PRESS RELEASE: : “EXPRESSIONS 2”

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 “EXPRESSIONS 2”

 RENEE BORKOW * RHONDA DONOVAN
STEFANIE EINS * DEB FLAGEL * KAT KING
KAZUO ISHIKAWA
* VIRGINIA EVANS SMIT * CHRISTOPHER T. TERRY

 
    September 6 – October 1, 2022

                           Opening reception Thursday September 8, 6–8pm

Chelsea: Viridian Artists Inc. is pleased to present an exhibition of recent art by Renee Borkow, Rhonda Donovan, Stefanie Eins, Deb Flagel, Kat King, Kazuo Ishikawa, Virginia Evans Smit, and Christopher T. Terry. The show runs from September 6th through October 1st, 2022, with an opening reception Thursday, September 6th, 6–8pm.   

 
“EXPRESSIONS 2” is an exhibit gathering the art of 8 outstanding Viridian Artists not having a solo exhibit this season. For each, we are sharing a small selection of their works as an appetizer for the solo show some of them will have in 2023 or 2024.  All of these artists work differently, but there are connecting threads among them. Many incorporate found elements, but those who do, present them in totally different ways. Collage and construction are major components for all but the painter, but the composition of his paintings is a unique combination of reality and the still life. Both Stefanie Eins & Deb Flagel use stitching and sewing in the creation of the art, but the final results are unique. Though Christopher T. Terry and Kazuo Ishikawa both use the invisible and hidden as a beginning point for their art, Terry creates his images with paint while Ishikawa creates his by combining a variety of materials.

 
This series of collages by Renee Borkow is based on Greek mythology and the image of the Goddess, a woman at her prime who is both independent and smart. These are complex works, filled with the symbols of both feminism and femininity, not in opposition, but depicting the wide and complex range of female concerns, then and now.

 
Stefanie Eins who lives in Namibia, Southern Africa creates artworks she calls drawings that combine fragments of paper from old maps or teabags and African fabrics that she collages with elements of nature: leaves, feathers, seaweed. Her drawn line is often sewn, combining the bits she gathers into artworks which speak of her life there. Her works in this series are spontaneous reactions to moments, both experimental and playful.

 
The underlying theme of Deb Flagel’s art relates to containers and containment. How we view objects – from within, from without, and looking through – reveals societal context and perspective. Regarding the artwork, “Crosswalk Analysis” in this exhibit, the artist says “As I walk, sidewalks appear as tablets – human marks feel like text. Through photography, I observe patterns and content. My own experience becomes a narrative thread, weaving the seemingly unrelated into a story cloth.”

 
Kazuo Ishikawa finds himself always looking for hidden landscapes as he gathers together a variety of materials to create an artwork. To bring these elements to life, he makes the invisible visible to the viewer through juxtaposing the inconsistencies and complexities. Approaching his constructions from multi-dimensional perspectives, the works he creates possess complex spatial considerations that defy easy interpretations.

 
Chrisopher T. Terry’s subject matter is nearly always drawn from the objects and artifacts of everyday life which he frames, lights, and presents in a manner that focusses on what is hidden behind the everyday façade. These ordinary objects take on a new appearance as the artist creates and transforms them into a scene “both meditative and taut with expectation.” About his painting, “Silent Ceremony,” the artist says, “I present the still life as a secular altar where an ambiguous ritual takes place.”

 
Upon first seeing Rhonda Donovan’s “May I borrow a Cup of Sugar,” one might wonder how she came to give it that title, but as you look more carefully at her constructions of fragments of fabric, paper and other materials, you begin to see the stories that are hidden beneath the surface. And storytelling is what she is doing as she assembles her complex and extremely tactile compositions. Her inspiration arises from family encounters, the stories and memories that arise from everyday moments in life.

Kat King has been creating multiple interpretations of the Dragon in paintings, sculptures and mixed media works for a number of  years which involve both playful and sinister metaphorical narratives. Her early dragons were cast bronze, but more recently she has been creating fanciful dragon paintings over digital prints of which are from Ms. King's original photographic compositions. 

 
Virginia Evans Smit was a long time Viridian Artist, active until nearly the end of her life. Working primarily as a printmaker and combining various techniques in her mixed media works, she created a range of monoprints utilizing photographic transfers, lithography and relief printing as she pushed the envelope of her explorations. Calling them her visual poetry, she most often created images of the changing flora and plants of her garden in Barbados. There will be a private reception for her family and friends on Saturday, September 17.

 

We hope to see you at this wonderful exhibit of differing expressions.

Vernita Nemec: Exhibiting work in Art Fluent's online exhibit : WABI-SABI

Vernita Nemec

PS, Remember I Don't Love You
Discarded plastic packaging on rag board with paper

Vernita Nemec’s work is currently on view in WABI-SABI: an online exhibition on the Art Fluent website. Click here to view the entire exhibition.

WABI-SABI

A certain courage is exposed when life is expressed in such a blistered tone. Each piece in WABI-SABI breathes an experience that we have not quite seen collectively before. Vulnerability and confidence move through this exhibit like wisdom, becoming exposed through its scars. WABI-SABI is a Japanese term that refers to that which is impermanent, imperfect, aged, humbled, and unconventional. It is a state of mind and a way of being. It expresses a whole new world of seeing. The rawness and purity within WABI-SABI are without limit.

Press Release: Wally Gilbert: “Images from Life”

 
 

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 Wally Gilbert
“Images from Life”
April 12th - May 7th, 2022

Opening reception Thursday, April 14, 6 – 8 PM
Second Reception: Saturday, April 23, 3–6PM

 

Chelsea: Viridian Artists Inc. is pleased to present an exhibition of new digital imagery by the artist/scientist/photographer Wally Gilbert, entitled “Images from Life”. The show opens April 12th and continues through May 7th, 2022. You are invited to meet the artist and celebrate the opening of this exhibit on Thursday, April 14, 6 – 8 PM. There will be a second reception on Saturday, April 23, 3–6 PM.

Wally Gilbert is a prolific artist/ photographer who has been exploring color and form in a multitude of solo exhibitions at Viridian as well as other locations since the early 2000’s, digitally experimenting and analyzing a range of imagery.  Sometimes he explores the details of beautiful decay as in his Norblin Project, the documentation of a former factory in Poland, while at other times he digitally alters and transforms the imagery of machines, towers, plants, doorways, fruit – beginning with images of daily life that he encounters with his camera, perhaps in travel or perhaps on just a walk through a park.

Working with digital photography, Gilbert, the artist/scientist, approaches his imagery as he would any scientific investigation, exploring and experimenting in a thousand ways before accepting his findings. He has scrutinized color and form in extreme detail, become more and more involved with transforming and layering until new patterns emerge, almost of their own accord. Investigating and manipulating, he transforms and combines fragments of photographs into arresting artworks that are simultaneously abstract, multi-faceted and multi-layered.

In this most recent series of images taken with his i-phone, Gilbert is exploring the world around us, seeing and recording the beauty of nature and then transforming on the computer what he sees, adding black boundaries as if drawing his own version of a reality filled with the intensity of life exemplified through his intensifying colors.

Gilbert brings us into his process, not really revealing his inner self, but offering us a choice through his various interpretations of what he sees. With “Red Flower”, “Yellow Flower”, “Purple Flower”, only the “Broken Flowers” hint at more in their titles which on the surface speak to the broken image only. “Forever Red”, “Forever Blue” could be portraits of the land but it is up to us to fill in the details and “Sunset” barely reveals two hidden structures behind the black silhouettes of foliage under a burning red sky that if we let ourselves, we could think might be the fires of California.

We look forward to sharing with you, Wally Gilbert’s latest investigations, artistically inspired.

For further information please contact

Vernita Nemec, Director or Jenny Belin, Assistant Director

visit Instagram @viridianartistsinc, see us on Facebook & YouTube at Viridian Artists Gallery or visit our website at viridianartistsinc@gmail.com