Dedicated to covering the visual arts community in Connecticut.

Wednesday, December 04, 2013

Nancy Eisenfeld finds artistic harmony with nature

Paul Mellon Arts Center
333 Christian St., Wallingford, (203) 697-2000
Nancy Eisenfeld: Dynamic Cycles—Freeze to Thaw
Through Dec. 15, 2012.

For years, Nancy Eisenfeld—in her drawings and paintings—has created whirlwinds of color and line evocative of natural forms. These works were mostly abstract, if referential. Several years ago, Eisenfeld began taking a sculptural approach to her compositions, engaging in a kind of found object collage.

In her show Dynamic Cycles at the Paul Mellon Arts Center at Choate Rosemary Hall, Eisenfeld exhibits both types of her work. The show is divided into two sections: a sculptural display in the Gallery and a painting/drawing exhibition on the curved wall of the theater.

It's not unusual for an artist to employ the texture of paper or canvas to aesthetic effect. What is clear in contemplating Eisenfeld's sculptural works, such as "Under Cover" and "Under the Skin," is that the natural found objects (and manufactured, in some cases) are for her another form of canvas or paper with which to realize her visions.

Nancy Eisenfeld: "Under Cover" detail

Eisenfeld lets her surfaces and objects sing. But she finds ways—through juxtaposition, arrangement, judicious and bold applications of paint—to harmonize with them. She valorizes the materiality of concrete, bark or rusted steel much as any other artist would the viscous pigment of oil paint or the tooth of a fine paper.

Blizzard Nemo and its aftermath inspired the drawings and paintings. One of the things that strikes me about them is the dense layering of texture, ink and paint. Eisenfeld sets the tone with the first of these, "It's on the way," utilizing whites, blacks, grays and blues to represent the color palette of a "major winter weather event." It's a tour de force, a swirling maelstrom of pooling pigments and coagulating textures, realizing—in its silence—the howl of the wind, the biting chill and a storm's blinding fury.

There is a narrative to this succession of drawings but each also stands on its own as an evocative abstraction. Individually, they sing. Collectively, they harmonize.

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Opening reception Saturday for Eisenfeld show at City Gallery

City Gallery
994 State St., New Haven, (203) 782-2489
Nancy Eisenfeld: Free Associations
Jan. 31—Feb. 24, 2013.
Opening Reception: Sat., Feb. 2, 3—6 p.m.
Artist's Talk: Sun. Feb. 17, at 2 p.m.

Press release from City Gallery

Nancy Eisenfeld: "Orange Twist"
There will be an Opening Reception this Saturday at City Gallery in New Haven from 3—6 p.m. for the Nancy Eisenfeld show Free Associations. The exhibit will be on view through Feb. 24.

City Gallery in New Haven presents Free Associations, an exhibition of new work by Nancy Eisenfeld during the month of February. This show features sculpture and wall work. Many pieces combine parts that are usually not associated with one another. The materials are tree limbs, wood, metal fences and found objects. The images are open to the viewer’s imagination.

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Wednesday, November 14, 2012

"About Paper" opens Saturday at Institute Library

The Institute Library
847 Chapel St., New Haven, (203) 562-5045
About Paper: 8 Sculptural Forms
Nov. 17—Dec. 15, 2012.
Reception: Sat., Nov. 17, Noon—2 p.m.

Press release from Institute Library

A new show opens this Saturday at Institute Library in New Haven. About Paper was curated by Howard el-Yasin. Exhibiting artists are Meg Bloom, Giada Crispels, Ryan Cyr, Jennifer Davies, Nancy Eisenfeld, Howard el-Yasin, Susan McCaslin and Noel Sardalla.

There will be an opening reception on Sat., Nov. 17, from noon—4 p.m.

Meredith Miller: detail from "Untitled"

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Wednesday, March 23, 2011

"A Twist" and shout

City Gallery
994 State St., New Haven, (203) 782-2489
Nancy Eisenfeld: A Twist
Mar. 3—27, 2011.

Nancy Eisenfeld's works are deeply connected to nature. This connection to nature and the environment expressed both through her imagery and—in the case of her sculptural and assemblage works—juxtapositions and through the materials she employs. Those materials include the traditional ones of paper, ink and paint as well as found objects both natural and manufactured. A Twist, Eisenfeld's solo exhibit at City Gallery, showcases drawings, sculptural works and pieces that incorporate both two- and three-dimensional elements.

An obvious example is "Bark Bitter & Sweet." As with many of her recent sculptural works, Eisenfeld has stories to tell about how the materials came her way. In this case, the jagged shards of glass are from a broken mirror from her studio; the tall pieces of ragged bark were stripped off a tree struck by lightning.

"I think the materials, if they're not given to me as a present, come to me out of need," Eisenfeld tells me as I survey the show.

With "Bark Bitter & Sweet," Eisenfeld juxtaposes wide collaged strips of bark standing some 8—9 feet high with a plexiglas panel etched on the back and rubbed with black paint. The effect is that of a drawing on Plexiglas with swirls of smoky gray and snaking lines of force. Pieces of the mirror are adhered in two vertical veins the length of the open bark. Smaller shards of the mirror glass are attached to the Plexiglas in such a way as to suggest the idea of a spray of debris.

Works like these are open to multiple interpretations. On the most immediate level, it suggests the violent rending of the tree at the moment of the lightning's impact. But it could also allude to broader environmental questions or even to emotional states, depending on what the viewer brings to the experience. The fact that the shattered glass is from a mirror rather than a transparent pane adds to the symbolic resonance: The viewer sees oneself in the vortex of natural, manufactured and hand-worked elements.

Even when referencing such ugly realities as industrial pollution or oil spills, there is great beauty in these works. A solitary smokestack in "Air Particles"—a drawing in white on black paper—is the source for a richly detailed miasma of dots, lines and vapor.

With "Oil Spill," composed with black ink on a tall sheet of mylar, Eisenfeld couples control with chance to evoke the thin line between normality and catastrophe. Black coagulating clouds of ink billow upwards from a thin squat ink blotch three-quarters of the way down from the top. That same ink blotch is repeated eight inches below, a serendipitous rolling of the just-inked mylar back onto itself, according to Eisenfeld. The vagaries of chance play a large part in her work. The unintentional repetition of that shape adds a temporal dimension to "Oil Spill," as though what we are seeing is two consecutive moments in time. One moment everything is fine, all systems (seemingly) under control. In the next moment, the hounds of industrial hell are unleashed.

Contained within this work—actually within most of Eisenfeld's works—is the formal and metaphorical duality of control and chaos.

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Monday, February 28, 2011

Eisenfeld drawing and sculpture show reception this Saturday at City gallery

City Gallery
994 State St., New Haven, (203) 782-2489
Nancy Eisenfeld: A Twist
Mar. 3—27, 2011.
Opening reception, Sat., Mar. 5, 3—6 p.m.

Press release

City Gallery in New Haven presents A Twist, a show of drawing, painting, and sculpture by Nancy Eisenfeld during the month of March. In this selection of recent work, Eisenfeld explores natural forces and growth cycles and the impact of human intervention on our environment. Her drawing and sculpture express chaos and order, exploding energies and natural beauty. The sculptures are made with found wood and man-made objects. Drawings and paintings are composed of mixed media. These works evolve from visual observation and imagination.


The show will on display Mar. 3—27. An artist's reception will be held at the gallery this Saturday, Mar. 5, from 3—6 p.m.

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Thursday, September 10, 2009

Natural feel for sculpture

City Gallery
994 State St., New Haven, (203) 782-2489
Nancy Eisenfeld: Out on a Limb
Through Oct. 4, 2009.
Opening reception: Sat., Sept. 12, 2—5 p.m.

With Out on a Limb, Nancy Eisenfeld continues and broadens her explorations of the past several years. The show includes several sculptural works composed using found objects from strolls in the woods: sloughed-off bark, branches, discarded construction wood, metal trash. There is a striving for organic integrity to the compositions but one that mirrors nature. Beauty and chaos, order and wildness.

The show features both Eisenfeld's sculptural works and drawings and, in several cases, a combination of the two. One such work is "Blaze." This large wall sculpture clusters panel, curling birch bark, sun-bleached branches, mylar and plastic mesh next to an incendiary abstract drawing. Executed with rubber stamps, charcoal, paint and spray paint, the drawing is a vision of black, almost graffitiesque shapes consumed by orange and bathed in gray smoke. It is a complex work, dense with layering both of materials and ideas.

The interplay of the fiery colors and the forest scraps intimate destruction and decay. But within and from those processes there is life, too. It is reflected in the vibrancy of Eisenfeld's line and brushwork in the drawing—and she paints, sparingly, into the found materials also—and in the undulating curls of the birch bark.

A sculptural work in one of the front windows, "Embers," has the feel of a monument. Burnt pieces of wood, some scorched to an almost anthracite glisten, are arranged within a circle bounded by a rusty ribbon of metal. It's like a miniature landscape of sheer obsidian stone forms. I felt like I wanted to be shrunk to an inch tall so I could wander through this ancient park like one does through the hoodoos of Bryce Canyon in Utah.

The works that are strictly drawings, such as "Smoldering Woods," "Rolling Stones" and "Erupting Shards," complement the sculptural works. The plethora of different media used—paint, spray paint, ink, charcoal, rubber stamps, line, brush strokes—provide a strong analog to the diversity of materials in the sculptural works.

For most of her career, Eisenfeld has worked in two dimensions. Her step into the third is not only bold but successful, too. There is a convincing solidity and confidence to her constructions that belie the short amount of time she has been engaged with this body of work.

There will be an artist's reception for this show this Saturday, Sept. 12, from 2—5 p.m.

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Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Saturday afternoon artist reception at City Gallery in New Haven

City Gallery
994 State St., New Haven, (203) 782-2489
Nancy Eisenfeld: Out on a Limb
Through Oct. 4, 2009.
Oening reception: Sat., Sept. 12, 2-5 p.m.

Press release

Nancy Eisenfeld explores the forces of nature, growth and decay, and the impact of human destruction on our environment. Her drawings and sculptures express chaos and order, exploding energies and natural beauty. The sculptures are made of found wood and man-made objects. The drawings are composed of inked rubber stamps, pen and pencils. These works develop from her visual observations and imagination.

There will be an opening reception for Out on a Limb on Sat. Sept. 12, from 2-5 p.m.

(I will post a review of the show tomorrow. HH)

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Monday, June 15, 2009

Creative Arts Workshop exhibition showcases talented faculty

Creative Arts Workshop Hilles Gallery
80 Audubon St., New Haven, (203) 562-4927
Faculty Show
Through June 26, 2009

On thing that struck me as I wandered through the second floor of the two-floor Hilles Gallery at Creative Arts Workshop, checking out the Faculty Show, is the seductive energy of the gesture. It isn't that there were gestural drawings. Rather, there were a number of works in which the physical dynamism of the approach—or the appearance thereof—is reflected in a compelling liveliness of expression. This gestural current is present in Kelley Kapp's "Mad Plaid," a two-panel monochromatic acrylic on canvas. There's something about Kapp's doodle-like profusion of brush strokes that invites closer inspection.

A sense of fervent commotion also animates Julie Rogoff's "Through the Trees," an oil painting and abstraction. The pastel hues in "Through the Trees" capture the sense of sunlight coursing through the forest canopy. Her "Chomping at the Edge, CT River" relies on a darker palette but still conveys the feel of gestural motion.

This energy is present in Dorothy Powers' "Round Again," collaged and enlarged photocopies of a drawing of objects that look like balls of string. Nancy Eisenfeld's "Vortex," ink on paper, weds sweeps of pen lines with what appears to be stamps of abstract natural forms. Again, whether Eisenfeld approached the execution of "Vortex" in a gestural manner, the drawing pulses with visual energy.

Some works convey this sense of motion and urgency even though the act of creation was likely meticulous, even painstaking. Connie Pfeiffer's "Opening" is a steel wire wall sculpture in which two vertical, parallel lines anchor a chaotic profusion of horizontal threads. It is like a 3-D drawing in black and white. There is also motion captured in the sculptures of David Millen and Susan Clinard—figures poised in one-legged balance.

The exhibition showcases the breadth of media in which CAW's artist/teachers work. One example is the trio of sculptures by Jeannie Thomma. Thomma's poles are wrapped and decorated with felted wool and mixed media—thread, lace, sequins, ribbon. Thomma uses the characteristics of all materials at her disposal—the colors, textures and surfaces—to create complex, visually engaging works.

Downstairs, I loved the contrast between Steven R. DiGiovanni's "Untitled" acrylic on canvas and Josh Gaetjen's "Story and Play II." Lines and form are important for both painters. But where Gaetjen's urban landscape is concerned with accurately replicating architectural perspective and the play of light and shadows, DiGiovanni bends and warps his geometric shapes. He turns space inside out, painting a funhouse mirror of his imagination. Both large works satisfy in their very different ways (although both painters share a command of their craft.)

A short review like this can't do justice to this show. Suffice to say, Creative Arts Workshop is a treasure trove of talent and a real jewel for New Haven.

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Thursday, October 02, 2008

City Gallery Line-Up to run concurrently with Open Studios

City Gallery
994 State St., New Haven, (203) 782-2489
Line-Up
Oct. 3—26, 2008 (with special extended hours City-Wide Open Studios' weekend)
Closing reception: Sun., Oct. 26, 2008, 2—5 p.m.

Press release

City Gallery is pleased to present Line-Up, a mixed media exhibit, by gallery members.
The exhibit is planned to run concurrently with City Wide Open Studios. The hours will be: Fri., Oct. 3, 12—8 p.m.; Sat., Oct. 4, 12—8 p.m.; Sun., Oct. 5, 12—5 p.m. The Closing Reception is Sun., Oct. 26, 2—5 p.m. Free.

The artists are working in all kinds of media: painting, photography, printmaking, sculpture, and each is responding to ideas about line.

The artists presenting are: Judy Atlas, Orange; Meg Bloom, New Haven; Phyllis Crowley, New Haven; Jennifer Davies, Branford; Nancy Eisenfeld, North Haven; Freddi Elton, Woodbridge; Barbara Harder, New Haven; Jane Harris, Madison; Sheila Kaczmarek, Guilford; Mary Lesser (see image), New Haven; Deborah McDuff, New Haven; Liz Pagano, New Haven; Jefri Ruchti, Guilford.

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Saturday, March 22, 2008

Woods working

City Gallery
994 State St., New Haven, (203) 782-2489
Nancy Eisenfeld: Out of the Woods
Through Mar. 29, 2008.

Over the past couple of years, Nancy Eisenfeld has been showing works in various local shows that blur the boundaries between collage, painting and sculpture. Out of the Woods at City Gallery in New Haven is Eisenfeld's first solo show of this body of work, and it's a great one.

For an artist who has worked predominantly in two dimensions, Eisenfeld's branching out—so to speak—into sculpture is a successful aesthetic turn. While each piece has its own individual identity, there is an energetic coherence to the show. Eisenfeld has been "out in the woods" scavenging wood and bark, vines, branches and metal screening. Elements of play go into her compositions, arranging and rearranging her materials, riffing off the natural forms and their processed and manufactured analogues.

"Wizard" looks like a giant walking stick. Thick, tightly interwoven vines are topped by a pockmarked piece of driftwood. This driftwood head or crown is styled with ultramarine and cobalt blue paint and pastels. Eisenfeld has integrated the vines, which have a strong swirling visual drive upwards, with the driftwood by dabbing the clipped shoots of the vine with blue and scarlet paint. A brown length of twine is also interpolated into the sinuous curves of the vines. Large spikes of painted wood near the top recapitulate the visual element of the blue and red clipped shoots.

Abstract use of color ties together a large sculptural work like "Whirly Wind Up"—wooden cable spools, painted with splotches of green, bronze and copper, form a trunk around which spirals of vine and copper tubing whirl—and "Over Time," which is more of a flat, mixed-media collage. "Over Time" incorporates birch bark, paper, wood and metal in a jittery gridwork.

As with so many of the pieces here, "Over Time" is notable for a complexity that is fastidious without becoming fussy. There is a rewarding density of visual expression—the variation between the natural and human-made surfaces, paint that is applied heavy and dry versus paint with a fluid translucency. The piece is actually composed of two collaged panels set side by side. Thin curls of string sprout from all along the edges, like tendrils of new branches springing forth from a seemingly dormant trunk.

In "Forest Totem," Eisenfeld cobbles together a blend of curved copper-colored mesh that creates a three-dimensional cross-hatching effect, painted paper, curls of weathered birch bark (some of it decorated with tight tufts of browning moss) and old torn lengths of wood trim. She has arranged and painted these materials—or left some in the state as she found them—in such a way as to allow disparate parts to become an aesthetic whole.

Even the four works that are closest in conception to traditional abstract painting—"Wired," "Night Light," "Glow" and "Soot"—have been engaged with in such a way as to be completely at home in this show.

The elements that make "Over Time" successful are characteristic of this work. The natural and the processed are combined to create something that is both obviously the product of a conscious mind but also appears to have taken on a life of its own, both literally as well as figuratively.

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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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Saturday, December 01, 2007

City Gallery Give Art opening tomorrow

City Gallery
994 State St., New Haven, (203) 782-2489
Give Art
Nov. 24—Dec. 23, 2007.
Opening reception, Sun., Dec. 2, 12—4 p.m.

Tis the season, I guess, for abstraction. But that's usually the case at City Gallery in New Haven. For its annual year-ending holiday Give Art show, City Gallery members are showcasing a lot of smaller works. All the works are available for sale at the fixed price of $100 each. The full spectrum of materials and techniques employed by gallery artists is on display. Show participants include new members Deborah McDuff (mask making) and Freddi Elton (photography). This holiday season, City Gallery members are offering the opportunity to give the gift of art at an affordable price.

For the most part, the work is collage-based. Several artists incorporate found or non-traditional materials. (Although what might have been considered a non-traditional material in the past—a delicate twig as used by Meg Bloom, a torn piece of corrugated cardboard employed by Jane Harris, fine mesh screening added by Connie Pfeiffer, a strip of rough tree bark completing a Nancy Eisenfeld composition—is increasingly becoming the new norm.)

Deborah McDuff offers lively collages in which she creates masks out of things like cut-up soda cans, feathers, fabric and beads. There are some beautiful watercolors by Judy Atlas. Almost pastel-like, they radiate deep vibrant color. One, speckled with light blue dots, looks like some beautiful chaos attending the Big Bang or other cosmic event. Another (there was no sheet with titles available when I visited), in which washes and spatters of green range over a background of black, orange and cream, offers a convincing illusion of depth.

Jefri Ruchti's charcoal and/or graphite drawings revel in rich twists of light and shadow, suggesting natural if unidentifiable forms. With Freddi Elton's photographs, there is a sense of time in suspended animation. Her images zoom in close on layers of ice, capturing a vision of cracks, bubbles and needle-like forms.

The opening reception is Sun., Dec. 2, from 12—4 p.m.

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