Monday, July 11, 2011

Some Color



I am back home now trying to process an amazing trip to Tuscany. My workshop participants had a great  time making fun of my constant exclaims "Look at the color, look at the light, look at the texture"...etc. So that is how I have decided to organize my photos, starting with some color.











Saturday, June 25, 2011

And while I am away......


The Edge of the World 48 x38 oil Lisa Pressman
Pressman, based in West Orange, N.J., creates paintings that are simultaneously lyrical and glacial: The open spaces in her oil and encaustic works are intersected by thin swirling lines suggestive of tornadoes, but also by thick, clotted ones that bring to mind chain links and rivers. Pressman clearly loves to paint.” 
Edith Newhall
                                   The Philadelphia Inquirer, Galleries: Meticulous and abstract, there back on the scene



I  don't apply to juried shows much any more but on a whim I decided to apply to this one because the juror,  Elisabeth Sussman will be curating the next Whitney Biennial. Hey, you never know.... You can see this painting in the 22nd International Juried Exhibition show from June 28th- July 16th at Viridian Artists, 530 West 25TH Street between 10th & 11th Avenues in Chelsea.

 A special reception will be held on Thursday, June 30th, 5:00-8:00pm.


Spirit of Motion, Following the Path  both 24 x 24 encaustic LPressman


Making Their Mark, a show curated by Amber George at the Susan Eley Fine Art Gallery has been extended through June 30th. It features  paintings by Amber George, David Kidd, Chase Langford, Maria O'Malley, Audrey Phillips and Lisa Pressman

Gallery Hours: Tues, Wed, Thurs, 11-5 and by appointment
917.952.7641 46 West 90th Street, NYC, Fl 2

Press on this show can be found at:


Friday, June 24, 2011

Off to Tuscany

I have exciting news!! 
I am leaving on Saturday for Tuscany  with a group of students for a week long workshop. This workshop will include a variety of breathtaking locations chosen to inspire our creative work. Using mixed media (pastels, oil pastels, oil sticks and paint) we will be informed by the landscape. Imagine working with the textures, tones, colors and the clarity of light that is so much a part of Tuscany's natural beauty.   Cortona, Sienna, Montepulciano,  Pienza and Assisi are on the list. I hope to be able to post some pictures while I am there.( Even as I write this I can't believe  I am going.)

Ciao for now

Untitled 2 8 x6 oil on board 2011


Untitled 1 8 x6 oil on board 2011




Untitled 3 8 x6 oil on board 2011

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Hotel Art Fair at the Fifth Annual International Encaustic Conference

               Welcome from Marybeth


 Marybeth Rothman and I participated in the Hotel Art Fair that took place at the Fifth Annual International Encaustic Conference in Provincetown,  the first week in June.

I wish I had taken before and after photos of the room. From  11 to 1 am  on Saturday night we found ourselves using garbage cans, trays, suitcases, towels and whatever else we could find to create some kind of  presentation for our work the next morning. I seem to remember running to my room to grab extra props.
It was a great success for us. We both sold some work, were curated into an upcoming exhibition and enjoyed seeing and talking about our work together and to our visitors.

The only thing we were disappointed in was that we didn't get to spend time seeing all the other work.



Here are some blogs that show more pictures from the fair:



Small Gems encaustic 1-5  6 x 6  each   L Pressman



 
Left:The Hands of Wickaboxet Seven
encaustic and mixed media
14"x14"
2010
Right:
The Hands of Wickaboxet One
encaustic and mixed media
14"x14"
2010
Mary Beth Rothman


Marybeth and I both loved how our worked played off each other, as if the twins were thinking in an abstract language.



What are they thinking?


12 x12 each  ink and wax on paper Lisa Pressman



Quick notes 7 x5  each ink and wax L Pressman

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Workshop at R & F


If you have a chance to see the Richard Serra show at the Met he is using paint sticks in many of the drawings in the exhibition. Process, surface, texture, gravity and physicality are explored.
Richard Serra (American, b. 1939)
out-of-round X, 1999
Private collection
© Richard Serra
Photo: Rob McKeever

In April, I was invited to be one of R&F Handmade Paints visiting artists to their workshop in Kingston, NY.  The  workshop “Pigment Sticks and Mixed Media” was  three days of exploration with R&F's oil sticks.  I use  them in my own work to paint and draw and also combine them with oil paint and encaustic. 

Thanks to all  my students!
Below are a few pictures from the workshop. 

The  clean studio



 

I like to start with a 30 minute, 30 drawing  introduction to materials and mark making. It is a great way to loosen up and  let go of fear and preciousness.


 Here are some examples of what happens when we move from smaller to bigger.





 Some examples of work done in the workshop and then back in the home studio.

workshop
 
                                                     studio


 workshop

workshop

studio




Sunday, June 19, 2011

"Bad Blogger"




I know, I know, it has been  more than a month since I have posted. Our pet mice come out every night and run run on their wheel. That is how I have been feeling  with so much going on....family illness and  an amazing recovery, high school graduation, (empty nest is very close)  plus teaching here and there, workshops, shows, conferences, visitors, upcoming trip. You know........life.

I am not complaining, it is all terrific stuff.  This is the first week that I don't have a list a mile long so I am going to try to catch up before I am gone again.

Monday, May 9, 2011

Lorrie Fredette and Cora Jane Glasser: Art Buddy Check In

 Several years ago, I reconnected with an old friend and we began a month by month art date. We would make an appointment, a list/agenda and then  go over it on that day. After a few years the list became a way for both of us to see what we had learned and  accomplished.

Cora's studio
Inside Lorrie's studio



















When I heard that artists Cora Jane Glasser  and Lorrie Fredette  have been doing a similar  date which  they call  "Art Buddy Check-in" for 11 years, I decided to ask them some questions.


When and how did your weekly check-in begin?
The exchange Cora and I have shared over 11 plus years has been similar to letter writing. It has always been from the individual, the I. Yet, the responses you’ll be reading is a first. It is primarily written, by Cora in a we format….a joint perspective. We approached the response to your questions as we would with our ABCi (Art Buddy Check-in). We each wrote our responses and then emailed them to the other. We didn’t read the other’s response until after we had written and emailed our own. It didn’t surprise us that they were practically mirror images. You will find just four isolated responses from us as individuals. We felt that they were of particular importance and should be identified.

It was between 11 and 12 years ago. We had met at least a year before in a class we were both taking at the Art Students League. We gravitated towards each other.

Cora – I recall receiving a call from her - I can picture exactly where I was standing in my apartment- asking if I would be her art buddy. The idea was that we would commit to exchanging weekly goals for ourselves via email on a specific day each week and we picked Monday. I recall being very flattered and excited. I had started my art career rather late in life and saw Lorrie, though younger, as more advanced and experienced.

What was the initial purpose? And how has it changed over the years?
The purpose was to hold us accountable to ourselves and to each other for staying focused on identifiable goals that would advance our studio practices. Over the years we have incorporated longer-term goals using an annual check-in around the New Year. We have also gotten more specific on a week-to-week basis as we have both taken on projects and opportunities that require very carefully defined attention. So it has been both an enlarging and a narrowing of focus. Most importantly, we have come to be true friends, which enables us to provide support and guidance to each other. The range of support spans our practices as well as our personal lives and the constant balancing act between them. We have also expanded our outreach to one another so that if we need to run something by the other at any time we do so. One of the sweetest changes is the occasional joyous phone call to give or receive good news.


Talk a little about the structure of the call.
We don't really set agendas. Each of us is free to set forth our goals for the coming week however we choose. We have fallen into a basic email format of topics, almost always starting with "Studio". The idea there is to hold us accountable for as much studio time as possible under whatever circumstances exist at the time. The rest can be other art activities planned for the week such as attending an opening; clerical tasks like cleaning off desks, or updating mailing lists; preparing for a specific project or exhibit at whatever stage it might be. There are no limitations and our lists do not have to match each others- they just have to make sense for each of us.



Lorrie – Two of the organic happenings in our format is that we each email back responses to what the other has sent and there are mid-week check-ins. The responses are similar to having a physical conversation offering ideas, support and motivation. The mid-week checks, for me, are a way of staying on tracking by getting some additional verbal support either through problem solving or cheering.



You are welcome to give examples and talk about some of the topics.

We each start off discussing our studio time. It has ALWAYS been in our exchange and IS the most important part. The remainder is stating a goal and listing the actions.

Lorrie - For example, I've pasted a section from my check-in for the week of 4/18/11

To Wax Natural:
1. Look at the drawings I have for the show.
2. Consider making a few more for the show. How many?

A bunch of other things….
1. Schedule visit with Ani & then visit with her!
2. Read FN: VA catalog
3. WSW solo show
4. Go through desk stuff….
5. Clean and organize email boxes
6. Lisa Pressman’s blog


Cora from the same week: and here is a sample of mine from the same week:

Studio:
My goal is to go on Saturday start working on tiny paper planes. I am promising myself at least 4 solid hours. I think once I get the rhythm I can knock them off pretty fast. My initial goal will be 8 and then who knows.

AAF:

· work on Vertical Response ad for the booth
· make sure to add certain people from TEC to the mailing list for the fair
· review video for final edit
· work on group of paintings to take (plan on little or no works on paper-combo of older panels based on ruins and earlier group of construction paintings)
· work on list of things we need for installation
· work on list of things we need for booth

Other:

· schedule breakfast with Audrey this or next week
· connect with Lorrie about ABCi interview for Lisa
· Thursday I am going to Philly for the Eastern State Pen. artist orientation tour!


How has it changed each one of you? your work, promotion, confidence etc.
This is such a huge question. I believe that it has not changed us but it has contributed greatly to each of us developing as artists along our own paths. Growth would be more accurate than change. That in turn provides confidence, which in turn helps with self-promotion.

Have you ever had a break or a halt and then restructured?
Not really. Of course if one of us is going on vacation or is occupied with a project or a family emergency we might skip a week every now and again but it is very rare. We have always stuck to Monday as our day, but sometimes we will send the email on Sunday, or Tuesday. We are rarely later than 2 days and since we do this independently rather than as a meeting we do what works for each of us and we give each other whatever slack we each need.

How do you separate (or do you?) the close friendship that you have and the weekly check in.
It is impossible to separate the two and that fact has enhanced both. We will often add a personal note as an introductory paragraph. However, we are pretty rigorous in keeping it as an Art Buddy Check-in and try to talk to each other and see each periodically about more personal matters.


Thanks to Lorrie and Cora for sharing the details of  their ABCI and here is their work:

Lorrie Fredette
My sculptures and drawings are inspired by medical and environmental news stories pulled from today's headlines and historical sources. Upon choosing an area of focus, such as the swine, avian and Spanish flus, or the increased incidence of poison ivy with the growth of greenhouse gases, I set upon a rigorous course of research, gathering images which I then alter, vet and reject through an elaborate system designed to completely subvert and distort any likeness to the original source.

Recent and Current Exhibitions:
An Exchange with Sol LeWitt, Mass MoCA, North Adams, MA .
Article for An Exchange with Sol LeWitt.  
TO WAX NATURAL at the Albany Center Gallery, Albany, NY .


Upcoming:
ENCAUSTIC WITH A TEXTILE SENSIBILITY at the Kimball Art Center, Park City, UT.
THE GREAT SILENCE at the Cape Cod Museum of Art, Dennis, MA. 
PROPER LIMITS at Women's Studio Workshop, Rosendale, NY. 
CONFLUENCE at the Morean Arts Center, St. Petersburg, FL.

Extracting (in) formation, detail   Beeswax, tree resin, muslin, brass, nylon line
9'3" H x 9'3" W x 15' D
© 2010

 Extracting (in) formation Beeswax, tree resin, muslin, brass, nylon line
9'3" H x 9'3" W x 15' D
© 2010





There are 3 images attached, from most recent (Query) to a construction site painting (Nothing Sacred) to an older archeological site painting (Casa Grande). Details of each below.

I turned out a new body of work between 2009 and 2011 called "Query" which was recently the subject of a solo show in a Philadelphia gallery. The work grew out of an interest in urban construction sites, that in turn grew out of an interest in archeological ruins. This trajectory has taken me on a ride between complex layering and minimalized form. I am looking for ways to unite these aspects. A solo exhibit at the end of May in an architect's office seems to be offering me that opportunity. I have recently shown work spanning archeological and construction based work at the Affordable Art Fair in NYC and will continue to show in venues compatible with my work as it develops further.


When not in the studio I spend much of my time these days running a decades old family business in New York City. It involves glass and mirror installation and is considered a construction trade - not inconsistent with my studio practice.

Query (in black, #2), 2009
Beeswax & oil on Homasote on wood
36 inches 18 inches (2 parts)




Nothing Sacred, 2007
Beeswax, oil & ink on Homasote
38 inches x 35 inches (16 parts)




Casa Grande, 2005
Beeswax & oil on wood 
14 inches x 33 inches (triptych)