Two Member Shows Highlight Winter

Two Member Shows Highlight Winter

Two Member Gallery Exhibits this January

Exciting to be in two different member shows this past January. The one on the left “Fire and Ice” was up at Galatea Gallery in SoWa Boston. The Painting “Snowscape” was at Copley Society, or Co/So on Newbury Street. They are from the same series of cold wax paintings on 1.5″ cradle board, 12″ x 24″. Both are for sale and either can be purchased by reaching out to deb@perugi.com.

Galatea Gallery “Fire and Ice”

Copley Society of Art “Snowscape”

Galatea and Friends Show

Galatea and Friends Show

A really fun show was held this July called “Galatea and Friends.” The idea was to invite a friend who is not a member of the gallery to show a painting to pair with yours.  

I noticed via Instagram that an old friend from The Boston Globe days who was an illustrator for many years was now creating fine art painting. (There is a distinction, but less so these past few years.) I asked James Steinberg to submit a painting along with mine and together we found one that would look good along with my style. 

Years ago, when I was freelancing as an information graphics designer, James and I produced a beautiful graphic together on genetic sequencing for a scientific company. I researched and drew the outlines and James airbrushed it. The client was so happy they purchased the drawing to display in their corporate office.

He came to the opening July 11 and brought his wife Paola. We had a great time and even went across the way to another studio to visit a friend of his and see his work. He also was an illustrator moving on to painting. 

These shows are a great way to introduce Galatea Gallery to other artists with the intention of increasing membership. If you are interested in joining an art gallery, let me know!

 

‘Earth Unknown’ Galatea Show

‘Earth Unknown’ Galatea Show

My first gallery show was this past month, May 1 through May 31. A gallery space at Galatea Fine Arts in Boston was hung with 20 or so cold wax and oil paintings on cradle board and a few oil and acrylic paintings on canvas. The opening was First Friday; always a busy and fun time at SoWa, Boston. Parking is free, and there are food trucks and restaurants nearby to complete a fun night out.

This was a dream come true for me. Other artists and art collectors talked with me about the process of cold wax and what goes into the thinking behind it. It was especially meaningful to me that one elderly man commented on my statement which began with a quote from Rachel Carson:

Earth Unknown

“We stand now where two roads diverge. But unlike the roads in Robert Frost’s familiar poem, they are not equally fair. The road we have long been traveling is deceptively easy, a smooth superhighway on which we progress with great speed, but at its end lies disaster. The other fork of the road — the one less traveled by — offers our last, our only chance to reach a destination that assures the preservation of the earth.”

― Rachel Carson, Silent Spring

Rachel Carson, the environmental scientist, published these words in 1962. Now, over fifty years later, climate change has become the leading problem of our time, and yet we struggle to stay on the “road less traveled by”.

I have always been attuned to nature and the environmental movement of the 70s, when I was in college, it made quite an impression on me. 

These paintings, though intended to be non-representational or abstracted landscapes, resemble a dystopian view of our future, our earth unknown.

First Friday Interview at Galatea

First Friday Interview at Galatea

I spoke to Jonathan Gold who recently graduated from Berkeley School of Music in composing. He was very thoughtful and articulate in describing the painting I had at Galatea. We found that the creative process of painting and compoing had a lot in common. (Video below).

JONATHAN:  “I am extremely drawn to the balance between softness and stasis as well as like a kind of violence with the scratching texture. It’s very evocative unlike a lot of representational art. That’s why I love Expressionism so much.”

“It forces a deeper and more personal response as I’m forced to take it in and react to it and then try to put it all together. Pieces like this draw me in. There’s an ineffability about it. But it’s beautiful, subtle, but bold. It’s hard to do that.”

DEB: “And you relate to it in this way,  because of what you do with your music?”

JONATHAN: “Yeah, I’m a composer of avant garde music, minimalistic music, but music that puts the listener into, I would say, a meditative state. It’s  a state that’s sort of paralysis and forces us into a listening position versus a reactive position. You know, the world around us and everything around us keeps changing, but we’re forced to stop. And I do that through very slow rates of change, as well as striking dissonance.”

(Back to painting) “There’s something very striking about this.  I think there’s a level of dissonance. But also a level of harmony. I love the way it’s sectioned off. There are pieces that absolutely fit together versus like an unobstructed, undivided, undifferentiated form field of color like you might find in other paintings.”

“Lots and lots of just beautiful texture and dimensionality too, which is important. I think we want to capture complexity, the complexity of life, complexity of our experience. And it’s impossible to do that if you don’t have a great deal of dimensionality to your work, in my opinion.”

“I think this is, to me, successful. You can see all this nuance, this scratches and different colors and combinations of colors are revealed underneath, and there’s darkness, and there’s light, and I love the way that those things interact. And then there’s a a splash of bold…  I’m not going to call it neon.  which is also subtly represented here in a smaller section. I love that a lot.”

DEB: “That’s really great. That really helps me. Thank you so much for commenting.  A lot of it is not intentional, but a subconscious expression.”

JONATHAN: “When people hear my work and they say, “I love how this happened”, and it made me feel this way. I didn’t mean for any of that to happen. But, that’s inherent to the complexity of our expression or our emotion. We don’t even understand it. It just sort of happens. The spontaneity of it is, to me, magical.”

DEB: “And a bit of serendipity.”

JONATHAN: “Absolutely.”

DEB: “I start off with a very simple layer and build upon layer upon layer but it’s not finished. And I keep adding layers and removing parts that I don’t like that don’t work. I take that off. And this can take hours until you’re like, “that’s it”.”

JONATHAN: “Right… “That’s it. I’m done.” And it’s great when we reach that point. You know, I’ve had pieces where I build up these huge structures, these, and then I tear them down. build them back up and sometimes you put everything out there and you exactly you whittle away until it’s just the right balance and combination of everything you’ve already put on there and as you said there’s an additive and subtractive element that to me is is true balance. Some people don’t know when to stop. They just put everything there and then, that’s it.”

DEB: “That’s an interesting connection that you’ve made between art and design.

JONATHAN: “Yeah, I’m very  inspired by art, especially abstract art. It’s more exciting, it’s more expressive to me. It’s a great piece.

DEB: “There will be more coming! Thank you.”

JONATHAN: “Of course!”

First Friday, First Show at Galatea, 2023

First Friday, First Show at Galatea, 2023

My painting, “Abstract #10”, will be in Galatea Fine Art Gallery opening on First Friday, November 3, from 5 pm to 9 pm. The small exhibit is called “Color Theory” and features a few Galatea group artists. Galatea Fine Arts is online at galateafineart.com and is located at 560 Harrison Avenue. First Friday is a SoWa event every first Friday of the month. All galleries and shops are open and it is widely attended. There are some nice restaurants/pubs around the area, so you can make a nice evening of shopping, viewing and dining. I’ll be there!

Perugi Now Member of Galatea Fine Art

Perugi Now Member of Galatea Fine Art

Several Newton artist members of both Newton Open Studios and Newton Art Association invited me to apply to become a member of Galatea Fine Art Gallery. It is located in the SoWa (South of Washington) district of Boston, located at Harrison Avenue, 3B-6. I have been to the gallery before to visit artist friends who were members there.

“SoWa is the most sought-after art community in Boston with over 30 galleries, design houses and restaurants all clustered within walking distance. Hundreds of people come out on First Friday to view the new exhibitions in the area, as well as the Open Markets from May – October. Galatea Fine Art has been, and continues to be, a source of comprehensive, stimulating and nourishing exhibitions, creating a pillar of activity in the area.”

Galatea itself is a co-operative gallery with fifty artist members. Each member exhibits in a member show in January and schedules their own show as well. It is not just a gallery but a community of artists who meet and support each other. I’m looking forward to meeting the other artists. And I’ll be opening the gallery on Sptember 28 for four hours. Come say hi!