28 silent one - AIDS Action Committee
Transcription
28 silent one - AIDS Action Committee
28 ● S I L E N T O N E ● silent auction one 29 30 ● S I L E N T O N E 35 SOPHIA AINSLIE Best Value II, 2004 Iris print 46 x 35” American consumerism and the resulting waste of mass produced goods influence Sophia’s work. She is adjunct faculty at School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Northeastern University, New England School of Art and Design. Her art is included in collection of Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, London, Gauteng Legislation, South Africa, Gaborne National Museum, Botswana. 36 Donated by the artist Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $950 STEVE AISHMAN Steve Aishman’s recent work deals with the relationship of contemporary life and religious iconography, using daily rituals to explore where icons have become everyday objects; but still retaining visual power. Morning Mandala, 2004 Chromogenic print 16 x 20” Donated by the artist Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $1,200 37 MEG ALEXANDER At once minimal and richly detailed, Alexander’s poetic drawings rely on a strong belief in the power of singular objects to convey complex meaning. The artist has been exhibited at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the ICA at MECA, the Danforth Museum of Arts, and the Fitchburg Art Museum. ARTcetera Arrow, 1999 Ink, gesso on board 6 x 35” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Allston Skirt Gallery $800 SILENT ONE ● 31 38 LAURIE ALPERT For the past few years, Alpert has been combining photography with printmaking techniques and gum transfer. Her most recent work adapts these techniques to sculptural book forms, fusing music and abstracted forms from her environment. She is on the faculty at Curry College and a member of EES Arts and the Bromfield Art Gallery. Untitled, 2002 Gum transfer 9 x 11” Donated by the artist $350 ROBERT AMESBURY Robert Amesbury grew up in Guam and studied art at Harvard. His works are in many private collections as well as the Fogg Art Museum. Life Under Glass is a simple study of refracted toy specimens cohabiting in a fishbowl. LAURA ANDERSON Laura Anderson is widely recognized for her luminous paintings of porches and chairs juxtaposed with the surrounding landscape. Laura states, she has “always been fascinated with painting as a vehicle by which she can transport herself to another place.” Life Under Glass, 2003 39 Gouache on paper 12 x 12’ Donated by the artist Courtesy of The Boston Drawing Project at Bernard Toale Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $750 Green Rocker, Red Porch, 1998 40 Acrylic, canvas 11 x 11” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Chase Gallery $1,400 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 32 ● S I L E N T O N E 41 BERT ANTONIO Kiss Me Quick Kiss Me You Fool, 2000 Bert Antonio, a Philippine artist, presents with his work a composition of photographs, postcards, book covers of the 1950’s, and abstract drawings. He lives and works in Boston and he has been showing at Genovese/Sullivan Gallery since 1994. 42 Mixed Media 18 x 12” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Genovese/Sullivan Gallery $800 ADRIA ARCH Unwound, 2003 Unwound is part of an on-going series exploring the nature of self. Arch is a faculty member at Montserrat College of Art and the Education Director of the Arlington Center for the Arts. She will be exhibiting recent work at the Bromfield Art Gallery in November, 2005. Acrylic and oil stick 20 x 16” 43 Donated by the artist Courtesy of Bromfield Art Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $750 LARAINE ARMENTI Laraine Armenti uses the intersection of food and modern industry to explore her family heritage and spiritual concerns. She is a graduate of Rhode Island School of Design. Cherry Peppers, Olive Oil, Garlic, 2004 Oil on linen 11 x 14” Donated by the artist $850 ARTcetera SILENT ONE ● Internal Affairs II, 1998 Oil on paper with oil stick 27 x 28” TOBY ATLAS Toby Atlas is a painter living and working in Cambridge, MA. She has been a fellow in the print department of the Boston Public Library, at numerous artists’ colonies, including Yaddo and MacDowell, and her work is in the collection of the Boston Public Library, Museum of Fine Arts, and the Worcester Art Museum. 44 Donated by the artist Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $800 ELLEN BANKS Ellen Banks, a former Boston resident, taught for 22 years at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts and has exhibited widely in the area. Now living in Brooklyn, she is represented by the Spandau Gallery in Berlin and exhibits regularly in the New York area. JOSEPH BARILLARO 33 Untitled, 1992 Acrylic on handmade paper Detail, one panel of 6-panel piece 45 Donated by the artist $2,000 46 Joseph Barillaro is an underground artist who is just beginning to show his work. April Showers, 2004 Collage, paint 12’ x 37” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Art Advisory/Boston $850 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 34 ● S I L E N T O N E 47 DEBORAH BARLOW Barlow creates dimensionality through layering and glazing. In 2003, she represented the US in the Biennale Internazionale Dell’Arte Contemporeana in Florence and previously was artist-in-residence at Anam Cara in Ireland. Shown locally through Lyman-Eyer Gallery in Provincetown, she also exhibits in California, Oregon, and Europe. Mapuche, 2000 Mixed media on paper 38 x 50” Donated by the artist Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $3,000 48 BRUCE A. BARRY Bruce Barry is on the faculty of the DeCordova Museum School. His work was included in the 1999 DeCordova Annual Exhibition and in 2004’s “The Perfect Collection” at the Fuller Craft Museum. 49 THADDEUS BEAL Beal’s most recent work reflects his long held interest in such cerebral subject matter as chaos theory and fractal geometry. Beal was a practicing attorney for over a decade before beginning work as an artist. He is represented in many public and private collections including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. ARTcetera Open Field-31, 2003 Mixed media on panel 32 x 40” Donated by the artist Courtesy of OHT Gallery $2,400 Journal Entry #121, 2000 Ceramic Height: 15.5” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Clark Gallery, Lincoln, MA $900 SILENT ONE ● MICHAEL BEATTY Michael Beatty’s works on paper trace the visual links between structure and natural phenomena. His work is included in the collections of the DeCordova Museum and the Fogg Art Museum. 35 50 Nature/Logic VI, 2000 Mix media on paper 15 x 11” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Barbara Krakow Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $900 51 KEN BECK Ken Beck is a Boston painter whose work explores the relation between abstraction and realism in portraits of simple forms and idiosyncratic objects that are transfigured through painting into iconic presences. He is represented in numerous public and private collections. Beck is Associate Professor of Painting Drawing, and Liberal Arts at the Art Institute of Boston at Lesley University. Yellow Beach Hat, 2001 Oil on Canvas 11 x 14” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery NAGA $1,800 SUSAN JANE BELTON Belton continues her consuming exploration of the American ritual, coffee-to-go. She collects the logoemblazoned, take-out coffee cups, and lovingly renders studio portraits of these contemporary icons. The recipient of grants and fellowships, Belton exhibits nationally. Her works are in collections including Hood Museum, Boston Public Library, and M.I.T. We Are, To Serve, 2004 52 Oil, paper 22 x 19” Donated by the artist in memory of Gary Kichline Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $1,600 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 36 ● S I L E N T O N E 53 BREMNER BENEDICT Between Here & There is from Bremner Benedict’s Wanderlust series. Benedict uses her camera to create a dialog between two images taken close in time at the same location creating a new perspective. Her work is in the collections of the Addison, the Fogg Art Museum, the DeCordova Museum and Philadelphia Museum of Art. Between Here and There, 2000-2004 Silver gelatin photograph 20 x 24” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery Kayafas $800 54 JOEL BENJAMIN In this continuing series, Joel W. Benjamin mines the tension between domination and submission and the underlying homoerotic nature of wrestling in American culture. This photograph was one of a series published in the international photographic magazine, Blue. 55 Wrestlers, 2001 Silver gelatin print 11 x 14” Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $600 STANLEY BIELEN Philadelphia painter Stanley Bielen is a graduate of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Mr. Bielen has work in collections that include Hirshorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and numerous private and corporate collections. Ladi Apples, 2001 Oil on paper mounted on panel 7 x 8.5” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Pepper Gallery $1,400 ARTcetera SILENT ONE ● CATHERINE BOWEN Intimate works on panel employ a direct template of her body as a point of departure for Bowen to explore tensions between absolute and perceived symmetry. Faculty at UMass Lowell and Excel Williams, she is the recipient of several awards, including Chantanqua Scholarship and Somerville Artists Award. 37 56 Untitled (ss-s, shield after press), 2004 Acrylic on panel 12 x 12” Donated by the artist Courtesy of the Hera Gallery $750 Medici Duke, 2003 LARRY BOWLING 57 Collage with color transparencies and copper 12 x 12” Larry Bowling’s works often make visual references to art history and personal symbology. They avoid direct narrative and are intended as meditations for the subconscious. Donated by the artist $750 DEBORAH BRIGHT 58 In her photography, Deborah Bright focuses on the erotics of everyday objects. She is a professor at the Rhode Island School of Design and her work is in the collections of The Whitney Museum and The Fogg Art Museum. Untitled, 2004 Archival Inkjet Print 11 x 17” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Bernard Toale Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $500 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 38 ● S I L E N T O N E 59 JUDITH BROWN Boys Will Be Boys, 2003 Judy teaches drawing and painting at Montserrat College of Art. Though best known as a painter showing her landscapes at the Arden Gallery in Boston (with solo exhibitions in 1996, 1999, and 2001) she continues to work and exhibit in a range of media. These exhibitions include the 8th Annual Photography Exhibition of the RicePolak Gallery in Provincetown, MA and Memories, Reflections and Self, featuring her digital work at HallSpace gallery in Boston. Hold Still, a group show featuring mixed media and digital work, opened in May 2003 at StudioSoto in Boston and travelled to Montserrat’s Carol Schlosberg Alumni Gallery in the fall of 2003. 60 DAVID LLOYD BROWN Brown is a painter, educator, and Coordinator for Graduate and Academic Programs at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. He uses templates as the structure for a visual language system. Sources include nature, the Fibonacci sequence, Indonesian sculpture, Islamic carpet design and European Baroque and Rococo painting. 61 MAGGI BROWN Memorium is representative of Brown’s recent work in which she has sectioned her surfaces, making spaces that recede while complemented by spaces that demand careful attention at the foreground. The allusion to written text keeps the viewer suspended in the tension between the literal and the abstract. Memorium, 2001 Oilstick, paper 20.5 x 22” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Barbara Krakow Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $1,200 ARTcetera Mixed media 8 x 10” Donated by the artist Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $825 REF #2000/10, 2000 Acrylic on paper 30 x 22” Donated by the artist Courtesy of The Boston Drawing Project at The Bernard Toale Gallery $1,100 SILENT ONE ● AMBREEN BUTT Untitled, from the series “What is Past or Passing or to Come”, 2003 Ambreen Butt received her MFA from Mass Art in 1997. Recent exhibitions include: Kunsthalle Fridericianum, Kassal, Germany; DeCordova Museum, MA; and William Benton Museum of Art, CT. Other solo and group shows include: Worcester Art Museum, Bernard Toale Gallery, and ICA, MA. Recent awards include ICA’s Artist Prize for Excellence in Art as a Boston Artist 1999. 39 62 Watercolor, ink, and pen on handmade paper 12 x 9” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Bernard Toale Gallery $2,150 JOHN CALHOUN In Calhoun’s recent paintings, he works with images taken from photo-albums that integrates family history, WWII related events and the unavoidable self revelation that occurs when discovering or interpreting subject matter. Calhoun currently resides in western Massachusetts and teaches at Holyoke Community College and Rhode Island School of Design. Student, 2002 63 Oil on Linen 16 X 12” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery Katz $800 64 LANA CAPLAN Using just one of the many 19th century photographic processes Caplan has mastered, her tintypes focus on the various stages of growth, death, and decay of living things. Caplan is a graduate of Boston University and the recipient of a Massachusetts Cultural Council grant. Sea Horses, 2003 Tintype (3/5) 8 x 8” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery NAGA Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $800 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 40 ● S I L E N T O N E 65 CATHERINE CARTER Scoop, 2000 Acrylic spray paint and fabric collage on canvas 20 x 20” My paintings explore my ongoing interest in the patterns of calligraphic shapes and textile weaves. In my most recent series, I have severely limited the painting process by eliminating color and repeating loop shapes in a variety of size and arrangements. Despite these restrictions, the series evokes a spectrum of associations ranging from elegant to playful. 66 Donated by the artist Courtesy of Genovese/Sullivan Gallery $800 LAURA CHASMAN This series of portraits focuses on pre-teens – inspired by how these young people look and how they express themselves. Laura Chasman has received numerous awards, including The Maud Morgan Prize in 2001. Her works are in the collections of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Public Library, and Simmons College. Kenneth, 2000 Gouache on Bristol board 12 x 11” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Allston Skirt Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $1,600 67 JOHN CLAYTON Plein air painter John Clayton creates an unexpected palette in the colorist tradition, sun-drenched and dreamlike. Clayton’s work can be found in Provincetown at the William-Scott Gallery. He studied at Cape Cod School of Art in Provincetown, and in New York at the Arts Students League and the National Academy of Design. He has received two scholarship awards from the Mrs. Robert Forbes Foundation, and an honorable mention from the Academy of Fine Art exhibition in 1998. Honeysuckle and Roses, 2003 Oil on board 16 x 20” Donated by the artist Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $1,350 ARTcetera SILENT ONE ● BENJAMIN COLLIER 41 68 Benjamin’s current work illuminates compelling biographies of people and places that appear frozen in time. Fusing a formalist approach with modern documentary styles, he focuses on imagery from contemporary spaces bound in historical moments. An old barbershop, locksmith, winery, submarine and vintage baseball team are some of Benjamin’s recent subjects. “Wildroot” Edition 3/6, 2003 Digital Photography 24 x 36” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery Katz Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $1,050 LISA COSTANZO In a series of self-portraits, Costanzo transforms herself into the created woman in the 1935 film “The Bride of Frankenstein”. Assuming various gestures and expressions, she exposes the multiple personalities embodied within her. Her works are included in numerous private collections. STEPHEN COYLE Self-Portait/The Bride of Frankenstein as “Vixen”, 2002 69 Colored pencil, graphite and thread 15 x 20” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Clifford ● Smith Gallery $800 70 The focus of Coyle’s paintings is the objects that surround him everyday: beds, roadways, kitchen tables, cars, tricycles, and ironing boards. His current series, Urban Pools, depicts children in their element at play. Coyle’s work has been exhibited at the Danforth Museum and is in many private collections including Arthur S. Goldberg. Urban Pool I, 2003 Alkyd on Canvas 13 x 18” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Chase Gallery $1,800 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 42 ● S I L E N T O N E 71 JULIANN CYDYLO Untitled, 2002 Cut paper 14 x 11” In her new cut paper collages, Cydylo incorporates antique papers, letters, and ledger sheets, combined spontaneously to investigate a range of formal possibilities while also bringing together the artist’s ongoing quest to link and layer the past with the present. 72 Donated by the artist Courtesy of Judy Ann Goldman Fine Art $1,200 RUTH DANIELS Composed with two layers of vellum, this drawing is part of a series in which superimposed shapes coexist and interact in a single plane. Daniels’ work is included in corporate and private collections. 73 MICHAEL DAVID Michael David is currently Chairman of the Department of Fine Arts at the Art Institute of Boston. David’s work resides in numerous private and public collections including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Harvard’s Fogg Art Museum, and the Boston Public Library. ARTcetera Townhouse, 1999 Monotype 20 x 16” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Pepper Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $1,400 Twist 2 (detail), 2004 Grease pencil, mica, gel medium on vellum 11 x 11” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Bernard Toale Gallery $600 SILENT ONE ● DEBORAH DAVIDSON Deborah Davidson’s paintings explore the connection between visual art and text. Inspired by her son’s language development as an infant, Davidson began documenting his early sounds and attempts at language. The artist has developed a series of personal hieroglyphs rendered in a highly complex and unusal palette. In this recent body of work, she continues her interest in the intersection of text and image, and especially the evolution of the image as an analogy, a shadow of the text. Reve 43 74 Acrylic on vellum mounted on wood panel 8 x 6 x 2” Donated by the artist Courtesy of William Scott Gallery $450 RACHEL DAYSON 75 In her vividly colored works on paper, Rachel Dayson reveals her sensuous mastery of color combined with whimsical narratives. She recently exhibited her works at Allston Skirt Gallery in February 2004. Community, 2002 Watercolor/gouache on paper 11 x 15” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Allston Skirt Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $800 KATHERINE DESJARDINS Katherine draws and redraws the characters from a 1947 coloring book, reinventing them and revealing contradictions buried in the original material. This recent series of works has grown to include hundreds of drawing – from one inch squares to 15 foot high wall drawings. Untitled (Frolic), 2004 76 Ink, acrylic, gesso on paper 12 x 12” Donated by the artist Courtesy of The Boston Drawing Project at the Bernard Toale Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $850 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 44 ● S I L E N T O N E 77 GARY DUEHR Taken in Paris, this image is from “Soft Cities”, which treats architecture and street scenes as if they’re floating, ghostly impressions. Duehr received an artist grant in photography in 2003 from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, and past awards include the LEF Foundation and Rockefeller Foundation Mask, 2003 Pigment print, C-Photo 28 x 24” Donated by the artist Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $750 78 THOMAS DURAND Thomas Durand’s decade-long monkey sock doll series places these depression era dolls in found and made landscapes that evoke the human story. A graduate of the Museum School of Fine Arts (1986), Thomas is starting to show his work in the New England area. Beached, 2002 Black and white photograph 16 x 20” Donated by the artist $750 79 DANIELLE DWYER Dwyer continues to investigate imagery from personal snapshots that evoke the loss of innocence and illusion of safety in childhood. Painted in a loose gestural manner, the work embodies the fragility of reconciling these psychological spaces. Her work has been exhibited at the Allston Skirt Gallery, Gallery at Green Street, and numerous group shows in Boston and most recently at Mixture Contemporary in Houston, Texas. Charlotte’s Web, 2004 Oil on canvas 18 x 28” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Allston Skirt Gallery $850 ARTcetera SILENT ONE ● MICHAEL EDER Nature (Orange), 2003 Woodcut, monoprint on BFK paper 27 x 20” Michael Eder studied painting at The Rhode Island School of Design and recently received his Masters at Massachusetts College of Art. He has exhibited in a wide range of spaces, cities, and countries, and has had a studio in Boston for 8 years. His abstract prints, large oils and recent wall paintings derive from a long-time study of Nature. 45 80 Donated by the artist Courtesy of Art Advisory/Boston Frame Donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $650 81 TODD ELLIOTT Mr. Elliott combines images and objects inherent to fast-food and gas station signs; custom and race car graphics; and the Western American landscape. “OPEN” is one of a series of paintings using zero(s) as a foundation to connect the vernacular with abstract imagery. “OPEN”, 2004 Acrylic on Polycarbonate 18 x 30” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery Katz $1,800 82 MARTY EPP In an ongoing series of drawings and paintings, Epp uses single words or short phrases as a drawn “mark” to activate the picture’s surface. Epp has shown widely throughout New England and recently in Cuba and France. She teaches in the Museum School Continuing Education Program, the DeCordova Museum School, and the Fine Arts Work Center. Yummy, 2002 Oil on panel 24 x 24” Donated by the artist Courtesy of the Schoolhouse Gallery, Provincetown $2,000 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 46 ● S I L E N T O N E 83 LAURA EVANS Sandwich Combo #20, 2002 Cast stone, grout, wire, wax 7 x 6 x 2” Evan’s sandwich combo series combines the appearance of softness with edginess, while exploring the tension between togetherness and individuation. Hew work was featured in 2003 at The Mills Gallery exhibition “South Enders (2)” and in “Made for Each Other” at Hall Space Gallery in 2002. 84 JEMISON FAUST In her most recent mixed media pieces, Faust works from photos of ruins, excavations, and restoration projects to rebuild an abstract evocation of the original space. She has been a member of the Bromfield Art Gallery since 1990 and has shown her work in Rhode Island, Boston, and New York. 85 Donated by the artist Courtesy of Barbara Krakow Gallery $1,000 Renovation #2, 2004 Mixed media on board 12 x 12” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Bromfield Art Gallery $500 TINA FEINGOLD Feingold experiments with layers of paint building transparencies with paint to evoke mysterious states of spaces and feelings. Her work was featured in a one person show at the Allston Skirt Gallery in September 2003. ARTcetera Dusk, 2002 Oil on canvas 14 x 11” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Allston Skirt Gallery $750 SILENT ONE ● EDWARD FETTER 47 86 Edward Fetter was the recipient of the 2003 Mass Cultural Council Grant in Photography. He has a BFA from Mass College of Art, a MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute, and has work in the Danforth Collections. Golden State Park, San Francisco, CA, 2001 Gelatin-silver print 9 x 13” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Kingston Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $800 87 JIM FITTS Jim’s photographs have been exhibited in numerous solo and group exhibitions. He currently serves on the board of Directors of the Photographic Resource Center and the Board of Overseers of the Art Institute of Boston. Recently he juried the exhibition entitled “Photography Now” for the South Shore Arts Center. Lumpinee Park – Bangkok Carbon Pigment Quadtone Inkjet Print 11 x 14” Donated by the artist Frame Donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $550 KATHRYN FRUND 88 With a strong connection to her past, Frund’s new paintings continue to pose questions about the triangular relationship between nature, science and spirituality; specifically exploring the concepts of stewardship and consumption. The result is a compelling and wellarticulated body of ethereal landscapes resonant with symbolism. Marked Narration I, 2004 Mixed media on board 11 x 11” Donated by Kathryn Fund Courtesy of Chase Gallery $1,400 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 48 ● S I L E N T O N E 89 ESTHER GARCIA EDER Eder’s recent work is a series of 20 monoprints titled “Archetypes”. They draw on the imagery that has appeared in prints, oils, and watercolors over the last 15 years. Born and educated in Argentina, the colors and forms of her first impressions still prevail in her current work. Her work is included in the collections of the Rose Museum, Brandeis; the Boston Public Library; the Morrisey Library, UC Berkeley; and the School of Art and Design, Savannah, Georgia. 90 About Love, 2004 Monoprint oil on paper 24 x 20” Donated by the artist $750 DORE GARDNER Dore Gardner teaches photography at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts and Tufts University. El cerro de campana is from the Nino Fidencio, A Heart Thrown Open, published by Santa Fe: Museum of New Mexico Press, 1992. Ms. Gardner’s work is collected by Boston Public Library, Loyola University, DeCordova Museum, and the Corcoran Gallery of Art. El cerro de campagna, Espinazo, Nuevo Leon, 1987 Silver gelatin photograph 16 x 20” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery Kayafas $800 91 MARGARET GERDING Enchanting and intense paintings depicting the expansive horizons, isolated trees, serpentine rivers, and soft velvet marshes found in New England’s landscape. Softly meditative, yet dramatically luminous panoramas transport the viewer to a place unaltered by human presence. Colors of Treeline, 2002 Oil on panel 12 x 24” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Arden Gallery $2,800 ARTcetera SILENT ONE ● 49 92 EILEEN GILLESPIE Gillespie attended the University of Pennsylvania and the Rhode Island School of Design. She has had solo shows in Maine and Boston and group shows throughout the Northeast. Her work can be found in numerous public and private collections including the Boston Athenaeum and Fidelity Investments. Untitled #1 (Boston), 2002 Charcoal on paper 22 x 30” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Pepper Gallery $1,200 MITCH GLASSMAN 93 The artist recently spent two months in the Middle East engaging Israeli and Palestinian artists; demonstrating an open system of written language which transcends territorial identity. His works have been shown in numerous exhibits and galleries and are in private collections in the U.S., China, Israel, and Palestine. (www.mitchglassmanart.com) The Poet and the Executioner, no. 5, 2003 Oil, oil crayon, graphite on 365 gsm paper 18.5 x 18.5” Donated by the artist Courtesy of the Harcus Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $1,500 GREGORY GOMEZ 94 Drawing on such diverse sources as ancient pictographs and genetic sequencing, Gomez creates an eclectic mix of geometric signs and symbols. Subjecting the surface to an industrial sandblaster, he reveals new meaning in the combined imagery. He has taught at Wellesley College and Wheelock College, and lives and works in Newtonville, MA. Native Chronology/E.R. Model, 2002 Gouache sandblasting on iris print 10 x 14” Donated by the artist Courtesy of OHT Gallery $1,200 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 50 ● S I L E N T O N E 95 ANDREW GUTHRIE Putting on a wig is one thing. Putting on a wig, the color of which is unlike any strand of hair, is another. Consider these themes within the safety of your home. The artist received the Massachusetts Cultural Council Photography Fellowship in 2003. Sample his work at www.localidea.com. Totem, 2004 3 joined frames, digital photography 28 x 10” Donated by the artist $800 96 SCOTT HADFIELD Early Spring, 2003 Oil on wood panel 32 x 24” In his earlier works, Hadfield’s curvilinear shapes were literally cut from the panel and reassembled. Hadfield now depicts those same shapes, but with subtle coloration and with washes of color. 97 Donated by the artist/Barbara Krakow Gallery Courtesy of Barbara Krakow Gallery $2,000 LEIGH HALL Leigh Hall’s photos capture the details and patterns of everyday life in the city of Boston. Hall has a degree in painting from the Massachusetts College of Art, and has been working with digital photography for the past three years. She is a member of the Atlantic Works Gallery in East Boston. Embrace, 2004 Digital Photo (Ink jet print) 12 x 16” Donated by the artist Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $600 ARTcetera SILENT ONE ● DECLAN HALPIN Pieta, 2002 51 98 Acrylic and pencil on aluminum 38 x 24 x 2” Halpin’s unique interpretation of the Pieta theme combines multiple layers of fabricated aluminum with vivid acrylic color. His 2004 schedule includes solo exhibitions in New York City and Provincetown, MA. Donated by the artist Courtesy of Clark Gallery $2,400 CHRISTOS HAMAWI A rhododendron with buds ready to burst: These “natural distractions” provide me escape from the routine of everyday life. Printed on acid free Somerset Velvet 330gsm weight paper with museum quality, archival inks. Comes with signed Certificate of Authenticity. www.bluebrickstudios.com Awakening, 2002 99 Limited edition giclee print 17 x 13” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Legacy Gallery $475 100 ANNE GILSON HANEY Virtually self-taught, Anne Gilson Haney found the inspiration for Open Here during time spent on Cape Cod. Open Here, 2004 Acrylic on Board 12 x 12” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Mercury Gallery $450 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 52 ● S I L E N T O N E 101 ARTHUR HARDIGG Arthur Hardigg is interested in creating dramatic spaces through the juxtaposition of figurative and abstract forms. Arthur is a graduate of the School of the Museum of Fine Arts. He has been a member of the Bromfield Gallery since 1999. 102 TIMOTHY HARNEY Timothy Harney has been showing his intense, soulful portraits and vibrant landscape paintings in the Boston area for over 20 years. Harney attended UMASS, Amherst, and has shown at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and DeCordova Museum in Lincoln. He is a faculty member at the DeCordova School and is represented by Clark Gallery. 103 CONLEY HARRIS This drawing is based on an 18th Century Kishangargh (India) court sketch in my collection and currently on loan to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts for an exhibition organized by Joan Cummins, Asst. Curator of Southeastern Asian and Indian Art. In my work I focus on aspects of simultaneous beauty and chaos witnessed during travels across India. ARTcetera Garden Theater, 2002 Mixed media on paper 35 x 24” Donated by the artist Courtesy of the Bromfield Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $900 Train Man, 2002 Acrylic and mixed media 27.5 x 20” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Clark Gallery $2,500 Visions and Whispers Near the Step Well, 2004 Chalk pastel, watercolor drawing 41 x 30” Donated by Howard Truelove and the artist Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $3,800 SILENT ONE ● 53 104 PAMELA HAWKES Hawkes’ photographs have received numerous awards including those from the Photographic Resource Center, Boston, the 21st Journal of Contemporary Photography Award, 74th and Philadelphia Print Club’s International Competition. Her work is represented in many private and public collections including that of the Addison Gallery of American Art, the Boston Public Library, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and the Polaroid Corporation. Paper Hydrangeas, 2000 Toned silver print 19 x 23” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Pepper Gallery $1,150 GL HEEREN Ars Longa, Vita Brevis About a Boy, 2003 105 Oil on board 36 x 12” Donated by Gina Heeren Courtesy of my family $800 HEATHER HOBLER-KEENE 106 In this series of drawings, I continue to use the duplication and repetition of a few images. I use them around the edge to explore the influence of negative space on the frame. Pink, 2003 Casein and ink on mylar 23 x 23” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Allston Skirt Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $750 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 54 ● S I L E N T O N E 107 CHRISTINE HOLTZ For the last six years, Christine Holtz & #8217’s photography has focused on transforming our everchanging environment into an artifact for contemplation. Using the common language of ubiquitous space to create conceptual landscapes, her photographs facilitate an interactive exploration of deeper, universal issues regarding space, the existence of objectivity, and the verisimilitude of popular culture. Classroom, 2003 C-print 16 x 20” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery Katz Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $750 108 WILL HOWCROFT In his latest series, Out of Season, Will Howcroft continues to explore the possibilities of studio still life. Although these photographs are digitally printed, they all begin with traditional chemical film capture. With little digital manipulation they are then printed on archival watercolor paper. Howcroft is co-founder of Clements/Howcroft Photography in Boston. Collections include the DeCordova Museum and Fleet Bank. 109 DUTCH HUFF Dutch Huff photographs our urban exoskeleton as it has been altered by everyday happenings: weather, demolition, destruction. He finds abstract beauty in these stressed surfaces and detritus as evidenced in this color print from his Strength in Numbers series. ARTcetera Two Hearts, 2003 Pigmented dye inkjet print 22 x 17” Donated by the artist Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $750 208 Flynn Avenue, #1, 2003 C-print on aluminum 24 x 16” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery Kayafas $750 SILENT ONE ● 55 110 SIDNEY HURWITZ This print is part of a series done from the decks of the Provincetown fishing fleet in the 1980’s. Blue Deck, 1985 Watercolor, aquatint 11.5 x 16” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Pepper Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $750 PAUL INGLIS 111 Paul’s drawings have recently been included in The Boston Drawing Project and the Mills Gallery’s 18th drawing show. Fort Point Channel, 2003 Monotype 9 x 15.5” Donated by the artist Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $800 ANTHONY JAMES Eloquent and enigmatic abstract paintings, luminous in form and energy, James’ paintings are quietly profound expressions of color and light. His lyrical works are windows into a non-narrative world where a painting does not explain, it simply expresses. Haiku XXII, 2002 Acrylic on canvas 36 x 24” 112 Donated by the artist Courtesy of Arden Gallery $4,500 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 56 ● S I L E N T O N E 113 SPENCER JAMES In his current work, James trades in his usual found, weather-worn wood surface for smooth new masonite and merges his life drawings with paint and oil stick. His drawings are currently touring in the “Bad Touch” exhibit, recently at the Rose Museum. 114 MONIQUE JOHANNET Just Do What pollutes and expands an art-making vocabulary of the 60’s and 70’s, so that words like prop and lean mingle with words like horrify and grieve. Johannet exhibits throughout the U.S. Her work is in the collection of Fidelity Investments and private collection in the U.S. and Europe. 115 Donated by the artist Courtesy of The Boston Drawing Project at Bernard Toale Gallery $800 Just Do What, 2003 Mixed media on paper 22 x 30” Donated by the artist Courtesy of The Boston Drawing Project at Bernard Toale Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $750 BRONLYN JONES Bronlyn Jones’ spare, diagrammatic graphite drawings have been exhibited in Boston, New York, and Philadelphia. Her work is included in the collections of the Fogg Art Museum, the Rose Art Museum, Fidelity Investments, and private collections throughout the United States. ARTcetera Rear View, 2003 Acrylic and oil stick on masonite 33 x 40” After Mondrian, 2004 Graphite on paper 8 x 6.5” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Barbara Krakow Gallery $1,200 SILENT ONE ● CHET JONES Utility Shack, Long Point II, 2003 Chet Jones is a Provincetown-based painter. His work is process oriented--rooted in the observation and interpretation of light, and the act of painting itself. Jones has been painting professionally since 1981. He majored in art at Boston College, and attended art school in Florence, Italy. In addition to his many exhibitions on Cape Cod, Jones’ work has been shown in New York at the National Academy Museum. His work is included in both public and private collections throughout the United States and Europe. Jones is currently represented by the WilliamScott Gallery in Provincetown. 57 116 Oil on linen 13 x 13” Donated by the artist $1,400 Dieter Standing, 2002 PHILLIP JONES Though Phillip Jones is known for his industrial and architectural photography, he has been working with live models for many years. Dieter is not a professional model: the photographs in this series grew out of a collaboration between photographer and model. 117 Silver gelatin print 17.5 x 9” Donated by Mercury Gallery Courtesy of Mercury Gallery $950 118 NICHOLAS KAHN & RICHARD SELESNICK The Lunar Study is one of one hundred photographs and drawings printed in an edition of 25 for Kahn/Selesnicks newest series “The Apollo Prophesies”. The show features one continuous 36 ft long panorama of an Edwardian 1960’s trip to the moon. The artists have been collaborating for over 20 years and are in the collections of the National Portrait Gallery, The Philadelphia Museum of Art and The Fogg Art Museum among others. Aperture has published Scotlandfuturebog and will be publishing City of Salt in 2004. Lunar Study, 2004 Photograph 11 x 8” Donated by the artists Courtesy of Pepper Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $600 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 58 ● S I L E N T O N E 119 JANE KAMINE Intrusion #16 Monotype 22 x 31 This series of monotypes is based on the concept of intrusion, a system being invaded by unwanted elements. These intrusions are created by multiple printed layers. Kamine has an MSA from the University of California, Berkley and has taught visual arts in the MBA program at Babson and MIT. Her work is in corporate collections, including Fidelity, Meditech, and the Druker Co. (Atalier 505). 120 $750 MASAKO KAMIYA Masako Kamiya creates complex paintings constructed of thousands of tiny nodules of paint, one built upon another. These fields of color shift and move, creating patterns and illusions. Kamiya received an MFA from Massachusetts College of Art and is now an assistant professor at Montserrat College of Art. Tuscania, 2003 Gouache on paper 20.5 x 16” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery NAGA Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $800 121 JASON KARAKEHIAN This lamp turns on and off by a toggle switch and has a very stable, weighted base. It is excellent for your desk or table. You can see more of Jason’s work at www.workinsteel.com. Lamp #6, 2002 Steel, brass 30 x 10 x 10” Donated by the artist in honor of Annahid (Mooshagian) Karakehian $750 ARTcetera SILENT ONE ● CATHERINE KEHOE Columbines, 2004 59 122 Oil on Wood 8 x 8” Catherine Kehoe is best known for her self-portraits. Her recent paintings have focused on flower imagery. Kehoe’s paintings record a search for an essential structure that exists beyond, but is revealed by, changing conditions of light. Donated by the artist Courtesy of Howard Yezerski Gallery $1,200 123 LANCE KEIMIG Lance Keimig photographs mainly at night, combining long exposures with mixed light sources to create surreal and other worldly effects. His photographs record time in a way that cannot be perceived by the human eye. Keimig teaches night photography at the Museum School in Boston, and the New England School of Photography. His work is in the collection of the Boston Athenaeum, the Art Complex Museum, and numerous corporate collections. Red Skies II, 2003 Color Photograph 19 x 19” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Pepper Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $850 JAMES KENNEDY #37 is part of a series of drawings completed while on a Macdowell Fellowship last winter. James Kennedy’s work has been exhibited in Boston, Germany, and California. #37, 2004 124 Colored pencil on paper 10 x 7” Donated by James Kennedy Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $750 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 60 ● S I L E N T O N E 125 JUDY KERMIS BLOTNICK Judy Kermis Blotnick is a graduate of Pratt Institute and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts where she teaches. Her work questions gender, identity and the packaging of the self via clothing and possessions. She was a traveling scholar 2002 and has shown at the MFA, the Mills Gallery and the Drawing Project at Bernard Toale Gallery. Charmed, 2004 Gouache, graphite, ink 30 x 24” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Allston Skirt Gallery $1,500 126 MAXINE KIM Maxine Kim, a graduate of Brown University, currently lives and works in Providence, RI. Light Me Up, from her latest body of photographs, explores the relationships and the physical tension as bodies touch and interact. Light Me Up, #1/10, 2004 Gelatin silver photograph 24 x 25” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery Kayafas $1,100 127 DAVID KING Temptation is one in a series of self portraits, painted when the artist was 15 and 16 years old. As he faces the future and his manhood, he is afraid and turns away for a moment, but knows the way is there and the lantern is lit. Holding the light is a woman, naked, pure and certain. ARTcetera Temptation, 2003 Acrylic on Wood 4’ x 2’ x 9” Donated by the artist Proceeds from this special donation will benefit Aritists for Humanity $1500 SILENT ONE ● 61 128 JAMES KINNY James Kinny’s objective is to paint paint; to portray an emotional expression. These intuitive paintings are never intended to be narrative, but instead seek viewers to have their own experiences. Kinny has worked and shown in the Boston area since the mid 1980’s and is in public and private collections. XII, 2003 Oil 22 x 18” Donated by Richard Giglio $3,000 129 MARY KOCOL This photograph is part of Kocol’s toy camera work, whose inconsistent focus makes for gentle distortions and dark corners. Her pictures are included in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Victoria and Albert Museum, the San Francisco Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts, and the DeCordova Museum. She received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1993. Water Lilies, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, 2000 Type C print 28 x 28” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery NAGA Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $1,000 DANIELLE KRCMAR Krcmar explores the metaphoric potential in the forms of the bust. Connection, distances, and interactions between the heads use visual images to speak of emotional ones. She is a 2001 recipient of the Mass. Cultural Council Grant in Sculpture. She has taught at Brandeis, the SFMA, and is currently artist in residence at Babson College. Newlyweds, 2004 130 Cement, nylon Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery @ Green Street $1,100 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 62 ● S I L E N T O N E 131 DAVID KUPFERMAN Kupferman’s Yagya Series refers to Vedic Indian ceremonies that restore synchrony between the individual and the cosmos. He recently had solo shows at the Cape MFA, the Danforth Museum, and the Judi Rotenberg Gallery. He is in a dozen museum collections including the DeCordova, Naples, BPL, Davis and MFA-Springfield. He is a grant recipient from the Pollock-Krasner, Gottlieb and Rauschenberg foundations. Yagya (ceremony), 1995 Acrylic on paper 26 x 35” Donated by David & Beth Kupferman Courtesy of the Judi Rotenberg Gallery, Boston Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $1,500 132 MARY LANG Mary Lang’s recent photographs are not of actual trees or clouds, but their reflections in water or ice. Inverting the reflection describes a landscape which may not exist in reality but which feels more true to Lang’s experience. She will be in the DeCordova Annual Exhibition, 2004. Her work is in the collections of the DeCordova Museum, Fogg Museum, and the Museum of Fine Arts. Flowed Meadow II Early spring, 2003 C-Print 15 x 22” Donated by the artist Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $800 133 JUDITH LARSEN Wrapping the figure with imagery from a wide variety of sources, Larsen continues her exploration of the human form. Her photographs, with the softness of drawings, invite multiple levels of interpretation. She earned an MFA from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts and her work is in several public and private collections. Inversion 3, 2003 Iris print on paper 17 x 21” Donated by the artist Courtesy of OHT Gallery $900 ARTcetera SILENT ONE ● 63 134 PEIK LARSEN Larsen focuses on mood, energy and light, as well as the more formal issues of form, color, and space, as he strikes an intuitive balance between the figurative and the abstract in his work. He taught at Harvard University for many years, and lives and works in Cambridge. Red Yew, 2003 11 x 12” Monotype Donated by the artist Courtesy of OHT Gallery $950 JEAN LARSON Employing translucent washes of oil paint on wooden panels, Jean Larson creates a poetic world of pure color, spiritual light and soft emotion. Larson draws inspiration from the enchanting landscapes and wild flower gardens surrounding her remote home in Southern France. Automne en France I, 2002 135 Oil on panel 30 x 24” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Arden Gallery $3,400 MARYELLEN LATAS 136 This piece combines sensuous materiality in its use of lead foil with the hard edge geometry created by the repetitive use of the squire. Latas is represented in numerous public and private collections in the U.S. and in Europe. Untitled #1998-62, 1998 Lead, 23kt gold leaf, gold size on baltic birch 12 x 36 x 2” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Barbara Krakow Gallery $2,800 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 64 ● S I L E N T O N E 137 JAMES LEITCH Paintings depict scenes in and around Boston of old industrial and abandoned landscapes –areas often overlooked and ignored which are slowly fading away. Edison Plant, So. Boston MA, 2003 Oil on panel 9 x 14” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Art Advisory/Boston $700 138 JULIE LEVESQUE In her recent work, Julie Levesque has explored the hidden reality of normalcy in families and society. This print is from Levesque’s installation “Trespass”. She attended Massachusetts College of Art and SUNY, New Paltz. Julie Levesque has shown at the Mills Galley, the New Art Center in Newton, and is represented by Clark Gallery. 139 MARILYN LEVIN Known for her rich colors and surfaces, Levin’s recent work has a spiritual quality. Her works are included in the collections of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Rose Art Museum, and Harvard University. She teaches in the Tufts/Museum School Program. Somewhere Between the Moon & New York City, 2003 Oil on Canvas 12 x 10” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Toomey-Tourell Gallery, San Francisco $1,200 ARTcetera Immense Fence, #2/10 2003 Iris print 44 x 33” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Clark Gallery Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc $800 SILENT ONE ● MARJA LIANKO This image comes from a series of doll paintings in symbolic situations. Marja Lianko has exhibited her work widely and received several grants and fellowships. Her work is included in the collections of the Museum of Fine Arts, the Fogg Museum, the DeCordova Museum, and numerous corporate, university, and private collections. Falling, 2001 Acrylic and mixed media on panel 15 x 12” 65 140 Donated by the artist Courtesy of Pepper Gallery $1,200 SID LIMITZ 141 Photographer/filmmaker, Sid Limitz continues to travel throughout the United States in search of THE AMERICAN PHENOMENON. He has shown his work at the ICA, Photographic Resource Center, Museum of Fine Arts, The Boston Public Library, and ARTcetera 2002. www.limitz.com. Hollywood, 2001,2001 Digital print from original slide 16 x 20” Donated by the artist Courtesy of sidlimitz.com $1500 SANDY LITCHFIELD 142 Sandy’s work is derived from her experience of place in nature. She was recently selected for the 2004 DeCordova Annual Exhibition. Her drawings are in the Boston Drawing Project, Pierogi 2000, and the Drawing Center’s Viewing Program in New York. Lake Life, 2003 Watercolor and collage on paper 14 x 18” Donated by the artist Courtesy of The Boston Drawing Project at the Bernard Toale Gallery. Frame donated by Stanhope Framers, Inc. $600 AN AUCTION TO BENEFIT AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS 66 ● S I L E N T O N E 143 EVIE LOVETT Evie Lovett’s fascination with changes in personality brought about by “dress up” or masquerade, led her to Backstage at the Rainbow Cattle Co., Drag Queens in Vermont. Documenting the transformation of the “Average Joe” to the flamboyant and sequined diva, we find Miss Kitty Rawhide and Mama, Rainbow Cattle Co., #22, in mid illusion. Rainbow Cattle Co., #22, 2003 Silver gelatin photo 14 x 14” Donated by the artist Courtesy of Gallery Kayafas $500 144 MICHAEL LYNCH Michael Lynch lives and works in Boston and Provincetown. His latest works are inspired by Herman Melville’s Moby Dick, the illustrations of Rockwell Kent and his own cetacean dreams. Winthrop I, 2000 Gelatin silverprint Donated by the artist $825 ARTcetera