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For Land and Water by Rosa Vera
Dec
3
to Jan 2

For Land and Water by Rosa Vera

December 3, 2021 – January 2, 2022

“For Land and Water” by Rosa Vera

Opening Reception: Sunday, December 5, 3 – 5 pm 

 “In nature nothing exists alone.” Rachel Carson, Silent Spring

From the deserts of Peru to the hill towns of Italy and the marshes of the United States, Rosa Vera in her latest solo exhibition at Touchstone Gallery, focuses on how virtually everything we cherish -- natural and manmade -- is in danger due to climate change. As Rachel Carson has been reminding us since 1962, the threat is great and time is perilously short.

 For land, dusk and sunrise on the desert coast of Peru are marked by multiple hues of reds and oranges on the sand, while “close-ups” of plants are abstracted interpretations. In her "Italian Angles” series, she paints the lines that define dwellings’ sides and terracotta roof tops.

Between the land and water are marshes, areas rich in wildlife.  Keeping marshes and rivers healthy is essential to the health of our environment.  They are reservoirs for invertebrates, fish, waterfowl and aquatic animals, and they are crucial to absorbing high tides and other changes due to extreme weather. But they are also threatened by sea level rise and erosion. 

Ranging from facile, expressive brushstrokes to geometric compositions, she engages the audience to become aware of the colorful beauty of what will be lost as we face our natural disasters.

Vera has exhibited her pieces in national shows and in solo, juried, and group shows in Washington, D.C., Texas and in Lima, Peru.  Her work has been published in several books and magazines and is in private collections in the US and overseas, including the permanent collection of the National Institutes of Health.

Image: Lotus Fields III

Masks are required inside the gallery. Open hours: Friday, Saturday, Sunday 12-5.

More information about Rosa Vera can be found on her website www.rosavera.com   

* Please note the gallery will be closed between December 24, 2021 and January 1, 2022. Please plan your visit accordingly!

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Parallels by Elaine Florimonte
Dec
3
to Jan 2

Parallels by Elaine Florimonte

December 3, 2021 – January 2, 2022

“Parallels” by Elaine Florimonte

 Opening Reception: Sunday, December 5, 3 – 5 pm 

In the Fall of 2019, Elaine Florimonte was stopped in her tracks at the sound of the wind. With a million things to do, she stood still and watched and listened as the trees moved in unison under the force of the wind. Like one big organism breathing. By the middle of the next season, we would be in a global pandemic effecting our connections with each other and our collective ability to breathe.

In a forest, there is not one isolated tree, but a network of trees, often of many different species. When one tree is weak, the neighboring trees support it through the connection of its root system and protect it from the elements through their proximity. The parallels between the life of a tree and its dependency on the forest and the issues of connection and isolation in our society is undeniable. The pandemic created an incredible sense of global community at the same time it divided us into our own isolated spaces.

Florimonte paints intuitively. She makes a mark and responds to that mark or color with another and another. Recently in her studio, trees kept showing up in her compositions. The repetition of verticals along the constant of the horizon and the light that she imagined pouring through the negative space brought Florimonte hope. Light has always played a role in her work and as she isolated in her home during the pandemic, she couldn’t help incorporating that interior light in this body of work. With the combination of interior spaces with her landscapes, a sense of knowing came over her as an artist.

 Just like standing still observing the trees swaying in the wind on that busy day two years ago, she has felt like she was suspended during the pandemic. At the same time inside-out, isolated and connected.

 Florimonte has exhibited her pieces in national shows and in solo, juried, and group shows in Washington, DC, Virginia, Maryland and in New York.  Her work has been published in magazines and is in private collections in the US and internationally.

Image: We Were Born Before the Wind. 28”x 34” Acrylic Collage on Canvas.

Masks are required inside the gallery. Open hours: Friday, Saturday, Sunday 12-5.

 More information about Elaine Florimonte can be found on her website www.elaineflorimonte.com  

* Please note the gallery will be closed between December 24, 2021 and January 1, 2022. Please plan your visit accordingly!

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"Eight Stories" (virtual)
Aug
8
to Sep 8

"Eight Stories" (virtual)

On display August 8 - September 8, 2021 at www.touchtonegallery.com

"Eight Stories" by à deux: Charlene Nield and Ann Pickett; Chris Tucker Haggerty, Mary Lagnaoui, Teresa Roberts Logan, Sharon Malley, Donna K. McGee, Debra Perkins, Janathel Shaw (virtual)

Virtual Exhibit Zoom Artist Talk & Opening: Sunday, August 8, 5 pm EST

RSVP to attend at https://www.touchstonegallery.com/rsvp

Artworks details by Mary Lagnaoui, Sharon Malley, Debra Perkins, à deux: Charlene Nield and Ann Pickett; Janathel Shaw, Teresa Roberts Logan, Chris Tucker Haggerty, Donna K. McGee (left to right)

Artworks details by Mary Lagnaoui, Sharon Malley, Debra Perkins, à deux: Charlene Nield and Ann Pickett; Janathel Shaw, Teresa Roberts Logan, Chris Tucker Haggerty, Donna K. McGee (left to right)

In their new series Royals, Charlene Nield and Ann Pickett (painting as the collaborative à deux) offer their painterly interpretation of who should wear a crown.  The genesis of the series was their painting Royal Wedding which led to a series of whimsical portraits, each rich in color, pattern and texture and each wearing a signatory crown. Painting in tandem, at the same easel at the same time, the two DC-area artists' collaborative is recognized for primarily figurative works that incorporate an element of abstraction in a style uniquely their own. 

Chris Tucker Haggerty's work is broadly inspired by international travel, the American Southwest and family culture. Chris has a great appreciation of the created world and often incorporates natural elements—feathers, leaves, branches, things that have known life— into the work. Scavenged treasures such as these as well as discarded bits that have a history— scraps of metal, pieces of maps or photos, relics of experiences——imbue the work with a certain power. She is interested in cultural beliefs and histories, manifested through traditional customs and symbols, especially circles. Circles gather you in and hold you safe. They are infinite. They connote Divine Providence and wholeness. They represent the sun, moon, the cycle of the seasons and the cycle of death to rebirth. Within a composition, elements create a dialogue, first with one another and then with the viewer. Chris enjoys facilitating the conversation.

For Mary Lagnaoui, painting involves a plan, a search, and surprise. She begins with an idea that firms up into a sketch, but it is not until she is exploring it on canvas that she sees and feels an image coming into being. Something starts to come to life. One drop of blue over another, a darker blue changes the feeling of the purple next to it, or a brushstroke pulls an edge closer in. Shape, line, and mix of colors build up and pull together into what Mary is looking for, imagining, realizing, and sometimes surprised to find.

A bold graphic approach is central to Teresa Roberts Logan’s work, and she is exploring figures and shapes in more abstract ways, with more attention to texture, pattern, while working in monochromatic (shades of black) schemes.
Great influences are comics and her Southern upbringing (Memphis, Tennessee), with her exposure to Southern music, quilting, and bold unapologetic folk art. Other interests which influence Teresa’s approach are Outsider Art, world textiles, Aboriginal dot paintings, Ben Day dots in pop art, Mexican contemporary and folk art, and African masks, as well as her trips to Mayan cities and temples. Teresa learns from art traditions with strong iconic images and a bold approach to storytelling and artistry, and works which communicate a narrative within the work.

Sharon Malley is predominantly an oil painter, currently focused on two different themes in her work, expressed in figurative narratives and abstracts. She usually starts with a base of acrylic and collaged papers, and then proceeds with oil, oil crayons, stencils, and stamping tools. The abstracts express the general theme of the environment and climate change, calling attention to the spiritual and what we are losing as we fail to address the issues we have caused.
For this exhibit Sharon chose to show these narratives, as they are timelier than she had ever expected when she started painting the first of them. They are part of a series centered on her experiences growing up on the Eastern Shore of Maryland during Jim Crow laws. Some of them are very specific to incidents and activities that she remembers, and some are the general essence of being together with children of a different race during those years. Sharon’s intention is to process and educate while telling a visual story, that the past very much decides the future, and that only through understanding can we move forward in a positive equitable direction.

Working in acrylic and texture often on a large scale, Donna K. McGee’s bold painterly brushwork combined with dramatic forms and color has a breathtaking impact on the viewer.  McGee has caught the interest of collectors and her work can be found all over the DC area, corporate conference rooms, lobbies, as well as private homes. Most are in the DC area, but also in many other states and in London, England. As an abstract painter, McGee is frequently asked, “What were you thinking?” Her artist statement answers this question: “Nature has a strong influence on my work as I see many organic shapes emerge into each other on the canvas. I continue to add layers of paint and texture or sometimes scrape it off, until it becomes the total picture. No matter how serious I am as an artist and how authentic I want my work to be, there is always the question —“Will others like my work?” However, it is only when I am true to myself, by responding to the colors, textures, and forms on my canvas from my mind’s eye, can I put my brush down and call it finished. I love, that when others respond to my work and share the images they see, it reinforces the idea “It is all in the eye of the beholder.”

“Every single line means something.” That quote by Jean-Michel Basquiat captures perfectly the importance to Debra Perkins of every line in her paintings. Be it straight or curved, thick or thin, fluid or broken, pristine or textured, every line really does mean something to her.  Debra’s lines are integral to visually telling a story or evoking an emotion.  By connecting disparate things, creating or traversing boundaries, and forging paths to follow, she uses lines of all kinds to symbolize change, life journeys, and the reconciliation of conflicts.  Her color palettes often involve considerable contrast to create strength commensurate with the challenges she is seeking to understand or resolve.  The inspiration behind Debra’s abstract paintings may not be obvious, so there is room for each viewer to see the paintings through their own lens and to experience it in their own unique way.

In her latest drawing series, Janathel Shaw examines her experience and how she perceived others dealt with the series of upheavals in 2020 and 2021.  The word THREAT became a psychological and three-dimensional entity.  It tied the malady of Covid-19, the social unrest of racial killings, white supremacist rallies and xenophobia. Fighting for light and balance through community became her goal.
Janathel felt overwhelmed by the constant televised information that centered on death and hatred.  She experienced the suffocating feeling of isolation as safety restrictions were created, and division continually mounted.  Her emotional compass swung like a rocking pendulum.  As she began her creative process, she had to revisit those emotions to imbue them in the drawings.   Some of the pieces show a surreal approach as in “Social Pincushion”.  In this drawing she is the pincushion.  Janathel looks out at the audience stoically showing the scars that she received from the chaotic year.  She embodies the role of an object.  What signifies that she is human is the tethered heart.
Janathel experimented more with varied materials, with space and construction.  She hopes to continue to push it more.  As with most of her portfolio, whether ceramic sculpture or drawing, her approach is classic.  She is fine with that but it is always good to experiment and grow.

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THE WISDOM OF CIRCLES by Peter Swift (virtual)
Jun
9
to Jul 9

THE WISDOM OF CIRCLES by Peter Swift (virtual)

Virtual Exhibits Zoom Artist Talk & Opening: Wednesday, June 9, 5 pm EST
“My work combines two distinct elements: classical realistic still-life painting and symmetrical design. I have coined the phrase "Symmetrical Realism" to describe this type of work. Most of my work features circles, because I believe that the human brain has a deep psychological connection to circles. The circle is a fundamental symbol in many of the world’s religions because it represents harmony, unity, tranquility, completion, and wholeness.”

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URBAN SYMPHONY by Claudia Samper (virtual)
Jun
9
to Jul 9

URBAN SYMPHONY by Claudia Samper (virtual)

Virtual Exhibits Zoom Artist Talk & Opening: Wednesday, June 9, 5 pm EST
“Confinement over the past year has turned my artistic search on its head, away from figurative work into abstracts. The need for freedom, to be unchained from confinement, is one we all have similarly felt during the pandemic. I found my freedom through my work, picking up the acrylics, big brushes, and canvases to start my escape...
In Urban Symphony, I continued deepening my visual interest for our urban spaces and its interaction with nature. Buildings, streets, nests, and cocoons are deconstructed and reinterpreted as nesting spaces for humans and creatures alike.
Organic shapes and curved lines interact with geometric configurations, generating a dialog that mimics that of reality where habitable and collective spaces interplay with nature. An urban experience that is occasionally noisy and hectic gives rise to a colorful, at times playful, response. More neutral colors representing the flip side of this coin, a peaceful afternoon, a stroll in the park.
I’m looking forward for you to enjoy a taste of freedom and the opportunity to escape to another world between nature and our urban landscape. The interaction between artwork and viewer is, in the end, what gives meaning to this exhibit.”

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I Chose White by Jeanne Garant (virtual)
May
5
to Jun 6

I Chose White by Jeanne Garant (virtual)

Zoom Opening Reception and Artist Talk: Wednesday, May 5, 5pm
“Looking back on my solo exhibits at Touchstone Gallery, I recognize a theme. At each exhibit, a color was featured. Black. Red. Black and White. This year, I chose white.
I chose it because of its representation of darkness - darkness felt deeply by me and people the world over as the COVID-19 pandemic stole so much.
To many, white symbolizes simplicity, openness, good or a new beginning. For me, this past Year, it represented loneliness, isolation and coldness.
The whites in my paintings range from pure white, to muted warm whites and cold whites.
The nuances represent the variations in feelings. Abstracts, patterns and architectural images complete the seven works and add contrast. They might also represent bright spots - even the dark hues.
I recommend Victoria Finlay’s book: COLOR, a Natural History of the Palette.”

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Breaking Out by Tory Cowles (online)
May
5
to Jun 6

Breaking Out by Tory Cowles (online)

Zoom Opening Reception and Artist Talk: Wednesday, May 5, 5pm
“I use an abstract expressionist process, responding directly to the materials in a stream of consciousness state of mind, allowing the work to evolve without a conceptual overlay. I’m interested in how the connotations evoked by the materials become an integral part of the work. For example, the materials from our organic farm - roofing, chain link fencing, and chicken wire - evoke for me the weather, growing things, time passing, my childhood. I’m still playing with color, shape, movement and texture, but the connotations, and sometimes the juxtaposition of connotations, add another important dimension to the piece.”

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The Colors of Hope by David Sloane (virtual solo exhibit)
Apr
7
to May 8

The Colors of Hope by David Sloane (virtual solo exhibit)

Zoom Opening Reception and Artist Talk: Wednesday, April 7, 5pm
“As spring shrugs off the dark COVID winter, and Americans are getting vaccinated in record numbers, I see a glimmer of hope that normal life is gradually returning. This recognition -- which struck me like a bolt of lightning shortly after the New Year -- prompted a frenzied effort to capture on canvas the welcome sense of hope and renewal welling up in me. The tantalizing prospect of again being able to resume the life I once took for granted (i.e., gathering with family and friends, going to the movies, or out to an art exhibit opening at Touchstone) is no longer an abstraction. We humans are returning from the abyss -- an abyss of hopelessness, death, distrust and fear. And that is worthy of celebration … in this case a visual celebration!”

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But What Does It Mean?! by Jenny Singleton (virtual solo exhibit)
Apr
7
to May 8

But What Does It Mean?! by Jenny Singleton (virtual solo exhibit)

Zoom Opening Reception and Artist Talk: Wednesday, April 7, 5pm
“The paintings I have selected for this show are abstractions intended to convey meaning as well as an aesthetic experience. My natural language as an artist has always been abstraction, and my focus has often been purely aesthetic, centering on color and calligraphic curves. In recent years, however, I have found my concerns over climate change and social justice making their way into my work via visual symbols, sometimes with a humorous component, that with a few explanatory words become readily apparent. I have no illusions about effecting social change through my art. As has been the case for me in making it, however, I hope it will provide viewers with a tool for reflection and an inspiration to pursue constructive ways of tackling these daunting issues. All of the artist’s proceeds from the sale of work in this show will be donated to these organizations: Earthjustice, International Rescue Committee (IRC), We Are Family DC, Whitman-Walker Health.”

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Emerging from Isolation by Drawing Overlapping Nudes  by Marcia Coppel (virtual solo exhibit)
Apr
7
to May 8

Emerging from Isolation by Drawing Overlapping Nudes by Marcia Coppel (virtual solo exhibit)

Zoom Opening Reception and Artist Talk: Wednesday, April 7, 5pm
“Marcia Coppel’s drawings were made from drawing online models from Barcelona Spain using zoom. They were all created during the pandemic and helped her cope with the isolation. Coppel used ink and graphite on paper to depict nude female figures overlapping and emerging from each other. Her style of line drawings with a few touches of colored ink and graphite create dynamic and sometimes whimsical compositions made out of bodies. Even resting figures appear to be in motion, creating an illusion of constant movement.”

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Pillow Book: Pages from a Pandemic by Dana Brotman (virtual solo exhibit)
Mar
10
to Apr 10

Pillow Book: Pages from a Pandemic by Dana Brotman (virtual solo exhibit)

  • Google Calendar ICS

Zoom Opening Reception and Artist Talk: Wednesday, March 10, 5pm
It has been almost exactly a year since we closed Touchstone Gallery in response to the spread of the virus. At the beginning of March 2020, I hung two shows there side by side: mine and that of my dear friend and mentor Steve Alderton who had died suddenly just six months earlier. Of course, these two shows never opened.
For several months, I uncharacteristically stopped painting. Then, in October, I came across the empty guest books from the show and started to fill them with small paintings, fleeting thoughts, and dreams. I had not thought about showing this work, as I was more aware of trying to fill the book’s blank pages with whatever I was thinking and seeing. When it came time to consider showing my work, I thought of The Pillow Book. The Pillow Book was a collection of inner thoughts and feelings about everyday life in Japan written around the year 1000 by Sei Shonagon, a court lady to the empress. I have entitled my show, Pillow Book: Pages from a Pandemic, as a nod to this earlier collection of musings that reflect a time in history.

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Myths of Creation by Steve Wanna (virtual)
Feb
10
to Mar 11

Myths of Creation by Steve Wanna (virtual)

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Zoom Opening Reception and Artist Talk: Wednesday, February 10, 5pm
Joseph Campbell describes the role of mythology in human culture as something that helps us define our place in the world, both on the micro and macro levels. Myths of creation and origin are common to all cultures. As our awareness of the world and the cosmos has grown, many of the world’s old myths have become inadequate. For me, science offers the ground for a new mythology for the modern world, helping us navigate and find our place in the cosmos, sometimes quite literally.

Each work in the Myths of Creation series is a record of a unique event, an instant of time, forever frozen. The series is inspired by images from NASA’s Hubble Telescope of cosmic events like supernovae: what we see are records of ancient events that occurred eons ago but still have impact and immediacy. I wanted to capture that feeling: each work is made by exploding various materials onto a prepared board. The resulting explosion becomes the work—each piece is a record of the very instant of its creation. The titles reflect this as they bare the date and exact time of the event. The works are fixed in cast resin, which adds a stunning visual dimension, and enhances the sense of these works as frozen moments of time, records of specific, cataclysmic events.”

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Mass Balance: Endgame by Gale Wallar (virtual)
Feb
10
to Mar 11

Mass Balance: Endgame by Gale Wallar (virtual)

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Zoom Opening Reception and Artist Talk: Wednesday, February 10, 5pm
In art terminology, MASS refers to a three dimensional form that stands out from surrounding space because of value, color or texture.
BALANCE refers to the equal weight or attention of forms in a composition that contribute to visual unity.
MASS BALANCE, defined in glacier terminology, refers to a measure of the change in mass of a glacier; the balance between accumulation (growth) and ablation (loss) in a glacier system.
Mountains have dominated my landscape paintings for many years because of their visual and spiritual appeal, as well as an existential dimension. Across the globe, climate change and rising temperatures in the mountains imperil the source of precious water as the glaciers recede and are on track to disappear.
This body of work has a compositional and thematic focus on the upper regions of mountains, in the snow accumulation zones. This is where compressed snow and ice form the glaciers that eventually feed the rivers and creeks. Water is life.
Endgame.”

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NADA by Linda Bankerd (virtual)
Feb
10
to Mar 11

NADA by Linda Bankerd (virtual)

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Zoom Opening Reception and Artist Talk: Wednesday, February 10, 5pm
"This collection of recent work is almost entirely abstract, or to be more accurate, it is about 98% non-representational. Even though line, color, shape and form come together and feelings of exuberance or a sense of mystery are evident, it really is about nothing in particular, hence the title Nada which means “nothing” in Spanish.”

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Touchstone Gallery Member Artists Exhibit (virtual)
Jan
7
to Mar 7

Touchstone Gallery Member Artists Exhibit (virtual)

Virtual Solo Exhibit Zoom Opening: Thursday, January 7, 5pm
Participating artists: à deux: Charlene Nield & Ann Pickett, David Alfuth, Linda Bankerd, Katherine Becker, Valerie Bernat, Joan Bixler, Leslie Blackmon, Jill Brantley, Rick Braswell ,Dana Brotman, Michael Cabezas, Marcia Coppel, Tory Cowles, Elaine Florimonte, Jeanne Garant, Robin Harris, Donna K.McGee, Anna Katalkina, Cookie Kerxton, Harvey Kupferberg, Michael Lang, Dee Levinson, Heather Lynn, McCain McMurray, Sonya Michel, Mary D.Ott, BD Richardson, Amy Sabrin, Claudia Samper, David Sloane, Maureen Squires, Peter Swift, Rosa Vera, Gale Wallar, Steve Wanna, Patricia Williams, Jenny Wu

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FRAGMENT by Paula Lantz (virtual)
Jan
7
to Feb 7

FRAGMENT by Paula Lantz (virtual)

Virtual Solo Exhibit Zoom Opening: Thursday, January 7, 5pm
FRAGMENT: "…a small piece that’s come off of a larger whole….” “…a piece broken off or cut off of something else…a separate part of a whole.” “…an incomplete piece.”
"These collage paintings are part of a continuing body of abstracted figure paintings that I have created over the years.
The collage paintings in this show are composed with “fragments," combining new figure drawings with previously created works.
Use of abstraction brings cohesiveness to each painting.
All my works are in bold colors.
All painted and printed papers are cut and torn by my own hand.
The careful placement of each “fragment” offers a sense of personal history as well as a yearning for the collective “whole.”

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Chesapeake by Susi Cora (online)
Jan
7
to Feb 7

Chesapeake by Susi Cora (online)

Virtual Solo Exhibit Zoom Opening: Thursday, January 7, 5pm
Hughlett’s Point on the Chesapeake Bay is a hauntingly beautiful place with a broad swath of sand lush with beach grasses. This work documents the rhythms and natural patterns formed by water. These patterns change with the tides – rising and receding - each one more intricate than the last.

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Responding to Beethoven by Leslie Blackmon (virtual)
Jan
7
to Feb 2

Responding to Beethoven by Leslie Blackmon (virtual)

Virtual Solo Exhibit Zoom Opening: Thursday, January 7, 5pm
These paintings are pure response to sound, specifically Beethoven's Sonata No. 8 in C Minor -- the "Pathetique." Although I have explored response to the non-visual in the past, this was my first exploration of responding to sound. I chose Beethoven's Sonata No. 8 because I played this piece of music as a teenager, at a time when I was studying classical piano and preparing for a senior recital. It is an important part of my past -- hardwired into me, although I am unable to play it now, having given up my studies years ago. Painting my response to this music was a way to tap back into my past and to bring to my paintings a vitality that I could not have achieved with a more randomly chosen favorite piece of music. The paintings are largely painted "blind" in order to get the purest response to the music. I did not look at the surface while making any of the marks in these works. I confess that I did at first "cheat" a bit and look but, interestingly, the marks that came forth in those moments were failures, and so the urge to cheat quickly dissipated. I did stop routinely at pauses between the movements in the Sonata -- to assess what had appeared, whether the painting was finished, which area seemed to call for more attention in the next pass, and what tool or color would best achieve the marks or textures needed in the next round. The works on yupo alternate layers of black painted strokes with layers of scrapes of the palette knife yielding white marks on the slick yupo surface. Most of the yupo paintings were finished after six to ten blind passes. Only one seemed finished after a single pass. The painting on canvas is much more thickly layered than the yupo pieces.

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Compositions by McCain McMurray (virtual)
Nov
5
to Dec 5

Compositions by McCain McMurray (virtual)

Virtual Solo Exhibit Opens Online November 5, 5pm

"Since I was an architect during most of my career, much of my art has been inspired by architecture-window, doors, openings or buildings. In my recent work, I have continued to refine, simplify and create works that are more elemental, minimal but retain the architectural inspiration. I use colors intuitively that generally have little relation to architecture. They are colors I like or want to explore and express. All of these works are painted with acrylic paint but with some of them, I have used iridescent or interference pigments. These pigments are formulated to create optimal effects."

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Careful Arrangements by Sonya Michel (virtual)
Nov
5
to Dec 5

Careful Arrangements by Sonya Michel (virtual)

Virtual Solo Exhibit Opens Online November 5, 5pm

My pieces combine acrylic paint and other conventional artistic media with found materials, sometimes as-is, sometimes prepared. If viewers recognize the origins of these elements in my work, that’s okay. My goal is to “make them strange” by yanking them out of their usual contexts. In this sense, they are not meant to be representative (though they may be referential) but primarily aesthetic. And all the elements—despite appearances—are carefully arranged.”

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Time Is Running Out by Jenny Wu (virtual)
Sep
1
to Sep 30

Time Is Running Out by Jenny Wu (virtual)

Virtual Solo Exhibit Opens Online September 1, 5pm
Jenny Wu’s current sculptural work process is derived from making oil on canvas paintings and discovering the many layers of oil paint beneath the surface. Those layers of oil paint embody linear time, repetitive process, and material characteristics. She exemplifies the layering by pouring latex paint one color at a time, letting each color dry, and repeating the process thirty to forty times. Jenny then cuts into the dried layers of paint, revealing the cross-section, and uses those dried paint to assemble sculptures on a flat surface. The cross-section juxtaposes order and chaos: the consistent order of paint from old to new, and the imperfection of subtle differences in thicknesses. Each piece follows a specific pattern, uniting the differences to present a systematic imagery.
Jenny Wu is Touchstone Gallery member artist and also Touchstone Foundation for the Arts www.tfawdc.org Emerging Artist Fellow (2018-2021).

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A Look on the Bright Side by Cookie Kerxton (virtual)
Sep
1
to Sep 30

A Look on the Bright Side by Cookie Kerxton (virtual)

Virtual Solo Exhibit Opens Online September 1, 5pm
This show is about abstractions of color, design and shape in three different mediums—monotype, cold wax and acrylics. Bright colors pervade my work and make me happy. I hope you are affected in the same way. I purposely left my pieces untitled so the viewer can interpret the works on his/her own. Finding things to make one feel good are important in these very uncertain times.

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Landscape as Metaphor by Elaine Florimonte (virtual)
Aug
1
to Aug 31

Landscape as Metaphor by Elaine Florimonte (virtual)

Virtual Solo Exhibit Opens Online August 1, 5pm
Artist Elaine Florimonte exhibits a collection of her abstract landscape paintings. Florimonte’s work is created through layers of collage and paint, balancing abstraction with precision. Her subject matter is derived from memory and is often a metaphor for the nature of human relationship. Most recently that imagery has included trees which represent the impact one life has on another.

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ALL MEMBER ARTISTS JUNE ONLINE EXHIBIT
Jun
12
to Jul 7

ALL MEMBER ARTISTS JUNE ONLINE EXHIBIT

CLICK ON THE IMAGE TO VIEW THE EXHIBIT

Participating artists: David Alfuth, Linda Bankerd, Katherine Becker, Mirette Bedrous, Valerie Bernat, Joan Bixler, Leslie Blackmon, Jill Brantley, Richard Braswell, Dana Brotman, Michael Cabezas, Marcia Coppel, Susi Cora, Tory Cowles, Elaine Florimonte, Jeanne Garant, Judith Giuliani, Robin Harris, Carolyn Johnson, Timothy Johnson, Anna Katalkina, Cookie Kerxton, Makda Kibour, Harvey Kupferberg, Michael Lang, Paula Lantz, Dee Levinson, Rosemary Luckett, Heather Lynn, Pete McCutchen, McCain McMurray, Sonya Michel, Mary D. Ott, Pamela Reynolds, Colleen Sabo, Amy Sabrin, Claudia Samper, Jenny Singleton, David Sloane, Peter Swift, Lisa Tureson, Rosa Vera, Gale Wallar, Patricia Williams, Jenny Wu.

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Marrakech Portraits by Steve Alderton ONLINE ONLY
Mar
4
to Mar 29

Marrakech Portraits by Steve Alderton ONLINE ONLY

Marrakech Portraits by Steve Alderton ONLINE ONLY
Steve Alderton's trip to Marrakech, taken about a year before his unexpected death last summer, inspired this series of portraits. While leaving a few pieces possibly unfinished or in the process of being altered, he left an opening for a dialogue as to when an artist feels their work to be complete. These paintings, some including vivid pastels and others filled with shades of black, gray, deep blue and brown, some layered in Warhol-like quadrants of color, others quite still, half in shadow, share a haunted profundity.

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Transitional Spaces by Dana Brotman ONLINE ONLY
Mar
4
to Mar 29

Transitional Spaces by Dana Brotman ONLINE ONLY

Transitional Spaces by Dana Brotman ONLINE ONLY
In this series of paintings for Transitional Spaces, Brotman explores the liminal space between what is here and what is gone, what is remembered and what is only dreamed, what is real and what is imagined, what is desired and simply and, at times, regrettably, what one does and does not have.
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