Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Platteville 2020 WRAP Exhibit

Amerika Ist Anders


 Like other WRAP Shows, the Platteville WRAP was virtual this year due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The show was small - eleven pieces submitted by five exhibitors. But the small size actually allowed for a very enjoyable critique of all pieces with more artist participation than is usually possible with a bigger group.

I submitted two small collages on cradled panels, "Amerika Ist Anders" and "S and H". These two pieces are somewhat of a departure from my usual collages laden with lots of paint layers. Instead, while these collages incorporate some drawing and mark making, they depend on the unaltered papers and cloth collage elements themselves to provide texture and visual interest. 

I was pleased that "Amerika Ist Anders" received a State Award so will be eligible for the next State Exhibit in September of 2021.


S and H


Wednesday, September 30, 2020

UW-Madison Ag Hall Exhibit and Rountree Gallery Award




Wow! My piece, Gabrielle has received a quite a bit of recognition this year.

WRAP Show Awards
Gabrielle earned a State Award in the Madison Regional WRAP Show held last spring. The show was originally hung in the Pyle Center on the UW campus, but when the coronavirus hit the campus closed so the show moved online, as did most of the remaining 2020 regional WRAP as well as the WRAP State Show. View the State Exhibit here.

At the State Show, Gabrielle was given the Rountree Gallery Award sponsored by Friends of Our Gallery (FOG), a support organization for the Rountree Gallery in Platteville. As a long time member of FOG and a huge admirer of the Rountree Gallery, I was really pleased that my piece won this particular award. Many thanks to FOG for this award! 


Ag Hall Exhibit
Each year the UW-Madison College of Agriculture and Life Sciences selects a number of pieces from the annual WRAP State Show to hang in their AG Hall for the coming year. This year, due to COVID, the Ag Hall exhibit is going virtual. I am very flattered that my piece, Gabrielle, is among 14 pieces selected for their 2020 online exhibit. 

Click here to view the exhibit.

The UW Ag Department has a connection to the WRAP program going back to its inception. Here's the history of WRAP's connection to the AG program from the AWA website (AWA, formerly WRAA, is a volunteer support group for the WRAP program): 

"The association was founded mainly as a support group for the Rural Art Program (RAP), begun in 1940 by UW-Madison’s Dean Chris Christensen and Prof. John Barton. These visionary men believed the lives of rural families could and should be enriched with art. They recruited John Steuart Curry to UW to be an artist-in-residence who would spend time traveling about, encouraging citizen artists and crafts people. By 1945 the RAP had held its first exhibit in Madison of works by non-professional artists from around the state. The program became so popular that Prof. James Schwalbach was hired to coach rural artists and set up exhibits. He and Curry’s successor, Aaron Bohrod, attended a dozen shows per year, teaching and judging. The plan for a regional artists’ association was first proposed by a handful of artists who were excited by the early RAP and wanted to help UW Extension reach out to even more Wisconsin artists, stating this goal explicitly in their by-laws."

Thank you to the Ag Department for this honor!


Sunday, June 21, 2020

Prairie du Sac WRAP Exhibit

Like many WRAP shows this year, the Prairie du Sac WRAP Exhibit is being held online.

Eighteen people registered for the show with a total of 45 pieces. Coordinator Terry Doeler reports that this is the number of people that generally enter the Prairie du Sac WRAP so he is pleased to be able to maintain that number of entrants even with the change to the online format. View the show here.

I entered two of my portrait collages - He Was Dubious (17 X 11) and February (8 X 10).

He Was Dubious

February

Saturday, May 23, 2020

Cambridge Virtual WRAP Show

In response to the coronavirus pandemic and the resulting lock-downs, most of the 2020 spring and early summer WRAP shows have either canceled or moved online.

The 2020 Cambridge WRAP was the first to be held online. Each participating artist mailed or emailed images for up to 3 works to the Cambridge Show coordinator Jill Jensen. The images were then uploaded to the cloud with a link to the show on the UW WRAP website

The show judge was Diana Cavalerro. Diana received her Bachelor of Fine Art from the Maryland Institute College of Art in 2006. In 2016 she received her Master of Fine Art degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Diana has exhibited in Chicago, New York, Madison and various places around Wisconsin. Her mediums include oil, ink and watercolor.

On May 2nd, Diana did a Portrait Demo for the Cambridge WRAP participants via Zoom. 15 artists attended the Zoom presentation. Then to follow up, there was a Critique Happy Hour via Zoom on the evening of May 7th during which Diana commented on pieces as requested by the artists. Both sessions went well and were well attended despite many participants being Zoom "newbies." Fun to see everyone even from afar.

I submitted two small mixed media portraits - Carl (5 X 7) and Lemonade (7 X 7). Carl received a State Award so can be entered into the State Show in September.


Carl - mixed media collage, 5 X 7


Lemonade - mixed media collage, 7 X 7


Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Art in the Time of Corona

Hope everyone is making a lot of art during this stay-at-home time. Here's a few things I've been playing around with.


Lately I've really been trying to use up some of those supplies that have been cluttering up the studio for way too long. These pieces are basically decoupaged 2 X 4 lumber scraps. Kind of a mystery why I had stashed these away but they were definitely begging to become part of an art project.

They started out as simple collages a la some collages like this one that I did a while back on a deep (1.5 inch) cradled panel -



But then I started coating the collages with layer after layer of acrylic medium in a technique meant to mimic the look of encaustic - something that takes oodles of time, which I've kind of had in abundance lately.

For some reason the results reminded me of apothecary jars...but then I couldn't resist throwing in some string and dried weeds so maybe ultimately they look a bit more like vases? Either way, kind of a fun project.

Trouble is now I want to make more and have run out of 2 X 4 scraps. I really should resist the temptation to add to my clutter by scrounging more scrap lumber and instead unearth some other mixed media fodder lurking in the studio stash...there's lots more. Stay tuned.







Saturday, February 1, 2020

2020 Arts Mineral Point Member Show

Ben and I each have two pieces in the 2020 Arts Mineral Point (AMP) Member Art Show. This year it is in the Masonic Lodge and will be open weekends from February 1st through February 15th.

"Gabrielle"

"Ilsa"

"A Snowy Stroll"

"Milkweed" 

The piece, Gabrielle, was my sample for a demo at the Sun Prairie WRAP Show back in November. Here's how it started out: