The Midcoast Chapter of the Union of Maine Visual Artists presents “Waterways,” a dynamic curated collection of artworks celebrating water at the Central Lincoln County YMCA, 525 Main St., Damariscotta continues to Sept 15th, 2023. Artists in this show include: Sett Balise, Chris Covert, Bernadette De Cesare, Jean Kigel, Linda Leach, Arlene Jurewicz Leighton, Sandy Olson, Linda Packard, Rachel Robbins, Liv Kristin Robinson, Emily Sabino, Marcia Sewell, Kathryn Shagas, Ann Tracy, and Leslie Woods.
The exhibit, juried by Matthew Barter of the Barter Art
House Gallery, includes representational waterscapes with a twist; fantasy
marine creatures; crashing waves, prayers for rain, buried treasure, ghosts and
more. This show will delight art lovers, nature enthusiasts, and daydreamers
who wonder what lies at the bottom of the ocean.
For Rachel Robbins, while she hopes to beautify the world
around her, she also attempts, with her artwork, to help increase understanding
about the neurodiverse community.
Specifically Robbins wants to raise awareness about epilepsy, as this
medical condition plays a role in all she does.
Wolf Moon On Fox Island - Rachel Robbins |
Gestural and non-objective, Linda Packard’s work is subconsciously but strongly informed by her years as a plein-air landscape painter. She continues to be drawn to the same organic shapes and marks, rich textures, and earthy palette. Embracing the physicality of oil paint, Packard finds excitement in the way it behaves with a wide variety of mark-making tools and different surfaces.
Mariner's Song by Linda Packard |
Although it’s been many decades
since Ann Tracy performed as a modern dancer, she loves shooting dancers in the
wild and on the stage. In addition to visual art and photography, she
weaves her interest in quantum string theory, specifically the concept of other
shadow dimensions operating alongside our four dimensions, into her
artwork. Tracy also wonders how AI –
artificial intelligence – factors into all this. She’s long been interested
in fractals and digital art and is now adding bits of AI generated images to
her “digital alchemy” collage work. She has used one of her AI creations in The Ghost of Prouts Neck.
Ghost of Prouts Neck by Ann Tracy |
After Marcia Sewell’s many years of illustrating children’s
books, she turned to painting in 2000.
She is interested in the meeting/melding of the abstract into
representational subject matter…how a red square can be a barn and at the same
time a red square, the cove a horizontal blue-black shape and yet a cove. Sewell finds her own art moving more and more
toward abstraction, as an exploration of her own perceptual sensibilities.
Marcia Sewell "Cresting Waves" 12 x 12" |
For years Leslie Woods painted
sports focusing on the geometry of bodies and actions. Then her husband died
and, after a few stymied years, she is finding her voice with a new
direction. “Edible Islands” was painted
for fun and as a guessing game.
Leslie Woods "Edible Islands" 16 x 20" |
As soon as she gets to a forest
or shoreline, Kathryn Shagas feels different — calmer, happier and part of
worlds humming with life. From the point
of view of physics, everything in our universe is vibrating at various
frequencies, including rocks, trees and objects that appear stationary. Yet, within these connections, the delicate
balance of rhythms that we depend on for life is now threatened by an
approaching tipping point in climate change.
Drawing from my early training in music and this interplay between
equilibrium and chaos, my paintings are a visual interpretation of the world in
continuous motion at a time when there is still an option to choose connection
and renewal.
Kathryn Shagas "Light upon Water" 36 x 36" |
Over many summers Arlene Jurewicz
Leighton’s mornings begin with a swim at Barrett’s Cove in Camden. One early
morning, as the sun rose over the Camden Hills, a slight breeze rippled the
water creating patterns of liquid sunlight. For over fifty years l have
been ‘feeling the light’ with many imaging systems. It’s a time to ‘breathe an image into
existence’ be it with a camera, a laser or an iPhone.
Liquid Sunlight by Arlene Jurewicz Leighton |
Jean Kigel finds inspiration in
subjects from eclectic sources most notably the Mid-coast Maine environment and
world travels. She paints with energy and passion, seeking a poetic
response to the world. We have a few short moments of influence on this
earth; for many reasons to me it seems critical that my art serve to preserve
our environment, if by nothing more than creating portraits of the earth’s
natural wonders.
Jean Kigel - "Into The Bay" 18 x 22" |
For as
long as she can remember, Liv Kristin Robinson has been fascinated- perhaps
even a bit obsessed by water—of all shapes and sizes. my trajectory as a photographer was the
direct result of sailing to Block Island in the summer of 1982 and capturing on
black & white film the Bath House there (the store had run out of color
slide film) and subsequently learning how to develop my own black & white,
silver prints and then hand painting them once they dried. Since 1986, when I moved from New York City
to Maine, I have been mostly drawn to Maine’s ever changing and captivating
coastline and communities. It took a
little longer to fully appreciate the unmanaged, chaotic beauty of swamps and
other wild water habitats one may find in some of the more remote areas away
from the coast.
Waves by Liv Kristin Robinson |
She loves living near water, surrounded by trees and hills. So when Emily Sabino traced her arms for this particular painting, she was thinking about how veins and arteries are the human version of rivers and waterways. Her work has been exhibited at Waterfall Arts in Belfast; River Arts in Damariscotta, Maine Art Gallery in Wiscasset, and Kerr Jones Gallery in East Boothbay.
The River Lights Me Up by Emily Sabino |
Sett Balise is a self-taught
artist influenced by the Hudson River School and its luminism movement. His
focus is capturing atmosphere and light in paint, and he hopes to convey the
feelings of the moments depicted.
Further Down the River by Sett Balise |
Bernadette De Cesare weaves symbolic imagery and mystical
connections throughout her work. They emerge from a form of daydreams, which
result from simple to complex patterns that include images of deep-felt
stories. Color is a powerful element which aids in representing her personal style.
They reflect her ever-changing choices where, as she says, the realm of the
subconscious is part of the journey for this self-described visionary artist
and storyteller. Her mediums were mostly in oil and acrylic until about a
decade ago. De Cesare’s discovery of the
soft pastel medium has given her an extraordinary selection of colors seen throughout
her work. Over the past few years, the acrylic medium has returned with a
passion.
Bernadette DeCesare - "Bathers" 24 x 24" |
After a long hiatus full of life and explorations, Sandy
Olson started painting again a few years ago.
At first she wooed her path of twenty years ago and that failed to
catch. Then she ran from it, seeking higher ground, addressing the vast issues
of our times.
Sandy Olsen - "Catfish" 9.5 x 12.5" |
Chris Covert’s work originates in quick mark making, progresses
through random color application in forms generated by the intersection of
those lines, is subjected to intuitive and thoughtful examination of
possibilities, and is ultimately refined by careful editing and adjustment. She
is often surprised by what occurs to her during the process and pleased by the
results.
Chris Covert - "Flotsam and Jetsam" 16 x 20" |
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