Cristina Nunez

On view through January 29th, 2022

Nuances by Cristina Nunez is a collection of contemporary paintings focusing on the organic, abstract form. Nunez’s work is thought-provoking and asks you to explore its colorful movements.

The paintings emanate a playful energy. As one looks at Nunez’s work, the mere composition and tones of the pieces express her love for art’s pure expression.

The most interesting component of this work is its transparency. The viewer can see every bit of color, even when it is overlapped by a contrasting one. Nuances keeps the eye constantly looking at its intricate tones and fluid movements.

Indeed, the beauty of art is its ambiguity. Nunez manifests this ambiguity in its purest form. This collection allows the viewer to interpret the compositions in any way they find connection. Whether this may be an emotion or a memory, we hope you find your own connection in Nuance.

The South Gallery at the Columbia Art League is located at 207 S. 9th St. Columbia, MO 65201.

Savor

One of our very favorite shows of the year is Savor, which we lovingly refer to as the “Food Show”. Part of savoring your food is making positive connections to emotions and slowing down to enjoy your food and your environment.

Food is the universal language unto itself. It engages all of our senses and provides us with a shared experience, connecting us with strangers and loved ones. From the way food is cooked to the way it’s served, this art form can stirs our souls evoking memories of good times or bad. We hope Savor inspires you to explore the connections you have with food and the beauty it brings to your life.

Thank you to Jennifer Schneider for being our juror for the Savor exhibit!

“It was such a pleasure to be chosen as the juror for Savor! There were so many great entries it was difficult to choose who would be included in the exhibition. The awardees selected submitted works that activated and intertwined the senses. We can savor our food experiences with a collaboration of the senses, and this helps us better understand and connect to the world we live in. Such beauty, decadence, and mouthwatering craftsmanship.

 A big thank you to all who entered the show and best wishes, Jennifer Schneider 

Sweet Tooth, Leann Porrello,

Donut Splash, Diane Epstein,

Cherry Cordial, Cheryl Hardy,

Congratulations to our Savor Award Winners!⁠

1st Place: "Sweet Tooth" by Leann Porello⁠ is at first an unassuming documentation of an ear of flint or heirloom corn, but on closer inspection we see that it is lined with teeth. This clever photograph is at once alarming and entertaining. Imagine biting into hard corn on the cob, getting corn kernels stuck in your teeth, or even the physical nature of milling corn for cornmeal, or in this case grinding your teeth! Savor those sensations! - JS

2nd Place: "Donut Splash" by Diane Epstein⁠ is a dynamic, colorful and playful sculpture. Why not enjoy a donut with a glass of milk, hear it splash, and wait for the mess as savor your inner child! - JS

3rd Place: "Cherry Cordial" by Cheryl Hardy⁠ perfectly captures what it’s like to just take one bite and out the sticky syrup oozes … down the picture plane. This small composition is a burst of flavor to savor, an intimate experience to relish! - JS

Honorable Mention: "Ode to Thiebaud Sweet and Tart" by Amy Meyer⁠

Honorable Mention: "Singular Snack Station" by Ira ⁠Papick⁠

Honorable Mention: "Pineapple" by Deb Roberts⁠

Deni Cary Phillips

Specimens - the handiwork of time

December 1 - January 3

Deni Cary Phillips is a Columbia, Missouri based artist, primarily working in digital photography. This retrospective is a collection of work focused on natural and human-constructions, and the meanings woven into them by the viewers' perspective. If there is a central theme, it is the detail we often hurry past, brought up close. Each piece presented here has both an immediate nature and a fleeting nature.

Phillips’ calls this collection fine-art documentary, terminology describing photographs of objects and familiar places, highlighted by intentional composition and layering of light. Nature is the star of the show in most cases—the original artist—or the object’s natural companion. 

Self-taught over decades of film photography, digital photography opened new doors to printing her work for shows in art galleries, juried competitions and exhibitions in Missouri.

www.denicaryphillipsphotographs.com

Rachel Deutmeyer

Rachel’s work is on display at Central Bank. You can visit the show in person through the end of the year and see it online at the button below.

ARTIST STATEMENT

Growing up in a small community surrounded by farmland in eastern Iowa inspired a curiosity and respect for the land and people who work it. The images in Land and Patchwork share an exploration of color and form in response to the agricultural landscape of the American Midwest.

 

The project was inspired by Mustard Seed Farm (Ames, IA), a property dedicated to sustainable and regenerative land management practice. While volunteering at Mustard Seed, I started thinking about the importance of daily interactions with landscape and the fragmented quality of the way I often relate to nature. I visualized this idea of fragmentation through digital collage, using quilt patterns as both an interruption and loving division of the landscape of the farm. There are formal similarities between the division of fields and the patchwork of a quilt. There are also connections to the cultural identity and heritage represented by barn quilts scattered across the state. The collaged photographs reflect the time farmers dedicate to their land, my own experiences with my natural surroundings, and the ways in which qualities of home and land overlap.

BIO

Rachel Deutmeyer is an artist and educator living in Mid-Missouri. Her photography-based art explores inconsistencies of memory and connections to places beyond tangible perception. Deutmeyer graduated with a B.A. in Graphic Design from Ashford University and an M.F.A. in Integrated Visual Arts from Iowa State University. Her artwork has been regionally and nationally exhibited. Deutmeyer teaches photography, theory and history as Assistant Professor of Photography at William Woods University in Fulton, Missouri.

Give the Gift of Art: Winter Members’ Show 2021

We host two members’ shows a year and it’s always a surprise to see how the work will come together in our group gallery space. One of our long time supporters was looking at the show and said, I see a bunch of new names! Each members’ show is as unique as each of our artists and you never know what you’ll find - maybe a new direction for a familiar artist or maybe a new name you aren’t familiar with.

The unique thing about this particular exhibition is that when are artwork is sold, the customer can take it home that day. The artist is then contacted to bring in another artwork to sell… so the show itself is ever evolving just like our members.

As always, giving the gift of art not only shows that you’re thinking outside the box to find a unique one-of-a-kind gift, you’re also supporting an artist in our community.

We look forward to seeing you over the next two months!

Kelsey Hammond

Director, Columbia Art League

Judge’s statement

Thank you to the CAL directors, board, and members for the opportunity to judge this exhibit. I’m constantly in awe of and reverential to the overflowing of creativity in the Columbia community. The varying media, techniques, voices, and style of work in this exhibit alone show a broad and diverse group of individuals whose creative output was unstifled and - perhaps more impressively- fueled, by a year-and-a-half long pandemic. You should be so very proud of this. It speaks to the determination in the artists to create, and the determination of this organization to continue their stewardship of the imperative we all believe in so deeply: visual art. 

Thank you to everyone involved for bringing something beautiful into the world.

Joel Sager

Founding Owner + Curator, Sager Reeves Gallery

Awards

1st Place - Cristina Nuñez, Nuances no. 29

2nd - Derek Fox, Woodlandville Barn, Late Summer

3rd - Pam Gainor, Mulranny, Ireland

Honorable Mention:

John Fennell, Path to the Lake

Tom Stauder, Cherry Hall Table

Lindsay Lennon Picht: The Ghosts of Memory

Perception of the physical world is changed by memory of the past. The memories I made with friends and lovers appear as ghosts, brought to mind by specific locations. These ghosts are often people who have left my life; they have faded away on ambiguous terms, lost touch or moved away. The places these memories inhabit often remain the same, but the people are no longer physically there. The moments we shared together play like a movie across my vision as I look around a familiar place. All the past versions of myself and all the people I shared that time with appear before me, whether at a table in the corner of a café, on the grassy trails of a nature park, or in a local bookstore. 

In my paintings and drawings, I depict my memories as ghosts, inhabiting the placeswhere these moments happened. The ghosts appear as overlaid white contours or voidshapes on paper. These contours radiate into the environment or exist contained in theshape of a person, representing the ephemeral, intangible aspects of memory. Mypaintings show the ghosts occupying the same space as me. To create these works, Ivisited the places myself and relived the memories in real time. So, it is the me of thepresent who visits the haunted space, experiencing the visions, the spirits left behind,and all the feelings that come with them. I am both among the ghosts and removedfrom them. My drawings, however, put me outside of the scene, as a spectator, relivingthe moment as if viewing a photo. In all of my works, the ghosts exist on their own plane, presumably unbothered by my presence, even though I am lost in nostalgia forthe moments that will never be recreated in the same way again.

Artist Statement by Lindsay Lennon Picht

Meaning + Memory

In this month's South Gallery exhibit, artists Pam Gainor and Hannah Reeves each present a series of works in fiber that explore the meaning and memory that cloth can hold. Quilting as a traditional medium preserves fabrics that have been saved or collected by recombining them. These artists push beyond purely functional sewing, composing with fabrics while reflecting on how each piece of cloth brings a sense of history to the ultimate piece.

View the show in person in our South Gallery (Tuesday-Saturday 12-4PM) or view the show online by clicking the button below.

Spot History #2, Hannah Reeves

Spot History #2, Hannah Reeves

 

For a long time, I've been drawn to cloth and sewing (both part of my upbringing), and I tend to think of how the items of comfort around our homes, like quilts, carry a sense of memory and personality. Historic patterns and prints have often made their way into my work in representational form, but for this series I started to think about how stains bring their own stories. Where patterns are precise, stains are out of our control, and yet equally bring a sense of history. To make this series, I stained various fabrics such as linen, muslin, organdy, and raw silk with washes of acrylic paint while they were draped and positioned to help the pigment wick and spread. I then composed using these stained pieces, assembling them into basic, traditional quilt formats. The sewn construction of these pieces directly references nostalgic domesticity, while the pieces of stained fabric more subtly speak to the abstract ways we can mark the passage of time and file away our un-monumental but grounding memories of home.

Hannah Reeves, 2021

 

The Invention of Wings: Untold Stories

This exhibit is in memory of my father. He was a very kind and quiet man who never spoke of his experiences as a glider pilot in the South Pacific during World War II. All that remains from those years are faded photographs with names scribbled on the backs: Lubbock, Biac, Guadalcanal, Tokyo. He brought home many kimono to my mother and I played with as a child.

My dad passed on before it ever occurred to me to ask what he did during that time, what he saw, how he felt. The Invention of Wings was made several years ago incorporating pieces of the kimono he’d brought home. What better tribute to a glider pilot I’d thought, who also soars on wind currents like birds.

Untold Stories were made this year to continue the theme of uncertain remembrances, beauty and destruction. They are made with kimono fabric, eco dyed and rusted fabric, sutures and the occaisonal feather.

Pam Gainor, 2021

Interpretations VI

BETTY Art Robins Gallery

Reception: Friday, September 17th, 6 - 8 PM

ABOUT THE SHOW:

30 visual artworks and 30 short pieces of poetry or prose were selected from a pool of submissions. Artists and authors were then paired anonymously and at random. Each selected visual artist received a piece of writing and each author, a visual image. They then had the next few months to create a response inspired by the prompt they’d been given. The result is a fascinating glimpse into the creative process and a gallery full of penetrating conversations between works and across mediums which transcend the limits of both visual and written communication alone.

This show is a must see in person to be able to read the poems or prose with the visual work itself.

Visit our gallery, Tuesday-Saturday 12-4PM.

Interpretations VI - the book - will launch during the week of October 11th!

Amy Stephenson: New Paintings

South Gallery

August 31st - October 2nd

Reception: Friday, September 10th 6-8PM

Artist Statement:

In some ways, most every piece of art I've made over the last three decades has been about what it's like to be a human in relation to other humans. It's something of an obsession for me, and maybe that's why I love portraiture so much. But ultimately, the face is still a mystery, only hinting at the depth of the living being in front of us. Archetypes can be a compelling way to speculate on how we're put together differently from one another, and how we're all ultimately the same. When I decided to make paintings representing the twelve signs of the zodiac, it seemed like a good structure around archetypes that would provide me with a juicy excuse to paint twelve portraits of people in costumes doing slightly weird things. What's life without a little fun? But over the course of the twelve, my appetite for costumes diminished, and I became more interested in the quiet humanness contained in every face I encountered. That said, my future as a painter definitely includes more fun with costumes, and also more faces, which are both always silent and never silent. - Amy Stephenson

artist BIO:

Amy Stephenson is a native of Memphis, TN, and studied art at the University of Memphis and Belmont University in Nashville. She has lived in Columbia for 14 years, and can be found most mornings and evenings wandering field and forest with her two dogs, collecting weeds, bones, and inspiration for paintings along the way. Her mother and daughter are both artists, and her paintings have long dealt with the nature of being human in relation to others.

Linda Hays: Unsung Phenomena

What are ‘Unsung Phenomena’ ?

Things, occurrences or proceedings which are uncelebrated, unknown or unrecognized.

They may be profoundly true (to me), of mild interest (to you); sometimes metaphorical, beautiful or humorous. You decide.

Artist Statement:

I work from life – from both direct observation and experiences. My life has been a rich tapestry of places, people and things, many parts of which remain around me. I draw from this milieu of ‘stuff’ in my recent body of work, presented as images of still life and landscape.

I usually present my subjects realistically, but with abstract underpinnings. I delight in the particulars of shape, color, light and space as well as in defining a journey for the eye. The objects I paint are either inherited (from the group of women who raised or mentored me) or part of my own collection of 20 th century funk and function. The landscape images are views out my windows or other spaces I feel a connection to. This show is dedicated to Lelia Hall, my Boone County grandmother, who valued education and imagination.

You can find more work by Hays at lindahaysart.com

Nick + Erin Potter

Inherited: A collection of Mixed media on canvas

Artists’ Statement:

Much of my girlhood was spent being terrified of the impending cataclysmic 2nd coming of Jesus Christ or fretting about eternal damnation. I learned how to prep and store food long term, how to grind the wheat by hand so that I could nurture my future children during the apocalypse. I spent time with other girls my age learning how to take care of babies, bake, alter skirts so they were more modest or sew a replica of a pioneer bonnet to wear while trekking through a dry Western landscape.

Once a month the girls would have a special meeting with the women in the church. It was called “Homemaking Meeting.” They would teach us handicrafts, like how to make our own Christmas tree decorations out of dried pasta, how to crochet hats to donate to those in need, how to coupon, or tie a quilt while the boys and men played basketball in the church gymnasium.

My mother was extra talented at all these perceived “feminine” endeavors. She was always working on a project and teaching others how to do the same. I would watch her toll paint decorations for the holidays, make ceramic statues of Jesus, and make the most delicious meals from the produce she grew in our garden. Every room in our Victorian home was a different vibrant color with hand stenciled embellishments. I always had access to a myriad of art supplies and so I inherited my mother’s propensity towards creativity.

In college I would try to elevate these handicrafts into “art,” belittling my mother’s talents. When she passed away from a near decade long battle with dementia at age 56, my dadshipped the entirety of my mom’s leftover art supplies across the country to me. I was perplexed by the cross-stich hoops, beads, half sewn teddy bears, and miraculous number of ribbon spools. How would these items fit into my life?

We inherited most of the materials used in this show. An eccentric family friend’s gaudy art frames and unused antique wallpaper, my great grandmother’s broaches and clip on earrings, stretchers bars from old collected paintings or my mother’s unused fabric scraps.I spent hours researching family history and doing genealogy as a youth so that I could perform sacred ordinances in temples for and on behalf of those relatives. Inherited objects have always been very important to me.

It would take me a few years of grief before I was able to use these supplies. I finished painting a giant nutcracker, learned to make dollhouses, and taught myself to cross stitch. I have been exposed to much more rich and wonderful folk art from all over the world and started valuing work I otherwise have thought was too low brow. I realized that in turning away from the church I was also trying to divorce myself from the aesthetic of it and disregard the crafting I had been taught, but that those things were part of what made me who I am now.

As I get more time and distance from my faith crisis, the grief of losing my mother or the straining of my relationships with my family members I am better able to separate myself from it all and process the trauma. Working with my mother’s paintbrushes or embroidery thread is always hard. My grief is often forefront when I work creatively. Part of that grief is my confusion at being raised in our faith traditions and wondering what she would think of me if she were still here now that I have left those traditions.

Much of the work here is coded with symbolism of my inherited faith. Most of it will not be decipherable to anyone who wasn’t raised in those traditions but would anger those who believe and see it depicted in public. We were taught that the wilder beliefs were “sacred not secret.” We weren’t allowed to talk about some of the more extreme practices: the “signs and tokens” or our special underwear that protected us from harm. I thought that if I didn’t keep the sacred secrets I would be punished. As I grew older, I realized that that was a cult tactic to guard some of the more controversial beliefs of our faith. I now realize that I have the right to own my own life experiences.

Everyone depicted in the gallery also inherited these same faith traditions. Our upbringing had various degrees of strict devoutness, but we all rejected it as adults. We all struggle in different ways to reconcile having two halves of ourselves. Having interpersonal struggles with our religious families. Guilt. Hiding parts of yourself from your past or present acquaintances. Some of us feel ashamed that we ever believed any of it in the first place.

This is about those feelings that many of us have, of having left a faith but being largely shaped by it. It’s for those of us who were willing to be labeled apostates to leave what was damaging and bigoted, and how monumentally hard and isolating it is to do so. We inherited this faith; we did not choose it. The repercussions of it will be felt for a lifetime.

Marrying my past and current selves is complicated. My house is filled with mismatched antique inheritances surrounded by a collection of contemporary art. I am equally drawn to mid-century modern architecture and a nice damask wallpaper. I have come to terms with my life and style being an eclectic fractured accumulation of ideas, aesthetics, beliefs, and time periods.

Nick and I have been collaborating for nearly 15 years. Our work has similarly been the marriage of two very different art styles and practices. This is what this show means to me. It might be something completely different to Nick. Although, we shared a similar rejection of our upbringing, we have divergent feelings about it. We also have different opinions on art and struggle through the process of collaborating, but through the difficulty of reconciling often find there is a complexity that doesn’t exist in our solo work.

We each bring a divergent viewpoint but will be forever tied by our shared story.

Artist Bios:

Nick and Erin Potter started collaborating on art in Salt Lake City, Utah in 2005. Much of their initial work was screen printed posters for concerts. They each work primarily on flat surfaces, but their collaborative work now tends to be more sculptural and include elements of installation. Each show they’ve had, they’ve created a new body of work specifically for that space.

They are married with 2 kids and a rascally dog. They live in Columbia where Nick teaches in the Digital Story telling Program at the University of Missouri. He teaches courses in writing, cartooning and videogames. Erin has a BFA in 2D Art from Weber State University where her emphasis was on painting and printmaking. She enjoys working on murals, immersive installation art, mixed media, drawing and painting.

Deni Cary Phillips

Beyond Borders: The Essence of Place

Artist Statement:

This exhibit is a curated collection of photos taken in America and Europe. Each one’s intention is to draw the viewer into the essence of the place, it’s heart, to tell a story of creation, whether natural or made by human hands.

I’ve engaged in many creative hobbies in my life, and that is how photography began for me, shooting my mom’s sacred Brownie box camera, then getting a Polaroid that spit bad prints out in seconds. Nothing like a little bit of instant gratification! Then the day came that I was heading out on a bird-watching expedition. I borrowed a friend’s 35mm--and that was it. I was hooked. The photos were amazing. The flocks of geese I photographed laying flat on my back or belly-crawling on damp ground convinced me that there was more to photography than family holidays and vacations. A year later I held my very own 35mm camera.

Snack Show

Juror’s Statement:

It was a pleasure to jury the snack show! Fortunately, artists provided me with a broad range of media and subject matter. From felting to banjos and handmade paper with blueberries, the artists in the Snack Show create a visual experience for us that ranges from quirky to gorgeous and well crafted. While some artists focused on the sumptuousness of the snack experience, others explored the more conceptual idea about what a snack can be. 

I found the variety of interpretation by each artist to be a strength in this group of works. There’s plenty of visual snacks in the show for viewers. Tastes, texture, color, tools associated with serving snacks, and even the act of consuming snacks: all aspects of snackdom are represented! 

—Patti Shanks

Award WInners:

1st Place—Willa Campbell, Mignonette

2nd Place—Sarah Mosteller, Blackberry Cupcake

3rd Place—Brandy Tieman, Finger Food

Honorable Mentions:

Tootie Burns, Jiff

Marc Chauvin, Salad (Hidden Condiments)

Deb Roberts, Two Sqaush

Theresa St. Vrain, Croissant

Tom Stauder, Charcuterie Board

Byron Smith: Painting Missouri

Artist Bio

Byron L. Smith, b. 1960 in Columbia, Missouri, attended the University of Missouri—Columbia and pursued drawing, painting and printmaking within the Fine Arts department. Smith also Co-owned Mythmaker Gallery (1992-1996), was a member of the Grindstone Printmaking shop in the North Village Art District, and a member with Orr Street Artist Guild where he currently occupies a studio.

Collections includes : State Historical Society Columbia., Museum of Art and Archeology, Walter-Boone Cultural Museum Columbia, Ashby- Hodge Gallery of American Art. At Central Methodist University Fayette, MO. Daniel Boone Regional Library Columbia and numerous private collectors.

Smith works in oil, watercolor, and casein., he’s best known for his landscapes of the Missouri river valley. Byron also studies anatomical drawing, and enjoys working from the human figure when he’s not in the landscape. Smith also likes local history and collects works on paper and prints.

Bethanie Irons

Artist Statement

This series of digital illustrations explores the tradition of vanitas still lives; symbolic

works of art containing mostly inanimate objects that represent the transient nature

of life. Each image contains items pertaining to time, death, cleanliness, play,

boredom, pleasure, chaos, monotony, history, and hope. As a result of the ongoing

COVID-19 pandemic, I have become much more aware of my own mortality and the

ephemeral nature of my surroundings. Utilizing the vanitas tradition, I filter this

experience with the acceptance of change, contentment in stillness, and an urgency

to find joy in the present.

Artist Biography

Bethanie Irons is an artist and educator currently residing in Columbia, Missouri.

She earned a BFA in Art from the University of South Dakota and MFA in Art from

the University of Missouri. Irons also earned a PhD in Art Education from the

University of Missouri with an emphasis on higher education.

Joe Dino: To-morrow and To-morrow and To-morrow...

Artist Statement

The work here is based on instinct, an instinct I have developed by seeing art. It is a pure abstraction of my thought or lack of thought, the blankness of mind, a meditation. Because I grew up very poor, I became accustomed to creating art using whatever I could find. I work predominantly with mundane materials such as canvas drop cloth, house paint, oil enamel, concrete, tar, clay, etc. because they were the things I had access to, the things we all have access to. Those materials connect me to my past and still give me comfort. I wasn't introduced to art via academia but from trips my mom and I would take to Kansas City where we experienced the entirety of the city—the beauty within the museum and the grit of the street. I eventually discovered graffiti and fell in love with hip-hop culture; it gave me an escape and sense of community, somewhere you could exist without existing.

This new perspective taught me to see things differently. I started noticing walls, the erosion in and of cities which has become a huge inspiration to my work. I create my work because I don’t have any other choice, it is an addiction. I rarely have any sort of plan; I react to the music I put on, to the surface, to the lines or splotches of color, to the materials I have at hand. Working with these common, non-archival materials, I aim to create works that breakdown over time like our bodies or the walls in a city. I’m not trying to convey any specific meaning in my work; there is no political or philosophical metaphor in these layers. These works exist because of what has happened and what happens, something that will always be with me and a place I can always escape to.  They are all self-portraits, every bit of me.


-“It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.”


Hindsight is 2020

Juror’s Statement:

It has been a long year being closed-off in many ways, but creative work knows no boundaries. This is evident from the artworks currently on view at “Hindsight is 2020” at the Columbia Art League. As usual there were many excellent entries by talented artists from our area— so many styles and visions of the past year. It was very difficult to select winners. I looked at not only the quality of the artwork, but also at the relationship of the concept to the theme of the show. I regret that some works are not included due to the large number of entries. The Art League has many opportunities for us to share our art. I’ve had a long association with the Art League and appreciate this opportunity to assist.

Award Winners:

1st Place—Brooke Cameron, Five Pages from a COVID Diary

2nd Place—Rodney Burlingame, The Came the Lockdown

3rd Place—Larry Young, 2020-SOS

Honorable Mentions:

Mike Seat—Mask it or Casket

Lindsay Picht—Watching the World from my Room

Christina Nunez—2020

Renee Hackman—Safety Glass

Sean Lofton: (re)Iterate

On exhibit 3/30/21-4/17/21 in the South Gallery

Artist Statement:

I have always had a deep interest in architecture and it has often been a driving force in my artwork. But recently, I have shifted my focus from the building to the decoration. What happens to an architectural embellishment when it is removed from its host building? Does the object lose its meaning or take on new importance? These are just some of the questions that my work seeks to answer. These sculptures rearticulate disused architecture, in order to show the way in which style, often separated by rigid parameters, can be reimagined as fluid, modular, and valuable. 

With this series of sculptures, I seek to better understand what a decontextualized and deconstructed ornament can come to represent through digital synthesis and mechanized reiteration. At its core, this work will demonstrate how the functional can be derived from the ornamental; and how the application of technology can question the role of “master” craftsperson or designer. I will continue to refine a methodology of architectural synthesis, analysis, and articulation that I can use across all styles and histories of architecture that draw my interest. My hope is that as I investigate more of these now defunct styles, I am able to uncover new meaning from old designs. To do this I have focused my attention on the Ennis House designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Designed in 1923 for Charles and Mabel Ennis and built in 1924. It is the largest of the four existing Mayan revival textile block homes he built.


The Sketchbook Show

On view in the South Gallery at The Columbia Art League March 2nd-March 27th

This interactive gallery show has over 60 sketchbooks made by local artists. We provided the sketchbooks and each artist spent about a month making it their own. We believe that artists are made through practice, play, learning, and experimentation. A sketchbook is the perfect place to see the marks of progress and also a great way to get your art wiggles out.

When you come by to see the show, we want you to look through the sketchbooks and vote for your favorite one. We will make a limited art print from the sketchbook with the most votes and sell them at CAL. We have hand sanitizer available to use before / after you look at the sketchbooks to try and make things as safe as possible.

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