Members' Summer Show 2022

On exhibit: June 14 - July 21

Reception: June 24, 6-8PM

Our Members’ Summer Show is a great opportunity for the public to get to know our member-artists! The show is unthemed and unjuried: just bring in new work for our community to enjoy.

Congratulations to all of our Members' Summer Show award winners! ⁠

1st: Anna Drake, Plastic Feelings⁠

2nd: Cheryl Hardy + Mark Baltzer, Dark Warnings⁠

3rd: Diane Epstein, Portrait of a Lion⁠

Honorable mentions: Cristina Nunez, Curtis Hendricks, Wendy Yelton, Tom Stauder⁠, Kristen Lyle. ⁠

Juror: Chris Daniggelis

Cynthia Richards @ Central Bank

BLOCK PARTY - photographs by CYNTHIA RICHARDS

On exhibit at Central Bank of Boone County

May 21 - July 12

ARTIST STATEMENT:

In my photography practice, which is informed by my background in theater, I like to

stage objects in direct sunlight to create a drama of reflections and shadows. The

photos in this exhibition are created with colored plexiglass blocks, construction paper,

textured colored paper, cardboard packing material, paint samples, a rubber washer,

and a scrap metal dowel. It is always interesting to me to see how the sun impacts the

objects on my “stage," and how quickly it alters the look of my temporarily constructed

set as its position in the sky changes, causing me to make adjustments. Working in this

way with the sun, I'm constantly reminded that nothing is permanent.

 For me, creating photos is like a meditation. It leads me to let go of the everyday world

for a while and to connect with a force much greater than myself. It nourishes and

energizes me. I hope you will come away from this show with a similar, positive feeling. 

 — Cynthia Richards

ARTIST BIO:

Abstract photographer, Cynthia Richards, has had her work presented in national juried

exhibitions at galleries in North Carolina and Massachusetts.  Her work has also been

shown in regional juried exhibitions held by such organizations as The Columbia Art

League, Art St. Louis, and The St. Louis Artists’ Guild.  Her work has been given

several awards in exhibitions held by The Columbia Art League (CAL):  her photo,

“Lapse of Memory,” was awarded first place in CAL’s “Monochrome” exhibition in

 2020; her photo, “The Blue at the Top of the Stairs,” was given an honorable mention

in CAL’s Winter Members’ Show that same year; and in 2021 her photo, “Hiding in

Plain Sight,” was awarded third place in the CAL Members’ Summer Show. 

Cynthia grew up in Northern Virginia.  Her adult years include many spent in New York

City, and then many more in St. Louis, where she earned a Ph.D. in comparative

literature with an emphasis in drama at Washington University.  She now lives on a 

small farm outside of Columbia with her husband, two big dogs, and a studio full of

inspiring light.

Angela Shaffer, Good Mother

Good Mother

Artist Statement:

My son and I often collide into each other as we navigate our evolving relationship. We also rest in moments of tenderness & stasis. Good Mother is about the emotional and psychological labor of raising my son. These images depict my efforts to shape and mold him into the man I think he should become. In spite of this, he pushes against my control and asserts his own position in the world.

In these photographs, we reenact and imagine moments of tension or affection in front of walls and spaces in our home. I direct our performance in front of the lens. Additionally, I use still life objects and isolated gestures to symbolically reference our relationship. Through my attempts to manipulate my son, he barricades himself from me or exerts physical aggression in defense of my encroachment. Yet, our bond is evident in moments when we cling & attach to each other. I bathe in anxiety about the future, as there are no definitive directions on how to mother. In earnest response to our cultural climate, I am attempting to avoid failure, for I have one child & one chance to get it right. This work is an expression of a need to be a good mother.

www.angelareneeshaffer.com | @angtakesphotos

Bio:

Angela Shaffer is a photographer working to bring visibility to hidden aspects of mothering. In doing so she explores the psychology, vulnerability, and banality of motherhood. Angela was recently shortlisted for the Palm Photo Prize 2022. Her work has been featured in exhibitions with Woman Made Gallery (IL), Spilt Milk Gallery (UK), The Artist/ Mother Podcast (TN), Arts Mill (WI), The University of Iowa (IA), and Art Saint Louis (MO). She was a 2021 Critical Mass Finalist with PhotoLucida and she has shared work through an Instagram Residency with DearArtists. Angela (b. 1983, Pennsylvania) received her B.S. in Art Education from Asbury University and was a High School Art Teacher for five years in Garrard County, KY. She currently lives in Columbia, MO where she is in her third year as an MFA candidate and Graduate Teaching Assistant at the University of Missouri’s School of Visual Studies.

Q & A with Artist Angela Shaffer & CAL Director Kelsey Hammond

Read more about Angela’s work below.

 Kelsey: How did you get interested in photography? 

Angela: I have been surrounded by art my entire life. My father was my elementary school art teacher and my parents owned an art gallery in the small town that I grew up in. I followed in my father’s footsteps and became an art teacher, but considered my medium drawing/painting. 

When I started to attend SPE (Society of Photographic Educators) conferences with my husband, who was studying Photography as an MFA candidate, I was exposed to imagery that I was entirely unfamiliar with. I saw Kelli Connell and Lori Nix give artist talks at the first conference I attended and I was blown away by the content they were documenting with their cameras. I had only considered a camera as a way to photograph “reality”, much like Ansel Adams’ work. I always struggled with drawings and paintings becoming what I envisioned. The result never met the expectations of my imagination. It was after this conference that I realized photography can live up to the original idea and that images can be fabricated or manipulated. 

In 2013, we moved to Columbia, MO for my husband to teach Photography in the School of Visual Studies at MU. I became acquainted with his colleague, Joe Johnson, and asked if he would allow me to audit his Large Format Photo class. I wanted to learn how to develop and print in the darkroom. It was during this class that I latched onto photography permanently. I am now in my 3rd year as an MFA candidate at MU focusing in Photography as my medium. 

Kelsey: What led you to this series of photographs - specifically working with your son?

Angela: When I became a mother in 2013 (right after moving to Columbia), I was faced with more than I could handle in my new role. I was in a new place without a social support structure and feeling completely overwhelmed with the responsibilities of being a new mom. All of the women in my family had been stay at home mothers and seemed to fit into this role with ease. The amount of struggle I was having with it made me feel like a failure. At the same time, I was frustrated with how little knowledge was passed on to me about the weight that caretaking for an infant would require. I was struggling with bi-polar emotions of contentedness and joy and resentment for what it actually involved. 

The class I audited with Joe Johnson happened in the Fall of 2015 when my son was two years old. This opportunity became a place of sanctuary and respite for me to connect with my former self. We were given a tableaux vivant assignment and I decided to photograph some mom friends that were also staying home to care for their children. I photographed them with their kids and when I hung the work up for the class critique, the feedback impacted me so deeply. It was as if the feeling of invisibility in my role was dissipating in the moments that my peers were discussing my imagery. I applied to the program at MU with this work, which I continued after I left the Large Format class. 

I started the Graduate program in the Fall of 2019. As I began to make work, I continued to photograph mothers with their children. Yet, as the pandemic started in the Spring of 2020, I was forced to pivot, as it seemed unsafe to continue entering peoples’ homes. Without a lot of options, I started to point my camera towards my son. As I first started to make new work, the images were doting and quirky representations of him. Yet, as the work grew, I realized that the imagery I was trying to make with other mothers, could be done between the two of us. It started to feel natural and more authentic. I realized that as I turned the camera on us, I was able to achieve images that I was straining to make with other women and their children. This work became my focus for my 2nd Year Review in the Graduate program and evolved into my “Good Mother” series.

Kelsey: What is your process - how do you find the images to make... are they based on interactions? Do you see the image in your head and recreate it? 

Angela: When I first started making photographs, especially of mothers and their children, I think I relied heavily on the inspiration of painters, like John Singer Sargent and Mary Cassatt. After I discovered more photographers, I leaned on the formal quality of Joel Sternfeld’s portrait work, which lent itself nicely to my using a large format 4 x 5 camera on a tripod. When I eventually switched to a digital camera, I started to be inspired by Elinor Carucci’s “Mother Series”. The images in her work were so palpable and tense. I wanted to bring this type of tension to my new work with my son and I. So, I began to write down image ideas in a list and walk my son through my ideas before we would start a session together. I would use events and circumstances that we had gone through in the past and recreate them for the camera. I would also stay open as much as possible to the moment happening before me and follow inspiration when it seemed important to do so. 

Kelsey: What does your son think about the work you're doing? In other words how is the process for him? 

Angela: Photographing my son at first was easy and he was a willing participant. However, as the work began to build and I was feeling the pressure and time table of 2nd Year Review and having this work be resolved, my son became a bit more disagreeable to the demands I was placing on him. I would have to beg him to participate at times. We both have shed a lot of tears during the making of this work. There were a few times where I thought I would have to give up and start something new. 

At one point, I agreed to give him a break and after the break we wrote up a contract that we both signed. The contract was photographed and became a part of the series. It defines the amount of time his is willing to work and for what reward. It also states that he is allowed to say “no x number of times.” It became a boundary for us to both work from. I do not think this contract would have been necessary outside of the constraints of my Graduate program. I was also making this work during the Pandemic and my son was in Virtual Learning for the year. So, we were consumed with one another during this process in a way that makes the work even more emphatic for the two of us. 

The work is not only about our relationship to one another but it was also this secondary association of collaborating in front of a lens. This “Good Mother” series has come to a pause, yet I am still making work with my son. I believe he is starting to understand the role he plays in my work. He recently saw himself in the images hung on walls and said “I’m famous!” I am not sure how our photographic relationship will evolve over time, but this work has become incredibly precious to me. 

Kelsey: How do you decide what work is in color (like in this selection for the CAL show) vs. what work you show in B&W?

Angela: Originally, I never saw myself becoming a color photographer. I loved working with black and white film. Also, when I entered the Graduate program, I was learning everything about Photography as medium for the first time. So, the control of working with just black and white film was helpful at first. Switching to color became a bit trickier with editing and maintaining a steady palette in the work. The “Good Mother” images seem to function well in color though. There is a playful and humorous tone with some of the images and the color lends well for this purpose. I am now making new work with my son and it is all in black and white. This work is more somber in tone and the black and white film is helping to steer the imagery in this direction. 

Kelsey: And lastly… Do you think this series of work will ever be “done"?
Angela: To be honest, I am not sure. After my 2nd Year Review, I was so exhausted by the making of “Good Mother.” I needed a break and so did my son. Then rather than continuing on with it in the next semester of Grad school, I started new work. This work was inspired by an image I made in the “Good Mother” project. It was of my son wearing one of his father’s suits. He is swimming in it. It prompted me to think more about my fears of the future and my sadness for him growing up so quickly. At this point in time, I feel artistically compelled to make work about motherhood. However, I have many other photographic ideas constantly spinning around in my head. I write them down so that I know I can always come back to them if I want to. Most important to me is the freedom to follow whatever creative pursuits are tugging on me and just will not let me go.

Postcard Pop-Up

Postcard Pop-Up

Great news!

Donations from the Postcard Pop-Up brought in just over $1,000 for our Scholarship Program for students entering college to study art!

Thank you to all of the artists who made postcards and to the folks who purchased / donated to the fundraiser! It was such a fun community event!

If you’d like to hear our director, Kelsey Hammond speak with former director, Diana Moxon about the show, click here to listen to Speaking of the Arts on Spotify.

How it worked:

We invited the community to participate in the show - no age limits, no media limits… the only stipulation was that it had to be 4”x6” and be able to send through the mail. We then hung the show and posted the following directions:

-see a postcard you like?

- take it off the wall and give a donation of your choosing

- all funds raised go to our scholarship program to help high school artists with their art supplies in college.

Thank you all so much!

Interior Gallery Show

On view: May 3 - June 9

Reception: May 13, 6-8pm

What does it mean to be on the inside? In our new gallery show, Interior, we invite artists to explore their own understanding of the interior: interior design, interior thoughts and feelings, interior to our bodies or minds or buildings and spaces, inner circles of trust and community, and more. The interior pertains to that which is within, and we want this show to highlight that which is within you, whatever that means to you. 

Juror, Pazia Mannella, spent over 2 hours looking carefully at all 98 artworks submitted before making her final decisions. Please find her statement below.


Juror’s Statement

C. Pazia Mannella

 

Each artwork included in the Interior exhibition engagingly responded to the inquiry, “What does it mean to be on the inside?” 

 

Vibrant colors, dark shadows, and brilliant flashes of light radiate from the collective artworks in the Interior exhibition. Artists interpreted the theme of Interior along spectrums of real and imagined, public and private, and figure and architecture.  

 

These three award winning artworks are excellent contemplations of interior.  

 

The watercolor painting by Mary Redders, Lucy + JayJay Patiently Waiting on the Deck, depicts two black dogs viewed from the interior of a home through a sliding glass door. Brilliant blue highlights the deep black of their fur and palpable movement is rendered, suggesting slow pacing and tails wagging, passively waiting...  

 

The mixed media work by Madeleine LeMieux, Pendulant Curtains, is a two-dimensional color pencil and acrylic painting of elongated breasts partially obscured by a potted plant. The piece is framed by hot pink, teal, turquoise, and yellow three-dimensional stuffed spandex, containing, binding and extruding from the interior.  

 

Lindsay Picht’s watercolor and pen painting, Comfort Zone, depicts a young woman shrouded in a coral blanket, wearing white slouchy socks. Prominently displayed behind her is a bulletin board pinned with photos and other memorabilia, posters of ads, and artwork. The bedroom wall is a soothing shade of powder blue, and the bedding and carpet are cream. The figure appears at home, surrounded by material comfort, gazing from within the room past the viewer.  

 

It is an honor to jury the Interior exhibition at Columbia Art League and I wish all the artists sincere congratulations.  

 

C. Pazia Mannella

Artist and Assistant Professor 

School of Visual Studies 

University of Missouri 


Congratulations to all in the show, and especially to the following:

Lindsay Picht - 1st Place for Comfort Zone

Madeleine LeMieux - 2nd Place for Pendulant Curtains

Mary Redders - 3rd Place for Lucy & JayJay Patiently Waiting on the Deck
Honorable mentions for:

Jason Stephen - Invasion

Lina Forrester - The Stone Giver

Ira Papick - Interior Equals Exterior

Brandy Tieman - Monster Inside

Seth Steinman in the South Gallery

On view April 26th - May 7th

Reception: Friday, May 6th, 5-7PM

ARTIST STATEMENT

By interpreting the surface through acrylic paint and shaped wooden panels we are able to grasp the human connection to these impersonal resemblances of the overlooked. The websites people visit, the number of alarms that are set, the way a person's apps are laid out; each of these operates as a means to personify one's interactions with the screen. The paint serves as a secondary means to show that there is a human behind every screen, consuming and outputting information. Specificity of detail is either deeply rendered or sometimes omitted, depending on its relation to the user. The paintings exist either on the flat plane of the wood, mimicking the 2-dimensional nature of the screen, or other works wrap the canvas and flow off, capturing how the form or crop and the real-world application may interconnect.

Each piece lives between a number of varied states: screen vs. surface, real vs. unreal, the constructed event vs. the happened upon, as well as the distinction between them alongside the value structure that is created. It’s contextualizing itself generationally, to the way different age groups of people view our phones, laptops, etc. Each series functions as a means to exemplify a separate interaction with the screen, in a similar construction to the online. Each new program or platform, building off the last. The work aims to be these moments on the internet and the representation of fragmented ideas or imagery in a familiar way.

ARTIST BIOGRAPHY

Seth Steinman is a 23 year old painter/sculptor from Hannibal, Missouri. He is currently based in Columbia while attending The University of Missouri. Seth will receive his bachelor’s in fine arts in 2022 with an emphasis in painting and a minor in art history. Attending college during a time when being online is essential to education, his current work references the way that humans interact with these screens and can represent them in physical space. In 2022, he participated in the Art in Storefronts group showcase in St. Louis, Missouri, as well as the show “This is not an exit” hosted by Dogwood Studios in Columbia, Missouri.

Columbia Youth Fiber Arts Exhibiton

Columbia Art League is proud to present the Youth Fibers Art Exhibit sponsored by CWSG, an organization dedicated to promoting fiber arts skills and knowledge. Young artists from Columbia, MO are featured in this collection.  These artists created beautiful works ranging from wall hangings, sculpture, and clothing design.  Congrats to the Grand Prize and First Place Winners in the Youth Fibers Exhibit!

Grand Prize:

Battle High School: Keziah Segoiva 

Rock Bridge Elementary: Kali Harris

Jefferson Middle School: Sally Chevalier

1st Place:

Rock Bridge Elementary: Anaya Barbote

Our Lady of Lourdes:  Mary Duong

Locust Expressive Arts: Nasya Putri,  Grace Parrell

Columbia Art League:  Elizabeth Smith

Battle High: Lily Bennet

City Garden School: Lilly Bryant, Alex Current

Heritage Academy:  Grace Kempf

Carrie Yonley

Glimpses of Our Land: Photographs by Carrie Yonley

Central Bank Hallway | March 22 - May 5

Carrie and her husband chased their dreams as ‘youngsters’ and found a way to explore America’s backroads and natural areas for their 8-month honeymoon. Their path followed the seasons – chasing spring up the East Coast; summer across the northern states and Rocky Mountains into Canada, and pushing fall down the West Coast and then into the Canyonlands before returning to Missouri. To a nature photographer, Carrie found then and has continued to find through her decades of travel that there are endless places, subjects and moods of nature to photograph.  The images shared in this exhibit are but a few glimpses that represent her life-long work photographing nature and man across our land.

Carrie’s underlying goal of her photographic endeavors is to create a sense of connection and inspiration for her audience, sharing the joy she experiences while documenting the intricacies of the world around her. She encourages viewers to contemplate the fates, the luck of the draw, the providence of our existence in the midst of such an incredible depth of beauty and to consider our role in sustaining the balance between man and nature.


Bio:  Carrie Yonley is known for sharing her vision of nature’s beauty and man’s creations through her images. As an avid photographer and lover of the outdoors, she has recorded the natural world around her for many decades. In her day-to-day life, and during her widespread travels and adventures, Carrie has produced an extensive library of images locally and across America, capturing the spirit of the moment - the light - the mood. In her images she showcases the diversity of our land – landscapes from the intimate to the panoramic – contrasted with dramatic cityscapes to quaint rural towns. Carrie is a frequent contributor to coffee-table books exploring the character of American cities, and in 2018 published her own coffee table book, Elements of Life. Her images, books, and fine art greeting card collection can be found in mid-Missouri art stores and gift shops, and she regulatory shares images on her Facebook site.

Derek Fox

March 1 - March 26

Reception: Friday, March 18, 6-8PM

Andrew Wyeth said, “Most artists look for something fresh to paint; frankly I find that quite boring. For me it is much more exciting to find fresh meaning in something familiar.” I find this singular philosophy to be most inspirational as I go about my daily non-artist life as a veterinarian. Wyeth challenges us to continue to observe the aesthetic appeal of everyday objects, views and people around us with this quote. However, succeeding in translating these things into two-dimensional representations that a viewer can connect with is the real challenge and something I strive to do with my work. Thus, with this collection of paintings, I’ve attempted to paint those things that I encounter regularly; a city street, a pasture or farm implement encountered on a bike ride, the animals that surround and sustain us. Each is worthy of closer observation, but rarely gets it as we busily go about our lives. I’d like to think this body of work would allow a viewer to stop and take a second look and maybe appreciate something beautiful in what would otherwise be a mundane subject regularly seen but rarely observed. 

Dr. Derek Fox is a veterinarian and Professor of Small Animal Orthopedic Surgery at the University of Missouri's Veterinary Health Center. He has possessed a lifelong interest and passion for art inspired by his father, formerly a commercial artist. He is self-taught and works mostly in gouache, watercolor and oils, painting subjects in a representational fashion. His artistic inspirations include Andrew Wyeth, Joachin Sorolla, Dean Mitchell, Tad Retz and Aaron Cordell Johnson.

Tiny Things 2022

March 1 - April 8

Reception: March 11th 6-8PM - open and free to the public

Why do we love tiny things? Although small, their impact can be quite big when it comes to our feeling, understanding, and positioning in the world. We can understand tiny things in their entirety: we know immediately what we’re faced with, removing the possibility of fear from our usual, life-sized world. There can also be a power in limited space, as artists and viewers alike recognize limitations of scope, and communicate only the bare necessities of understanding.

Juror’s statement:

Tiny Things

The fine brushwork in a painting, fissures and textures on a glazed surface, embroidery thread meandering through a photograph and lyrical lines forming colorful abstractions are just a few reminders to look closer at the work in the Tiny Things exhibition. The small scale allows us to slowdown and appreciate the subtle, minute details of larger stories unfolding in smaller packaging. Work of this nature presents the viewer with a sense of wonderment and surprise while encouraging us to engage with these pieces in a thoughtful and intimate way.

The task of selecting award winners was extremely challenging, as there are a number of strong and impactful works of art presented here. It was truly inspiring for me to experience the vast array of techniques, processes and concepts. I’d like to congratulate all the artists who participated in this exhibition and thank them for sharing their work with us.

Scott McMahon
Scott McMahon received his MFA from Massachusetts College of Art in Boston and his BFA from The University of the Arts in Philadelphia. He works with a combination of historic photo processes as well as video installation and sculpture. Scott is a Professor of Art at Columbia College.

Congratulations to our award winners:

First place - Lindsay Lennon Picht - Lemonhead and Limehead

Second place - Deb Roberts - Grass & Stone

Third place - Matt Ballou - wheneverWHEN 2.22.22

Honorable Mentions: Tom Stauder - 217 Tiny Things; Katie Barnes - Rainbow Village; Hope Martin - Be Mine; Karalee Tearney - Ceann; Tootie Burns - Skull; Kate Gray - Anatomy of a Conversation

Marc Chauvin

Marc Chauvin’s work is currently on exhibit at Central Bank of Boone County in Downtown Columbia. Chauvin is a senior at the University of Missouri studying Printmaking and Philosophy. Marc has been involved with the Columbia Art League since he was fifteen and it has been a joy to see his work develop throughout the years.

Chauvin’s work features a collection of bright and colorful compositions that capture the eye. His process focuses on, “the origination and interaction of various forms of mark-making to try exploring my own perception. I do this by spontaneous reaction to previous marks.”

Chauvin intends for the viewer to contemplate the creation of his prints more than their figure or form.  The intention is to dive in further than the surface and spark a “conversation of looking” (Chauvin).  Each of these works are intended for the viewer to ponder their own interpretation, allowing each individual to process art differently.

Check out Marc Chauvin’s portfolio to learn more (marcsonthesurface.com)

Midwest Woodworkers Association

Wood is an overlooked medium and these craftspeople bring its true charm to life. These artists play with wood’s organic aesthetic and display it in a multitude of ways. The gallery showcases how one may manipulate wood into an exquisite art form, not just a useful tool.

Many of these woodworkers have perfected the craft of taking a typical, everyday item and redefining its use through the addition of beauty.

Midwest Woodworkers’ Association

On exhibit February 1st - 26th | Reception: Thursday, February 17th 5:30-7pm

MWA was formed for the purpose of the education of its members and the general public in the art and science of woodworking; performing charitable woodworking services; to assist the members to gain expertise in woodworking skills; and to provide forums for the exchange of information concerning woodworking techniques.

All of the work in this exhibition was created by the members of the Midwest Woodworkers’ Association and friends. 

Artists represented in this show:

Norm Anderson

Don Bristow

Sarah Estrapala

Dean Gregory

Ernest Hilderbrand

Charles Hunter

Ira Papick

Tom Stauder

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!