Friday, November 30, 2012

Holiday Time in Hillsborough




It's holiday time in Hillsborough!  Tonight's festivities include lighting the town Christmas tree, luminaries along Churton Street, and of course our gallery reception celebrating "The Art of Giving" from 6-9 pm. Saturday morning welcomes the annual Christmas parade, and Sunday evening is the candlelight tour of the historic homes near downtown.

The holiday exhibit at Hillsborough Gallery of Arts features works by our 22 members: blown-glass, paintings, turned wood, photography, jewelry, fiber arts, glass mosaic, ceramic bowls and platters, metal sculpture, and more.  In addition to our regular offerings we have seasonal work on display until early January.  Come into the gallery to see strands of brightly colored ornaments suspended on white branches, holiday cards and books, and many gift-sized items perfect for family and friends.

Saturday, October 27, 2012

HGA Artist Ellie Reinhold


...became part of her street art during Hillsborough's Fresh Roots Festival on October 20th.  Ellie and HGA hosted events for children as part of the day's celebration.

Hillsborough Gallery Artists Showcase New Work for the Holidays in the Art of Giving, Opening on November 13th




The Hillsborough Gallery of Arts will help you with your gift giving for the holiday season by offering a range of fine art and fine craft plus work by new member, Brian Mergenthaler. 

The Hillsborough Gallery of Arts will open its holiday show, the Art of Giving, on November 13,th with a reception on Friday, November 30,th from 6-9 p.m.   

The gallery's 22 members work in a variety of media, providing a wide array of art and fine craft for gallery goers and holiday shoppers. Glass art includes hand-blown vases and vessels, ornaments and paperweights; fused glass panels and jewelry; and glass mosaic pieces for windows and walls. Fiber art on display includes framed quilted art pieces; hand-knit shawls and scarves; and fabric handbags. Jewelry in the show covers a variety of styles and techniques, from copper and bronze to sterling and fine silver necklaces, earrings, bracelets and rings, some with gold accents and stones, to hand-crocheted sterling and copper as well as steampunk pieces. Visitors will also find metal sculpture, pottery, turned wood, fine wood furniture and enameling on wood.  Fine art photography, oil and acrylic painting, watercolor, and mixed media work round out the gallery's visual feast. Adding to the mix is the found object sculpture of HGA's new member, Brian Mergenthaler.
   
The opening reception for the Art of Giving holiday show will be held on Friday, November 30th from 6-9 p.m.  The Hillsborough Gallery of Arts is located in the Mercantile Building at 121 North Churton Street, in Hillsborough, NC.  For more information, visit the gallery Website at http://www.hillsboroughgallery.com. 

Hillsborough Gallery of Arts Hosts Preview Exhibition for Orange County Artist Guild Open Studio Tour




The Hillsborough Gallery of Arts (HGA) will host a preview event on October 26th, featuring the work of many of the artists participating in the Orange County Artist Guild (OCAG) Open Studio Tour.  Among the more than 70 artists on the tour are eight Hillsborough Gallery members: Linda Carmel, Garry Childs, Chris Graebner, Lolette Guthrie, Marcy Lansman, Eduardo Lapetina, Pat Lloyd, and Pringle Teetor.  

Linda Carmel, an experienced tour participant, says,  "I love welcoming guests to my studio and having an opportunity to show more of my work and explain my process." Carmel shares her studio tour with glass blower Pringle Teetor. “Our work shows well together,” says Teetor. “Some people come to see my work and enjoy meeting Linda and hearing about her process and some come to see Linda and her work and are pleased to see my glass and hear about something they are unfamiliar with. We make a good team.”

Chris Graebner will be on the tour for the second year in a row. “Last year I enlarged my studio, which meant that for the first time, I had enough space to be on the tour,” Graebner says. “I wasn’t sure what to expect. Some people just wanted to come and look; others wanted to talk. I enjoyed answering questions and talking to visitors about my work or their own. I’m always happy to share what I’ve learned over the years and to learn about new materials and techniques from other artists or beginning artists. Painting is a lifelong learning process – each canvas teaches you something new.” 

Lolette Guthrie, whose abstract and landscape paintings have many devotees, says, “I’ve been a member of OCAG for four years and have participated in the open studio tour each year. I find it an exhilarating experience.  I am constantly amazed and humbled by the great number of people who are willing to travel long distances to come on the tour, by how interested they are in what I do, and by how knowledgeable so many are about art. It’s especially gratifying to meet other artists who are so willing to share their knowledge.”

Eduardo Lapetina says his open studio this year will feature his color-field abstract paintings, which he says he creates with techniques he’s worked out himself.  Using those techniques, he starts a painting without knowing what the end result will be.  

Marcy Lansman, whose watercolors are well-known to HGA visitors, says, “my studio is my living room. I love having people come by during the Studio Tour. I feel they get a better sense of who I am as an artist by seeing my paintings in their native habitat. For the past several years, I have shared my "studio" with Dale Morgan during the tour. She paints realistic and fanciful animals; I paint flowers, mushrooms, and leaves. We feel that our work is complementary.”
For HGA wood turner Pat Lloyd, the tour provides an opportunity to introduce visitors to the art of wood turning.  She says of her visitors, “there are so many questions: where do you get your wood; how do you get it so smooth; what finish do you use; how long does it take; how do you do "that" (fill in the blank)? Throughout the four tour dates, my husband, Wayne Peterson, and I will be turning wood and spraying wood shavings while we demonstrate the process of converting a tree into a finished bowl for your dining room table. In addition, we have a gallery that will be filled with the latest crop of finished turnings.”

HGA will host the preview reception for the Studio Tour on Friday, October 26th from 6-9 p.m. The Hillsborough Gallery of Arts is located in the Mercantile Building at 121 North Churton Street, in Hillsborough, NC.  For more information, visit the gallery Website at www.hillsboroughgallery.com.  

The 18th Annual Open Studio Tour will be held November 3rd and 4th and November 10th & 11th from 10am-5pm Saturdays and 12 noon-5pm Sundays.  

Tour brochures with maps will be available at the Hillsborough Gallery of Arts as well as many other locations across the Triangle.

Monday, October 15, 2012

HGA Artists Host Book Signing

Meet local artists at the Hillsborough Gallery of Arts from 6:30pm-8pm on October 20th, during Hillsborough's Fresh Roots Festival.  Several HGA artists have been included in upcoming books about sculpture, Southern artists and more. Purchase a book at the gallery and get it signed!

Meet Pringle Teetor
She is featured in 100 Southern Artists
By E. Ashley Rooney
Take a fresh look at the magical and insightful compositions of artists living in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia. Here, 100 living artists delineate their creative expression through their personal stories and inspirations, along with several examples of their works. In oil, pastels, sculpture, and wood, with a diversity of styles and influences, including pop surrealism, realism, and expressionism, these artists capture the rich traditions of the south and our world. Essential reading for all who appreciate or practice art today. Foreword by Paula Allen, a Southern painter, sculptor, and illustrator.


Meet Lynn Wartski
She is featured in Contemporary Sculptors: 84 International Artist
By Danijela Kracun and  Charles McFadden
An eclectic group of 84 international artists guide us on a journey of beauty and art through 477 inspiring sculptures. Enjoy the variety of sculptures from the traditional to the avant garde, the serious to the whimsical. Artists employ a variety of media, including bronze, clay, glass, stone, and wood, as well as some less common materials such as ice, sand, and even food. The diversity of the their work and the range of their creativity and resourcefulness provides insight into the international trends in art today. The result is an eye-catching and wonderfully informative look at contemporary art. A must-have reference for serious art collectors and enthusiasts.

Lolette Guthrie, * illustrator for:
Artie and Merlin

by Sue Ruff and Don E. Wilson
Artie and Merlin is the story of an amiable pig named Artie, and Merlin, a brainy bat, who become friends and together explore the world of mammals and the meaning of friendship.  It is geared to lower to middle elementary school students who will learn a great deal about mammals while they enjoy this fun and interesting book. [*Lolette will be out of town for the event, but the book will still be available for purchase.]

Meet HGA artists Marcy Lansman and Chris Graebner*
Both have paintings in Tree
by Shelly Hehenberger
This beautiful book displays the artwork of 30 artists from the Chapel Hill-Carrboro, NC area, exploring the meaning of a tree. Proceeds from the book benefit the Haw River Assembly, a 501(c)(3) non-profit citizens’ group founded in 1982 to restore and protect the Haw River and Jordan Lake, and to build a watershed community that shares this vision. [*Chris Graebner will be out of town for the event, but the book will still be available for purchase.]

And last but not least…
Give Us Some Color: Hillsborough Gallery of Arts Coloring Book
This book features all 22 HGA artists. There is a line art coloring page featuring the work of each artist accompanied by the artist's own words, describing either the piece shown, or his or her work in general.  The back cover features color images of the original artwork used.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Cane, Murrini, Incalmo Oh MY!

a post by Pringle Teetor

This is a description of how some of the more complicated pieces in my current HGA show are made.

Making cane starts with picking up a piece of color bar that has been preheated to almost 1000 degrees on the end of a steel rod, then heated and shaped. This is the center color of the cane. While one person is doing this, another is preparing another chunk of color in the same way to cover the first color in an “overlay”. Then, by heating and shaping the glass on the marver, the second color is distributed to cover the first color, then one or two gathers of clear glass are added to encase the color. After the second gather, the glass is heated and shaped to set it up to be pulled into cane.
 
When pulling cane, one person prepares a 'post' on another steel rod to attach to the mass of colored glass. When the glass is at the right temperature, the post is connected to the end of the glass and the two people walk away from each other, stretching the glass like taffy. When the glass has been stretched to the diameter needed, the cane is held tight for a few seconds to ensure it's straight as it hardens. It is then set down on the wood boards to cool. Once cooled, the cane is cut into lengths to be incorporated into work.

Murrine (common pluralization murrini) is an Italian term for colored patterns or images made in a glass cane (long rods of glass) that are revealed when cut in cross-sections. Murrine
can be made in infinite designs—some styles are more familiar, such as millafiore To make the murrini, I make a color core in the same way as described above, then roll up cane around the core. The cane is heated on a plate in the glory hole by an assistant, then pulled the same way as cane.
Once cooled, the bars are sliced up on a diamond saw. In pieces where murrini is used for patterns, much of your time goes into planning and preparing to make the piece before you even start the actual piece.

INCALMO - is a technique invented in Murano in the 16th century, to create vessels with distinct bands of color. Two or more cylindrically-shaped blown objects of different colors are made then attached while hot on the blow pipe, and blown further to create a vessel. The joining of the two vessels takes great precision and careful measuring to ensure that the pieces will fit correctly and stay joined. Each piece of glass that is to be made into one is blown separately and must be the same width at the base or top where it is to be fused to another piece of glass. This second piece must be placed directly at the edge of the first piece and fit perfectly so there is no overlap with the edges.


Here is a picture of me working on a vessel when glass artist Ed Schmid was visiting from Washing State. The center part is a murrini roll up, which I previously attached to the vessel on the pipe, and now Ed is attaching the bottom vessel.

Murrini roll ups and incalmo pieces are something I  would like to do more of in the future. However, these are not pieces I can do alone. Towards the end of this past season, I was fortunate to be able to hire an assistant, Matt Decker, who blows glass for Corning Museum of Glass, to work with me on the pieces in this show. These pieces take careful planning, extra time (and money) to produce, and my hope is to have more of this type of work in the future.

Pushing the Envelope

Le Jongleur by Mirinda Kossoff
a post by Mirinda Kossoff
www.jewelrybymirinda.com

Recently, I've been experimenting with combining jewelry and mixed media work; both are abiding passions without which I wouldn't be me.  I'm finding this new exploration to be both fun and fulfilling, regardless of the end product.  I try not to focus too much on outcome, because it's the process that's most important.  If the process is right and my heart is in it, the end product will be satisfying.  And I hope others will find it so as well.

Here's a new mixed media piece that resulted from just playing around with various gel mediums and acrylic paints.  As I worked, using some sgraffito, the colors and layers suggested shapes and forms, which then suggested the title:  Le Jongleur, which is French for "The Juggler."  Working intuitively allows stuff to bubble up from my unconscious, and I find there's playfulness in that place - as well as the darker stuff.  I suspect that the juggler image came up because I juggle jewelry along with my mixed media work, along with being an adoring grandmother, wife, reader, writer and traveler.  I love all the special people and activities in my life.  Working everything in sometimes is a challenge.  I need a 48-hour day.  The ones I have go by all too quickly.  When I'm absorbed in making a jewelry piece or other art, I have no concept of time, and when I come out of my state of flow, I find that time has fled.  That's a good space to be in.

I'm playing around with patinas on copper and finding other new materials for jewelry, since the price of silver is going back up again.  In the earrings shown here, I patinated copper donuts that I had cut out and then sandwiched a graphic ad from an old Ladies Home Journal between the two copper donuts.  I riveted the pieces together with brass rivets.  The vintage paper is preserved with resin.  I'm hoping to do more of this with my jewelry.  The prospect is intriguing, like visiting a new country.

Will a juggler reappear in my next mixed media piece, or abstracted in a piece of jewelry?  Maybe.

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Hillsborough Gallery of Arts Hosts Preview Exhibition for Orange County Artist Guild Open Studio Tour

AS EVENING FALLS by Lolette Guthrie


The Hillsborough Gallery of Arts (HGA) will host a preview event on October 26th, featuring the work of many of the artists participating in the Orange County Artist Guild (OCAG) Open Studio Tour.  Among the more than 70 artists on the tour are eight Hillsborough Gallery members: Linda Carmel,Garry Childs, Chris Graebner, Lolette Guthrie, Marcy Lansman, Eduardo Lapetina, Pat Lloyd and Pringle Teetor.

Linda Carmel, an experienced tour participant, says,  "I love welcoming guests to my studio and having an opportunity to show more of my work and explain my process."  Carmel shares her studio space with glass blower Pringle Teetor. “Our work shows well together,” says Teetor. “Some people come to see my work and enjoy meeting Linda and hearing about her process and some come to see Linda and her work and are pleased to see my glass and hear about something they are unfamiliar with. We make a good team.”


 Chris Graebner will be on the tour for the second year in a row. “Last year I enlarged my studio, which meant that for the first time, I had enough space to be on the tour,” Graebner says. “I wasn’t sure what to expect. Some people just wanted to come and look, others wanted to talk. I enjoyed answering questions and talking to visitors about my work or their own. I’m always happy to share what I’ve learned over the years and to learn about new materials and techniques from other artists or beginning artists. Painting is a lifelong learning process – each canvas teaches you something new.” 

Lolette Guthrie, whose abstract and landscape paintings have many devotees, says, “I’ve been a member of OCAG for four years and have participated in the open studio tour each year. I find it an exhilarating experience.  I am constantly amazed and humbled by the great number of people who are willing to travel long distances to come on the tour, by how interested they are in what I do, and by how knowledgeable so many are about art. It’s especially gratifying to meet other artists who are so willing to share their knowledge.”

Eduardo Lapetina says his open studio this year will feature his color-field abstract paintings, which he says he creates with techniques he’s worked out himself.  Using those techniques, he starts a painting without knowing what the end result will be.  


Marcy Lansman, whose watercolors are well-known to HGA visitors, says, “my studio is my living room. I love having people come by during the Studio Tour. I feel they get a better sense of who I am as an artist by seeing my paintings in their native habitat.
For the past several years, I have shared my "studio" with Dale Morgan during the tour. She paints realistic and fanciful animals; I paint flowers, mushrooms, and leaves. We feel that our work is complementary.”
For HGA wood turner Pat Lloyd, the tour provides an opportunity to introduce visitors to the art of wood turning.  She says of her visitors, “there are so many questions: where do you get your wood; how do you get it so smooth; what finish do you use; how long does it take; how do you do "that" (fill in the blank)? Throughout the four tour dates, my husband, Wayne Peterson, and I will be turning wood and spraying wood shavings while we demonstrate the process of converting a tree into a finished bowl for your dining room table. In addition, we have a gallery that will be filled with the latest crop of finished turnings.”

HGA will host the preview reception for the Studio Tour on Friday, October 26th from 6-9 p.m. The Hillsborough Gallery of Arts is located in the Mercantile Building at 121 North Churton Street, in Hillsborough, NC.  For more information, visit the gallery Website at www.hillsboroughgallery.com.  

The 18th Annual Open Studio Tour will be held November 3rd and 4th and November 10th & 11th from 10am-5pm Saturdays and 12 noon-5pm Sundays.  

Tour brochures with maps will be available at the Hillsborough Gallery of Arts as well as many other locations across the Triangle.

Friday, September 21, 2012

HGA Painter Ellie Reinhold Exhibiting in Raleigh Show, "Curio"

Ellie Reinhold, a painter and founding member of HGA, will have work in "Curio,” an art exhibition sponsored by the City of Raleigh Arts Commission, that runs from Oct. 4 to Nov. 13 at the Miriam Preston Block Art Gallery, 222 W. Hargett St. This is the fifth exhibition of the Block Art Gallery 2012 Exhibition Series.
 “Curio” includes paintings by Reinhold, as well as Chance Murray and Christina Preher and glass work by Lucartha Kohler. The theme linking the artists' work is an exploration of the fantastical through inventive characters, narrative, emotions and archetypal imagery.  Reinhold focuses on the importance of color, symbolic imagery and emotion in her paintings.
An opening-day reception will be held on Thursday, Oct. 4 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the Block Art Gallery.  Tuff Love in Dub will provide the music for the opening.  Ellie encourages all her friends to attend, saying, "I'll be lonely without my peeps!"
Here's a link to Ellie's interview on YouTube:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TF3j8123n3M&feature=youtu.be

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Nature is My Muse


a post by Jude Lobe
www.judelobe.com

Nature is my muse. I'm inspired by its qualities of rejuvenation and renewal necessary for survival. Since we're all a part of nature, I believe we need to respect the connection we have with the natural environment. In nature things change over time, evolve. And we, as individuals, also evolve and are the sum of the bits and pieces of our experiences. This idea I want to translate in my art.

Cold wax and oil lends itself perfectly to expressing this idea. It affords the opportunity to show a history of the painting by building up layers, obscuring what's beneath, and removing layers to reveal bits of past layers. It represents the history of a life that becomes an aggregation of our observations and experiences.

Cold wax was a widely used medium in Greco-Roman art beginning in the 5th century BC. Cold wax can be used to make oil colors thicker and more matte. The wax I use is Gamblin Cold Wax. It is made from naturally white unbleached beeswax, alkyd resin and odorless mineral spirits. It can be thinned to brush on or mixed 1:1 with oil paint and applied with a palette knife, brayer, or brush. It can also be used as a wax varnish over a dry oil painting. When I use a 1:1 ratio, I use a rigid support. If I used canvas or linen, the stretching and shrinking of the soft supports could cause cracking of the wax and oil. However, if you want to use a flexible support, mix the cold was with a Galkyd Gel 1:1 to add flexibility to the wax.

A nice advantage to using cold wax with oil, rather than just oil painting, is that you do not have to varnish, so you do not have to wait for the painting to cure, which could take several months. The cold wax paintings dry to touch within about a week. They would take more time to thoroughly dry, but because they don't have to be varnished you can ship or exhibit them within a week or so. I do buff some of mine with a soft cloth after a week when I want a slight shine.

I've just begun to put some of my pieces on my website. I also have some pieces exhibited at Hillsborough Gallery of Arts including the image above.