.
In this series:
PROVINCETOWN-- My series, Critical Mass., continues with a trip to the far end of Cape Cod, highlighting exhibitions at Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill in Truro, and in Provincetown at the Albert Merola Gallery and Schoolhouse Gallery. The summer gallery season is short here so exhibitions are correspondingly truncated--two weeks in most instances, sometimes even a week. By the time you get to the Outer Cape, these shows may be down. I'll try to do them justice here.
Castle Hill
We start with a beautifully installed three-artist show, Elementary: Paintings by Sharon Butler, Sharon Horvath and Patricia Miranda, which ran July 11--22. These New York-based artists would appear to share commonalities of modest size, at least for this exhibition, and an engagement with materials.
We start with a beautifully installed three-artist show, Elementary: Paintings by Sharon Butler, Sharon Horvath and Patricia Miranda, which ran July 11--22. These New York-based artists would appear to share commonalities of modest size, at least for this exhibition, and an engagement with materials.
Panorama of half the gallery: Miranda on left and right walls bracketing Horvath and Butler, Several of the works are shown in closer view below
Three by Sharon Horvath
Sharon Butler, Screenshot, 2015, oil on canvas, 16 x 20 inches
Patricia Miranda, Her time passed and they read new stories, 2016; vintage lace embedded with red clay, the artist's hair, thread
.
I am totally enthralled by the beauty and creepiness of this piece--the red clay coloring the fabric, the same iron, essentially, that's in our blood--the intestinal imagery embroidered on the doily, its ultimate passage leading to the long hair tail.
.
I am totally enthralled by the beauty and creepiness of this piece--the red clay coloring the fabric, the same iron, essentially, that's in our blood--the intestinal imagery embroidered on the doily, its ultimate passage leading to the long hair tail.
Detail below
Panorama of the other half of the gallery: Horvath and Butler on the left wall, Horvath and Miranda on the back wall, Butler at right
Sharon Horvath, Bluering, left, and Whiteeye, both 2016; pigment, ink polymer, paper on canvas
Sharon Butler, Cybercave, 2015, oil on canvas
Patricia Miranda, Florilegium, vintage book dyed with cochineal insect dye, bamboo skewer
Sharon Horvath, Moons, 2016; pigment, ink, polymer, paper on canvas
Detail below
Sharon Butler, Blue Alloy, 2015, oil and t-shirt scraps on canvas
Detail Below
. . . . . . . .
Lipton had the front gallery, showing five square paintings in her signature organic abstraction. Three paintings on one wall were pulsing thanks to a graphic, largely black and white palette, while color anchored the wall opposite the entry and to your right as you stepped into the gallery.
View from the entry: Irene Lipton, untitled (1504), 2015, oil on canvas
A wall of Lipton paintings as seen from the entry, above, and the opposite direction
untitled (1509), 2015, oil on canvas, 40 x 40 inches
Looking into the small back gallery where Tabitha Vevers' Curiosa: Once, Lately, Later was installed
Tabitha Vevers's small paintings are thrillingly beautiful, consummately painted and, often, extremely creepy. I love them, even if they sometimes make me uncomfortable. Known for her paintings on such materials as seashells and scrimshaw, here she paints not-quite-miniatures on Mylar or ivorine, lavished with metal leaf. Her figures are women--strong or dangerous or sexual or vulnerable--but we view them out from under the lens of a male gaze. If you're on the Cape, pick up a copy of Provincetown Arts, where Vevers is the subject of an 18-page (!) feature.
Shiva: Vortex, 2016, Shiva: Vortex, 2016, oil and gold leaf on Mylar
(This painting is visible just beyond the curtain in the image above)
View from inside the gallery, looking out
Lioness: Quieting the Night, 2010, oil paint and gold leaf on ivorine
. . . . . . . .
Schoolhouse Gallery
The steepled wooden structure at the far eastern end of Commercial Street in Provincetown is close to 200 years old. Built to house schoolchildren in grades one through four, it has seen numerous incarnations, including Community Center, American Legion post, art school, and a succession of galleries. Now, as Schoolhouse Gallery, it is under the director of Mile Carroll, himself an artist.
The steepled wooden structure at the far eastern end of Commercial Street in Provincetown is close to 200 years old. Built to house schoolchildren in grades one through four, it has seen numerous incarnations, including Community Center, American Legion post, art school, and a succession of galleries. Now, as Schoolhouse Gallery, it is under the director of Mile Carroll, himself an artist.
.
There are typically several exhibitions on view at any one time. This was the case when I stopped in to see Sarah Lutz's solo, which is up in the front gallery through August 3. I have followed and admired Lutz's work for some years. Beauty is the overarching element of her work with its palette of intense pastels, subtle patterns, and organic sensibility.
The small and the large: Domino V and Sluiceway
Panning around the gallery with Sluiceway; two small paintings shown together, Night Float and Gorgonian; and Elance (Red)
Continuing the pan: Festoon on the far wall and Sea Bloom foreground
. . . bookend the two small paintings shown below: Sidewalk VIII and Sidewalk VI
2 comments:
Great post Joanne. I wish I could have seen these exhibits in person. I know some of these artists, and admire all of their work.
So marvellous Artworks Joanne! I love your work!
Fotini Kouzoumi, Greece
Post a Comment