23rd Annual Photo Show

Lesley Williamson, director of the Saltonstall Foundation for the Arts, awarded the following prizes in the State of the Art 23rd Annual Photo Show:

 

$100 / Ray Helmke / Train to Nowhere

$100 / Jari Poulin / Peter

$100 / Sarah Carman / The American Home

$100 / Fernando Llosa & Werner Sun / The Physicist’s Cow

$50 / Angela Possemato / Forest Fire

$50 / Mark Larsen / Cluster of Trees, Chenango County

$50 / Randi Millman-Brown / Thingvellir, Iceland

Ninety photographs by seventy-five photographers filled both galleries at State of the Art for its 23rd Annual Juried Photo Show.

 

The show will close Sunday, April 1, 2012.Gallery Hours:  Wed. – Fri., 12-6pm and Sat. & Sun., 12-5pm. State of the Art is located at 120 W. State Street, Ithaca.  The gallery is ADA accessible with curbside parking.  Contact information:  607-277-1626 andwww.soag.org

December Juried Show

Sixty-seven works of art by sixty-seven artists will be exhibited in the State of the Art December 2011 Juried Exhibition. This biennial show opens November 30 and will include watercolors, pastels, oil and acrylic paintings, woodcuts, sculpture, pottery and giclee prints.  At a reception for the artists, former Johnson Art Museum Director Frank Robinson awarded the following prizes:

 

$100 / Jessica Warner (title, Encompass)
$100 / Matthew McLean (title, Gold Mountain Hi-Way)
$100 / Barbara Page (title, Out Of Bounds)
$100 / Ji Eun Kim (title, Oneness)
$50 / Vickie Mike (title, Circling Abstraction)
$50 / Milly Acharya (title, Fushsia)
$50 / Liese Bronfenbrenner (title, Forest Spring)
$50 / Hope Zaccagni (title, Salt Mine with Yellow Train Car)

The show closes Dec. 24, 2011.

Gallery hours:  Wed. – Fri., 12-6pm and Sat. & Sun., 12-5pm.  The gallery will be closed Dec. 25-Jan. 3, 2012.  State of the Art is ADA accessible with curbside parking.  Contact information:  607-277-1626 and www.soag.org

September Members’ Show

PAINTINGS, DRAWINGS, PHOTOGRAPHS, PRINTS, WATERCOLORS, SCULPTURE, CERAMICS AND MORE will be shown by STATE OF THE ART MEMBERS in their second group show of 2011.  Show dates are August 31 through October 2, 2100. Reception for the artists, Friday, September 2, 5-8pm with a wine tasting compliments of Standing Stone Vineyards of Hector, NY.

Also in September:


SOAG to sponsor nationally known artist Jim Mott’s Itinerant Artist Project

Jim Mott first conceived of his Itinerant Artist Project (IAP) in the late 1990s, while visiting Ithaca. This summer Mott returns to the Ithaca area at the invitation of State of the Art Gallery, for an IAP residency and exhibit.

Mott and his project have received national attention, including features on the “Today” show (http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/22472628/ <http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/22472628/> ) and in American Artist.
For one month out of the year, Mott makes a road trip somewhere in the United States, staying with voluntary hosts for two to five days and painting small location paintings, one of which is offered in exchange for the hospitality provided.

Mott will be in Ithaca from August 25-September 7, 2011.  He is still looking for a host or two for his “painting stops” (contact him at jhmott@juno.com or State of the Art at 607-277-1626).

Paintings he makes during this residency will be exhibited at State of the Art in September as part of one the gallery’s two yearly members’ shows.  This exhibition opens Friday, September 2, Gallery Night in downtown Ithaca.

On Sept. 7 at 7pm, he will give a gallery talk about his art and experiences. In addition, he will hold a painting workshop which, he says, will be a double feature that combines his two most popular topics:  “Simple and Direct:  Small Panel Painting for Artists on the Go” and “The Shadow Landscape: Painting Dusk and Night”. It will be held from 5:30-8:30pm on August 31 at the Ithaca Farmer’s Market.  The cost is $35 plus a nominal materials fee for gesso panels.

An interview with Mott on “Out of Bounds” will air Thursday, Sept. 15, at 7pm on WEOS-FM and Sunday, Sept 18, at 11:30am on WSKG-FM.  For more information on Jim Mott and the Itinerant Artist Project, please go to his web site:  http://www.jimmott.com/

About the IAP, Mott says:  “It has been pivotal for my development as an artist. Besides giving me new ways to think about my role as a painter, and as a mediator between art and place and public, the touring has stimulated unexpected productivity, and the resulting artwork has drawn local and national attention.”

Abstract Discoveries

Over the past twenty years, artist/photographer Stan Bowman has explored the computer and digital software as tools for creating art.  “Abstract Discoveries,” the most current evidence of his efforts and explorations will be on display during June to visitors of State of the Art Gallery in Ithaca.  Bowman’s work in this exhibition is in the form of giclee prints:  most are printed on canvas and a few on metallic paper.

“These current images are for me a celebration of my interest in abstraction,” Bowman says.  “I am an abstract artist by inclination. Even when I began as a photographer in the 1950s my black and white images of subjects were organized with overall abstract patterns in mind. Places were important but so was the way the picture was organized in the frame. This attention to the abstract nature of imagery probably came originally from my years spent as an architect with its strong design emphasis, and my very intense interest in modernism with its focus on simplicity of form, shape and texture.”

Sharp Outline, one of the giclee prints in the exhibition, demonstrates Bowman’s use of abstract patterns and the ways he builds and manipulates them on the computer.  Although not black and white, he has organized his subject–colored shapes, which look like they were formed from a thick painting medium textured by a trowel–in layers of various colors and stages of enlargement.  There is an action caught–as if it were being captured through the viewfinder of a camera—of opaque shapes rising upward and leaving below trailings of what they once were.

Bowman has created this abstract imagery using programs like Adobe Photoshop.  “I am now pushing forward into new exciting territories,” he says, “I zoom in and feature pixels as the building block for abstract patterns, altering them using the powerful manipulation and transformation tools of Photoshop.  For me, discovery is the name of the game.”

“Abstract Discoveries” will be on exhibit June 3-28, 2009, with a reception for the artist Friday, June 5 from 5-8pm at the gallery.  State of the Art is located at 120 W. State Street in downtown Ithaca.  There is curbside parking and the gallery is ADA accessible.  Hours are:  Wed. – Fri., 12-6pm, Sat. & Sun., 12-5pm.  Contact information:  607-277-1626, www.soag.org//and www.http://Stanbowman.com//


Landscapes and Labyrinths: Frances Fawcett and Margy Nelson

January, 2009

Landscapes & Labyrinths
Frances Fawcett and Margaret Nelson

Wednesday, January 7, through Sunday, February 1, 2009
Opening reception:
Friday, January 9, 5:00-8:00 pm
Second reception: Friday, January 23, 5:00-8:00 pm (Gallery Night)

“Landscapes & Labyrinths”, a two-person exhibition of new work by Margaret Nelson and Frances Fawcett, will be the first show of 2009 at the State of the Art Gallery. Because January is a month for a number of art-related events in Ithaca, there will be two receptions for the artists. The first will be Friday, January 9, 5:00-8:00 pm and two weeks later, in conjunction with Ithaca’s Light in Winter Festival, a second reception will take place on Friday, Jan 25, 5:00-8:00 pm. This is also Gallery Night in downtown Ithaca. Both receptions are at the gallery, free and open to the public.

Pennisi
Heart of Gold

Some of Margy Nelson’s art reflects the subject matter and precision she brings to her “day job” as a biological illustrator. The rest is her escape from precision into free association, in watercolor and “digital paint.” Here is what she has to say:
“Though normally an articulate person, I find myself to be inarticulate about my art. The meditative process of creation does not translate easily into words… Art, after all, is a visual, not a verbal, medium. So take a look at my images and decide for yourself what I am about. Whatever that may be, its exploration gives me great pleasure. I hope it will give you some pleasure too” (more images)

Pennisi

Acrylic landscape paintings — large and small, expansive and intimate — make up Frances Fawcett’s share of the show. One of her interests is capturing the gestures of line in grasses, wood and water. She likes to paint environments that invite the viewer in, or that the viewer can imagine inhabiting were they a different creature altogether — a small mammal or an insect — or that call attention to the interest and beauty of often overlooked places in the landscape. (more images)

This is not the first time these two artists and friends have collaborated on an exhibition. They are both members of the Guild of Natural Science Illustrators and this past summer, they organized an exhibit of sixty-five pieces of scientific illustration to hang at Cornell’s Hartell Gallery. Nelson says submissions came from all over the world and it was a very impressive collection.


This exhibit is funded in part by a grant from the New York
State Council on the Arts Decentralization Program.

New Members-Leslie Brill, Erica Pollock, Andrea King, Ethel Vrana

Wednesday, November 5 through Sunday, November 30, 2008
Opening reception:
Friday, November 7, 5:00-8:00 pm
(The gallery will be closed Thanksgiving day, November 27.)

Paintings of urban life, trees, explorations of color and texture and collages of gods and goddesses which personify the planets will fill the front gallery at State of the Art during November. The work is by four new gallery members: painters Leslie Brill, Erica Pollock and Ethel Vrana and collagist Andrea King. The four artists will be present at a reception for their exhibition Friday, November 7, from 5:00-8:00 pm at the gallery.

This exhibition opens Wednesday, November 5, and runs through Sunday, November 30. In addition, other gallery members will exhibit paintings, prints, photographs, sculpture, and assemblage in the Members’ Gallery.


 

This exhibit is funded in part by a grant from the New York
State Council on the Arts Decentralization Program.

Jan Kather

February, 2009

Jan Kather
Water Preserves

Wednesday, February 4, through Sunday, March 1, 2009
Opening reception:
Friday, February 6, 5:00-8:00 pm

Kather

“Water Preserves” explores our complex and sometimes precarious relationship with water by visually and aurally examining its beauty, magic, terror, and poetry. The photo/video installation includes a special invitational collaborative piece created from the work of ten international video artists:

Michael Chang, Denmark
Simone Stoll, Germany
Marty McCutcheon, United States
Kika Nicolela, Brazil
Niclas Hallberg, Sweden
Alicia Felberbaum, England
Kai Lossgott, South Africa
Brad Wise, United States
Stina Pehrsdotter, Sweden
Junichiro Shindo, Japan

Kather

Frances Fawcett & Margy Nelson

January, 2009

Landscapes & Labyrinths
Frances Fawcett and Margaret Nelson

Wednesday, January 7, through Sunday, February 1, 2009
Opening reception:
Friday, January 9, 5:00-8:00 pm
Second reception: Friday, January 23, 5:00-8:00 pm (Gallery Night)

“Landscapes & Labyrinths”, a two-person exhibition of new work by Margaret Nelson and Frances Fawcett, will be the first show of 2009 at the State of the Art Gallery. Because January is a month for a number of art-related events in Ithaca, there will be two receptions for the artists. The first will be Friday, January 9, 5:00-8:00 pm and two weeks later, in conjunction with Ithaca’s Light in Winter Festival, a second reception will take place on Friday, Jan 25, 5:00-8:00 pm. This is also Gallery Night in downtown Ithaca. Both receptions are at the gallery, free and open to the public.

Pennisi
Heart of Gold

Some of Margy Nelson’s art reflects the subject matter and precision she brings to her “day job” as a biological illustrator. The rest is her escape from precision into free association, in watercolor and “digital paint.” Here is what she has to say:
“Though normally an articulate person, I find myself to be inarticulate about my art. The meditative process of creation does not translate easily into words… Art, after all, is a visual, not a verbal, medium. So take a look at my images and decide for yourself what I am about. Whatever that may be, its exploration gives me great pleasure. I hope it will give you some pleasure too.”

Pennisi

Acrylic landscape paintings — large and small, expansive and intimate — make up Frances Fawcett’s share of the show. One of her interests is capturing the gestures of line in grasses, wood and water. She likes to paint environments that invite the viewer in, or that the viewer can imagine inhabiting were they a different creature altogether — a small mammal or an insect — or that call attention to the interest and beauty of often overlooked places in the landscape.

This is not the first time these two artists and friends have collaborated on an exhibition. They are both members of the Guild of Natural Science Illustrators and this past summer, they organized an exhibit of sixty-five pieces of scientific illustration to hang at Cornell’s Hartell Gallery. Nelson says submissions came from all over the world and it was a very impressive collection.


This exhibit is funded in part by a grant from the New York
State Council on the Arts Decentralization Program.

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