Dedicated to covering the visual arts community in Connecticut.

Monday, November 04, 2013

Wait for the "Punchline": Opening reception Sat. at Institute Library

The Institute Library
847 Chapel St., New Haven, (203) 562-5045
Punchline
Nov. 9—27, 2013.
Reception: Sat., Nov. 9, Noon—2 p.m.

Press release from Stephen Vincent Kobasa

Curated by Kevin Daly, Punchline explores the use of humor in abstraction through the work of 13 artists who employ playful processes or formal languages. The exhibition is less self-consciously concerned with relevance and criticality than with the presence of the whimsical.

Karen Schifano: "Pirate"


The show features works by Stephen Westfall, Andrew Small, Suzan Shutan, Karen Schifano, Grant Wiggins, Richard Roth, Taro Suzuki, Insook Hwang, Sue Post, Roland Orepuk, Andy Cunningham, Inna Babaeva and Cary Smith.

Punchline is on view from Nov. 9—27. There is an opening reception Sat., Nov. 9, from noon to 2 p.m.

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Monday, October 01, 2012

Saturday opening reception for "Making Room" at Institute Library

The Institute Library
847 Chapel St., New Haven, (203) 562-5045 
Making Room: Ten Interpretations
Oct. 6—Nov. 3, 2012.
Reception: Sat., Oct. 6, Noon—2 p.m.

Press release from Institute Library

Ten contemporary artists integrate their work into a 186 year-old space, emphasizing historic integrity while exploring new connections. The artwork exists between two and three dimensions, is site-specific and responds to the issues of material ingenuity, color, architecture and reductivist aesthetics. Making Room was curated by Suzan Shutan.





Exhibiting artists are Richard Bottwin (NY), Melanie Carr (CT), Kevin Daly (CT), Robert Gregson (CT), Adam Lister (VA), Faber Lorne (CT), Debra Ramsay (NY), Karen Schifano (NY, see image), Paul Theriault (CT) and Jill Vasileff (CA). The show will be on display from Oct. 6 through Nov. 3. There will be an artists' reception on Sat., Oct. 6, from noon to 2 p.m.

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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

CWOS 2010 final weekend miscellaneous images

I just wanted to post images of the work of a few more artists with whom I visited this past Saturday.

Work by Kim Mikenis ("Werewolf Visits Martha's Vineyard"):


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A sculpture with toy soldiers from Margaret Roleke's "Weapons of Mass Destruction":


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An anamorphic mural designed and painted by students of the Cooperative Arts High School's visual arts after school program. The design was inspired by the anamorphic work of Felice Varini:


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A detail from one work by Suzan Shutan:


A window installation by Shutan:


An outside view of Shutan's window installation with enthusiastic visitor juxtaposing a diagonal:


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A recent painting by Gerald Saladyga:


A recent drawing by Saladyga that harkens back to work he was doing in the 1980's:

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Wednesday, March 10, 2010

"Streetwise America" opening reception at Kehler Liddell this Sunday

Kehler Liddell Gallery
873 Whalley Ave., New Haven, (203) 389-9555
Streetwise America: Hank Paper and Friends
Mar. 4—28, 2010
Opening Reception: Sun., Mar. 14, 3—6 p.m.
Musical Event: SKAmatics in Concert, Sun. Mar. 21, 1:30—3:30 p.m.

Press release

Kehler Liddell Gallery is pleased to present Streetwise America, a group show of photographs, paintings, collage and installation that documents contemporary America and facilitates a conscious consideration of what's happening on our streets. The exhibition features over 40 color photographs by New Haven-based artist Hank Paper, shot over the past five years. A selection of works by Peter Bosco, John Columbus, Steve DiGiovanni, Graham D. Honaker II, Robert Lisak, Maryann Ott, David Ottenstein and Suzan Shutan accompany Paper's work, offering chance similarities and juxtapositions that create new points of departure for reflection on our national identity.

Hank Paper shoots fast with a handheld Leica camera and crops with his lens in the straight, photojournalist style of New York's street photographers of the 60's and 70's: Robert Frank, Garry Winogrand, Diane Arbus, and Vito Acconci. The invention of digital film in the 80's did not fundamentally change his craft. Major themes in his work are evident in the patterns and behaviors that appear in his images time and time again: sexual role modeling, aging, immigration. His subjects are the people that play out these themes: preoccupied businessmen, wild hookers, concerned parents, assimilated immigrants, museum-going elders. For Paper, the challenge is to puncture the viewer's preconceived notions of his fellow man by making works that reveal his subjects' ever-changing dimensions: the posture of a Hell's Angel walking a toy poodle or the isolation of a lonely schoolgirl at a Christmas pageant.

Paper has dedicated the past 35 years to documenting contemporary society, mining the streets of North America, The United Kingdom, Western Europe, the Middle East and Cuba in search of capturing what he describes as "that revelatory action, or gesture, or face." His work has been exhibited in museum and gallery shows around the world, including The African American Museum in Philadelphia (2006), The Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Israel (1999), The Jewish Museum of New Jersey (2008), the High Point Historical Museum in North Carolina (2001), the Tamarkin's and the Leica Gallery in New York City (2002) and the Morgenthal-Frederics Gallery in New York City (2000). He received the Piedmont Award from the Somers Juried Photography Show for his Terminal Series in 2009 and a grant from the CT Commission on Culture and Tourism for his Ascension Series in 2006.

Together, the artists in this show hope to penetrate mass media image saturation and mitigate the pressure of electronic assault in order to fix on what is elusive and infinitely moving in the face of America today. A fully illustrated, hardbound catalogue with an introduction by Hank Paper will accompany the exhibition.

Peter Bosco's photographs come from a larger body of work titled Fading Places, which attests to the impermanence of things, both animate and inanimate. Bosco photographs many places that are no longer extant, intending to show things as they are and to render them in the most literal way possible. His work has been described as "hymns of sadness", and while they are often about loss, his works ultimately serve to sustain time, place and memory.

John M. Columbus' interest in photography began as a boy in 1960's New Jersey when his parents gave him a Polaroid/Land camera. He studied with photographer Marc Cohen, who influenced his street photography style of "seeing the unusual." Columbus, whose photo assignments have taken him throughout the U.S., the Caribbean, and Europe, currently concentrates on event and magazine photography, exhibiting his work, and drumming in the SKAmatics, a ska/jazz band that will perform in the gallery on Mar. 21.

Steve DiGiovanni blurs the line between painting and photography (see image) by incorporating digital photography in his paintings. DiGiovanni culls Internet images, old magazines and personal photographs, all of which he incorporates in his works in acrylic on canvas. Inspired by his imagination, his compositions are often free associative and improvisational, reflecting his ongoing interest in the wide range of painting's possibilities.

Graham D. Honaker II is an Abstract Expressionist whose paintings comment on contemporary society, with subjects ranging from potentially harmful political structures to the simple poetics of everyday life. Influenced by Existentialism, which emphasizes the act of creating, Honaker exercises his subconscious through "auto-painting." At the same time, his observations of the perpetually shifting world around him and his place in it are conveyed in his often-intricate and highly conceptual subject matter.

Robert Lisak is a photographer based in New Haven, who recently published a catalogue on the architecture of his city's historic churches. Lisak received his MFA from the Yale School of Art, and is currently a member of ASMP and an adjunct Professor of Photography at Sacred Heart University.

Maryann Ott is inspired by dreams, hallucinations, flights of imagination, and the mind's eye. She feels that if she could map the streets, alleys and hidden pathways of her inner life, she'd be a wiser person. Instead, she is a photographer, capturing what she can and making it hers.

David Ottenstein has been pursuing fine-art/documentary photography, exploring interiors of abandoned and decaying buildings in the northeast and the vanishing agrarian landscape of the Midwest.

Suzan Shutan is a New Media Sculptor, Installation and Video Artist straddling the worlds of two and three dimensions.

There will be an opening reception for this show on Sun., Mar. 14, from 3-6 p.m.

The following Sunday afternoon, Mar. 21, will feature a musical performance by the SKAmatics ska/jazz band from 1:30-3:30 p.m.

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Wednesday, December 02, 2009

Two openings today at Middlesex Community College

Middlesex Community College Niche
100 Training Hill Road, Founders Hall, Middletown, 1-800-818-5501
Flurrying Pheremones: An Installation by Suzan Shutan
Through Jan. 16, 2010.
Opening reception, Wed., Dec. 2, 5:30—7 p.m.

Press release

Suzan Shutan's temporal installations consist of delicate compositional illusions that challenge viewer perception. Shutan's work has been included in numerous prestigious collections and she has participated in international and regional exhibitions for three decades.

Suzan Shutan:

Flurrying Pheromones is about sexual attraction as communicative behavior. It represents forces of nature and life processes that are unseen but felt as subjective universes. The compelling mystery of airborne chemo-signals... a spray, a flutter, a blast... make us receptors of sexual attraction. Flurrying Pheromones tries to illustrate this idea, evoke its essence and remake it into something uncommon and transformative.
The Niche is located on the first floor of Founders Hall and open: Mondays through Thursdays 8:30 a.m.—6 p.m., Fridays & Saturdays 8:30 a.m.—4 p.m.

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Middlesex Community College Pegasus Gallery
100 Training Hill Road, Chapman Hall, Middletown, 1-800-818-5501
Self Portraits: Paintings by Erika Arneson
Through Jan. 16, 2010.
Opening reception, Wed., Dec. 2, 5:30—7 p.m.

Press release

Middletown Artist Cooperative resident, Erika Arneson is a MxCC Fine Art Alumnus and recent B.F.A. graduate from the Hartford Art School. Arneson's paintings address the symbolic and introspective nature of self-portraiture and the expressive vehicle of color. The personal nature of this series explores the dynamics of self as an interdependence of past and present.

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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, November 05, 2007

Alternative Space: Short takes

City-Wide Open Studios
50 Orange St., New Haven, (203) 772-2709
Alternative Space: Short takes
Oct. 28, 2007.

I was unable to go through the Alternative Space on Saturday, Oct. 27, because I was in Boston visiting my son at college and protesting the war in Iraq and the coming war with Iran. But I spent the better part of five hours at the Alternative Space in the old Hamden Middle School on Sunday, Oct. 28. Overall, I would say that it all felt much more low-key and reserved than last year. Of course, that is a subjective impression. It seemed less expansive—there were parts of the school that were utilized last year that weren't this fall. I occasionally noticed the color banners identifying the media being displayed in particular rooms but didn't use them for way-finding.

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Derek Leka was showing his acrylic paintings in a room on the first floor. Three of them were indicative of a new direction he is taking in his work.

"I started from liking Mondrian and his ideas with how to deal with space. And I liked Albers as far as color and light. It's blasphemy to call them boring but I wished Mondrian would use other colors and Albers would break out of his format," Leka told me. "So I combine them. And since it is the 21st century, it is the voice of those languages in a 21st century voice."

Where Leka had in the past generally confined himself within the constraints of straight-line geometric forms, his newer works chart an evolution into more organic forms.

"I've allowed myself to let it look like circuitry or organic," he said. A work like "Invariant Discordant Catastrophe" (see image) starts at the top with rectangular forms. But as the imagery moves down the painting it opens up first into a splaying of wires and cables and finally into free-form space. The progression of imagery within the painting reflects Leka's cautious approach to changing his style.

"I'm trying to make it my language and a new language. I'm still stretching into new areas but trying to stay within my language," explained Leka. "I always want them to look like they are by the same artist. I don't want to make something so simple that it looks like it's by a different artist or that I'm trying to change my style."

This was Leka's third CWOS. He wanted to show all work from this year "both for myself and the people who already know me. So people can know I'm working. And I want to see them all in one place to see how they communicate with each other and get feedback."

Some of the feedback he got surprised him. One of the "slow, simple" paintings, as he described it, was built of different shades of blue squares and rectangles. Leka felt it might be "boring." But many of his visitors, he said, told him they liked it the best.

"It's nice to get feedback. That's why this is great, of course," he said.

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Marc Pypaert is an electron microscopist by trade. In an artist statement he had available, he wrote, "I have spent most of my career looking at cells through the lenses of a microscope and marveling at the beauty of life and creation." The photos he was showing were not taken through the electron microscope. Rather, Pypaert uses a 35-mm camera and a 55 mm macro lens to shoot objects very close up. This included the ripples left behind in beach sand at the water line, bubbles in mottled ice, the bottom of a cracked enamel basin and rusted metal—a mélange of congealing browns and pastel turquoise.

"The idea is that they are abstract. I try and make the images look like a painting," Pypaert told me. In the case of the basin, he saw something of a landscape. The grains of sand, shot very close up with a high resolution camera, look almost like pixels.

Like many of the photographers I have spoken with recently, Pypaert is moving, albeit reluctantly, from film to digital imaging. He had been using the darkroom at Yale but it is being closed. Taking film to be processed and scanned can be prohibitively expensive for a serious but non-professional photographer. His conclusion: "Why not just be controlling the digital process myself?"

He entered Open Studios for the first time in 2004. He had always had an interest in being an artist, he said, but couldn't afford to.

"[City-Wide Open Studios] is great for that reason because it allows everyone to get a shot," said Pypaert.

•••
Suzan Shutan was showing "Fragmented Narratives," an installation that is still a work in progress. In a little dark room, she had hung wire and twine sculptures from the ceiling. Through the sculptures—held more or less in place by nearly invisible fishing wire—she projected a loop of short videos. The sequence included goldfish beneath the sun-reflected surface of a pool, a couple of ducks gliding over a pond surface, a young girl twirling in a dance, a ceiling fan spinning with a slow motion hum. A fan blew softly through the sculptures, which cast gently moving shadows on the projected video. The video included occasional narration, lines that Shutan took more or less at random, Dada-style, from novels she really likes.

As the ducks were swimming on the pond, the narrator (a female voice) says, "It's a secret between us and a secret that's being kept from us." Sounds like the varying takes on contemporary art (although in that case the word "and" should be replaced by "or.")

One visitor told Shutan, "I know the secret!" When Shutan inquired, "What's the secret?" the visitor replied, "I can't tell you!"

"It was the best comment I got," Shutan told me (now the secret is out). "My own audience keeping my secret from me."

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Last year, Greg Garvey created an installation in the old Hamden Middle School music room using iMac computers left behind when the school was closed. This year Garvey was using iMacs again for a different installation, one that touched on the growing and intertwined fears of identity theft and virtual surveillance.

The four iMacs were labeled with bold declarations: two stated "Trust Me" while the others were emblazoned with "Go Ahead" or the more provocative "Make My Day." The set-up was in a first floor hallway. Like a carnival barker, Garvey accosted passersby: "Let me steal your identity;" "Step up and enter all your personal information." On the screens was a familiar display, a form with fields for the computer user to enter personal information: name, address, phone number. But there were also fields for Social Security number, credit card number, bank account number and PIN. At the bottom of the form there was a button ripe with double meaning. "Submit," it said.

There was a disclaimer at the bottom of each form that none of the information would actually be retained. In fact, Garvey told me that the "submit" button was actually a "clear form" button. Notwithstanding the disclaimers, he wasn't getting a lot of takers.

"There are those who are reluctant and if I press them hard enough, I find their reluctance was related to a real experience of identity theft," Garvey told me.

"I like the piece because in a way it's a one-liner but it's much more than that. It allows me to explore issues," said Garvey. "You can imagine how banal it would be if I made a painting with a screen like this. It shows the limitations of traditional media. There are ideas, even emotions, that can't be captured by other media.

"There are emerging dimensions of our human experience that require new ways to comment and subvert," Garvey said.

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Jonathan Waters said that assembling his sculptural installation, which practically filled a room at Hamden Middle School, was "like wrestling an anaconda." Waters titled his work "Corrievrekin" after a whirlpool off the west coast of Scotland. ("My father," Waters said, "used to like the sound of that word.")

Waters used 2-inch orangeburg pipe, plywood and black gaffer's tape to create the spiraling sculpture. He built it in the room. It took about four or five hours, he said. He then spent a few days using the black tape to create lines on the walls that complemented the sculptural form.

"I had a really low budget on the piece. I had the pipe and had been thinking about what to do with it for a while," Waters said. He had been working with harder-edged forms, Waters said, but he was "starting to work with curvilinear elements." "Corrievrekin" was a way "to marry the two together." But the pipe was the snake Waters had to struggle with and tame to his vision. Tape and tie wraps were holding it together.

There was music accompanying the sculpture, composed by his friend Nelson Bogart specifically for the installation. Waters noted that in the beginning of the composition, which is orchestral in style although created digitally, there is the sound of (synthesized) bagpipes. The music, Waters said, "has eight repeating elements. It starts off kind of slow and as it goes up it builds in intensity." While I was there, one visitor told Waters the sculpture was the best thing he'd seen so far that day.

"It was great to have the opportunity to put this thing together," Waters told me.

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This was the first Open Studios for Joseph Fucigna, the Weston, CT-based sculptor. One of the artists-in-residence for this year's Alternative Space, he chose the room he was in because it was a big, "relatively clean" space with good lighting. He set an old teacher's desk and chair off kilter in the middle of the room.

"I was walking around trying to find elements to put on it. It was hard," Fucigna said. Ultimately, he scavenged up an old test and a student I.D.

Fucigna is attracted to the use and transformation of industrial materials in his work. Not materials with a strong identity, like car bumpers, but rather the type of anonymous yet functional products that are part of the background noise of everyday existence. Viewers can respond to these works in diverse ways—explore the material, try and figure out what it is, appreciate the formal aesthetic aspects of the sculpture. His material of choice for his installation was black plastic deer netting.

His current work comes from the idea of water stains or mold, the notion that "something ominous is underneath or behind the wall or ceiling," Fucigna told me. And what better place to imagine such a likelihood than a shuttered old school built on a toxic waste site? Fucigna spent about 25 hours arranging the black deer netting in the room. It appears to spill out of the ceiling down onto the desk. It bubbles out of the desk drawers and trails way on the floor. As the afternoon sunlight played off the netting, Fucigna contemplated the possible interpretations.

"Is it billowing smoke or lava? Is it coming up or going down?" he mused.

"Each installation gives you different things to respond to. It helps my work grow. It helps you to think on your feet," Fucigna said. "And there's something quite wonderful about throwing it all out at the end of the day."

•••

Kelly Bigelow Becerra and Roland Becerra were in high spirits when I stopped by their room. I had met Bigelow Becerra last year when I checked out her installation "Harvest: Hidin' from the Hair Cut, Amongst the Sweet Corn." The reason for the married couple's excitement was showing in the darkened room: clips from and a trailer for their short animated art/horror film Dear Beautiful.

Dear Beautiful won Moving Pictures Magazine's Spring 2007 Short Film Award Contest in the Animation category. The award scored the couple a paid trip to the Cannes Film Festival where the short was shown.

Becerra, who received his M.F.A. from Yale in 2001 and teaches at the Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts, used still photography, hand drawings and animated painting to create the visually unique film. What he didn't use was video. The paintings are of areas around New Haven. The photographs are of friends playing the roles of the characters in the film.

"It's a combination of scanning in the actual paintings and drawings, using stop-motion photography and compiling all those in Photoshop and using Flash and Final Cut Pro to make it move," Roland Becerra explained. "It's painting outside the computer and painting inside the computer."

Bigelow Becerra described the short as "the calling card to get into competitions: 'We can do this and this is what it will look like.'" The ultimate aim is to parlay the short into a contract to make Dear Beautiful a feature film.

The short will be featured with the other Spring 2007 Short Film Contest winners on a DVD to be included in an upcoming issue of Moving Pictures Magazine.

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