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FRED.GIAMPIETRO Gallery

~ Contemporary and Folk Art Gallery

FRED.GIAMPIETRO Gallery

Category Archives: ART

Our annual Holiday Exhibition is NOW OPEN!

30 Monday Nov 2015

Posted by Fred.Giampietro in ART

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Find your special someone a gift that will be forever treasured! We will be offering an incredible selection of works priced for the holiday gift giving season.    

November 27, 2015 – January 2, 2016

Opening Reception is on Saturday, December 5th, 6-8pm

Gallery Artists:

Michael Angelis • John Benicewicz • Power Boothe • Bernard Chaet • Emilia Dubicki • Elizabeth Gilfilen • Cham Hendon • Danny Huff • Blinn Jacobs • Celia Johnson • Jilaine Jones • Clint Jukkala • Zachary Keeting • Becca Lowry • Will Lustenader • Richard Lytle • Loren Myhre • Jeremiah Palececk • Jana Paleckova • Peter Ramon • Enrico Riley • Jonathan Waters • Becky Yazdan

with Guests:

Oriane Stender • Ken Grimes • Gerald Saladyga • Alteronce Gumby • Jean Scott • Robert Gregson • Jeremy Chandler • Stephen Grossman • Amy Vensel • Joey Loos • Adam Lovitz • Mingfei Cui • Stephen Rodriguez • Jane Miller • Megan Craig • Harold Shapiro • Laurie Auth • Patricia Spergel • Tizzie Mills • Barbara Marks • William Georgenes • Steven Powers • Gabor Kiraly

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Power Boothe, Clint Jukkala, Celia Johnson, Becky Yazdan, Loren Myhre, Enrico Riley, & Bernard Chaet

29 Thursday Oct 2015

Posted by Fred.Giampietro in ART, Encaustic, Painting, Sculpture, Works on paper

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Becky Yazdan, Bernard Chaet, Celia Johnson, Clint Jukkala, Enrico Riley, Exhibitions, Loren Myhre, Power Boothe

Power Boothe

Clement & Schneider Bonn (Bonn, Germany), Ten Ways, September 27 – November 21, 2015

Power Boothe, John Goodyear, Lynne Harlow, Daniel G. Hill, James Juszczyk, Joanne Mattera, Lorenza Sannai, Susan Smith, Don Voisine, Stephen Westfall

The exhibition “Ten Ways” centers ten “American Abstract Artists”, who deal with the topic of geometry in their works. Originally curated by Lorenza Sannai for the Milan based art location “Derbylius”, a second-hand art bookshop and gallery, the exhibition presents a work on the wall of each artist together with the respective art books, especially made for this exhibition.

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Uconn Health Center (Farmington, CT), Power Boothe New Work, December 7, 2015 – March 3, 2016

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Clint Jukkala

Edward Thorp Gallery (New York, NY), Receptive Fields, October 29 – December 6, 2015

Works by Farrell Brickhouse, Ariel Dill, Sarah Faux, Clint Jukkala, and Jess Willa Wheaton

CJ_2015_Astral Projection_OC_40x34

Pagus (Norristown, PA), Walk the Line, open now through November 13, 2015

PAGUS is pleased to present Walk The Line, a group exhibition of paintings by Mark Brosseau, Clint Jukkala, Lucy Mink, Brooke Moyse, and Enrico Riley, on view in the Project Space.

The exhibition brings together the work of these five artists, all of whom navigate an edge on which abstraction and illusionism press tightly up against one another, inter-weave, and vie for pole position. We see geometry, both angular and softened, building compositional puzzles, sometimes suggesting landscape, sometimes the figure, sometimes both, but never quite locking together to create the stable, manageable logic of these real forms in space. Color functions in a similar way: we know these hues from nature, how they down-shift by a few degrees in a passing shadow, how their chromas shoot into unbearable heights as they are blasted by an unrelenting sun, how late afternoon light shrinks into a single ember before being swallowed by the deep greys and greens of night; and yet, these assembled palettes are pushed just beyond the fence within which the order of observable and time-specific nature is present. Surfaces congeal, vibrate with textured marks, and find moments of sleek, brushless uniformity. And while each artist asserts his/her voice quite differently with a vocabulary of color, surface, and form, a deep love of this particular language of painting, its light, its juice, its range of heft and transparency, infuses each rectangular world presented.

CJukkala_Morning Routine


Celia Johnson

Silo Gallery (New Milford, CT), Wonderment, October 21, 2015 – January 2, 2016

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Becky Yazdan

Main Street Arts (Clifton Springs, NY), Small Works 2015,  November 7 – December 29, 2015

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Loren Myhre

Flordia State College (Jacksonville, FL), Loren Myhre, October 27th – November 17th, 2015

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Enrico Riley

The New Hampshire Institute for the Arts the Sharon Art Center Campus (Peterborough, NH), The Abstract Body, open now through October 31st

EnricoRiley_Abstract-Boardwalk,Popcorn,theCorndogVendor_2014_OC_30x24_RI000037

Pagus (Norristown, PA), Walk the Line, open now through November 13, 2015

PAGUS is pleased to present Walk The Line, a group exhibition of paintings by Mark Brosseau, Clint Jukkala, Lucy Mink, Brooke Moyse, and Enrico Riley, on view in the Project Space.

The exhibition brings together the work of these five artists, all of whom navigate an edge on which abstraction and illusionism press tightly up against one another, inter-weave, and vie for pole position. We see geometry, both angular and softened, building compositional puzzles, sometimes suggesting landscape, sometimes the figure, sometimes both, but never quite locking together to create the stable, manageable logic of these real forms in space. Color functions in a similar way: we know these hues from nature, how they down-shift by a few degrees in a passing shadow, how their chromas shoot into unbearable heights as they are blasted by an unrelenting sun, how late afternoon light shrinks into a single ember before being swallowed by the deep greys and greens of night; and yet, these assembled palettes are pushed just beyond the fence within which the order of observable and time-specific nature is present. Surfaces congeal, vibrate with textured marks, and find moments of sleek, brushless uniformity. And while each artist asserts his/her voice quite differently with a vocabulary of color, surface, and form, a deep love of this particular language of painting, its light, its juice, its range of heft and transparency, infuses each rectangular world presented.

EnricoRiley_Abstract-HeLovedHerMadly,WomanJumpingIntoTheSea_2015_OL_48x44_RI000032

The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Selections from the Permanent Collection

In honor of Black History month, VMFA will showcase both visual and performing African American artists. Maggie Ingram and the Ingramettes will perform on Feb. 6 from 6 to 8 p.m. for the First Fridays program at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. Since the 1940’s VMFA has sought works by African-American artists for the 19th, 20th, and 21st century collections. Some of these works are featured in the permanent galleries as well as in Fusion: Art of the 21st Century.

“The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts is dedicated to representing African-American artists throughout the entire year,” Director Alex Nyerges said. “We are honored to join in the nation’s celebration of African-American history and the cultural arts.”

Known as the “Gospel Queen” of Richmond, Maggie Ingram and her family have performed at the Kennedy Center, the National Folk Festival, and the Richmond Folk Festival.  The group has received numerous awards including the Virginia Heritage Award (2009) for a lifetime of excellence in the folk and traditional arts.  The Ingramettes are partially comprised of three generations of the Ingram family.  Maggie, 84, is joined on vocals by her daughter Almeta, her granddaughter Cheryl Beaver, and their close family friend Valerie Stewart.  This year marks the Ingramettes’ 59th and Maggie’s 65th year in gospel music.

Collections
VMFA has strived to increase the representation of African-American artists in its permanent collection, with more than 135 works, acquired during every decade since the 1940s.


Bernard Chaet

The Yale Club (New York, NY), A Creative Heritage: An Inaugural Loan of Modern Paintings by Yale Artists from the Yale University Art Gallery, October 14, 2015 – October 2016

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Celia Johnson – Encaustic

07 Wednesday Oct 2015

Posted by Fred.Giampietro in ART, Encaustic, Painting

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Abstract, Celia Johnson, CT, Encaustic, FREDGIAMPIETROGALLERY, New Haven, Painting

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We are thrilled to be working with artist Celia Johnson! Read below to learn more about her inspirations and working process. Examples of her work are on view now through October 17th, at FRED.GIAMPIETRO Gallery, 1064 Chapel Street, New Haven, CT

“As a child, I carefully collected stones, leaves and scraps into neat bundles of vivid similarities, and hoarded muslin bags bursting with glossy jewel-like marbles. But above all I lived and breathed for my Colorforms with the geometric Paul Rand logo, far preferring them to crayons.

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I was already hooked on saturated color and pure geometry.

Color as form and pattern, juxtaposed elements and their relational situations, these were interests that I wanted to explore as an art student, but it was challenging finding the right path. I was drawn to both design and painting, but I became increasingly conflicted over pursuing painting due to my lack of interest in generating representational or narrative imagery such as figures, scenes or familiar objects. I could not reconcile this reluctance and struggled in my inexperience to search for a painting problem to explore, engage and resolve.

Developing a personal language of abstraction and putting it to work had to be grown into for me as an artist. I began to find my way only when I realized that the subject of my work can in fact be the work in progress itself: its evolving shapes, forms and colors accumulating to articulate a document of myself at a given moment in time. With this realization in mind I began to conquer my doubt and move forward by creating controlled, small, intimate work in wax, oils, gouache and saturated silkscreen inks.

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I like to organize visual structure, and I start the exploration by utilizing both analog and digital collage. Here I explore form in both deconstruction and recombination, in redundancy and repeat, testing the balance and tension within figure-ground relationships. Through this method I gradually construct my distinct form-in-form compositions of formal and chromatic components. These are built into layered, structured fields of color, and as I proceed, one composition suggests another.

I enjoy persuading liquid paints, inks and hot glowing wax into counterintuitively distinct, bound, or embedded fields of pure saturated color.” – Celia Johnson

—

Click here to view more of Celia Johnson’s works
www.giampietrogallery.com/CeliaJohnson

Archive – Wonderful article written by Michael Valinsky about Clint Jukkala’s work at Volta NY 2015

06 Tuesday Oct 2015

Posted by Fred.Giampietro in ART, Painting

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Abstract, Clint Jukkala, CT, FREDGIAMPIETROGALLERY, New Haven, Painting

Don’t miss your chance to see Clint Jukkala’s most recent work, on view now through October 17th at Fred.Giampietro Gallery, 1064 Chapel Street, New Haven, CT

A Curious Play on Memory and Perception at Fred Giampietro Gallery’s VOLTA NY Presentation

At this year’s VOLTA NY Fred Giampietro Gallery offers a dynamic duo presentation featuring artists Jonathan Waters and Clint Jukkala, which will include a mixture of painting and sculpture, all centered around the theme of experience.

ARTSY EDITORIAL
MAR 4TH, 2015 12:33 AM

Each artist’s respective works initially appear to be antithetical, with one focusing on color and illusion and the other on structure and matter. However, both artists are interested in the ways in which we see things and how each perceived object can be seen from the perspective of a personal history. Jukkala’s work, while relying heavily on color to produce optical effects, employs amorphous shapes that are difficult to decipher. In his artist’s statement, he explains: “they tend to suggest eyes, goggles and periscopes—things to look through or things looking out.” It is precisely this idea of looking that makes Jukkala’s work so compelling; the viewer is never exactly sure what he or she is looking at, and is presented with the choice to mentally enter the scene or simply observe it. Like a landscape painting, Jukkala’s work asks the viewer to discern what the focal point of the piece is and provides many different options to choose from.

  • Clint Jukkala, 'Sun Globe,' 2014, FRED.GIAMPIETRO Gallery

    Clint Jukkala

    Sun Globe, 2014

  • Jonathan Waters, 'Hornhead,' 2015, FRED.GIAMPIETRO Gallery

    Jonathan Waters

    Hornhead, 2015

  • Clint Jukkala, 'Peculiar Velocity,' 2014, FRED.GIAMPIETRO Gallery

    Clint Jukkala

    Peculiar Velocity, 2014

On a similar note, Waters also produces works that consider the act of seeing, yet rather than relying on the viewer, as Jukkala’s works do, his works are born from his own experiences. Inspired by many years he spent living and working on a freight ship, Waters injects his works with references to nautical life. The resulting works, sharp, geometric sculptures and two-dimensional assemblages, incorporate elements of the hard-edged style and hints of 1970s-era minimalism. While exploring both paper and steel, and their respective textures, Waters develops a melancholic tone in his works, which the viewer experiences primarily through his use of color; this is where a dialogue between the two artists develop

  • Jukkala’s more vibrant tones offer a balance to Waters’s darker ones, and both combine produce a conversation on relationships between viewer and artwork and color and form. On the one hand, Jukkala asks us to use our imagination and become submerged in the canvas in order to experience it, and on the other, Waters beckons us to move around his works and observe the fruits of his own experiences. Due to this intriguing pairing, Fred Giampietro’s VOLTA NY presentation promises a stimulating study that makes the viewer question the way we look at art.

—Michael Valinsky

John Newman’s Prints

05 Monday Oct 2015

Posted by Fred.Giampietro in ART, ETCHING, PRINTS

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FREDGIAMPIETROGALLERY, JOHN NEWMAN

We are thrilled that John Newman was able to bring a wonderful selection of prints to the Gallery. He was worked with a number of complex processes including Intaglio (etching, aquatint, mezzotint, etc), Wood and Lino-cut, and lithography. Come by the gallery to view them in person!

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JN_Print2

www.giampietrogallery.com

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