Dedicated to covering the visual arts community in Connecticut.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Artists' reception for two shows on Sunday at Kehler Liddell Gallery

Kehler Liddell Gallery
873 Whalley Ave., New Haven, (203) 389-9555
Amy Browning: Sounding the Silence
Joseph Saccio: Memory and Transformation
Oct. 11—Nov. 11, 2012.
Opening Reception: Sun., Oct. 14, 3—6 p.m.

Press release from Kehler Liddell Gallery

Two shows open this week at Kehler Liddell Gallery in Westville and will run through Nov. 11, 2012. There will be an artists' reception for both shows on Sun., Oct. 14, from 3—6 p.m.

Amy Browning: Sounding the Silence

Amy Browning: "Lighting the Lamp"

Serious injuries, sustained in an automobile accident last year, forced Amy Browning to consider how she paints and what she paints. No longer could the artist stand for hours inches away from the wall or easel; she needed to develop a new approach.

Light dawned, and she contemplated the floor. It became her support. Browning stretched canvases on the floor and went to work, slowly moving over the surface with brush, bottle, and plastic utensils—anything she could lay my hands on. Her preferred stance was hovering over the artwork at a height of two or three feet and constantly circling. The mystery appeared, disappeared, re-appeared, and after much struggle and good fortune revealed its hidden reality.

Amy Browning’s new work is an exhilarating revelation of order within disorder. Pre-ordained rules yield to the mysterious needs of the canvas. What emerged is what was already there before she began—silence.

Joe Saccio: Memory and Transformation

The title and theme for Joe Saccio’s exhibit, Memory and Transformation, stems from his discovery when working on a four foot by twenty-foot section of a hollow black oak tree trunk. Saccio divided the old hollow trunk into three six foot sections and split each vertically to create three triptychs, or three open books revealing the old tree’s inner life and history.

The footprint for each six-foot high book section is seven feet wide by three feet in diameter. The inner, concave surfaces and the outer, convex bark surfaces are transformed in various ways to suggest new, strange growth and life in a tree that refuses to die.

Joseph Saccio: "Mouth of Medusa," detail

Gallery visitors can actually walk into the inner space of the tree and imagine the force and struggle of living, dying and finally regeneration into another form. Joe Saccio has created another large wall sculpture that is an eight feet high variation of the Medusa. In this case the serpents emerge from her mouth and not her hair.

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Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Four new shows open Sunday at Silvermine Guild Art Center

Silvermine Guild Art Center
1037 Silvermine Rd., New Canaan, (203) 966-9700
Director's Choice: Larry Lewis
Nancy McTague-Stock: Fragments of the Aquatic
Roxanne Faber Savage: Bird(ish)
Joseph Saccio: Memory and Metamorphosis
Sept. 25—Nov. 4, 2011.
Opening Reception: Sun., Sept. 25, 2—4 p.m.

Press release

The fall season brings four new exhibits to the Silvermine Arts Center, located in New Canaan, CT. Opening on Sept. 25 these new exhibits provide a look at the work of an artist whose work comes to awareness posthumously, reflections on the coexistence of nature and industry, and expressions of myth and reality. All are welcome to the opening reception on Sun., Sept. 25 from 2—4 p.m. The exhibits will run through Nov. 4.

The Director’s Choice exhibit features works by reclusive artist Larry Lewis as seen in his collage books, which he began in the late 60’s and continued to produce until his death in 2004. His niece and heir to the artwork, Sharyn Prentiss Laughton, shared that Larry never finished any of his books, but rather worked randomly and haphazardly through each one, and showed them only to her. The totality of his work was only discovered after he died. A member of the Silvermine Guild of Artists for a brief period of time in the 1960’s, very little is known about him personally or artistically. His artistic progress is sketchy at best as he rarely dated his work and rarely exhibited. As a member of the Guild, he exhibited some of his gouache work, however, there is no record that indicates whether he ever exhibited his collage books at Silvermine. A reclusive and unassuming person, his books took on another life with brilliantly hand ink colored pages created from photocopies of collected Victorian images, movie stars from the 1920’s and 30’s, and newspaper ads for elixirs, potions, ways to get rid of wrinkles, address sagging waistlines, pinch back ears and body remedies. Each page and spread was composed as a painting unto itself.


Fragments of the Aquatic showcases works by Silvermine Guild Artist Nancy McTague-Stock, a resident of Wilton, CT. McTague-Stock is an artist who works in a variety of media. She shares her interest in creating imagery that offers a glimpse of unnoticed rhythms of the natural world, with deep-rooted connections in ecology, psychology and sociology through drawings, paintings, printmaking, new media and writing. In its many forms, water plays a vital role for all of us. Water offers us properties of sustenance, potential for destruction, meditative moments, athletic opportunities and artistic vision. Her preoccupation with natural water occurrences in daily life is evident in this series of work. “By focusing on fragments available to me in a singular moment, I invite the audience to share in a multi-sensorial exhibition. I hope they will engage, reflect and contemplate how water plays critical and numerous roles in their lives,” says McTague-Stock. “The works of art in this exhibition offer the viewer an opportunity to play with their own perception of reality.”


Visual artist and printmaker, Roxanne Faber Savage has had an on-going fascination and attraction to birds and utility wires, which has taken on a life of its own. Bird(ish) is an exhibition of prints based on highway vistas, bird imagery and daydreams culled from her daily drives on I95 and rural roads. This show is a unique documentation of images shot, drawn, copied, stretched, pressed and printed, depicting the co-existence of nature and industry in the modern landscape. Savage will present interpretive exhibition programming in the gallery on Wednesdays from 3—5 p.m. for the run of the show (9/28, 10/5, 12, 19, 26 and 11/2). Each Wednesday she will engage gallery goers to “print, talk, draw and bird watch.”



A resident of Fairfield, Savage, whose work is comprised of traditional etchings, silk aquatint monoprints and a transfer technique called paper lithography, says that a “stream of consciousness and a rich store of personal memories are the starting place for my prints and drawings. My interests in energy and freedom, in the widest sense, provide a central theme through which I channel my experiences. I value the emotive power of color, and layer my prints with saturated color and energy related imagery: strewn power lines, loopy crayon scribbles and scratchy surface textures. I make prints because I love the possibilities presented in the combinations of multiple printmaking techniques, and the physicality of using an etching press.”

Memory and Metamorphosis, an exhibit of sculptural works in a variety of sizes and materials by Joseph Saccio, expresses the artist’s personal feelings associated with myth and ritual, loss and rebirth. “I’m interested in the idea of great power joined to fragility and vulnerability, a very human, and indeed, mythic combination,” says Saccio. “This is reflected in the choice of weighty, large materials literally joined with, or in association with, fragile materials such as paper or fiber bindings especially noted at the physical connections among parts of my sculptures.” The dark somber pieces are expressive of loss and rebirth, and for the artist, associated with myth and ancient ritual, leading the viewer through the changing process, producing forms that are abstract but resemble a living organism.

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Thursday, February 10, 2011

Artists' Talk for "The Guy Show" at Artplace in Fairfield this Sunday

Artplace Gallery
11 Unquowa Rd., Fairfield, (203) 292-8328
The Guy Show
Through Feb. 26, 2011
Artists’ Talk: Sun., Feb. 13, 3 p.m.

Press release

Artplace Gallery is pleased to announce dates for the first curated show in its new gallery space. Entitled The Guy Show the exhibit runs from February 1—26, 2011 at 11 Unquowa Rd. in Fairfield and is unique in that it will exclusively feature regional male artists from Fairfield and New Haven counties. The opening reception was held this past Saturday, Feb. 5, but there will be an artists’ talk this Sun., Feb. 13, at 3 p.m.

“We selected these ten artists for their professionalism, clarity of vision as well as their ability to move beyond limits set by traditional art,” says Gerald Saladyga, who is curating and organizing the exhibit. Saladyga is a member of ArtPlace and has curated exhibits on religious art, art and AIDS and redefining “landscape” in art. He notes that The Guy Show is not about “male issues” but about the direction male artists are now moving in.

“We chose five painters, three sculptors and two photographers who demonstrate a wide range of work as well as age and visibility—some are beginning their careers and several are already established,” he says.

Most of the artists featured are New Haven-based with two from Norwalk and one from New Fairfield. The painters include Chris Durante, a member of Norwalk Community College Art Department; Christopher Joy (Web) and Zachary Keeting (Web), co-founders of “Gorky’s Granddaughter,” an artist video interview site; Felandus Thames (Web), a painter and silk-screen printmaker who was recently represented by the Jack Tilton Gallery at Art/Basel/Miami 2010; and Jonathan Waters (Web)whose work has been exhibited at Art in General in NYC and locally at the Ivoryton and Madison Sculpture Miles.


Photographers Keith Johnson (see image above) and Jeremy Keats Saladyga have also been included in important exhibitions: Johnson in three Ground/Cover exhibits in Arizona, Washington and Wyoming and Keats Saladyga at The Michael Foley Gallery, NYC and the Museum of The City of New York.

Joseph Saccio (Web), a largely self-taught sculptor, received the “Best in Show” award at Silvermine’s Art of the Northeast USA exhibit in 2010, while Silas Finch (Web, see image below), a young New-Haven based sculptor, will see his work featured in the up-coming indie film by Stephen Dest, My Brother Jack.


Finally, Joseph Fucigna (Web), also a member of Norwalk Community College, held a recent one-man exhibit of his constructions at the Sculpture Barn in New Fairfield, CT.

“This show presents cutting-edge art not usually represented in Fairfield,” says Saladyga. “Visitors to the show will see art that is not usually exhibited in a private gallery.”

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Saturday, December 04, 2010

Saccio and Saladyga at Kehler Liddell

Kehler Liddell Gallery
873 Whalley Ave., New Haven, (203) 389-9555
Joseph Saccio & Gerald Saladyga: Site Unseen
Through Dec. 5, 2010

The exhibition airing of Joseph Saccio and Gerald Saladyga at Kehler Liddell Gallery in Westville ends tomorrow. It is a fine show of new (Saccio) and old (Saladyga) work by two artists with shared interest in incorporating metaphysical themes into their art.

For me, the paintings of Gerald Saladyga came as the biggest surprise. Dating back to the early 1990's but not shown until now, they are geometric and austere. As with his present works—which I have written about several times in Connecticut Art Scene—they are painted with latex house paints and modeling paste.


Saladyga has told me the quiet understatement of these paintings was a personal reaction to his paintings of the 1980's. The 1980's paintings, figurative and expressionist in nature, offered visceral revulsion to the violence of American foreign policy at the time, particularly in Central America. Saladyga told me that he ended up recoiling from his own representations of violence; these works addressed his concerns in ways more symbolic and spiritual.

I've written about Joseph Saccio's work before also. Saccio employs organic and inorganic materials to plumb themes of death and rebirth. In several of the works here, Saccio engages with the book form. In some cases this is overt. With "Do Not Forget the Burning Books," a cyliner of ruffled pages with singed edges is wedged between segments of a tar-blackened telephone pole. The book form is an interesting choice for Saccio because his works invite reading and interpretation. They are freighted with metaphor, dreamlike.

Whether this was Saccio's intention or not, "Do Not Forget the Burning Books" invokes two different forms of communication: written (books) and oral/verbal (telephone pole). To riff on that some more, we see the written word trapped within the two segments of the telephone pole as if verbal, technologically facilitated communication is squeezing out the written literary form. Of course, there is another association here—that trees have a second life as the paper that makes up the pages of a book.


Three works in the show were created in memory of a friend of Saccio's who dies in the 1970's. "Elegy for Clint: Homage to Motherwell" and "Requiem for Clint: A Thousand Cuts" are wall-mounted sculptures that also allude to the book form.

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Wednesday, November 03, 2010

Saccio/Saladyga show reception Sunday at Kehler Liddell Gallery

Kehler Liddell Gallery
873 Whalley Ave., New Haven, (203) 389-9555
Joseph Saccio & Gerald Saladyga: Site Unseen
Nov. 4—Dec. 5, 2010
Opening reception: Sun., Nov. 7, 3—6 p.m., with Artist Talk at 3 p.m.

Press release

Kehler Liddell Gallery is pleased to present Site Unseen, a two-person exhibition of sculpture by Joseph Saccio and painting by Gerald Saladyga. This will be Saccioʼs second show at the gallery, and Saladygaʼs debut.

Joseph Saccio is a sculptor who resuscitates life from discarded objects, both organic and inorganic. For this show, trees are the conceptual medium at large and Saccio announces it with vigor in the form of a 15-foot tall circular tempietto (Italian for small temple). With alternating slabs of hallow cedar wood and coils of industrial fencing, “Tempietto” speaks to the inherent ambition and mysticism of nature. This is the story of a tree that exploded itself to become something different, possibly bigger, and half manmade. The interior provides a small space for one person to rest and reflect on fantasies, salvations, and other sites unseen.

Natureʼs inheritance is further pondered in a series of wall-mounted works, which Saccio crafted as memorials to a lost friend. “Requiem for Clint A Thousand Cuts” reads from left to right like a heavy musical scale with oak cross-sections for notes. The composition, honors the life of the oak tree: making accessible the intricate growth rings and vascular rays that circle the innermost heart wood.

Saccioʼs Book Series speaks to our everyday reliance on wood for communication, entertainment, and language. “Leaves of Grass” is a large, open book overgrown with a fern-like moss, the “Book of Catastrophys” is a rotting heap of gossipy magazine page, and a telephone pole sculpture has a book for a belly. Here, pragmatism meets imagination in challenging ways.

Gerald Saladyga is a non-traditional landscape painter who is unafraid of pioneering a 21st century aesthetic. For Saladyga, the romanticism of 19th century landscape painters is out of touch with our reality, which burgeons unpretty things like suburban sprawl, pollution, and human injustice. Thus, his landscapes read more like complex GPS maps and diagrams of cosmic universes than the traditional plein air variety.

For his debut show, Saladyga presents a series of minimal paintings done in a strict palette of black, gray, and red. He uses a mixture of latex house paint and modeling paste in order to achieve a thick, viscous surface. Many of the new works contain Tau crosses, cruciforms, alluding to political violence and the sado-masochistic ritual religious belief during the Age of Exploration. The medieval symbol of the Tau Cross appears in a large triptych that physically dominates the show. A dark green border frames the work, and two small squares rest below, windows to a deep abyss.

As the central theme, medieval religion applies to “The Hours,” as well, a series of 16 works on paper that Saladyga created to reference a popular Christian devotional book used by monks, who also famously illustrated the manuscripts. The series, made up of formulaic compositions of vertical stripes, suggest routine, ritual movements, and the passing of light. The notion of a highly governed and glorified system is at play.

Saladyga painted the works in Site Unseen in the early 1990ʼs, at a time when he wanted to move away from the gore of figuration and expressionism, but still respond to the political climate of the time: El Salvador, Nicaragua and Vietnam. These works represent a conscious effort to change style and content, but not meaning, with a new wave of creativity.

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Monday, February 02, 2009

Transformation as subject and process

Kehler Liddell Gallery
873 Whalley Ave., New Haven, (203) 389-9555
Keith Johnson & Joseph Saccio: Transformative
Through Mar. 1, 2009

Transformative is the second show together at Kehler Liddell Gallery in Westville for sculptor Joseph Saccio and photographer Keith Johnson. (Their first is reviewed here.) In this exhibit, they offer two different takes on the notion of transformation.

For sculptor Saccio, the concept is expressed both in his use of materials and in his overarching metaphor. Saccio uses found objects of both natural and synthetic nature. He transforms them through a process of manipulation, coloration and combination. Saccio is particularly drawn to wood, which in its various forms takes well to carving, bending and painting. Consistent with his technique, he uses both found natural wood—massive tree trunks, twisted driftwood branches, splintered twigs—and processed wood. The paired works "Witch Queen of the Forest" and "Her Husband, the Warlock with the Wondrous Wand" include bamboo fencing and spirals of oak hoops. The spirals enclose mutilated painted doll parts; the fluorescent green paint on the doll in "Her Husband" has a very evocative and eerie glow. The sense of a living presence in these two works is highlighted, ironically, by the addition of plastic leaves.

Saccio's transformative metaphor is a concern with the processes of life and death, death and rebirth. In his materials, he breathes new life into found objects by situating them within new contexts. But the metaphor is also, and more importantly, expressed through his compositions. In the large "Memorial: From the Fire," rigid trunks of Arbor Vitae and cedar wood, carved and painted, thrust upward from a blackened base of metal mesh covered with tar and a pile of dirty yet sparkling coal. The trunks are pierced with metal spikes. A sense of desolation is present. But, in keeping with his metaphor, four of the posts offer the possibility of new life. Scarlet buds of painted fiberglass and resin sprout from or near the top, the notes of life charred yet irresistible.

Beyond their emotional power—which includes a refreshing reservoir of humor as well as chords of grief—Saccio's sculptures are remarkable for their fine compositional balance. That balance is evident in the small wall sculpture "Burst." It is dominated by coils of oak hoops painted in purple and magenta and roughly coated with beeswax. Like a giant Slinky, they surround globs of hardened foam painted fluorescent yellow and orange. Green cane shoots protrude from the foam and through the spaces between the hoops, each long, arching tendril ending in a dayglo pink plug. The three-dimensional balance is complemented by the eye-popping balance of colors. Similarly, the delightful "Flowers for Duchamp" creates its gestalt through the combination of a sinuous carved driftwood branch with accordion cardboard files, among its several disparate elements.

For Keith Johnson, transformation occurs both within his gridwork of photographic images and over the course of a series of photos. Johnson has created the grids either by shooting the same scene repeatedly or by showcasing similar images arranged either randomly, chronologically or on the basis of an overall compositional balance.

"Old Growth Sprawl Forest" is a 4-image-by-4-image grid in which each image depicts one forlorn leafless tree stranded on the median of an upstate New York commercial strip. Taken individually, these images might make a statement about the caging of nature in our contemporary consumer dystopia. Displayed as a unit, each tree can be seen as an individual, almost a series of strangers in a strange land. That they are connected to each other—if alienated from nature, their nature—is symbolized by the sagging horizontal lines of utility wires that glide from image to image. (This theme is further teased in many of the images by the background presence of utility poles, domesticated simulations of trees further distanced from their wild origins.)

As Johnson explains it, these images are about typologies, in some cases, or about time. "EW Falls" is a nine-image grid shot of the Eli Whitney Falls over a five minute period. It documents changes in the light on the rushing water within that short span of time. But it isn't necessary to know what the photographs document to appreciate the work on the level of aesthetics. Each individual shot, and all taken together, look like a well-balanced abstract charcoal drawing.

The centerpiece of Johnson's portion of the show is "Suite Niagara," a series of 10 3x3 nine-image grids all shot of Niagara Falls. It starts, at left, with images of the falls, the Maid of the Mist cruising in the background. This grid is the most overtly documentary of the suite. One of the benefits of viewing the images in a grid such as this is that we are challenged to look closer. In searching out the differences between individual shots the viewer takes more notice of the details: the way the water looks in each shot, the variations in the billowing of the mist. Over the course of the suite, the images trend more toward abstraction as Johnson's subject becomes less the falls per se and more the qualities of light on the water and the spray in the air. In the suite, transformation occurs within the sequence of each grid. But the suite also documents a transformation in Johnson's way of looking at and photographing the falls.

There will be two artist talks in conjunction with this show. On Sun., Feb. 8, at 2 p.m., Joe Saccio will discuss his sculpture. And, rescheduled from Jan. 28, Keith Johnson will present a large screen PowerPoint presentation "10 Years in Search of Nirvana with St. Lucy" on Wed., Feb. 11 at 7 p.m.

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Thursday, January 29, 2009

"Transformative" opening at Kehler Liddell on Sunday afternoon

Kehler Liddell Gallery
873 Whalley Ave., New Haven, (203) 389-9555
Keith Johnson & Joseph Saccio: Transformative
Through Mar. 1, 2009
Opening Reception: Sun., Feb. 1, 3—6 p.m.

Press release

Keith Johnson is showing new photographic work that continues his exploration of repeated or extended imagery. Much as a poet explores the topography of word and repeating text, or a filmmaker splices film into montage, Johnson moves beyond a single photographic image to a reconsidered or transformed topology in multiple images.

"Sometimes extended viewing of a photographic idea would reveal not only the idea, but additionally, time, light, color, and comparison changes during the extended time." By printing multiple images on a single piece of paper, working with grids, and linear presentation, Johnson offers the viewer a "bunch of picture ideas," beautiful, sharp, somewhat abstract pictures in both black & white and brilliant color. He creates an opportunity to be involved with his process, to follow and share his compelled exploration of typology, topology and the photographic ability to record.

Joseph Saccio's works range in size from large installations inside and out, to small pedestal pieces. His material is often natural, organic, frequently wood or found objects joined in what he calls a "primitivistic manner that expresses personal feelings associated with myth and ritual, loss and rebirth." He also offers sculpture constructed from synthetic materials with an apparent ironic humor that both contrasts and informs more solemn work. This show presents two memorial sculptures that have been out doors for 20+ years, and returned to the studio for restoration and decisive rework. They are shown as newly altered work with original and renovation dates, and accompanied by completely new sculpture that continues to explore the mysteries of transformation.

Keith Johnson's and Joe Saccio's art works have a notable relationship. There is a visible concern with natural materials, surfaces, and the compelling study and placement of objects in space. Both artists' work with ideas, producing striking visual images and objects which seem abstract or metaphoric, and then lead us into the transformative process.

Opening Reception: Feb. 1, Sun., 3—6 p.m.: Public is invited to join the artists and community in celebration. No admission fee for gallery or reception.

There will be two artist talks in conjunction with this show. On Sun., Feb. 8, at 2 p.m., Joe Saccio will discuss his sculpture. And, rescheduled from Jan. 28, Keith Johnson will present a large Screen PowerPoint presentation "10 Years in Search of Nirvana with St. Lucy" on Wed., Feb. 11 at 7 p.m.

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Monday, December 03, 2007

Limitations schlimitations

John Slade Ely House Center for Contemporary Art
51 Trumbull Street, New Haven, (203) 624-8055
Black + White and Red Upstairs
Through Dec. 9, 2007

According to John Slade Ely House curator Paul Clabby, he was "thinking about how black and white represents clarity. Red is a very subjective symbolic color—the opposite of clarity, relatively."

Clabby noted that in a book by Oliver Sacks, one of Sacks' patients loses the ability to see color after bumping his head in a car accident. All he could see after the accident was black, white and shades of gray. But, Clabby told me, Sacks wrote that his patient soon began to see more detail, see further and see patterns he hadn't seen before.

"I was thinking how in some way those patients have what we would look at as limitations but their world is complete for them," said Clabby. "It's the same with artwork that is black and white, or red. It can be complete, not lacking in anything. The irony is that I had a hard time finding red works that were good. Black and white took care of itself." For anyone has been visiting a number of shows around town this past year, or Open Studios, there are a number of pieces in this show that will be familiar.

The exhibition title, Black + White and Red Upstairs, is a play on an old riddle as well as a straightforward description of the curatorial arrangement. On the first floor are all works executed in the range of black/white/gray monochromaticism. Works in which red is a prominent-although not only-color occupy the hallway and rooms of the second floor.

These limitations seem like no limitations at all, at least as far as the presentation of a range of media is concerned. Jemma Williams and Meg Hunt used soft sculpture to create "Big Mama," a fanciful octopus. Williams did the sewing and Hunt illustrated the work. It is quilted and decorated with acrylic painted illustrations of fanciful sea creatures on the dark bands of its tentacles. Among the black and white works is Alexis Brown's "Murder of Crow Series, I-IV," a set of woodblock prints. Brown, who I profiled during City-Wide Open Studios in 2006, has a gift for imbuing her imagery of animals with active grace.

Deirdre Schiffer
also offers prints, in her case a series of primarily monochromatic monotypes of the CAW [Create Arts Workshop] Typesetting Room and of an interior with a window. Schiffer captures the sense of the natural light coloring the room in each case. The two figures in "By the Window" prints 1 and 2 are all shadow. In "CAW Typesetting Room 1 & 2", the light coming through the window is a white so intense that it overwhelms the posts.

Fethi Meghlelli
's "A Veil of Tears" is as powerful, if not more so, than it was in his Erector Square studio. The mélange of faces, rendered in charcoal and acrylic, meld together on three large sheets of white paper. They suggest not so much individuals as huddled humanity. Long lengths of black string hang in front of the drawings, the tears through which we view a constant image flow of suffering.

A rather unromanticized, if amusingly macabre, take on childhood is on display in Daniel Long's black and white photos. In "The Very Naughty Chair," a little boy in shorts sits facing the wall on hard wooden chair. He's situated in a bare concrete room and is bent forward, his head touching the wall. A boy dressed in jeans is seen entering a bathroom carrying a gun that shoots ping-pong balls in "Shock and Awe." A naked woman sits on the edge of the bathtub, her back to the opening door. Although her face is outside the frame, it appears she is just turning around while the barrel of the gun starts to poke out past the edge of the door. In Long's images, the traumas and threats of adulthood find their analogue in childhood play.

Trauma is psychological, personal and internalized in Julie Fraenkel's imagery of girls and women, drawn with charcoal and colored pencil on Masonite. While some of her subjects are smiling or laughing, others stare with the blank expression of the emotionally numb. There is throughout a sense of scarring. Scars are etched as scratches into the surface of the boards and apparent in scrawls across the faces and bodies.

Andrea Miller's fabric collages were inspired by the painted cement walls of an I-91 highway overpass near her studio, specifically the rectangles of beige, gray and white that appear as highway workers paint over graffiti. Geometric pieces of cotton rags and other fibers are stitched on a linen background. The lighter tones are set off by smaller, strategically placed dark areas (deep blue, maroon). The visual interest is heightened by the subtle tonal play within each of the elements.

Along the upstairs hallway are a series of prints, monotypes with collage, by Maura Galante. In "ByPass," the background field of swimming hot red, orange and magenta bypass the area where lithographic line images of hearts—the organ, not the Valentines Day symbol—are printed in blue. In "Untitled I-IV" and "Untitled Red," Galante collaged the monotypes with textured papers, some with Asian writing. As with Miller's fabric collages, there is an effective balance between the roughly geometric shapes of the collaged elements and the unconstrained play of color shades within the elements.

The installation "Red Square" is, according to her artist statement, Suzan Shutan's "first attempt at integrating drawing, painting and sculpture with a moving image on video." It incorporates video projection with a three-dimensional frame composed of red string, red tape and red paint. The video projection with accompanying declamatory soundtrack ("Seeing red! Red hot! Red alert! Red hot society! Fire engine red!") is a succession of images, most of which feature red prominently. Puckered lips. A red change purse. Salt and pepper shakers with red tops. A stop sign. A catsup bottle. The string and tape mark the boundaries of an imaginary skewed geometric enclosure, related to but not a square. The paint on the wall flares off to the right, a red shadow (sounds like a superhero's name) but one not quite in perspective.

Joseph Saccio
's "Quiver for St. Sebastian" was one of the works he showed at Kehler Liddell Gallery in October. Dozens of wood rods tipped with pointing seashells at either end burst through a torso of wood. The arrows, alluding to the story of the saint, are stained red. The big, hollowed-out log is smeared with beeswax in several spots, giving it the feel of sundered flesh.

Although red doesn't predominate in terms of surface area covered in Nancy Eisenfeld's two works, "Smolder" (written about before on CT Art Scene) and "Torch," its presence is essential to the sculptural compositions. Both works were created from found pieces of wood, both processed and wild. Much of the woods has been singed and then painted in colors—red, gold, yellow, orange, cool flame blue—to suggest still simmering fire.

In the works of Saccio, Eisenfeld, Galante, red is felt as an emotional charge, freighted with a certain measure of symbolic resonance. It's blood, heat. Shutan's installation, of course, plays the spectrum of red's associations. Kevin Van Aelst's two large Lightjet print photographs also feature red prominently but without any noticeable symbolic resonance as "red." Van Aelst's stock in trade is "conceptual photography." He reconfigures everyday objects in new ways, often with a strong dollop of humor. His conceptual fingerprints are all over these two photographs. In "Right Middle Finger," Van Aelst created a massive fingerprint on a mottled maroon diner countertop using saccharin as his medium. The fingerprint is surrounded by a mug of coffee with the dregs left, salt, pepper and sugar dispensers and a crumb-flecked saucer with a credit card receipt. This fingerprint is a reverse image, the lines reading maroon in a spill of white saccharin. The reverse is the case for "Left Index Finger." The print is formed out of red yarn and seems to hover over the beige carpet on which it rests. With knitting needles lying nearby, this could perhaps be a bloody fingerprint, the telling clue in a murder mystery as filtered through Ladies Home Companion.

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Monday, October 15, 2007

Erector Square: Joseph Saccio

City-Wide Open Studios
50 Orange St., New Haven, (203) 772-2709
Erector Square: Joseph Saccio
Oct. 13, 2007.

Sculptor Joseph Saccio's Erector Square studio is so chockfull of materials for potential pieces that it's a wonder he has space left to work. There are tangled tree branches, trunks, scraps of logs and lumber, plastic blinds all rolled up, doll parts. Maquettes for larger sculptures. Finished and unfinished works dating back to his first pieces in the late 1960s. (I knelt down to look at one of his earliest works—an untitled landscape with sun crafted out of welded scrap metal filled with plaster and framed by a steel rectangle, an influence of David Smith. When I got up, I banged my head on another piece, "Splitting", recently shown at the ALL Gallery. I consider the small cut on my scalp a site-specific collaboration with a Saccio sculpture.)

Saccio currently has work in a two-person show at Kehler Liddell Gallery. Now retired after a career as a child psychiatrist at Yale, he told me he's always been an artist. He was art editor of his high school newspaper and did a lot of drawing and illustrating. But he didn't step into the aesthetic third dimension until he took a class with sculptor Ann Lehman in the late 1960's and learned welding. Thereafter he also learned how to carve wood and stone.

He spent three or four summers in Italy learning to carve marble, losing his high frequency hearing to the relentless din of the air hammer. A couple of unfinished marble works are stored in the studio. Saccio pulled out the models for them and explained how he uses reference points and triangulation to translate ideas from the models to the larger works.

I asked him what his particular attraction was to wood as a sculptural material.

"It's easier to work with than stone. You can make mistakes and correct them or go with them. If you make a mistake with stone, it's the end of the piece," he said. "That it was a living thing and had a life of its own appeals to me. That's a big thing for me in the work that I do."

Saccio lost his son Milos in 1979, when Milos was 12 1/2 years old.

"That had a profound impact. I made all sorts of memorials for him," said Saccio. He had a weeping beech tree planted at Foote School, which is thriving to this day.

Referring to the work that I banged my head on, I asked him about his penchant for extruding different forms from a base form. It's symbolic, said Saccio, of the issue of death and subsequent reemergence and resurgence, a theme prompted by his grief over Milos' death.

"A form that's been broken, killed, split but something new emerges from the base," he explained. In the case of "Splitting," rattan rods sprout from a split hardwood railroad tie.

A good bit of studio space is taken up by a work in progress. "Tempieto" is inspired by a one-room temple created by Renaissance architect Filippo Brunelleschi, which Saccio noted is "always cited as a perfect example of that kind of classic structure."

The tall circular structure is supported by columns made of old hollow wood porch columns Saccio found on the street. The weathered paint is flaking off the surface and their vertical edges are torn. Saccio split them lengthwise and is "playing with the idea of a single column exploding into a larger column." Between the wood columns and forming a dome is screening over a heavier metal mesh support.

"I'll probably paint this and give it a surface so it looks green and plants will take over," he said.

I wondered if it was being built for a particular commission.

"No, I just wanted to make a temple," Saccio said. He has turned down requests in the past to work on a commission because he wanted to be unconstrained in expressing his own personal feelings. But he added that now that he devotes full time to sculpture, he might consider a commission "if the subject matter appealed to me."

His Erector Square studio has been his artistic workspace for 17 years.

"I love it. For me, the studio is a work in progress. I collect everything I see that's interesting," Saccio enthused. "It becomes my own personal environment."

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Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Saccio and Johnson reveal their artistic natures

Kehler Liddell Gallery
873 Whalley Ave., New Haven, (203) 389-9555
Keith Johnson and Joseph Saccio
Oct. 3—28, 2007
Artists talk: Thurs., Oct. 25, 7 p.m.

There is a fine show over at the Kehler Liddell Gallery in New Haven's Westville neighborhood. I stopped in at the opening on Sunday, checked out Keith Johnson's photographs and Joseph Saccio's stunning sculptures.

Saccio uses disparate materials to create complex idiosyncratic forms. The materials include found object scraps, packing materials, ping pong balls and more. Saccio likes to contrast the natural and synthetic. He seems particularly attracted to wood in both its various processed forms and in its natural state. A couple of the sculptures here explore that dichotomy directly. "Once a Tree I" and "Once a Tree II" each stand on a base carved from a tree trunk. The "trunk" of each sculpture, though, is made up of cardboard discs. The trunks terminate in "foliage" of crumpled paper out of which sprout branches of carved wood. Natural wood extends into processed wood (cardboard and paper) back into natural wood. But even the "natural" wood in these works has been partially processed—carved and painted or stained.

One of the perks of exploring a show at an opening is the opportunity to talk with the artists. I spoke with Saccio about several of his pieces. He told me that, in choosing his materials, he "looks for textures with a kind of regularity, a repetition" that resembles the "kind of growth phenomenon you see biologically."

As an example, he directed my attention to "In the Dark Forest Primeval One Discovers the Ambivalent Ping Pong Tree." The painted packing material at top reminded me of coral. It was studded in several places with ping pong balls, their fragile off-white surfaces resembling carefully placed eggs.

Saccio told me that his pieces tend to develop "organically," without any preconceived endpoint. I was asking in particular about "Wake For a Dead Forest." It had its beginning in Saccio's acquiring pieces of packing boxes from another Erector Square studio tenant. The strips of cardboard adhered to wood slats sparked his interest. Wanting to create a work that "reflected the state of the original substance, a tree in a forest," he used actual twigs to put "roots" on them. The piece then sat for many months until Saccio decided to use ragged pieces of wood veneer "to put wings on it, so it could fly." Saccio then added layers of collaged imagery. Skulls, possibly photos from the Khmer Rouge genocide in Cambodia, evoked the death of the forest. Images of dancers on a black background also had macabre associations for Saccio, reminiscent of an Irish wake. Collaged images of "awesome landscapes"—canyons, lightning strikes—add portentous power. The addition between the wood and cardboard slats of lengths of Plexiglas cut into gently rolling shapes gives the appearance of clouds when viewed from the side. At the top, crumpled paper coated with resin represents the forest canopy.

Saccio doesn't miss the trees for the forest, though. "Do You Remember That White Tree?" is composed of two long branches of a white birch from Saccio's yard. They are mounted on a base in such a way as to arc toward the ceiling, one of the branches curving in toward the other. There are a series of shiny metal strips joining the branches together. As it rises toward the ceiling, curving in upon itself, it looks like a stairway to the heavens.

While some of Saccio's works are somber (and playful at the same time), others are more lighthearted in aspect. This is the case for "The Great Showgirl Returns, Bejeweled, Outrageous, but Sad." Protruding from the wall like a giant enhanced burlesque breast, it has layers of foil tubing, pink plastic, green plastic and glittery stars. It is fascinating and absurd.

In comparison to Saccio's unique aesthetic, Keith Johnson's photographs seem far more traditional. But there are points of complementarity. Some of his landscapes are of unadulterated natural scenes. But most document the intersection of the natural world and the manmade, usually to the detriment of nature.

There is an interesting contrast between the side-by-side triptychs of "Cape Cod Tri" and "Stone Crop." The former includes three separate shots of wooded scenes: twisted trunks of scrub pine, floor of pine needles, dappled sunlight and tall coarse grasses. "Stone Crop" also portrays three nature scenes. But where "Cape Cod Tri" offers a natural image of contemplative freedom, "Stone Crop" is different. First, and most noticeably, taut horizontal wires in the foreground fence nature in and the viewer out in each panel. There are also natural elements that play into that sense of confinement: the tangle of forbidding brambles in the image on the left, the profusion of clutching vines that cover the brush in the center and overrun a large rock on the right.

Johnson shows an appreciation of form and texture that complements that of Saccio. The image field in "Red Rock" is filled with light blond gravel. But the crushed stone on the right is finer than the rocks on the left.

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Thursday, September 06, 2007

ALL Gallery reception Saturday

ALL Arts & Literature Laboratory
Erector Square, 319 Peck St. Building 2, New Haven, (203) 671-5175
Transformations
Aug. 17—Sept. 23, 2007
Artists' Reception: Sat., Sept. 8, 5—7 PM

Press release

Arts + Literature Laboratory (ALL) is proud to present a juried exhibition of recent sculptural work by ten artists from Connecticut and across the nation: Amelia de Neergaard (West Cornwall, CT); Peter Dellert (Holyoke, MA); Rachel Green (Savannah, GA); Jim Jacobs (Ogden, UT); Jason Lanka (Williamsburg, VA); Joseph Saccio (North Haven, CT); Paul Sakren (New Preston, CT); Mari Skarp (Harwinton, CT); Stephanie Victa, (West Palm Beach, FL); and Fay Wood (Saugerties, NY).

Transformations features non-site specific works that explore an innovative bricolage of natural and/or discarded materials as an expression of environmental remediation and the spiritual materiality of the sculptural form. Highlights of the exhibition include:

• "Twig Field" by Amelia de Neergaard evokes a sense of structure and randomness. The artist is drawn to the linear peculiarities of twigs and branches and their similarities to calligraphic markings. By connecting them with man-made elements and form, she seeks to emphasize their naturalness and individuality.

• Peter Dellert's sculptures "Accretion" and "Gleaning" are based on biomorphic forms inspired by seeds, shells, pods, and his imagination. These forms are reduced to a minimal essence while still allowing for multiple interpretations.

• "Shell Game" by Rachel Green is constructed from used shotgun shell casings. Her sculptures examine and question our collective values by transforming postconsumer items.

• "Plumb" by Jason Lanka focuses on his memory of his place within the disappearing residue of an agrarian culture tied so closely to the land on which it depended for its survival. The land has a mythic history within the contemporary experience of what the West should be and what it truly is.

• "Cocoon" by Jim Jacobs is an intersection of processed and non-processed natural materials. The limbs gradually penetrating and disrupting the structured maple are entwined with the processed material overtaking and strangling the mulberry limbs.

• Paul Sakren's "Tine Anns An Bolg" references one of the early tribes of Ireland, known as the Bag People (Fir-Bolg), who carried everything in bags. They were also a people who reverenced the sun and moon, and had fire feasts at strategic times of the year. "Tine Anns An Bolg" means 'fire in the bag', or 'fire in the belly,' and it refers to that skin bag carrying a glowing ember to keep the eternal fire alive.

• "Wire" by Mari Skarp (see image) is a commentary on the disappearance and destruction of farmlands in the United States, and the farm animals, who no longer have the ability to live naturally. All of the materials used in her work were found at abandoned farms.

• Stephanie Victa's "Spiral of Horns" was inspired by the natural growth patterns of horns. Horns of bovids are important social organs; their growth is often indicative of population characteristics and habitat quality. She has stripped away the physical being and left only the fundamental characteristics as a trophy.

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