Dedicated to covering the visual arts community in Connecticut.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Thursday evening opening at mARTket in South Norwalk

Gallery 305K
305 Knowlton St., Bridgeport, (203) 814-6856
Eye Candy
Through the end of July.
Opening reception: Thurs., July 21, 6:30 p.m.
Show is at mARTket, 136 Washington St., in Norwalk's SoNo area.

Press release

Gallery 305K, Norwalk 2.0 and TR SONO Partners are proud to present Eye Candy. Inspired by the candy store that once occupied the space that will be hosting the show on 136 Washington Street in Norwalk, the show will feature work that seems to view life through a child’s eye. Without naivete, but with an eye to the visually bold, magical, and simply fun.

The art explores the power of competing and vying color. It includes visual elements that speak to magical and improbable themes as well as the deliciously enticing. Artists reach the viewer on all sensory levels and we are tempted to consume the work on many levels.

Artists include Mark DeRosa, Liz Squillace, Frank Foster Post, Emily Habansky, Andrew Perkowski, Darrin Green, Jason Streater and E.S. Barraza. Eileen Walsh of Gallery 305K curated the show. The artists are all a large part of the creative bloom that is happening in Bridgeport. We are all very happy to bring a taste of our culture to Norwalk, a city that serves as an inspiration and example of how The Arts can invigorate a city.

Tom Rich of TR SONO Partners has donated the space to support emerging artists and incubate local produced talent. A strong supporter of the arts in Fairfield County, TR SONO Partners has donated space and supported programs throughput the county.

The show will have an opening reception on Thurs. July 21, with artists at 6:30 pm. The Space called the mARTket (former Sweet Rexies) is at 136 East Washington Street in Norwalk’s SoNo area. During the show Gallery hours will be Saturdays from 12 noon until 5 p.m. The show will run through the end of July and selected pieces will also be on exhibit during the Sono Arts Celebration, a weekend festival that runs through August 6 and 7 2011.

(Image: "Gods" by Mark DeRosa.)

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Monday, January 03, 2011

City by the Sea Art Fair call for entries

City by the Sea Art Fair
89 Ellsworth St., Black Rock 06605, (203) 362-5544
1st Annual City by the Sea Art Fair
May 14—15, 2011.
Call for entries

Press release

The first annual City by the Sea Art Fair (CSAF) is scheduled for May 14–15, 2011. A weekend-long regional juried art exhibition celebrating the vitality and creativity of our waterfront metropolis, the fair will include live musical performances, samplings of some of our best local fare and other special events.

All artists working in New England with work focused on urban and maritime or coastal subject matter may apply. The show’s theme is light, water and industry. The call for artists and entry form are available for download at CityArtFair.com. The Art Fair’s jurors are Robbin Zella and Terri C. Smith, respectively, Director and Curator of Bridgeport’s Housatonic Museum of Art — which was founded in 1967 and has one of the largest permanent collections of any two-year college in New England.

Artists and art enthusiasts are encouraged to join the fair’s Facebook page, Facebook.com/CityArtFair and follow fair news on twitter at @CityArtFair. Detailed updates on entertainment and other exciting news will be announced as the date gets closer.


The City by the Sea Art Fair was born when Black Rock NRZ liaison Kathryn vanRenesse and chair Wendy Nylen, owner of Picture This/Nylen Gallery in Westport and Black Rock resident, had researched a revival of the Black Rock Arts Walk. After interviewing local businesses, artists and residents they concluded the art walk had not fulfilled the needs of the community and a new project with a fresh approach in a different venue was the optimal solution. When vanRenesse and Nylen suggested their idea, fellow committee member Bruce Williams, an artist and owner of Captain’s Cove Seaport in Black Rock Harbor, immediately volunteered to donate space for the fair. Other community members running local art galleries followed suit in volunteering their efforts, including Eileen Walsh of The Gallery at Black Rock (and, now 305K Gallery on Knowlton Street), and Maureen Buckley of Framemakers Gallery and Frame Shop.

Bridgeport is Connecticut’s largest city and home to a growing community of multidisciplinary artists. Its increasingly vibrant art scene has been gaining momentum in recent years, including offering many new outlets for local artists to live, work and exhibit their art.

“Bridgeport's creative capital is currently on display via the Arts Trail; individual artists' work represents tremendous and relatively untapped assets for this city in the midst of a strong transformation. Celebrating these assets and sharing artwork with residents and visitors must be an ever increasing phenomenon, and making common cause with Bridgeport's world of performing arts in designing future events should be a priority for organizers, including the Bridgeport Arts and Cultural Council now based at the city's historic Arcade,” said Kenneth Kahn, executive director, Bridgeport Arts and Cultural Council.

City by the Sea Art Fair is presented by the Black Rock Neighborhood Revitalization Zone (BRNRZ), Black Rock Community Council (BRCC) and Captain’s Cove Seaport.

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Monday, October 26, 2009

They bombed in Bridgeport: Street art show with a mission

The Gallery at Black Rock
2861 Fairfield Ave., Bridgeport, (203) 814-6856
Off the Grid
Through Nov. 19, 2009

According to Eileen Walsh, director of the Gallery at Black Rock in Bridgeport, there used to be a legal outlet in the city for graffiti writers to practice their art. Called "Fame City," she says it was a truck bay on Boston Avenue.

"The kids made great use of it," Walsh tells me as I check out the street art-oriented show Off the Grid in the gallery. "There was so much of it that the paint is so heavy it's literally coming off the wall. There's like 40 layers of paint."

But that location is locked now. Walsh says the Off the Grid show has something of a mission: "We want to get the city to devote some walls for free expression. There are so many abandoned buildings here," she notes. These are canvases going to waste! Walsh adds that some cities have done exactly that, creating tourist attractions in the process. (Walsh details the process of putting the show together on her blog.)

With the exception of "legitimate" artist Peter Consterlie aka "Pete from Across the Street"—Consterlie is influenced by graffiti style—all the artists in the show are "active graffiti artists," according to Walsh.

"If you're around Bridgeport, you'd recognize recurring names and recurring characters," says Walsh. She adds that a couple of them have issues of "property damage outstanding that they want to avoid dealing with."

"They've absolutely learned in the street 100 percent. There's no education in art for any of them," she says, referring to all but Consterlie.

The works are displayed in the small two-room gallery "visual assault style." The participating artists, besides Consterlie, are Sketch, Filth, Snook, Equip, Mercedes Espinoza and Greg Brown. Equip and Sketch are the standouts. Equip is from Norwalk; the other artists are from Bridgeport. All the works, according to Walsh, were created within the month prior to the show's Oct. 16 opening.

Equip's works are painted on ripped "canvases" of drywall. The torn edge aesthetic suits the spray paint-on-the-run imagery. He is notable because he works with a subdued color palette. Using stencils and layers of color he creates an illusion of depth. "Landscape" delicately balances two seemingly contradictory sensibilities—the urban and the pastoral. As the title indicates, it is a landscape, a sunrise on the horizon over a river bounded by soft green shores. But the color is built up through stencils, spray painted tags, suggesting perhaps a yearning for the garden amid the city. All of this is bordered by the ripped, crumbling edges of the drywall panel. Others of his paintings feature stylized imagery of club deejays or skateboarders; one has a convincingly rendered portrait of the rapper and actor Ice Cube.

Much of this work is graphic shorthand and self-promotional imagery indebted to a now international subcultural language. It is influenced by the goofiness of TV cartoons but with a twist of the macabre: skulls and x-ed out eyeballs are recurring tropes.

The use of repetitive elements and bold colors derive from the need/desire to grab attention quickly. This is important when your canvas is often a surface glimpsed by viewers traveling at 65 miles per hour. But a desire to snag eyeballs isn't necessarily accompanied by concessions to easy readability. The paintings by Sketch owe the most to and are most typical of iconic graffiti style. They feature both a signature recurring cartoon image of a "monster"—a head with a wide open mouth with big teeth, x's in circles for eyes in a helmet-like head covering—and almost unreadable convoluted lettering. His text features three-dimensional characters that jostle and writhe around each other like riders in an overcrowded subway car. Most often these letters spell out "Sketch" but in his Obama portrait, they spell out "hope." There is also a table in one room that displays one of Sketch's sketchbooks showing how meticulously planned his imagery is.

It's a thought provoking show even if much of the work has a distinct amateurish tinge. Graffiti is a decidedly mixed phenomenon. It is true that most of it amounts to little more than another layer of blight in districts already marginalized by postindustrial capitalism. But where the serious writers take the time to exercise their explosive craft, the work can be a bracing visual element in a decaying landscape. And much more rewarding than that other graffiti that spreads like kudzu through our physical and psychic environment: advertising. Here's hoping Bridgeport can meet these artists halfway and designate some free spaces for grassroots artistic expression.

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