EAST HAMPTON STAR "Opinion: One Last Winter Show"

Charles Waller, Smoke 2, 2019, Ink on mixed media, 25 x 23 in, $7500

Charles Waller, Smoke 2, 2019, Ink on mixed media, 25 x 23 in, $7500

By Jennifer Landes

March 19th, 2020

“Folioeast’s “Winter Salon” in East Hampton is a vast undertaking in a small space, a miracle of placement and size management with an eye for hanging artwork so that it melds into a cohesive whole. Although it is hard to measure an exhibition of so many artists and their unique contributions, it is worth examining the highlights and the ensemble.

Occupying a good portion of the eastern wall of the gallery is Charles Waller’s “Smoke 1-3.” Mr. Waller, whose dry wit often crackles in his work, seems to have been less of a presence on the East End art scene in recent years, and he has been missed. His three mixed-media pieces embellished with his ink drawings have a nostalgic air, offering tropes of old-school masculinity.

Set on backgrounds of faded old packaging or ads for cigarettes, or facsimiles thereof, are drawings of gargantuan smoking implements. Each one has a different main subject — a pipe dwarfing an overstuffed club chair, a log of a cigarette doused in a martini glass with a toothpick-speared olive nearby, a cigar overtaking an ashtray. They work so well together that the series should be a triptych even though each is its own piece. The obsessive nature of the works, their seriality, and the size of the subjects suggest a habit being broken or even a once-universal lifestyle being subsumed or suppressed. Mr. Waller offers a lot to chew on with a limited amount of visual information.

On the opposite wall, Beth O’Donnell’s photographic images on paper are minimal in their own ways as well. “Torn but Not Broken” is a blending of a photographic image, encaustic, and oil stick on gampi paper, which is made from the bark of a Japanese bush that produces a virtually fiberless translucent sheet. The artist builds up the oil stick around the edges but lets the wax highlight the image, which is an abstracted, possibly floral subject, or seems to be, in the context of her “Peony” photograph nearby. Both are very striking images that go beyond the merely pretty.

Kurt Giehl is another artist less familiar to this viewer, but his work is exciting to see in this setting. Mr. Giehl has different series of works but seems best represented by his abstracted seascape paintings. His focus is on where sea meets sky, overgeneralizing both elements so that they can become unrecognizable as natural phenomena and more like stacked colors on a flat plane. That each subject has a very specific location in its title (on view here is “North Sea II”) touches on both the irony and the sincerity of his practice. “Stripes,” his series of small square works with horizontally stacked compositional elements that hang together in a group of six, seem a logical progression from his imprecise treatment of natural scenes. With bands of black, white, gray, sand, and thinner bands of blue, each square evokes something tangible that is not quite in reach.

The poignancy in Francine Fleischer’s series of nests, photographed from above on plain white grounds, is always endearing. These evocations of home, the circle of life, and, ultimately, loss, give them a gravitas that transcends the decorative and the mere appreciation of their natural sculptural beauty.

It is exciting to see Carolyn Conrad’s return to her series of iconic structures, small-scale buildings she makes by hand with clay and wood and then photographs in a painted setting using natural light. This time, she has revisited those subjects to create a series of paintings in gouache on paper. The references to each step in the creative process build and boomerang on each other in a very satisfying and fascinating way.

Perry Burns’s work is often a palimpsest of darker imagery overlain with bright colors and floral motifs. Here, in “Four Seasons,” a work of mixed media on paper, there are areas that look like torn-off paper that might have built up on a billboard or city wall, but nothing that resembles anything tangi ble. It’s more like a neutral background than anything sinister. The four floral motifs in a varied color palette have ties to what could be interpreted as their different seasons. This simple piece — and the mysteries it offers — compel one back to it.

As promised, there is so much more, but not enough space to discuss each work and its own significant contribution to the whole. The exhibition has been extended to March 29, and Coco Myers, the owner of Folioeast, said she intends to stay open as of this writing by appointment. The pop-up gallery in the Malia Mills shop can also be seen from the street.

Be sure to check out the outstanding examples of work by Scott Bluedorn, Pamela Dove, Denise Gale, Jonathan Glynn, Melinda Hackett, Hiroyuki Hamada, John Haubrich, RJT Haynes, Dennis Leri, Christa Maiwald, Jane Martin, Lesley Obrock, Vivian Polak, Anne Raymond, George Singer, Barbara Thomas, Aurelio Torres, Sarah Jaffe Turnbull, Rosario Varela, Aaron Warkov, Mark Webber, and Dan Welden.”

Source: https://www.easthamptonstar.com/arts/20191121/opinion-shape-shifting-folioeast

EAST HAMPTON STAR "Opinion: Shape Shifting at folioeast"

A detail from Michele D’Ermo’s “Into the Sea”

A detail from Michele D’Ermo’s “Into the Sea”

Read the original story on the East Hampton Star website by clicking here.

Opinion: Shape Shifting at Folioeast

By Jennifer Landes

November 21, 2019

“Coco Myers said that when organizing the exhibition that became “For the Love of Painting” at Folioeast in East Hampton, she was inspired by painters who had been working for some time but had departed from their regular practices. The work the artists brought in was so fresh, in fact, that some of the paintings finished drying on the gallery walls.

So what do we have here? Shari Abramson, Michele D’Ermo, and Janet Jennings are all working in some form of abstraction that might also respond to landscape and/or the figure.

Ms. Abramson’s newest paintings share a cohesive palette of plums, pinks, mauves, and white, using mostly color to create darker tones and shadows. The larger canvases, “Inside Buddha’s Head” and “Dream Reflections,” seem to represent faces or facial features — one of a dog in the case of the former, and one of a human in the latter.

They have a moody, hazy atmosphere and summon up the subconscious.

“Inside Buddha’s Head” has a Georgia O’Keeffe vibe, conjuring a looming animal head over an uncertain background. In “Dream Reflection,” the canvas divides roughly into thirds, with a dark twilight kind of sky at top, a middle section of cloudy white, and what appears to be the suggestion of two eyes.

Ms. Abramson’s smaller works, 12-inch-square canvases, evoke studies of objects placed in interiors. But just as soon as these impressions appear, they also dissolve, leaving an intriguing enigma in their wake.

Compared to her older work, there is a definite shift here. Her paintings from a couple of years ago are more loosely organized, with the occasional use of strong linear elements, while these are blockier and more grounded in most cases.

Ms. D’Ermo’s most recent work indicates a marked shift as well. The artist has ordered her hazy and loose landscapes, often images evoking the ocean and waterways of the East End, around a horizon line. As such, they can be almost as abstract as a Mark Rothko painting, but more referential.

The latest works play with these compositional and stylistic modes. It begins as a subtle departure in “Moody Blue,” which refers to landscape in its ordering of compositional elements, but they open up and blur. A great expanse of white takes up most of the space, which employs her usual horizontal orientation. But the white doesn’t replicate or even refer to a typical cloud. If anything, it is more like a mushroom cloud, something capable of overcoming or obliterating things.

But then Ms. D’Ermo moves very rapidly into a significant departure. Now, the works stand tall on canvas or linen. One is even square. In “Into the Sea,” she hardens her subtle striations into real horizontal bands that no lon­ger carry direct ties to the landscape,

despite the painting’s title. The even patterning from top to bottom asserts the artist’s own vision, taken out of a realistic context. In the square work, “Untitled I,” the stripes become even sharper and now move vertically.

“Voyage,” which may or may not be the last work Ms. D’Ermo painted this year, feels like the fullest realization of this new direction. She has returned to an atmospheric vibration in the painting, but this almost seven-foot-tall work has left earthly concerns behind. A wide and fiery red-orange central swath is held back by deep blue sides, but just barely.

Shari Abramson’s “Mindshot” is a powerful 12-by-12-inch canvas./“Sea Cloud” by Janet Jennings demonstrates the artist’s further move into abstraction. Folioeast Photos

Shari Abramson’s “Mindshot” is a powerful 12-by-12-inch canvas./“Sea Cloud” by Janet Jennings demonstrates the artist’s further move into abstraction. Folioeast Photos

Ms. Jennings’s works in recent years have moved from recognizable landscapes bathed in atmosphere to close distillations of them, heading more and more into the abstract. These examples are a good foil for Ms. D’Ermo’s paintings, although Ms. Jennings’s remain horizontal in their composition.

Capturing a period from 2015 to 2019, the works show the artist returning again and again to a sea study that can dissolve into soft linear bands as quickly as it falls into focus on a stormy sky with light bay waves accumulating in the foreground. Titles such as “Sagg Fog” and “Sea Cloud” from this year seem to ground them into a sense of reality. “Sea Smoke,” from 2017, and “Dream Wave,” from 2018, highlight the artist’s tacks in a more imaginative direction.

The exhibition will remain on view through Dec. 8. A post-Thanksgiving reception will be held on Friday, Nov. 29, from 5 to 7 p.m., with the artists present and an extended view of their work.”

Source: https://www.easthamptonstar.com/arts/20191121/opinion-shape-shifting-folioeast