Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Happy Holidays!

Happy Holidays from everyone at Delavan Art Gallery!



We'd like to thank everyone for their continued support and we look forward to seeing you in the New Year.

The Staff of Delavan Art Gallery

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Please note our additional holiday hours!

Not only are we open our normal gallery hours through December 19 (Thursday and Friday from noon to 6 PM and Saturday from 10 AM to 4 PM), but we are also open special hours between now and Christmas.

Special Hours:

Tuesday and Wednesday (December 22, and 23), noon to 6 PM
Thursday, December 24 from 11 AM - 2 PM

Stop by to pick up a unique gift for someone on your holiday shopping list! We have beautiful and unique gifts at a variety of prices - or pick up a gift certificate if you can't decide! Your purchase supports local Syracuse artists and brings new and exciting art to someone you love!

Syracuse Ceramic Guild exhibition

A collective display of members’ works at Delavan Art Gallery by the Syracuse Ceramic Guild is part of the organization’s mission to promote awareness and understanding of the ceramic medium, and also ties in with the gallery’s goal to feature and celebrate local artists.

The Syracuse Ceramic Guild installation, featuring pieces by nine of its member artists, opened in the gallery’s Wild Card space on Thursday, December 3 and remains up through Thursday, December 19. Please visit the City Eagle online for an article about the exhibition:
City Eagle Article

Brief introductions to each of the member artists celebrated in this show follow:


Carol Adamec, recently retired art teacher at Westhill High School, Syracuse, NY, is a native of Long Island who “fell in love with clay” when she was 10 years old and ever since, has ‘found clay and metal sculpture to be significant means’ of expression in her life. She says, “I work to express the reality of positive emotions we feel in our daily lives, translating them into a physical state and bringing them to peoples’ attention with beauty and elegance.” Indeed, Adamec’s works are described as “graceful, elegant and sensual.”

Lory Black also tells of her early “love affair with clay” and how it becomes “expressions of emotion,” pieces of inner feelings of “love, happiness, joy, sadness or beauties of nature.” Black’s experience in teaching kindergarten in the inner city instilled in her the wonderment and magic of the medium, referring to students’ creations as filled with the freedom and imagination of their uninhibited expression.

Walt Black, Lory’s husband, says he ‘came rather late to the art form,’ and describes his works as ‘strong,’ influenced by his years of physical activities and professional career as teacher, coach and administrator of Physical Education and Athletics. He adds, however, that he has always been interested in the relationship between ‘art and sport.’ Black enjoys the stimulation of creating a functional piece of pottery. He and his wife now have a studio in their home and one at their camp in the foothills of the Adirondacks where, he says, “we can produce ceramics inspired by the woods and Kayuta Lake.”


Sue Canizares likens her surface decorating on stoneware and porcelain to ‘embroidery’ saying the technique called “Sgraffito” design is finished using clay as thread and fire as loom. Having lived for a time in the rich historical region of Burgundy, France, Canizares says she draws inspiration from the culture of the medieval period, viewing ancient tapestries both as a window to the past and as a resource for creation of the stylized flowers, vines, leaves and animals that adorn her three-dimensional pieces.


Megan Conner, ceramics teacher at Jamesville-DeWitt High School, says her work is strongly influenced by the colors, patterns and textures she sees in the natural world. To her, the veins of a leaf or the texture of eroded stone represent growth and the passage of time and she refers to those ideas for expression in the carved and stamped surfaces of her pottery and textural compositions of her tiles. Conner’s current theme of work focuses on landscape and its connection “between our physical and emotional landscapes.” She describes her works as “hand built textural wall tiles using slips and stains on layered slabs of clay.”


Miyo Hirano says her wheel-thrown and altered stoneware reflects her Japanese heritage and adds that she is grateful to all those who helped in her journey from when, as a child in Japan, she first experienced the joy of rolling a small clay ball in her cupped palms, to venturing down a potter’s path and ultimately opening her own shop called, “Pleasing Pottery.” Hirano says that “working in clay is a continuum of mystery” and understands that her joy arises in connecting with elements of earth, water, fire and cosmic presences beyond ideas and forming techniques. Compelled to work through her inner self, Hirano says that she applies the concept of “sitting with a beginner’s mind.”

Amy Komar, having worked in a variety of expressive arts mediums from visual arts to performance, finds that the single uniting focus has always been ‘story’ and says her work evolves from a fascination with the personal narrative. She adds, “I draw heavily upon cross-cultural stories, favoring ‘trickster’ tales that explore, teach, cross and push boundaries to walk one’s own path. My visual representation of the trickster has become my personal signature.” Komar loves the direct contact with clay and the freedom of expression that it provides. She says, “As well as incorporating poetry, I can invent a language not limited by words that expands to include form, texture and color.”


Sabrina Nedell, who grew up in the Adirondack region, calls her hand built work ‘whimsical at times’ and says she is influenced by nature. Having been awarded three NYSCA grants, Nedell adds, “I have been seriously playing with and teaching clay for the past 13 years.” Before moving here and teaching classes in her home, she taught at the Old forge Art Center and did all after school art programming for the Camden NY school district. Of her Creamer and Sugar pieces, Nedell says the swirls remind her of seashells or gusts of wind, and the ‘squiggly’ atop the bowl, a whimsical hat..or maybe a croissant.


Wes Weiss, newly retired from the US Postal Service, is forging ahead with his art that first captured his interest much earlier when a student both at SUNY Oswego and later at Syracuse University. He currently works out of a studio at Clayscapes Pottery in Syracuse and hand builds pieces using slab construction methods. Weiss says he enjoys creating curved pieces from leather-hard clay and is currently working with heavy doses of colorants wedged into different clay bodies.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Critique of "Drawing in Air" by Bonnie Rosenberg

“Drawing in Air” heightens viewer understanding
Bonnie Rosenberg
December 2009

All too often surveyors of art are left to their own devices to decipher the meaning behind paintings, sculptures, installations, or posters. The task can seem insurmountable. But, on rare occasions, artists will take the viewers by the proverbial hand and guide them through their artistic creations

The Delavan Art Gallery’s latest Wild Card exhibit, “Drawing in Air,” explores the work of local artist Andy Schuster. Running concurrently with an exhibition of his sculptures at Lipe Art Park, the show displays the sketches and models that led up to this latest installation as well as some of his ceramic pieces.



For each sculptural model on display there is a bevy of accompanying sketches that flesh out the effects of changing sunlight and the impact of applied color on each monument. With his “Ellipse” series, the projected light of day lends each sketch different weight. Casting shadows change with the moving sun.

In “Red Square,” strategically placed sections of red paint come together to reveal a somewhat hidden, yet cohesive crimson geometric shape.

Each drawing includes flicks of colored ink and pen that suggest the intended color palette. The wisps of ink are hurried and brief, but lend an overall understanding of what the artist envisions in the end.



Text also aids the viewer in grasping Schuster’s grander artistic schema. In “Flapping Wings,” his script reads:




Flight
-birds wings flapping
-allow grass to grow and become part of sculpture
-contrast w/ bldg. windows

These sculptures, and the studies leading up to them, are experiments in shape, perception, and the effects of environment on art. With time, the saplings that constitute these works will blend into their surroundings. Snow and grass will become integral elements in all of the works.


Material is the chief difference between these pieces and that of other sculptors. “Spiral galaxy with grid” takes a page from Richard Serra’s book with its winding design. Though unlike Serra’s large, imposing sheets of manipulated metal, Schuster’s work is fragile and impermanent.


Next to the art itself is a video display of the sculptures as they appear in Lipe Art Park. This display adds to the exhibit’s emphasis on multi-media art production.

Interspersed throughout the studies and models are samplings of Schuster’s ceramics. Fired from the same series, these plates feature primal geometric shapes that float on top of an undulating, rippled surface.

A patina-tinted line cuts through the center of the plate in “Drawing, 9 Triangles.” This disruption adds visual interest and a welcome break from the rigidity of the many painted shapes.

“Drawing in Air” guides you to a certain point. It reveals everything up until the moment of artistic actualization. The next logical step for the viewer is to go out to the Lipe Art Park itself and see the installations in their literal natural habitat. Go, walk under the saplings, watch the shifting shadows, and bring along your newfound understanding of the artist’s intent.