Dedicated to covering the visual arts community in Connecticut.

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 Commentary was implicit and the art historical reference traced its lineage back to 18th and 19th Century painters who depicted ruins of ancient Greek and Roman antiquity.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.

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Monday, May 14, 2012

Group show opens Saturday at Institute Library in New Haven

The Institute Library
847 Chapel St., New Haven, (203) 562-5045
Family Haunts
May 19—June 16, 2012.
Opening Reception: Sat., May 19, Noon—2 p.m.

Press release

Curated by Joy Pepe, Family Haunts considers the beckoning of ancestry and perceptions of present day relations through the paintings, prints, photographs, drawings and assemblages of artists. The veils of memory, the desire to commemorate, and the need for identity compel these works of art into being. These nine artists siphon the particulars of familial connection into a visual scrapbook of our collective history.

The participating artists are: Silas Finch (Web), Stephen Grossman (Web), Mary Lesser (Web), Nathan Lewis (Web), Irene K. Miller (Web), Meredith Miller (Web), Kevin van Aelst (Web) and Thuan Vu (Web).

There will be an opening reception on Sat., May 19, from noon—2 p.m.

(Image is Stephen Grossman's "Marilyn Bridesmaid.")

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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Saturday opening at Windsor Art Center: Nathan Lewis & Lea Ann Cogswell

Windsor Art Center
40 Mechanic St., Windsor, (860) 688-2528
Nathan Lewis & Lea Ann Cogswell
Sept. 25—Nov. 6, 2010.
Opening reception: Sat., Sept. 25, 5—7 p.m.
Artist Talk: Sat., Oct. 9, 1:30 p.m.

Press release

An exhibition of work by Nathan Lewis and Lea Ann Cogswell will open on Sat., Sept. 25 with a reception from 5—7 PM. There will be a preview for members only starting at 4:30.

Nathan Lewis is a California born painter and installation artist. He received his MFA from Tufts University and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. He also studied at the Florence Academy of Art in Italy and in St. Petersburg, Russia. His work has been exhibited both nationally and internationally in museums, galleries, and universities. His work is in private collections in New York, CT, MA, CA, Russia, and India. Lewis' paintings have been on the cover of numerous books and journals and his work was included in films shown at the Cannes and Sundance Film festivals. His work has been published and reviewed by the Boston Globe, the New York Press, International Artist, The New Haven Register, The New Haven Advocate, Big Red and Shiny, and the New York Times. He is currently a tenure track Assistant Professor of Art at Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, CT.

Lea Ann Cogswell holds a BFA University of Texas, Austin in Sculpture and Drawing. She has taught privately at FVAC and as Artist in Residence, NBAL. She has received national awards for sculpture and drawing. Her work is in the permanent collection of the New Britain Museum of American Art. Lea Ann is on the board of directors of the CT Society of sculptors and teaches at the West Hartford Art League.

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Thursday, May 20, 2010

"8 Eyes" at Jennifer Jane Gallery reviewed in Advocate

My review of the show 8 Eyes runs in this week's New Haven Advocate. A glimpse of that review:

Painter Steven DiGiovanni has long used photographs to stimulate his visual imagination. As curator of 8 Eyes at the Jennifer Jane Gallery, DiGiovanni has asked four fellow representational painters — Mia Brownell, Nathan Lewis, Christopher Mir and Lawrence Morelli — to exhibit their own photographic creations as well as one painting.

Photography is not a primary practice for any of the four. Only Nathan Lewis has a background in photography. In each case, though, their use of photography is either intrinsic to or representative of their painting approach.

Read more here...

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Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Thursday evening opening at Jennifer Jane Gallery

Jennifer Jane Gallery
838 Whalley Ave., New Haven, (203) 494-9905
8 Eyes: Photographs by Four Extraordinary Painters
Apr. 22—May 22, 2010.
Opening reception: Thurs., Apr. 22, 5—8 p.m.
Press release

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Thursday, May 28, 2009

Two-painter show opening Saturday night at the Hygienic

Hygienic Art
83 Bank St., P.O. Box 417, New London, (860) 443-8001
Will Holub + Nathan Lewis
May 30—June 27, 2009
Opening reception: Sat., May 30, 7—10 p.m.

Press release

Both gravity and wit are at play in the storytelling paintings of Nathan Lewis coupled with a beautiful selection of "pairings" by visual artist Will Holub. There will be an opening for this two-person show this Saturday from 7-10 p.m.

Visual Artist Will Holub's exhibition at the Hygienic Galleries pairs his figurative oil paintings with textural abstractions made while living in New York City (1975 to 1991) and Santa Fe (1992 to 2006). These pairings invite the viewer to go beyond the assumed differences between varied approaches to art making to discover shared and unifying characteristics, a process that in itself mirrors Holub's on-going artistic explorations.

The paintings of Nathan Lewis weave historical reference, pop culture, religion, and politics into complex narratives that speak to the present. Both gravity and wit are at play in this storytelling. Text and image are employed in the work which ranges from intense naturalism to painting inspired by collage and vintage poster design. These works beg for interpretation. Lewis is an alum from Lyme Academy and School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Currently he is an Assistant Professor of Art at Sacred Heart University.

Starting in early childhood, Will Holub began sketching and painting the people and things around him. After many years of private art instruction, the study of Old Master painting techniques in college and post-graduate coursework in Illustration at the School of Visual Arts, he moved to New York City in 1975. Holub lived and painted there for 17 years, varying his approaches to art-making to include abstract and non-objective work and eventually becoming an active participant in the East Village art scene of the 1980s. Once established in Santa Fe, NM, where he relocated in the 1990s, his paintings were frequently exhibited in its galleries, museums and colleges.

In 2008, Holub returned to New England and settled in southeastern Connecticut. He is a member of the Hygienic Art Galleries and the Cambridge Art Association, where he most recently received a Best In Show Award from Jen Mergel, Curator of the Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston.

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Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Nathan Lewis opening at UNH thursday night

University of New Haven Seton Gallery
300 Boston Post Rd., West Haven, (203) 481-4270
Where Heaven Made Fun: A Selection of Works by Nathan Lewis
Sept. 4—26, 2008
Opening reception: Thurs., Sept. 4, 4:30—7 p.m.

Press release

A reception will mark the opening of Where Heaven Made Fun, a thought-provoking exhibition featuring the work of Nathan Lewis. This is Lewis's first solo exhibition since his New York show in Feb., 2008. Four new works have been completed for this show, including a monumental installation, which incorporates a 16-foot boat. The installation is a response to his epic painting "Till We Find the Blessed Isles Where Our Friends Are Dwelling," a contemporary remix of Leutze's "Washington Crossing the Delaware." The work depicts the American flag flying upside down, forcefully speaking to the problematic role of the U.S. in the Middle East and to a sense of hope for the lives of the Americans depicted. (I wrote back in February about "Till We Find the Blessed Isles" and some of Lewis' other paintings in a review of the show Uneasy Prospects at the John Slade Ely House.) Other themes present in Lewis's work are the manipulation of religion in war, the changing cultural roles of the African-American and the Arab, man's relationship with nature, and the human quest for transcendence. The reception and exhibition are free and open to the public.

Nathan Lewis is a New Haven-based painter and installation artist interested in the epic and monumental. He has lived and studied in Russia, Italy, and on both coasts of the United States. He received his MFA from Tufts University and the School of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. He has exhibited at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in Ridgefield, the Mills Gallery in Boston, and Jack the Pelican Presents in New York. His work has been reviewed in the Boston Globe, the New York Press, and The New York Times. He is currently an assistant professor of art at Sacred Heart University.

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