October 2 - 27, 2019
Opening Reception
Friday, October 4, 6 pm - 8:30 pm
Nancy Diessner
“All I want is to be the river though I return
again and again to the clouds”
Julia Talcott
“On the Night You Were Born”
Gary Duehr
“Aureoles”
Nancy Diessner
Nancy Diessner
“All I want is to be the river though I return
again and again to the clouds”
My interest is in the sliver of space between the sky and the water, between open air and surface tension, between the solidity and firmness of the earth and the mysterious, unknowable, impermanent depths of dark river water. I’m interested in the way a body and a boat can glide, as one, along that water line, and also—somehow—transcend it. I’m interested in how a boat, a body, water, and sky can mean so much more than what’s there.
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Julia Talcott
Julia Talcott
“On the Night You Were Born”
My work reflects my interest in the natural world. Natural and man-made patterns fascinate me. Observing, pulling apart, and re-imagining them as printed pieces I reprocess them as linoleum and woodblock prints. My vocabulary of images is worked intuitively back into collage and new forms or constructions. I alternate between abstraction and representational images, with color and black and white pallets, weaving them together in a way that hopes to express the vitality of growth and decay in a physical and spiritual world.
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Gary Duehr
Gary Duehr
“Aureoles”
With their radiant circles, these images of refuse evoke the aureoles (diminutive of Latin aurea, "golden") or
halos in paintings of sacred figures. In Christian paintings, a luminous cloud envelops the whole body or just
the head, where it would appear as a round halo or nimbus—a kind of crown.
These photographs of trash bins, however, look down instead of up, toward the earthy, random debris at our feet.
They are closer to profane than sacred.
Pigment prints in round white frames, 20" x 20".