Kim Piotrowski at The Hyde Park Art Center in Chicago

October 17 - January 30, 2011, Gallery 4

Beds and guns are highly charged cultural symbols the artist Kim Piotrowski dissects in her most recent mixed media paintings featured in Gallery 4. The solo exhibition debuts the largest acrylic paintings on paper by the artist to date. As analogies for life, the two separate series of new paintings - one series of beds and one series of guns - exhibited together transform the simple three-letter words into a image that represents having and losing control.

For the past several years, Kim Piotrowski has been manipulating photojournalistic imagery of impactful current world events found online into her painted and drawn abstractions. In her expressive style, she prompts us to consider the compromising and unplanned roles we face in life. She employs bold and flowing lines that capture the feeling of chaos of such events as a hotel bombing in Mumbai. Yet, her paintings can equally capture the desire for calm and comfort found in a roadside memorial made visible through her use of sepia-toned interludes painted among patches of intense color and abstract pattern. The new work presented by Piotrowski at the Art Center collapses global scale and private experience into one moment by addressing the significant personal episodes that mark every human life: birth, love, sickness, and death.

According to Piotrowski, “The bed can be seen as a place of record where one loves, dreams, and dies. Death, and the line that exists between having power and having it taken away, also fuels my art.  In the process of making this work, I keep unfolding parallels that I find very exciting to explore. Painting demands time to savor and analyze. Working with these images affords me to live through the ideas and to find deeper meaning within.”



New Work by Ruth Pastine

PRESENT FUGITIVE opening Saturday, November 6, 2010, 5 – 7pm

New Work by Ruth Pastine

Houston, TX – The Gallery Sonja Roesch is pleased to announce the exhibition Present Fugitive, featuring new work by California-based artist Ruth Pastine. This is the artist’s second solo exhibition at the gallery. The exhibition will open November 6, 2010 and close on December 31, 2010.

Ruth Pastine’s nearly monochrome color field paintings invest in the perceptual experience of color, light, and temperature. Suspending preconceived notions about visual experience, she investigates the mercurial shift of warm and cool color identities. The complementary oil colors are worked together on the canvas inch-by-inch, wet into wet, layer upon layer, with a 2-inch brush- an essential part of the rigorous process and seamless resolve of the meticulous surfaces. Inspired by distinct and contrasting light conditions Pastine creates an inner luminosity, which expands beyond the canvas.

The work is clearly focused on the process of painting - taking the material aspect and transforming it through a disciplined work ethic into something spiritual – “optically immaterial”. The result is a visually arresting surface, vibrantly present and ephemeral, that appears to expand outwards as the edges contract inwards.

Donald Kuspit writes, “The light suddenly changed and the field changed with it, losing its uniformity and blossoming, as it were, into a variety of spontaneously color events. Undifferentiated shallow surface had become differentiated expressive depth, one narrow color note had expanded into a chamber music of colors, each distinct yet merging, playing off of each other yet oddly harmonious.” “Pastine creates an infinitely nuanced range of color experiences, each with it’s own “spiritual sound” or resonance, to use Kandinsky’s term. While Pastine is obsessed with “the convergence and reconciliation of opposition,” the changing light brings out the opposing colors, conveying the tension between them.”

Opening Reception: Saturday, November 6, 5 -7pm
Exhibition closes December 31, 2010.

Sally Egbert in WOMEN at the Silas Marder Gallery

WOMEN
A group show featuring Kiki Smith, Connie Fox, Sally Egbert, Aurora Robson, Corinne von Lebusa, Heather Goodchild, Pat Steir and Emmanuelle Thayer Benard.
Reception
Saturday, October 16
4-8 PM
October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. A percentage of sales will be donated to the
Ellen Hermanson Breast Center at Southampton Hospital.
The Silas Marder Gallery
P.O. Box 1261
120 Snake Hollow Road
Bridgehampton, NY 11932
631/702-2306

Three New Videos from Mark Tribe

EFA Studio artist Mark Tribe currently has new videos in exhibitons:


Port Huron Project Overview from Mark Tribe on Vimeo.

 

PLANK ROAD: A Group Show with Sally Egbert

EFA member Sally Egbert will have work in PLANK ROAD: A Group Show
Artists who have participated in exhibitions and projects these past five years 
at Salomon Contemporary, East Hampton. The warehouse, the community, and beyond.
This is the first public exhibition at Salomon Contemporary, New York.
526 West 26 Street, Suite #519.
Reception for the artists: Wednesday 15 September, 6 to 8PM.
The exhibition will run through Saturday 30 October.



On Line: Drawing Through the Twentieth Century

EFA Grantee Sophie Tottie will have two drawings in the show On Line: Drawing Through the Twentieth Century November 21, 2010–February 7, 2011 at MoMA in New York City, which the museum has aqcuired.