. Now I want to see it as an artwork. Piloted by Plong! spacemen. 

Sunday, September 29, 2019

Open Studios at The Sam & Adele Golden Foundation for the Arts September 19, 2019


Yeah I know ... Been a while since there'd been a chance for me to get out to the big Artist in Residence Barn at The Golden Foundation in New Berlin. Changing work schedule and family issues have made Thursdays difficult & the time needed to get out to gorgeous New Berlin NY hasn't been there. But I decided it was time to get wise about renewing my commitment to my own art. Reasoned a swift kick in the pants from seeing the work of world-class artists at the peak of their game would about do the trick, and this is the place to go. Boy was I right, or to quote Alfalfa "Aaand How."

Gallery exhibits are curated collections of art removed from the atmosphere in which they are created so why mess around with the results filtered through a curator's agenda. Just go see the stuff as it's been churned out, raw unadorned unframed warts and all. See which ideas work, glom onto the best of it and apply to thine own effors. Will need a kitchen strainer to sift through Max Bard's results, which probably should (and likely will) be the subject of a blog post all on its own. But one point of the AiR program is to contrast the methods of the artists selected to showcase what all can be done with Golden Artist Color's endless arsenal of paints, mediums, pigments and "stuff". Singling just one artist out would deny readers the culture shock of encountering the differing approaches, and they've never been quite as different as this group. 

Be sure to use the Prior Posts menu to examine some of the other residency groups I've gotten swift kicks in the pants from, and to learn more about the Foundation and its residency program click here.



First up is Barbara Marx and while we did not have much chance to visit I was immediately enamored with her use of flattened cardboard boxes as painting surfaces. During the first year of my re-emergence from a long hiatus from visual art I drew on panels chopped from cereal boxes, kleenex boxes, Macaroni & Cheese boxes, and paper matchbook covers. Though I never flattened the boxes out themselves and was impressed by Barbara's bravery in allowing their forms to speak for themselves, spilling out across the wall in non-uniformed dimensions.


Potholders by Barbara Marks.


Barbara Marks


Barbara Marks


Barbara Marks


Barbara Marks, and I get landscape out of that.


Barbara Marks


Barbara Marks


Barbara Marks


Barbara Marks


Barbara Marks, and again landscape, or cityscape?


Barbara Marks



Melissa Dorn works with the idea of mops, and you had me at the very idea of making art with or about cleaning products. Should preface by noting that I worked for 20 years in a grocery store and had a fond attachment to assorted mops which played a role in certain work experiences. I did cleanups in Aisle 5, 8, 10, the beer cooler, you name it. Dry mop & wet mop, and the last seven years of working at the store I was a deli attendant. Mopped that floor every night, and the gals I worked with did their share of mopping as well.



Barbara's bio.


Barbara Marks ... I'd refer to her as the Formalist of the group, who was focused on producing works which espoused formalist sensibilities while drawing the viewer's eye in with subtle changes in surface textures & striking color contrasts. And while I groove on the Gender Politics end of her intentions I admired how the painting (or art making) was the focus rather then the politics.


Melissa Dorn, and this one made me think about that frayed loose mop end which would sort of worm along behind the rest of the mass. Wish I'd thought to get more individual pix of this group!


Melissa Dorn ... Butterfly Mop?


Melissa Dorn, and I believe the surfaces are a form of industrial felt padding. Not carpet samples, which was my first guess.


Melissa Dorn


Melissa Dorn


Melissa Dorn


Excellent.


Melissa Dorn


Now for Max ... I did instantly recognize that still images alone would not attest for the sheer magnitude of stuff which he had churned out during his monthlong stay in New Berlin so there's some video below, unedited as filmed & including a look at his outdoor sculptural creation.


Max Bard


Max Bard




Max Bard


Max Bard


Max Bard


Max Bard


Max Bard


Max Bard


Max Bard


Max Bard


Max Bard


Max Bard, and LOL.


Max Bard


Max Bard


Max Bard: My favorite of his ... things? from the display


Max Bard


Max Bard


Max Bard, and this time, WTF??


Max Bard


Max Bard


Max Bard, and I immediately recognized the thing at the bottom as the better part of a Hoth Rebel Base Playset by Kenner Toys from the early to mid 1980s. Pure genius.


... As seen in the video, if all that wasn't enough to keep Max busy for his month at the AiR barn he set loose in the woods with piles of more stuff, hammer & nails, some parachute cord, and a will to see them transformed.


Max Bard


Max Bard


Max Bard


I have two things to say about Max: He doesn't need a gallery show he needs a Tag Sale, and he looks like his art. That is commitment to a degree which I can only marvel at in awe. I also thought I had been "working with toys" in my own pursuits until I witnessed the above ... I've been taking pictures of toys and altering some of the printouts, as for me the toy forms are subjects where for Max they are surfaces. Both approaches are valid, though rest assured I won't be letting Mr. Bard and his buckets of paint anywhere near my nice antique Marx Toys playset pieces  ;D  Though if things go as I'm hoping we will get to get some his works in the Toys As Art exhibit I'm planning for The Tech Garden's gallery for June of 2020.


One more Open Studios session in October, go have a look & we'll see you there.