It is with great pleasure
that the Louisa Gould Gallery on Main Street in Vineyard Haven
presents the Ninth Annual Group Abstract Show,
“Personal
Visions” opening on August 25, 2016 and continuing until
September 11, 2016. The artists’ reception will be on August 27
from 5-7 p.m., with a curatorial talk about the exhibit by Roberta
Gross on Tuesday, September 6 at 5 p.m. The exhibit showcases the
work of six (6) artists, all with long time connections to Martha’s
Vineyard:
Jennifer Ellwood, Michaele Christian; Joyce
Silberling, Martha Mae Jones; Laura Roosevelt and Roberta Gross.
These artists create very individualistic works of art by creatively
employing a variety of media: oil, fabrics, digital photography;
monotypes, pastels, screen prints and mixed media compositions. Come
by to meet the artists at the opening and enjoy light refreshments.
Also, join Roberta Gross for a curatorial discussion of the exhibit
on September 6th at 5 p.m.
Jennifer
Ellwood’s
abstract
oil paintings, often inspired by nature including Vineyard
landscapes, reflect a command of composition and a movement of forms
and color.
Throughout her career, Jennifer has explored the
territory between pure abstract and near-representation. She
typically works large scale, creating her paintings over long periods
of time. She develops a layered and complex surface that
records the history of her work and her experience in the process of
painting. This surface is often interrupted with more immediate
marks and lines on the surface that are in tension with the history
of the piece.
Jennifer not only is
a talented abstract landscape artist, she is also a practicing
psychotherapist who grew up in Pittsburgh, moved to Boston to attend
Tufts University and graduated with a BA/BS in 1993. Jennifer has
studied painting at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, at
the University of Fine Arts in Hanoi, Vietnam, and privately.
Her
works, exhibited throughout New England, have been selected for
numerous public installations including the Boston Seaport Hotel,
Gateway Terrace Residence, Beauport Equity Corporation, the
Bridgeport/New Haven Hospital, and others
Michaele Chamblee
Christian is a retired oncologist who returned to her early
love of art and painting by pursuing monotype printmaking at
Featherstone Center for the Arts on Martha’s Vineyard beginning in
2004. She has studied with several instructors there including Linda
Ziegler, Leslie Baker, and Nick Thayer. She has also studied with
Skip Barnhardt and Penny Barringer in Washington, D.C. She uses
monotype, collagraph, chine colle and collage techniques to explore
themes related to nature and politics as well as more abstract
themes. She most commonly works with oil-based inks and paints, but
also uses water-based inks, water colors and crayon when it fits her
artistic expression.
Martha Mae Jones
turns to fabrics as her muse. In creating her original, coloristic
assemblages, she uses textiles she creates as well as remnants of
silk, cotton, rayon, bamboo, hemp, and other fibers. She is primarily
interested in creating a harmony between the sedate and the wild, the
new and the vintage, the bold and the subtle, the floral and the
geometric. Trained as a sociologist, she went to Sweden studying
weaving and textile design. For more than thirty years now, she has
practiced her deep passion for textiles, exhibiting her
fabric-centric creations in boutiques, including in New York City and
in the Vineyard. Her work has been featured in
The New York
Times,
Martha’s Vineyard Magazine, Essence Magazine,
Martha’s Vineyard Times, Shuttle and Dye, The Pittsburgh Business
Times and the
Amsterdam News.
Laura Roosevelt,
a year round resident of West Tisbury, uses many different ways to
express her artistic insights: she is a poet, journalist, and
photographer. She is once again presenting her abstract photography
for this exhibit. Her photographs reflect her continued interest in
bodies of water in which she responds to visual images of the boats,
pilings, docks, buildings -- seemingly solid objects -- as they
become distorted and transformed by the water’s movement. She aims
for the photographs to appear painterly rather than more hard edged
and presents colorful compositions of swirling patterns and
distortions.
Joyce Silberling
primarily works in water media but also incorporates fiber as well as
hand dyed papers into her monoprints and collages. She also is a
skilled print maker. Her work often highlights figures in their
journey through life, searching for a home, whether it is one that is
social, political or spiritual. These figures exist in “a great
cloud of witnesses” (
Hebrews 11) leading her to ponder the
individual and collective conscience in the world today.
Roberta Gross,
the curator of, and a participant in this exhibit, is a resident of
Aquinnah and Philadelphia, PA. She shows her work in galleries in
Philadelphia and on the Vineyard. She often can be seen at the
Featherstone Center for the Arts where she teaches abstract and mixed
media art courses. For this exhibit, she is showcasing both her
abstract pastels inspired by life models and a group of playful
geometric screen prints. Both series, though in very different
media, demonstrate her love for strong colors and shapes as well as
bold contrasts. Roberta has studied at the Smithsonian Institution,
the Corcoran School of Art, the Torpedo Factory (all in the
Washington, DC area) and is a member of and on the Board of the
historic
Plastic Club of Philadelphia.
Louisa Gould Gallery is located at 54 Main Street in the historic cultural district of Vineyard Haven. View the online show at www.louisagould.com and call for directions at (508) 693.7373. The Louisa Gould Gallery is open daily from 11am to 5pm.