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Tom Burckhardt, Becca Lowry, and Ruth Hiller

10 Thursday Mar 2016

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

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Abstract, ART, Becca Lowry, contemporary, FREDGIAMPIETROGALLERY, Painting, Ruth Hiller, Sculpture, Tom Burckhardt, Works on paper

Works by Tom Burckhardt, Becca Lowry, and Ruth Hiller

Open now through April 2, 2016

FRED.GIAMPIETRO Gallery 1064 Chapel Street, New Haven, CT


Becca Lowry

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“These pieces are built to protect. They are shields, force fields, and talismans, each custom-made to safeguard against a particular threat: One will ward off an impending storm, another will scatter daemons, a third will hold tight to your heart while you do something ridiculously, recklessly brave. These shields tend not to be combative – the pointy edges are more like the decorative fringe of a rug than they are the point of a spear. I think, instead, they’re meant to hold a person up, to bolster strength and resolution in a moment of great uncertainty. And then, when the coast is most certainly clear, they are meant to be hung, quietly, carefully, back on the wall.” – Becca Lowry

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Lowry received her Bachelor of Arts in Economics from Smith College in North Hampton, MA. Becca’s work has been exhibited throughout New England and can be found in many prestigious private collections. Lowry’s work will be exhibited at this years VOLTA NY, March 2 – 6th.

Click here to watch the Gorky’s Granddaughter’s 2014 interview with Becca

Click here to view Becca’s most recent work


 Tom Burckhardt

TB_2015_BU0000

In a recent statement, Tom Burckhardt describes his work, “At my core I am an abstractionist, but one who has some inherent distrust of its historical elitism and lack of humor. I think I have always tried to find ways to infuse it with a sense of it’s own absurdity, and poke some fun at it while showing my affection for it’s strength and ambition. I’ve also felt the need to resist a sense of purism and find ways of including elements of figuration, although often bleeding them of their literal realism to find an accommodation of the two spheres. In my “Cast” paintings I’m interested in creating a kind of false beginning, for the paintings with the support being fashioned as a faux sculpture. Once the inherent “quality” of paintings is reduced I feel the space has been cleared for me to invest my personal sense of integrity and attitude into the works. In these pieces I have cast all of the supports in plastic. I consider this good-natured humiliation a great place to start, almost like embedding doubt in the physical material of the support, and from this point the paintings proceed in a very abstract-intuitive way.”

 Burckhardt_Lowry_Hiller_2016_Install_0005

Burckhardt received his BFA from the State University of New York in addition to attending Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine. Tom has exhibited extensively throughout the United States and has been awarded many prestigious awards including the Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant, the Guggenheim Foundation Grant, The Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, and many more. Burckhardt’s most recent exhibitions have been featured in The New York Times and Hyperalergic.

Click here to watch the Gorky’s Granddaughter’s 2012 interview with Tom

Click here to view Tom’s work on exhibit at FRED.GIAMPIETRO Gallery


Ruth Hiller

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“I am obsessed with mass production, technology and industry. How do I reconcile these things that overwhelm and excite me?

Living in nature, as well as in an urban environment, have compelled me to create work that appears plastic, tactile and machine made with hints of my surroundings. The visual conversation between the paint and forms culminates in my softly linear objects– evocative of industry and nature.”

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Ruth Hiller received her BFA from Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, CT. Her work has been exhibited throughout the United States. Hiller has been awarded residencies and many prestigious awards.
Click here to view Ruth’s work on exhibit at FRED.GIAMPIETRO Gallery

Video

Becca Lowry at VOLTA NY 2016

19 Friday Feb 2016

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

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Abstract, Becca Lowry, FREDGIAMPIETROGALLERY, VoltaNY

Becca Lowry will be exhibiting with FRED.GIAMPIETRO Gallery at VOLTA NY 2016

Becca Lowry received her Bachelor of Arts in Economics with a certificate in African Studies from Smith College in North Hampton, MA. Becca’s work has been exhibited throughout New England and can be found in many prestigious private collections. Lowry’s work will be exhibited at VOLTA NY 2016 and in an exhibition with Tom Burckhardt at FRED.GIAMPIETRO Gallery, February 27 – April 2, 2016.

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VOLTA NY, MARCH 2–6, 2016

PIER 90, WEST 50TH STREET AT 12TH AVENUE, NEW YORK, NY 10036

PUBLIC HOURS

THURSDAY – SATURDAY, MARCH 3 – 5

12 – 8 pm

SUNDAY, MARCH 6

12 – 6 pm

For more information about VOLTA please click here

Click here for more information on Becca’s upcoming exhibition with Tom Burckhardt

HYPERALLERGIC – OAF NY 2016 – FRED.GIAMPIETRO Gallery

26 Tuesday Jan 2016

Posted by Fred.Giampietro in ART, Outsider Art Fair, Painting, Sculpture, Uncategorized, Works on paper

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FREDGIAMPIETROGALLERY, HYPERALLERGIC, Jana Paleckova, OAF2016, Susan Gerard

Great Article on the Outsider Art Fair NY 2016 by Hyperallergic’s Clair Voon!

GALLERIES

The Personal Passions and Detailed Devotions of the Outsider Art Fair

  • by Claire Voon on January 22, 2016

Figural sculptures by John VanZile and clothing works by Robert Adele Davis at American Primitive

Now in its 24th edition, the Outsider Art Fair has found a new home this year at the Metropolitan Pavilion, currently filled with the fair’s largest number of exhibitors yet. Of the 64 galleries participating from seven different countries, 24 are first-time exhibitors, with a large number of dealers who represent self-taught artists arriving from the nearby Lower East Side. The resulting presentation is incredibly diverse and sprawling. Most booths feature walls hung with artworks and shelves or pedestals covered with curios; you won’t find any sleek light boxes, digital screens, or colossal sculptures that make for easy Instagram fodder here. Rather, the fair is dominated by works that suggest a dedication to handicraft or an intimate fixation on a subject. This attention to detail — tantamount to a reverence — is what makes much of the fair’s art so intriguing and, simply, great.

Eugene Von Bruenchenhein at Andrew Edlin gallery

The materials these artists use to realize their visions tend to be simple, mostly everyday items, manipulated and transformed with devotion. Many artists just engaged with what was available to them: pages ripped from notebooks, recycled paper, paper bags, fabric scraps, bits of wood, found objects. These materials suggest a shared disregard for glamour and an eagerness or need for personal expression.

Cardboard panels serve as the backing for two colorful paintings by the self-taught artist Eugene Von Bruenchenhein, on display at Andrew Edlin; what was once discarded is revived with dynamic, fluid landscapes. Wire-bound and taped sculptures stand like miniature industrial mummies at Fleisher/Ollman gallery, their unconventional bindings wound tight around items like coins and bolts, concealing the small objects like precious treasures. Made by an unknown artist dubbed “Philadelphia Wireman,” the group of six sculptures is part of about 1,200 in existence, abandoned and found in 1982 — a physical remnant attesting to a ritual of creation that was deeply significant to someone. I was reminded of these wrappings when I saw the colorful cocoon works of Tony Pedemonte, on view at Cavin-Morris, that are also made of whatever material he has available, from wood fragments to bicycle wheels. These sculptures by the Creative Growth artist are incredibly charged, disarming in their resemblance to a spider’s dying prey but beguiling in their suggested warmth and vibrancy. (Curiously, they also resemble very closely the works of the late Judith Scott, also represented by Creative Growth.)

Sculptures by Philadelphia Wireman at Fleisher Ollman

More explicitly menacing is Galerie Anne de Villepoix’s series of drawings on tracing paper by Annette Barcelo, who has a story for those searching for the stereotypical narrative of the psychologically troubled outsider artist. A 73-year-old Swiss native, Barcelo claims to be haunted by demons and uses markers to draw vignettes of the peculiar beasts, each one carefully bordered by a thick line of color, as though she were attempting to contain these visions in her art. A series I found just as puzzling but much more compelling is a crowd of painted clay sculptures by Susan Gerard at Fred Giampietro Gallery. Easy to overlook because of their small scale, they stand as an expression of bizarre human interactions and deserve prolonged examination. The figurines — for whatever reason almost all male — are carrying out medical treatments, but others are also being harmed, forming an eerie collection. The self-taught Gerard is a physical therapist, and I wondered if her visualization of these themes was a way to find relief from constantly working with the pain of others.

Drawings by Annette Barcelo at Galerie Anne de Villepoix

One unique aspect of the Outsider Art Fair is that not all the art on view was initially intended as art. Perhaps the most delightful surprise is a series of largely anonymous 18th–21st-century drawings from India on view at newcomer Magic Markings. Likely created by monks or religious leaders who reused paper scraps such as old ledgers, the illustrations include diagrams of planetary positions and intricate patterns used as meditation devices. The inclusion of artifacts that showcase the spiritual beliefs of a non-Western community is refreshing, and also exemplifies the ever-broadening definition of outsider art.

Much more recently, the Memphis-born Hawkins Bolden, blind since the age of eight, constructed metal “scarecrows” out of objects he collected around his neighborhood, in an effort to keep birds away from his garden. Out of his practical pursuit emerged a group of whimsical metalworks tasked with keeping watch over and rejecting the outside world. Humanoid because of their strategically arranged holes that look like eyes, the sculptures occupy the entire space of Shrine’s booth, standing on and around a patch of grass. Facing these rusting sentries, one has a sense of Bolden’s resolve to bar unwanted visitors; stepping into the booth seems like it would be an act of transgression, of flouting one man’s fervent pursuit of his own secured space.

The Outsider Art Fair

Many of these artists aren’t household names, but as figures like Henry Darger prove, outsider art isn’t always so “outsider.” This year marked the passing of two well-known artists of the genre: Paul Laffoley and Ionel Talpazan. While the former’s works are absent at the fair, organizers pay tribute to the latter, who died last September and was known for his long-term obsession with depicting UFOs. Near the fair’s entrance is a memorial exhibition that features an array of Talpazan’s enigmatic spaceship paintings and plaster sculptures that balance on their bases like enlarged children’s spinning tops. Seeing years of his cosmic art together underscores his relentless devotion to exploring unsolved mysteries of the universe. This gathering of Talpazan’s lifework nods to the personal nature of outsider art that makes it especially appealing and that shines at this fair: the need to create primarily for the self, no matter how otherworldly the focus.

Painted clay sculptures by Susan Gerard at Fred Giampietro Gallery

Painted clay sculptures by Susan Gerard at Fred Giampietro Gallery

Tony Pedemonte, "Untitled" (2015) at Cavin-Morris Gallery

Tony Pedemonte, “Untitled” (2015) at Cavin-Morris Gallery

Hawkins Bolden's scarecrows at Shrine

Hawkins Bolden’s scarecrows at Shrine

Memorial exhibition to Ionel Talpazan

Memorial exhibition to Ionel Talpazan

Indian drawings from the 18th-21st century at Magic Markings

Indian drawings from the 18th–21st centuries at Magic Markings

Works by Uman at Galerie Anne de Villepoix

Works by Uman at Galerie Anne de Villepoix

Daniel Martin Diaz, "Collective consciousness" (2015) at American Primitive Gallery

Daniel Martin Diaz, “Collective consciousness” (2015) at American Primitive Gallery

Sculptures by Lonnie Holley and Joe Minter at James Fuentes

Sculptures by Lonnie Holley and Joe Minter at James Fuentes

Jana Paleckova at Fred Giampietro Gallery

Jana Paleckova at Fred Giampietro Gallery

Works by Linda Marathuwarr and Judy Manany at Rebecca Hossack

Works by Linda Marathuwarr and Judy Manany at Rebecca Hossack

Fabric and button sculptures by Momoka Imura at Yukiko Koide Presents

Fabric and button sculptures by Momoka Imura at Yukiko Koide Presents

Felipe Jesus Consalvos, "Untitled (White Eagle, Violin and Case)" (c. 1920-50) at Fleisher Ollman

Felipe Jesus Consalvos, “Untitled (White Eagle, Violin and Case)” (c. 1920–50) at Fleisher/Ollman

Paper works by Hidehito Matsubara at YOD Gallery

Paper works by Hidehito Matsubara at YOD Gallery

Peter Thomashaw at Marion Harris

Collages and assemblages by Peter Thomashow at Marion Harris

Various erotic dolls by Les Frères Lessard at Polysémie

Various erotic dolls by Les Frères Lessard at Polysémie

L'Inlassable Gallery

L’Inlassable Gallery

Mariposa Unusual Art

Works from South America at Mariposa Unusual Art

Gilley's Gallery

Gilley’s Gallery

The Outsider Art Fair

Outsider Art Fair 2016 continues at the Metropolitan Pavilion (125 W 18th Street, Chelsea, Manhattan) through January 24.

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

Jukkala_Newman_Johnson_OpeningReception_14

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!

JN_Print1JN_Print1_D1

JN_Print2_D1

JN_Print2

www.giampietrogallery.com

Sept. 2014

Fred.Giampietro Gallery

Fred.Giampietro Gallery

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