view article - Kate Gridley
Transcription
view article - Kate Gridley
Breaking New Ground, Eight Vermont women artists share innovative work grounded in a love of nature, respect for life cycles, and the joyful act of creation. StorybyelayneClift photos by DeiDre scherer Driven by an interest in aging human faces, Deidre Scherer’s work (top) “focuses on the universal issues of aging and mortality, and on seeing these transitions as a natural part of life, worthy of reflection.” One of Deidre’s torn paper weavings, Strings (bottom), part of a series involving “finger weaving,” in which she uses digital prints of her fabric work and weaves together two prints so they appear reintegrated in woven form. 56 may/june2013 A S A C H I L D , Deidre Scherer loved seeing dioramas her father painted at the Museum of Natural History in Manhattan. Spending hours gazing at Latin American terra-cotta animals and wood sculptures crafted by Native Americans, she buried dead animals and dug up their bones to display on her bedroom windowsill. “I could pick up anything and work with it,” she recalls. Influenced by the work of artists like Käthe Kollwitz and Alice Neel and by early Renaissance and Baroque tapestry, fresco painting, and mosaic, Deidre developed her unique medium of “thread on fabric,” pioneering the genre of fabric art. Deidre’s work with fabric began when she was a young mother finding it difficult to paint while raising children. She braided rugs, made batik, and worked with layered fabric. Then she made a fabric book for her daughter, a project she credits with beginning her “entire romance with fabric.” Deidre’s unique process brings to life people of extraordinary character and humanity, based on models and created with her special technique. Working from sketches or photographs, using scissors and a sewing machine, she cuts and layers with the eye of a painter, always looking for what she calls the magic: “a sense that there is a sentient being who will appear to tell me how they want to come through.” Her work with elders grew out of a project in which she visited a nursing home “looking for wise, queenly figures to draw.” Observing and talking to older people was life altering. She became a hospice volunteer and through that work found inspiration for her art. Listening to stories as she sketched the faces of elderly people, Deidre began to act as witness to their lives. As she transposed her sketches into fabric images, she saw that her works transcended individual contexts; they became universal representations of life, and death. Soon her work was recognized for illuminating the inevitable progressions of life, opening an “essential dialogue” about the difficult issues of aging and mortality. Currently working on a series involving “finger weaving,” Deidre uses digital prints of her fabric work in a process that weaves together two prints so they appear reintegrated in woven form. Other works in progress in her Williamsville studio include a piece for an assisted living home. “In considering our own death,” she says, “we have a chance to consider our own life. This is the dialogue of my work.” Middlebury artist Kate Gridley thought she wanted to be a doctor when she was in college but after a summer attending art school she realized “these were my people.” Returning to Williams College, she changed her major and after graduation headed to New York, then to Italy where she studied Renaissance painting with artist Ben Long. Back in the States, she began exhibiting at age 24 and hasn’t stopped since. “What always informs my work,” Kate says, “is a sense of quiet observation simply of what’s in front of me. I’m as interested in space seen as an object as I am in the actual subject matter. I’m searching for the quiet power in what I see.” Her latest project represents that power in a set of 17 portraits called Passing Through: Portraits of Emerging Adults, inspired by a vision of people between adolescence and full-fledged adulthood being recognized, honored, and supported Making Great Art photo by howarD roMero photos by Kerry o. FUrl ani Kate Gridley’s latest project is a set of 17 portraits called Passing Through: Portraits of Emerging Adults, inspired by a vision of people between adolescence and full-fledged adulthood being recognized, honored, and supported in fulfilling their human potential. in fulfilling their human potential. “Oil portraits of emerging adults are seldom painted in our culture,” Kate points out. “Yet the moments in which young adults develop their ideas, fully realize their selves, and claim their voices beg for the kind of sustained examination that detailed oil painting demands.” After choosing the subjects— all of whom have a connection to Middelbury—Kate realized that she had selected them for their stories and ideas and not simply because they impressed her as self-possessed and promising youths. “It felt appropriate to record their stories, their words, and to take note of what they say.” The resulting edited oral portraits will be an integral part of the exhibition, “accessible with a cell phone when one stands before each painting.” The exhibition opens in June at Southern Vermont Arts Center and will then tour Vermont and other New England venues. Kate hopes it will be a springboard for larger discussions on issues related to this age group and is convinced the project “will contribute something significant to our messy, fragile world.” Sculptor and slate carver Kerry O. Furlani began her career as a journalist but quickly discovered that her happiest hours were spent making sculpture after her workday ended. In the 1990s, she studied at the Frink School of Figurative Sculpture in England where she earned an MFA. Introduced there to traditional hand-carving techniques, she discovered an affinity for carving forms using the timeless materials of stone and wood. In 2001, Kerry came to Vermont to work with local marble but found the beautiful colors and soft quality of slate most interesting. “Slate, with its long history of use in the letter-cutting industry, was an ultimate fit for my passion for line and long-held desire to explore the ancient form of relief carving.” One day Kerry found a slate roof tile in her backyard and began translating one of her charcoal drawings into a relief carving. She has continued to explore this native Vermont material ever since. For the past decade she has been showing a growing body of slate work including panels, benches, tables, and sculpture throughout New England. Her Poultney studio is near the slate quarries that feed her muse while she earns a living selling art and lettering. In 2011, supported by a Vermont Arts Council Grant, Kerry traveled to Wales to study with master letter carver John Neilson. The three-month apprenticeship resulted in Words to Stone: The Carved Lettering of Kerry O. Furlani, widely shown in Vermont galleries. Why carve letters in stone? “I find In the 1990s, sculptor and slate carver Kerry O. Furlani (top) discovered an affinity for carving forms using the timeless materials of stone and wood. In 2001, she came to Vermont to work with local marble but found the beautiful colors and soft quality of slate most interesting. (middle) Kerry O. Furlani, Woman I, slate, 28 x 20 inches (71.1 x 50.8 cm). (bottom) Kerry O. Furlani, Family Secrets, slate, 26 x 30 inches (66 x 76.2 cm). Vermontmagazine5 7 photos by Dona M ar a Friedm an (Left) From her Rupert art studio, painter Dona Mara Friedman employs the ancient art form of encaustic, or hot wax, painting to produce unique and diverse artwork. She describes the medium as “elemental, natural, organic, messy, often with unexpected results.” (Right) Another example of Dona exploring the medium of encaustic painting, which has developed and heightened a new dimension to her oil painting endeavors. photos by Eliz abeth Billings The completed CUNY School of Law art installation hangs in the sunlight. The integration of Elizabeth Billings’s woven materials and Andrea Wasserman’s sculptural elements combine to form strong natural patterns. Elizabeth Billings (left) and Andrea Wasserman (right) smile after completing the CUNY School of Law installation. The collaboration, they agree, is a gift. “We are blessed to be able to do what we love,” Elizabeth says. 58 may / june 2013 great meaning in a studio practice that has ties to my surrounding land and our ancestral history, like that of the Roman ‘V-cut’ letters dating back 2,000 years,” Kerry says. Carving slate by hand using chisels and mallets, Kerry is fueled by the challenge of carving a layered stone prone to splitting when struck by a mallet. She also wants to “shake up the public perception of slate’s function in our culture as a humble material for landscape and/ or architecture. I hope my carvings will serve to honor slate’s beauty as a vehicle for art making.” Carving is also integral to the work of encaustic artist Dona Mara Friedman whose studio is in Rupert. Encaustic, or hot wax, painting is an ancient art form dating back to Greco-Roman times. It involves using heated beeswax to which colored pigment or other ingredients are added. The liquid paste is then applied to a natural surface like wood. By applying heat, the artist manipulates the wax mixture, sculpting and painting toward a final work. Dona, who began her career as a painter and graphic artist after graduating from Rochester Institute of Technology’s School of Art and Design, says that creative investigation in painting led her to the ancient medium of encaustic art, adding a new dimension to her oil painting. “The layered quality created with this combination of beeswax, dammar resin, and pigments drew me to its luminous surface. The process of painting with a heated medium offered an experimental odyssey. It is elemental, natural, organic, messy, often with unexpected results.” Dona says her latest work in this ancient medium has allowed her to use all that she learned through her years as a painter. “Doing the work, exploring, experimenting, and getting lost in that investigation is so pleasing. The drive is wicked and the desire to find the essence continual.” Artists Elizabeth Billings and Andrea Wasserman have been collaborating for 18 years on large-scale public art projects that complement and enhance the essential nature of their settings. Both MFA graduates of the Cranbrook Academy of Art, each artist studied weaving and textile design in Japan, an experience that figured largely in their respective artistic development. Today, Elizabeth extends the tradition of textiles by integrating woven surfaces with gathered natural elements, thus providing a deep connection between the work and nature’s rhythms. Andrea’s work is more sculptural, involving drawings mingled with carved and cast forms that use strong patterns within nature so that the living organisms become palpable. “In our public work we like to make more apparent what is underlying in the site so that when we make a piece it makes sense for that space as if it always wanted to be there,” Andrea explains. “We let a site speak to us about what’s important. In that way, each project becomes its own specific journey.” The synchronicity that exists between the two artists, and between them and the environments in which they work, can be found in such venues as the Burlington Airport, the bike path on Isle La Motte, the lobby of the Marriott Hotel in Burlington, and Vermont Law School’s amphitheater. Farther afield, photo by Kirsten M acEdwards they have done installations for the Philadelphia International Airport and the Proton Therapy Institute at the University of Florida in Jacksonville. The artists’ materials are wide-ranging. They include wood, stone, slate, glass, saplings, threads, and reeds. For example, an installation at the Emery Hebbard State Office Building in Newport, Vermont includes wood and granite carvings, etched glass panels, and a copper weathervane. “We think a lot about our natural environment,” Elizabeth says. “But the sense of the artist’s hand is always evident in our work.” That has meant a sharp learning curve on occasion since she and Andrea do everything themselves, from sandblasting to cutting slate and splitting rock. Saxtons River artist Michèle Ratté grew up in Brattleboro, where she began silk screening in sixth grade. She returned to Vermont a few years ago after living in Martha’s Vineyard. Describing herself as a “printmaker, assembler, and inventor of textile printing processes,” photo by Michèle Ratté Saxtons River-based artist Michèle Ratté’s work involves metal and mineral pigments, fabrics, sewing, and “nature-formed” objects such as stones and shells. photo by Dona M ar a Friedm an Michèle Ratté, island 1, 2010, 22k gold monoprinted hand-loomed silk, linen, translucent velum, Kevlar thread, metal beads, 6½ x 8½ x 2 inches (16.5 x 21.6 x 5 cm). her work involves metal and mineral pigments, fabrics, sewing, and “natureformed” objects such as stones and shells. “Reverence for nature forms the underpinning of my art,” she says. Michèle holds a patent, with master dyer Joan Morris, for inventing a process with chemist Dr. Miklos Breuer that permanently prints precious metals and mineral grains onto textiles. A series of large-scale mono-prints using this technology, executed with Joan Morris, have been exhibited at several venues, including the Bennington Museum. A VPR reviewer said of a recent exhibition there, “Ratté’s work is infused with a compelling tactile rhythm and grace.” An award-winning graduate of Dartmouth College’s art program, Michèle’s unique artistic work led to a successful business that supplied several major retailers in the U.S. and Japan with original designs on hand-printed textiles. But in 1997 she closed her company to concentrate exclusively on studio work. Currently, she is working on threedimensional collages that incorporate her printmaking and textile skills. “I feel strongly that the work I’m doing speaks the language of nature. I want to convey how interdependent and fragile it is in today’s world. I want people to notice what’s going on.” Watercolorist Brenda Myrick began drawing and painting at the age of 5 but she didn’t choose her medium until after she had earned a degree in studio art and art education at the University of Vermont. “I love watercolors because they are the direct link to the soul—when it is working it is magnificent, spontaneous, and pure. For me, watercolors beautifully describe the essence of spirit whether it be a portrait or landscape.” Brenda began doing landscapes when she saw an ad for artists who could paint upscale homes in Florida from a photograph. But she soon became bored with houses, so, having always loved horses, she turned to depicting the regal animals. Her first commission was painting retiring barn horses. “I kept going from there,” she says. “I realized I could capture the essence of a subject that mattered to me with my art.” Beginning with photographs and information about her subject, Brenda moves into her work by connecting with the spirit of the animal or person she is painting. “It’s almost a natural gift,” she says. “I begin to feel the connection and to focus on it. Through working and Watercolorist Brenda Myrick loves presenting her work to people who have commissioned pieces from her. “It’s so meaningful to them, so personal. I love being there when they see the work for the first time. It can be pretty emotional when they see that the spirit they wanted to capture is there and is never going to be lost.” photo by Brenda Myrick Brenda Myrick, Kramer, 2010, watercolor, 16 x 20 inches (40.6 x 50.8 cm). letting go as I’m working I somehow develop that spirit into the painting, usually through the eyes. It’s a kind of awakening that matters so much to me that I don’t want to do any other kind of art without that element.” Any piece needs to have that kind of meaning, Brenda says, “some sort of resonance for the artist or for someone else. The human aspect of what an artist creates is what drives us all. We must connect with the beauty that exists in each subject. That’s what makes the process so exciting.” Elayne Clift is a writer, journalist, and lecturer in Saxtons River, VT. Her latest book and first novel, Hester’s Daughters—based on The Scarlet Letter—was published in 2012. V e r m o n t M a g a z i n e 5 9