Dedicated to covering the visual arts community in Connecticut.

Monday, November 04, 2013

Upcoming shows at West Cove galleries in West Haven

West Cove Studio Gallery
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
Kevin Harty: Gravity Captured
Nov. 8—Dec. 7, 2013 in the Studio Gallery.
Reception: Fri., Nov. 8, 5—7 p.m.
Stephen Rodriguez: Pursuing Form
Nov. 16—Dec. 14, 2013 in A-Space Gallery.
Reception: Sat., Nov. 16, 5—7 p.m.

Press release from A-Space Gallery

The Studio Gallery at West Cove studio presents Gravity Captured, an exhibit of work by Kevin Harty. The show will be on view ("by chance or appointment") from Nov. 8 through Dec. 7. There is a reception on Fri., Nov. 8, from 5—7 p.m.

Kevin Harty: "Teslament"

A-Space Gallery presents Pursuing Form, an exhibition of work by potter Stephen Rodriguez. The show will be on view ("by chance or appointment") from Nov. 16 through Dec. 14 with a reception Sat., Nov. 16, from 5—7 p.m.

Stephen Rodriguez: "Vase"

Labels: , , , , ,

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Reception for Richard Falco show Saturday at A-Space Gallery in West Haven

West Cove Studio Gallery
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
From the Museum of False Art: True Painting by Richard Falco
Aug. 31—Sept. 28, 2013.
Reception: Sat., Aug. 31, 6—8 p.m.

Press release from A-Space Gallery

A-Space Gallery presents comprehensive exhibition of artwork once thought not to exist, paintings by Richard Falco.

Richard Falco: "The Greedy Churchman"


The exhibition of Falco's works will be on display from Aug. 31 through Sept. 28. A reception will be held Sat., Aug. 31, from 6—8 p.m.

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, March 06, 2013

Murdoch prints show reception Thursday at A-Space Gallery

West Cove Studio Gallery
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
Andrew Murdoch: Recent Work
Through Mar. 24, 2013.
Artist Reception: Thurs., Mar. 7, 6—8 p.m.

Press release from A-Space Gallery

Through darker imagery and altered found photos, Andrew Murdoch depicts fragments of scenes, taken as snapshots through the filter of his psyche. Dreamlike and sometimes unsettling, the works force the viewer into the murky headspace of the artist. Works shown cover a variety of printmaking techniques including intaglio, lithography and woodcut. Murdoch is the Assistant Printer at Milestone Graphics in Bridgeport, CT.

Andrew Murdoch: "She Hates"


The exhibition of Murdoch's recent works will be on display through Mar. 24. An artist's reception will be held Thurs., Mar. 7, from 6—8 p.m.

Labels: , ,

Monday, December 03, 2012

On the sunny side of the street: Insook Hwang installation at A-Space Gallery; plus Three paintings by Tony Kosloski

West Cove Studio Gallery
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
Insook Hwang: Best Wishes from the Magic Temple
Bright Logic: Three Paintings by Tony Kosloski Through Jan. 5, 2013.

New forms within old forms: that was my first thought in trying to process Insook Hwang's Best Wishes from the Magic Temple, currently on display at A-Space Gallery.

Hwang's playfully modular approach to design and installation melds contemporary references to science—primarily cellular biology—and digital technology with an irony-free New Age sunniness. This show grows one mega-installation out of numerous smaller—although not necessarily small—related installations, drawings and paintings.

Insook Hwang: "Jubilation" detail

These works—this work—is situated within the old form of a 20th Century industrial space: well-worn hardwood floors, brick walls and intersecting lines and diagonals of steel. Compared to the geometric precision of the space, Hwang's forms are amorphous, blob-like, suggestive of evolution and single-cell organisms. She uses repeated imagery—most notably in this show a couple of pictograms that evoke two figures dancing—to mimic the self-replication of cells.

But Hwang isn't just commenting on biological processes. She also creates fanciful living creatures—dinosaurs, a unicorn—and structures—a tower, a spaceship—out of linear forms loosely derived from computer monitors (at least, the old pre-flat screen type of monitors). What is "growing" is not just life but life informed by digital interconnectedness.

Insook Hwang: "Blue Dino"

Plenty of others have seen this developing social network in dark, dystopic ways but not Hwang. With her affection for pastel colors, glitter, suspended glass balls, hearts, flowers and lenticular overlays querying, "How are you?" and spelling out "love" in different languages, Hwang radiates buoyant, positive energy.

•••

Also on display in the room behind the main gallery are three large, geometric abstract paintings by Tony Kosloski (Web), dating back to the late 1980's and early 1990's. These works completely defy the usual rectangular space of the painted composition. In fact, defiance of perceived space is the operative principle of these compositions.

Tony Kosloski: "to look at the center of things and find the illusion of difference" detail

The irregular panels struggle to contain the lines of force, bright colors and Escher-meets-psychedelia designs. All three paintings have a giddy, disorienting energy, as if the built environment is in a pell-mell rush to turn itself inside out.

Labels: , , , ,

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Reception for Insook Hwang show this Saturday at A-Space Gallery

West Cove Studio Gallery
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
Insook Hwang: Best Wishes from the Magic Temple
Nov. 17, 2012—Jan. 5, 2013.
Artist Reception: Sat., Nov. 17, 4—6 p.m.

Press release from A-Space Gallery

Best Wishes from the Magic Temple, which features works on canvas and a drawing installation by Insook Hwang (Web), opens this Saturday at A-Space Gallery in West Haven. There will be a reception for the artist on Saturday from 4—6 p.m. The show will be on view through Jan. 5, 2013.

Insook Hwang: "Jubilation" (detail)

Labels: , , , ,

Wednesday, October 03, 2012

Picture book: Nathan Lewis reads the ruins

West Cove Studio Gallery
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
Nathan Lewis: Reading the Ruins
Closed.

Collapsing. Falling apart. The great industrial engine of the American economy increasingly decaying into ruin. Or let that be "ruins," plural. And in that desolation, some artists find visual inspiration.

One example of this was in the Anna Held Audette retrospective at the John Slade Ely House this past May. Audette concentrated on industrial sites and machinery as formal objects. Commentary was implicit and the art historical reference traced its lineage back to 18th and 19th Century painters who depicted ruins of ancient Greek and Roman antiquity. For the most part, Audette's paintings were industrial landscapes without a figurative presence.

In Nathan Lewis' painting show, Reading the Ruins, which closed this past weekend at A-Space Gallery in West Haven, the human element is present. The show features five large paintings, two smaller ones and four rough studies. In Lewis' paintings, people seem almost tourists of desolation, wandering dazed through factory rubble ("Orpheus") or stooping to pick up a small hardcover book off a detritus-strewn floor ("Book Keeper"). In "Light is the Lion That Comes Down to Drink," a bespectacled middle-aged man—seen through rusted diagonals of collapsed metal beams—carries what might be a piece of wood, a souvenir, in his right hand.


The backlit figure in "In the Dark"—not easily identifiable as a woman or man—reaches into a hole in a riven, peeling wall, searching for who knows what. The floor is strewn with debris and the old brick walls, painted white, are tagged with red and black graffiti. Lewis zeroes in on a tight cluster of seven upturned faces in the smaller painting "War Bells." The group—which includes local painters Paul Panamarenko and Larry Morelli as well as Anne Somsel, wife of art critic and curator Stephen Vincent Kobasa, and their daughter Claire—looks up at something outside the frame.

Hanging over these works is a sense of impersonal forces at work with the people in these spaces contemplating what has happened to their world. In fact, the only painting in which there is a real sense of active agency is "I Burn Today." In this work, the foregrounded figure—seen from waist down in torn blue jeans and sneakers—holds a kerosene can in their left hand (which has black-painted fingernails). Impersonal economic forces may have set in motion the demise of this factory but one individual can put the final nail in the coffin.


Lewis, who came to the gallery while I was visiting, says he has always been intrigued by these kinds of industrial ruins. He created the series as a challenge to himself to figure out how to depict this type of urban landscape. The results are exceptional. There is a tactile sense of the forms, capturing the feel of brick, rust, metal, wood and clusters of pink insulation material.


And the light. In "Light is the Lion That Comes Down to Drink," Lewis apprehends the nature of the foreground light—both the direct light coming down through holes in the ceiling, splashing on debris, and the surrounding diffuse light on the floor. Lewis tells me that seeing light as he hasn't seen it before is exciting. Similarly, in "Gate Keeper" (the large version), Lewis renders the subtle light in an essentially dark space; it is a painting primarily of shadow detail.

This series captures both a historical moment in late industrial capitalism and our response to that moment. Like the figures inside the frame, we absorb a certain kind of catastrophic beauty in these paintings like deer in the headlamps. Something is bearing down on us and it isn't good. But these paintings are. Very.

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Two new shows on view starting this weekend at West Cove Studios in West Haven

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
Hands of Caravaggio: Ink Drawings by Barry Svigals
Nomi Silverman: Mud Flat Drawings
July 28—Aug. 25, 2012.
Closing Reception: Sat., Aug. 25, 6—8 p.m.

Press release

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios presents two shows that open this weekend (although there will not be an associated event until the closing reception on Aug. 25).

Architect Barry Svigals (Web) will exhibit Hands of Caravaggio, a selection of his ink drawings.

Artist Nomi Silverman (Web)will display her Mud Flat Drawings series.


There will be a closing reception on Sat., Aug. 25, from 6—8 p.m.

Labels: , , ,

Monday, June 18, 2012

"Marking Time" show to open at A-Space Gallery in West Haven on Saturday

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
Marking Time: Works by Alexander Harding and Fritz Horstman
June 23—July 14, 2012.
Greeting of the Artists: Sat., June 23, 5:30—8 p.m.

Press release

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios presents Marking Time, an exhibition of work by Alexander Harding (Web) and Fritz Horstman (Web). The show will be on view from June 23 through July 14.

In Marking Time Alexander Harding (top image) and Fritz Horstman (bottom image) have created parallel series of photographs documenting the subtle changes in atmosphere, climate, weather, and light over set periods. Harding's twenty-five photographs record a single patch of sky over twenty-four hours, as it shifts through subtle gradations from the black of night, to blue and back to black.


Horstman's frieze of over a hundred photos were taken over the course of a year from five feet below the surface of a pond in Bethany, CT, looking up towards the sky. He used an eight-foot wooden device, upon which he mounted his underwater camera, to take these photos. The wooden device is also on display.


Both artists are interested in the myriad phenomena of the material of light, and in finding methods to track its often-unnoticed performances. Harding also displays work from a related photo series, and Horstman includes other wooden observation sculptures.

There will be a greeting of the artists at the opening on Sat., June 23, from 5:30—8 p.m.

Labels: , , ,

Monday, May 07, 2012

Sculpture show opens Saturday at A-Space Gallery in West Haven

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
Local Builders: An Anthology of Connecticut Sculptors
May 12—June 9, 2012.
Reception for the artists: Sat., May 12, 5:30—8:30 p.m.

Press release

Beginning this Saturday, A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios presents Local Builders, a show by a comprehensive group of area sculptors. Curated by Stephen Vincent Kobasa, the show will be on view through June 9; there will be a reception for the artists on Saturday from 5:30—8:30 p.m.


The exhibiting artists are:

Lani Asuncion, Anita Balkun, Janice Barnish, Dave Bassine, Meg Bloom, Susan Bradley, Aimée Burg, Natalie Charkow, Susan Classen-Sullivan, Susan Clinard, Paul Cofrancesco, Howard el-Yasin, Richard Falco, Tracy Walter Ferry, Silas Finch, Joe Gitterman, Kevin Harty, Shelby Head, Alexander Hunenko, Blinn Jacobs, Jilaine Jones, Robert Kirschbaum, Jacob Antone Könst, Tony Kosloski, David Livingston, Jacque Metheny, Jeff Ostergren, Dan Potter, Michael Quirk, Margaret Roleke, Joseph Saccio, Suzan Shutan, Jeff Slomba, Alison Walsh, Brian Walters, Jonathan Waters, Matthew Weber and Mark Williams.

(Image is of sculpture by Jonathan Waters.)

Labels: , ,

Monday, March 12, 2012

In memoriam: installation commemorates victims of Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
Cate Bourke: Crewel Linen—Unfinished Business
Through Mar. 25, 2012.
Panel discussion: Sat., Mar. 24, 2—3 p.m. at the People's Center, 137 Howe St., New Haven.
Reception: Sat., Mar. 24, 4—6 p.m. at West Cove Studios in West Haven.

Orderly ghosts.

That is my first impression gleaned from entering the West Cove Studios gallery where artist Cate Bourke has installed Crewel Linen: Unfinished Business, a remembrance of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of March 25, 1911.

From the gallery's industrial ceiling, Bourke has suspended four rows of eight-foot banners—made of shirtwaist cloth—more than 30 deep each. Sewn near the bottom of each banner is a rectangle of heavier beige linen bearing the name of one of the victims, mostly but not all women. There is a banner for each of the 146 victims of the fire.

The fire is the deadliest industrial disaster in New York City history and one of the deadliest industrial accidents in U.S. history. Because managers had locked the doors to stairwells and exits—ostensibly to prevent unauthorized breaks and theft—workers were trapped in the sweatshop, which was located on floors 8—10 of the Asch Building near Washington Square Park. Dozens of workers died jumping from the windows to the street in vain attempts to save their lives.

The names are a roll call of the striving industrial immigrant working class of early 20th century New York, predominantly Jewish and Italian: Annie Colletti, Sarah Brodsky, Morris Bernstein, Josephine Cammarata. Most of the victims were between 16 and 23 years old.

The edges of each banner are frayed, untidy. Long, loose threads hang from many—the loose threads of lives unfinished. A visitor can walk between the rows of banners like a supervisor walking the aisles between work stations, inspecting them. Or imagine oneself in a wraith-like cemetery.

At one end of the gallery, in contrast to the orderliness of the rows of banners, lies a pile of thread and cloth trimmings. It was scraps like this that are alleged to have caught fire, sparking the blaze. The pile evokes the chaos of the fire. But even more, it suggests the notion that these workers—these people—were themselves discards of an oppressive industrial system, as disposable as fabric trimmings.

Crewel Linen—"crewel" is a form of embroidery and, obviously, a wordplay on "cruel"—is a memorial, filled with the meditative silence of the dead. The subtle breezes endemic to a drafty factory building cause many of the banners to sway softly.

History, yes. In the terms of contemporary argot, "ancient history."

And yet, of course, it's not. One need only read the reports of the horrific—if gleaming with high-tech sheen—exploitation of workers in the Apple supply chain to know that abuse of workers remains a contemporary phenomenon. Too often, a reader can catch a glimpse of a one-paragraph wire services story in the newspaper of dozens of workers killed in an industrial accident—usually an accident that was completely preventable if a decent concern for human life took precedence over naked lust for profits.

The other contemporary resonance echoes from the names of the victims—probably all first or second-generation immigrants eking out a living (if that) without control over the conditions of their toil. Today the names are more likely to be Spanish or Asian. But the dangers of living a marginalized existence on the edges of the economy—compounded by the repressive crackdown on undocumented workers—remain.

Crewel Linen will be on view through Mar. 25, 2012, the 101st anniversary of the fire. There will be a panel discussion on the installation on Sat., Mar. 24, from 2—3 p.m. at the People's Center at 37 Howe St. in New Haven. Moderated by Henry Lowendorf, chair of the New Haven Peace Commission, the panel will feature artist Cate Bourke, Megan Fountain of the community organization Unidad Latina en Accion and Jennifer Klein, professor of history at Yale University.

The panel will be followed by a reception at the gallery (30 Elm St. in West Haven) from 4—6 p.m.

Labels: , ,

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Greeting of the Artists at A-Space Gallery this Friday, Nov. 18

A-Space at West Cove Studios
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
Two for One: Recent Work by Laura Marsh and Phil Lique
Nov. 17—Dec. 10, 2011
Greeting of the Artists: Fri., Nov. 18, 6—8 p.m.

Press release

A two-person show featuring recent work by Laura Marsh and Phil Lique opens this Friday (tomorrow) at A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios in West Haven. They don’t have “receptions” at A-Space but they do have “Greetings of the Artists” and if you go to that, you may find yourself thinking you are at an opening reception. But you aren’t.

Labels: , ,

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Edgy photo show up through this Saturday

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
At The Edge of Things: Twenty-Four Photographers
Through Sept. 17, 2011.

At the Edge of Things is a rather open themed photographic show in the A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios curated by Stephen Vincent Kobasa. Through Kobasa's eyes, the show is organized around poetic interpretations of the concept of "edge"—formalistic, emotional, sociological, political. These edges are more rough than smooth.

In work like Marion Belanger's "Rift #41," the white boundaries of an astroturfed miniature golf hole carve out the domesticated edge of nature, holding at bay unruly grasses and dandelions.

Phyllis Crowley's ominous "Moonlight" is a seascape of black water in the foreground rippled with lunar reflections. Clusters of clouds cloak the moon. The edge of the world—or horizon line—is just barely visible in the nocturnal murk.


A much different kind of edge is suggested by Paul Bloom's "Francisco Franco's Prison, Barcelona, Spain." The knife's edge of oppression and human suffering haunts this grainy image of a claustrophobic brick corridor with chains hanging from the ceiling.


There's more—much more—by many of the area's most respected photographers: James Ayers, Christopher Beauchamp, Joy Bush, Paul Duda, Ashley Estep, Joan Fitzsimmons, Andrew Hogan, Aniko Horvath, Keith Johnson, Clare Kobasa, Linda Lindroth, Eric Litke, Meredith Miller, Roy Money, Hank Paper, Thomas Peterson, Mark Savoia, Jess Smith, Maria Tupper, Marjorie Wolfe and Stefan Znosko.

The show is up through this Saturday, Sept. 17.

Labels: , ,

Thursday, September 01, 2011

"Greeting of the artists" at A-Space Gallery rescheduled for this Sunday

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
At The Edge of Things: Twenty-Four Photographers
Aug. 25—Sept. 17, 2011.
Greeting of the artists: Sun., Sept. 4, 2011, 6—8 p.m.

Press release

Because of Hurricane Irene, the "greeting of the artists" for At the Edge of Things originally scheduled for last Sunday, will take place this Sun., Sept. 4, from 6—8 p.m.

Arranged and installed by Stephen Vincent Kobasa, At the Edge of Things showcases meditations on various ways in which photographs can render boundaries both blurred and precise, real and imagined.

The featured photographers are James Ayers, Christopher Beauchamp, Marion Belanger, Paul Bloom, Joy Bush, Phyllis Crowley, Paul Duda, Ashley Estep, Joan Fitzsimmons, Andrew Hogan, Aniko Horvath, Keith Johnson, Clare Kobasa, Linda Lindroth, Eric Litke, Meredith Miller, Roy Money, Hank Paper, Thomas Peterson, Mark Savoia, Jess Smith, Maria Tupper, Marjorie Wolfe and Stefan Znosko.

Labels: ,

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Photography show at A-Space Gallery the end of August

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 627-8030
At The Edge of Things: Twenty-Four Photographers
Aug. 25—Sept. 17, 2011.
Greeting of the artists: Sun., Aug. 28, 2011, 6—9 p.m.

Press release

Arranged and installed by Stephen Vincent Kobasa, At the Edge of Things showcases meditations on various ways in which photographs can render boundaries both blurred and precise, real and imagined.


The featured photographers are James Ayers, Christopher Beauchamp, Marion Belanger, Paul Bloom, Joy Bush, Phyllis Crowley, Paul Duda, Ashley Estep, Joan Fitzsimmons, Andrew Hogan, Aniko Horvath, Keith Johnson, Clare Kobasa, Linda Lindroth, Eric Litke, Meredith Miller, Roy Money, Hank Paper, Thomas Peterson, Mark Savoia, Jess Smith, Maria Tupper, Marjorie Wolfe and Stefan Znosko.

There will be a "greeting of the artists" on Sun., Aug. 28, from 6—9 p.m.

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Thursday evening opening at A-Space Gallery in West Haven

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 966-9700
Masterskaya: the Studio as a Playground for Nine Artists
July 21—Aug. 13, 2011.
Opening Reception: Thurs., July 21, 6—9 p.m.

Press release

Masterskaya: the Studio as a Playground for Nine Artists opens tomorrow at A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios in West Haven. The show features the work of nine artists: Rita Brieger, Naomi Cruz, Robert Jacoby, Dmitry Krasny, Carol Kraven, Elizabeth Nagle, Randi Nussbaum, Aleksandr Razin and Victoria Wyndham.

There will be a reception for Masterskaya from 6—9 p.m.

Open Thurs.—Sun., 10 a.m.—4 p.m.

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, June 08, 2011

Darkness visible: "War Making" at A-Space Gallery

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 966-9700
War Making: An Exhibition of This Time
June 21—July 2, 2011.

The wars go on and on but are mostly invisible. The media hides the carnage, covers for the criminality. A tiny percentage of the population bears the burden—some reluctantly, some with relish—of carrying out the orders to kill and of sacrificing their bodies and psyches to our rulers' bloodlust and greed. The televisual screens chatter in a fog of mindless clichés like "They fight for our freedom." Meanwhile, freedom evaporates like a splash of water on summer's sidewalk.

War Making, an exhibition gathered by art critic and peace activist Stephen Vincent Kobasa and now showing at A-Space Gallery in West Haven, is one effort to resist the invisibility of the wars. This is war as maiming—of the physical body, the landscape and the human spirit.

The maiming of the body is manifest in works like Fethi Meghelli's (Web) "War Series," a collage and manipulated Xerox. Among the dark claustrophobic imagery are representations of brawny men—one wearing an "Army" t-shirt—with their prosthetic legs. Chris Alexiades' (Web) "Jar and Bones" accumulates stoneware bones in a large glass jar, the rawness of mass death as collective depersonalization. The individual is reduced to component parts.

Gerald Saladyga's (Web) "Playground in Rwanda," dating back to 1994, is a raw expressionist image of a child trying to jump rope with just bloody stumps where his hands and feet were. In modern warfare, it's not only the active combatants who suffer. Far from it. In fact, in drone warfare, the combatants slaughter civilians and purported "militants" while enjoying air-conditioned, videogame comfort. Point-and-click snuff film moviemaking.

The attacks on the landscape, including the built landscape, is referenced in Bradley Wollman's photographs, Nathan Lewis' painting "Orange Was the Sky" and in Nomi Silverman's drawing "Elysian Fields." Wollman uses models and toys to create diorama-like representations of war. In "Bunker Busters," the blinding sky shines through a hole blown in a building, illuminating the inner darkness to reveal the rubble. "UAV" shows a drone—"unmanned aerial vehicle"—high over a mottled desert landscape. Silverman's "Elysian Fields" from the "Mud Flat Drawings" is an abstract drawing that evokes a rending of the earth, a furious disturbance. A procession of haggard refugees trudge through a winter's landscape in Lewis' painting, the sky the color fire and elevated threat levels.
Joseph Smolinski (Web) brings together the themes of body and landscape mutilation in his spooky "Trepanned Skull—Civilian Casualties" (ink, watercolor, charcoal and graphite on paper). An upended blown-out skull births the skeletal remains of a bomb-eviscerated bus. This drawing suggests that the thought of war consumes both the individual who puts it into effect as well as war—or terrorism's—victims.

This conflagration is a maiming of the human spirit. The distortion of what it means to be human may be the ostensible subject of Brian Kavanagh's "For they have sowed the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind," Steven DiGiovanni's "Desert Sketch: Drone Pilots" and John Bent's "KYEO (Keep Your Eyes Open)."

Bent's painting presents the physical maiming of a soldier, in particular the mutilation of his face, as a metaphor for the spiritual mutilation of war. In DiGiovanni's oil on masonite sketch, war is almost play. Shirtless soldiers in the desert next to a trailer fitted with a satellite dish sit bored or act out gestures like they are flying, disconnected from the fact that their mission is technologically-inflicted, long distance death.

Kavanagh's ink drawing, which has the feel of a woodcut or block print, depicts generals and business-suited civilians plucking bombs, bombers and submarines out of a goody bag and dropping them willy-nilly into a churning sea. These are humans turned monsters, playing deadly power games devoid of compassion.

There is much more. Susan Nichols' (Web) two etchings hint at the disruption of the sanctity of the home by soldiers. Two artists riff on the plastic toy soldiers of childhood. Margaret Roleke's (Web) "White Men" features painted toy army men mounted on a large circular slab of wood. Mark Williams' (Web)three painted floor sculptures depict cutouts of posed military figures topped by contrasting playful forms—a bunch of bananas, a rooster, an elephant—derived from Play-Doh molds. The use of toys as a touchstone for both artists critiques the indoctrination in war that begins in childhood.

Considerations of the causes of war animate the works of Greg Haberny and Ronnie Rysz. Haberny's miniature assemblage "Gulf War Syndrome (with gold screw)" includes the word "Gulf" depicted in the oil company's logo. Ronnie Rysz's two linoleum cut prints, "Paper Economy" and "Shadow Banking," allude to the role of economic interest and greed in fomenting war.

Some of the artists represent the implements of war. Elizabeth White's sculpture is a disquieting visual pun: "Stickershock and Awe" encloses a hollow grenade in a cloak of burrs. Phil Lique's (Web) wall drawing "Out of Stock" employs cut vinyl to depict the silhouettes of three automatic rifles and the apology "Sorry…This item is temporarily out of stock." Jonathan Waters and Martha Lewis offer two very different takes on tanks. Waters' "Tank," dating back to 1980, is a small wedge carved out of ebony wood on a squat white pedestal. Martha Lewis' untitled pencil and watercolor drawing envisions the tank as intricate design of mechanical engineering. This raises a deeply uncomfortable truth: War, like art, is also a product of human imagination and creative ingenuity albeit turned to sulfurous, destructive ends.

Labels: ,

Thursday, June 02, 2011

"War Making" show at A-Space; gathering of the artists this Sunday

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 966-9700
Wa Making
June 21—July 2, 2011.
Greeting of the Artists: Sun., June 5, 2—4 p.m.

We live in an era of war—wars declared and undeclared. Wars for purported high purpose leaving blood and carnage in their wake. Resources wasted, pillaged. Close schools and open the bomb doors. Our leaders and media are rank fabulists, realtors specializing in flipping stinking charnel houses.

Does this have anything to do with War Making, the new show at A-Space Gallery over at West Cove Studios in West Haven? We'll have to go and see.

Gathered together by art critic and resolute peace activist Stephen Vincent Kobasa, it features work by Chris Alexiades, John Bent, Edward Castiglione, Steven DiGiovanni, Greg Haberny, Brian Kavanagh, Martha Lewis, Nathan Lewis, Philip Lique, Fethi Meghelli, Susan Nichols, Margaret Roleke, Ronnie Rysz, Gerald Saladyga, Nomi Silverman, Joseph Smolinski, Jonathan Waters, Elizabeth White, Mark Williams, and Bradley Wollman.

Open Tues.—Sun., 1—4 p.m., or by appointment: (203) 627-8030.

Labels: ,

Monday, April 11, 2011

Questions of scale

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 966-9700
Scale Factor
Through May 15, 2011.

I didn't spend much time taking notes at Saturday's Scale Factor opening at A-Space Gallery, located in West Cove Studios in West Haven. So this post's textual element will be fragmentary. The show features primarily paintings, the loose theme concerned with elements of scale.

On facing walls are both a series of miniature paintings by Emilia Dubicki and a large-scale work, "You Remember the Sky." Dubicki's paintings often reference real landscapes. "You Remember the Sky," according to Dubicki, is a work of the imagination untethered to any particular real world locale; the title comes from a poetic fragment inscribed in the bottom left of the work. Still, the sense of landscape is embedded within its gestural sweep of bold colors: elemental, fragrant with wind and sea brine. Dubicki's paintings on the facing wall, probably little more than 5" by 5", are more intimate, as if she is concentrating on just one element in a larger gestalt.



Dubicki's miniatures invite, almost demand, that the viewer inspect them closely. Cham Hendon's "Equal Justice Under Law," hung to their right, is a massive acrylic painting that paradoxically thrusts a viewer back to take it all in while pulling you in to absorb the painterly details. The "big picture" is of the imposing facade of an official court building. But by fusing his colors with a gel medium, Hendon creates swirls of colored abstraction within the overall representational aesthetic, as can be seen in the images below.



Jonathan Waters' (Web) works strike me as engaging more with perspective factor than scale factor. Although many of them are quite large—primarily painted panels inhabiting both the realms of painting and sculpture—they pique the interest particularly by considering them from different angles. One large work, when viewed directly, appears to be a series of several wood panels painted black and abutted against each other. But the edges of some of the panels are painted white. Viewed from the side, the white edges are visible and merge with the white wall on which the work is hung, creating the illusion that there are three separate black panels hung in close proximity.



Other works in the show:

Two Gerald Saladyga (Web) works from 1997, "Monoliths (Installation)" and "Monolith (Blue)":



Larry Morelli's (Web) "The Ghost in the Machine":


Chris Joy's (Web) Untitled (acrylic on wood):

Labels: , , , , , ,

Thursday, April 07, 2011

Saturday opening at A-Space Gallery in West Haven

A-Space Gallery at West Cove Studios
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 966-9700
Scale Factor
Through May 15, 2011.
Opening Reception: Sat., Apr. 9, 4—8 p.m.

Press release

Scale Factor, a group exhibition, is now on view at A-Space Gallery at west Cove Studios. There will be an artists' reception for the show this Saturday, from 4—8 p.m. According to artist Jonathan Waters, "We all deal with scale in our work intuitively—proportions within a work, overall size, smaller elements making up a larger piece, heroic small pieces. I had hoped to create some dialogue around the subject, sort of a stepping-off point…and deliberately kept it loose." The notion of "scale" is the common thread. Waters says the show includes some works from the nineties and more recent works made for the show.


The exhibiting artists are Cat Balco (Web), Sharon Butler (Web), Ethan Boisvert (Web), Emilia Dubicki (Web), Cham Hendon (Web), Chris Joy (Web), Larry Morelli (Web), Jerry Saladyga (Web), Jean Scott, Brian Gill Wendler (Web) and Jonathan Waters.

Open Tues.—Sun., 1—4 p.m., or by appointment: (203) 627-8030.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, December 08, 2010

Friday night art opening and Christmas party at A-Space, West Cove Gallery

West Cove Studio & Gallery
30 Elm St., West Haven, (203) 966-9700
sameness-difference-variance
Emilia Dubicki: Cold Suite
Bridges, Inc.
Dec. 6, 2010—Jan. 2, 2011
Opening Reception: Fri., Dec. 10, 6—10 p.m.

Press release

sameness-difference-variance is a group exhibition at West Cove Studio & Gallery running Dec. 6, 2010—Jan. 2, 2011. Organized by Eric Litke, the exhibition brings together work by eight Connecticut artists who share an interest in serial approaches to presenting their imagery, and creates a dialogue between the traditional poles of "painting" and "photography".

Included are works by: John Bent (Web), Cham Hendon (Web), Keith Johnson (Web), Eric Litke, Jeff Ostergren (Web), Jessica Schwind (Web), Mark Williams (Web), and Robert Zott (Web). The opening reception is Fri., Dec. 10 from 6—10 p.m. Open Saturday and Sunday 10 a.m.—4 p.m. and weekdays by chance or appointment: (860) 878-5589.

Also on view will be Cold Suite, an installation of drawings by Emilia Dubicki (Web); Bridges, Inc., a photograph show curated by Harold Shapiro (Web) and other works by studio artists throughout the building.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,