First Friday for Boston's SOWA Galleries
Balmy Night Lures Art Mob
By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 06, 2007
"Nobody wanted to show in January," related my colleague, the artist Linda Leslie Brown, during the opening of her show last night at the cooperative Kingston Gallery in the SOWA art district of Boston's hoppin South End. "As a new member it is usual to have to wait two years for your first show. But hey, I lucked out big time."
Who knew back when galleries were making up their schedules that the normally less than ideal, post holiday, usually down and dirty, wintry month of January would post record temperatures this week. Good heavens, can you believe it, in the 60s! Talk about Global Warming. Unfortunately it is tricking nature into blooming fruit trees which will be a disaster if we get a blast of arctic air between now and Spring. But why complain. Droves of folks were blasting around the densely packed galleries many in skimpy, tank tops and casual T-shirts. Instead of the usual post
It was a fun night for people watching. As usual Bill Arning was holding forth dispensing news of the latest shows. Clusters of artists were milling around him. Robert Stover of the Museum of Fine Arts contemporary program was spotted lurching about furtively. He keeps a lower profile than MIT's Arning who is always front and center. For the first time in decades I spotted Anne Hawley the director of the
It was particularly fulfilling to view the installation by Linda Leslie Brown at
Having followed and respected her as a peer and artist for many years I have always been awed by her ability to constantly push and experiment. The results have not always clicked and made sense to me. There have been phases when the work was rich and lush with abstractly applied layers of saturated color. A show some time back for my gallery program at NESAD was particularly stunning. But the work that followed was off kilter and I said as much in a review of a group show organized by James Manning. There were some rough edges between us about that and at the time she referred cryptically that it occurred during a difficult time.
So it was a relief for both of us that the work that we recently discussed is back on track and past the speed bump. Primarily I think of Brown as a painter but there is also an experimental, multi media aspect to her practice. In particular she has been exploring, like everyone else, the possibilities of Photoshop. This has resulted in large format prints that play between self portraits and premonitions of death with layered elements of skulls and flayed flesh. But one has to dig deep to find that as it is not intended to pop out. There is distance, introspection and ennui in the imagery which also entails suspended microphones that convey dead silence as a metaphor. On the floor are illuminated tubes with translucent white cloth shrouding. We peer down into the centers of these glowing pools and find those haunting, drowning faces. Overall this is a somber, melancholy but resonating effort but is far more abstracted and aesthetic than literal so perhaps I am reading too much into my interpretation. Surely the artist will differ from this opinion. Which seems like a good beginning for a beer and burger.
Thad Beal is another artist whom I have shown in our program, written about, and pondered for decades. This new work at OH+T Gallery offers abundant evidence of why I regard him among the best of
Beal will be included in a major thematic exhibition "Big Bang! Abstract Painting for the 21st Century" curated by Nick Capasso, Lisa Sutcliffe and Mary Levin for the DeCordova Museum which opens on Friday, January 26 (through April 22) in posh, suburban Lincoln, Mass. In addition to Beal the artists include: Peter Barrett, Steven Bogart, Sean Foley, Reese Inman, Clint Jukkala, Julie Miller, Meg Brown Payson, Jon Petro, Cristi Rinklin, Terry Rose, Sarah Slavick, Laurel Sparks, Barbara Takenaga and Sarah Walker. It promises to be one of the best shows of the coming season.
This was our first visit to the spectacular new ground level space of RHYS Gallery which has a corner of a brand new luxury condo building. Development is evident all over the South End and has the potential to bring hip new clients for the nearby galleries. Art critic, Shawn Hill, was on hand interviewing the director for a piece on new galleries for Art New England. The large space was divided into two exhibitions. In the front, a range of abstract paintings and works on paper by Christi Rinklin. And behind the partitions were provocative little objects with tiny photos of people attached to toy vehicles and key chain rings by Heidi Hove Pedersen. They were kindah too cute.
Joseph Wheelwright is currently featured with outdoor carved stone, figurative pieces at the DeCordova. I was taking installation shots of one piece in particular when the artist came by to discuss it. He assumed that I knew the subject which frankly I did not recognize. It was a powerful and typically brutal "portrait" of the artist's long term but recently deceased