Cross Contemporary Art

  • ARTISTS
    • Gregory Amenoff
      • Mono-a-Mono: Gregory Amenoff and Richard Bosman Monotypes
      • Gregory Amenoff: Selected Prints
    • Jeffrey Bishop
    • Katherine Bowling
      • NIGHT FALLS with Katherine Bowling, Jared Handelsman, Portia Munson & Paul Mutimear
        • Katherine Bowling: The Presence of Leaves
    • Richard Bosman
      • Richard Bosman by Eleanor Heartney
      • Mono-a-Mono: Gregory Amenoff and Richard Bosman Monotypes
    • Gregory Crane
    • Mike Cockrill
      • Mike Cockrill
      • Mike Cockrill
    • Susan Copich
    • Ford Crull
      • Ford Crull Solo Show
      • Ford Crull Solo Painting Exhibit “Red”
    • Peggy Cyphers
      • Peggy Cyphers: Solo Show
      • Peggy Cyphers & Catherine Howe
    • Richard Edelman
    • Deborah Freedman
    • Catherine Howe
      • CATHERINE HOWE SOLO SHOW
      • Peggy Cyphers & Catherine Howe
    • Heather Hutchison
      • Heather Hutchison: Here Now
    • Mark Thomas Kanter
    • Ellen Kozak
    • Iain Machell
    • Melissa Meyer
      • Melissa Meyer: On Paper
    • Portia Munson
      • NIGHT FALLS with Katherine Bowling, Jared Handelsman, Portia Munson & Paul Mutimear
      • Portia Munson Solo Show
    • Garry Nichols
      • Garry Nichols “Water Witch” opens 3/7
  • EXHIBITIONS
    • Kingston Design Connection 2020 Show House
    • Heather Hutchison: In Praise of Shadows
    • Millicent Young at 11Jane Street Installation Art and Performance Space
    • ISDay Saugerties
    • Colin Chase Solo Show at 11 Jane Street
    • Lily Prince: There There
    • AESTIVUS: Summer Group Show
    • KINGSTON DESIGN CONNECTION
  • ABOUT

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ISDay Saugerties reviewed by Lynn Woods for Hudson Valley One

April 30, 2018 by Jen Dragon

Protected © Ian Laughlin 2012 25 x 38 x 30 smaller Spawn © Ian Laughlin 2017 smaller IMG_4070 IMG_4068 IMG_4074 Newberry_Miller IMG_4106 IMG_4112 IMG_4139 IMG_4136 IMG_4140 IMG_4141 IMG_4137 Private Horizon © David Provan 2016 76%22 x 98%22 IMG_4416 4. Tony Moore, Children of Light I 2017, 60.75x24x24in, wood-fired ceramic, porcelain, glass, steel 5. Tony Moore, Children of Light I 2017, 60.75x24x24, wood-fired ceramic, porcelain, glass, steel From forever to Forever © David Provan large IMG_4236 yunque de los sueños #20, 2017 (anvil of dreams) © Colin Chase 2018 yunque de los suenos...© Colin Chase 2017 Follow The Leader © Melissa Stern 2014. Clay, paint, ink. 21 x 19 x 3inches Only Child © Melissa Stern 2017 Clay, paper, ink 20 x 8 x 1.5 inches SPAWN - White Rot ©Ian Laughlin 2017 90” x 43” x 60 copy still-reach © Millicent Young 2018 horse hair, clay, 117 x 14 x 14 bones Torso II © Estate of Jan Sawka 2001 mixed media MetropolisNo.4 ©Alex Kveton 2018 tenaglia_902 tenaglia_337 tenaglia_445 © ©Susan Spencer Crowe 2018 GuideOfSouls © Alex Kveton 2018 Protected ©Ian Laughlin 2012 25%22 x 38%22 x 30%22 copy 2013 Walrus detail I Am Happy With Teeth and Claws ©Jan Harrison 2018 When Viola Turns © Judy Sigunick 37x14x14 fired ceramic And Hugged the Narrow Ledge © Grace Wapner 1997 15 x 10 x 13 sagger fired © Lorrie Fredette 2017 © Nadine Slowik 2018 Totems © Kenichi Hiratsuka 2018 drawing on bluestone ©Kenichi Hiratsuka 2018
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It’s been the coldest, dreariest April in memory. No lilacs yet, forming buds out of the dead land.

Despite the cruel season, Saugerties has gotten a jump on spring, thanks in part to a village-wide display of sculpture including a knock-out show at Cross Contemporary, 99 Partition Street, in honor of International Sculpture Day (ISD, on April 28).

Before a leaf has sprouted, the well-lit display of monumental works in the windows of the former J.J. Newberry Co.’s five-and-dime will have you standing admiringly out in the cold. In front of a backdrop of an immense linen curtain, a triumvirate of styles, representing three different artists, is riveting.

To the left is Ian Laughlin’s installation of an industrial barrel split down the middle to reveal an illuminated image of barbed wire and dead branches ominously framing a “Posted Public Water Supply” sign, an ecocidal message cleverly embedded in a found object that signifies the source of the problem.

In the middle are Lowell Miller’s striking abstracted figures, posed as if they were Cycladic mannequins, primitive in their extreme simplicity of form and subdued charcoal coloration and surface patterning, imbued with a bouncy animation as though they contained an inflatable.

To the right is a piece by Millicent Young that at first glance strikes one as exquisitely lyrical. A thick column of horsehair suspended from the high, hard-to-see ceiling descending into a distressed, blackened plaster vessel, resembling the base of a hollowed-out charred tree trunk, except that the bottom is slightly curved, like a witch’s pot. The coloration of the horsehair gradually shifts from cream at the top to black at the bottom, so that the hair seems to meld with the vessel, transforming the two elements into a single form, a kind of koan signaling the meeting of opposites. The upward movement of black, dark as coal, seeping into the pearly tones of the hair, seems to draw a parallel with the pouring of carbon into the atmosphere, a symbolic image of ecocide that echoes the message of Laughlin’s piece.

While beautiful, the image, interpreted as such, is also dramatic and horrific, in the contrast between pale, delicate hair and black, filthy pot. An ordinary store window is transformed into a portal for the imagination that reflects on the condition and crisis of our time, imbuing a touch of magic to the quotidian life of the sidewalk.

The three artists are also represented in the sculpture show at Cross Contemporary (owner Jen Dragon curated not just the gallery show but also the street and window installations), whose 46 works run the gamut from figurative to abstract, from the medium of steel to wood to cloth, ceramic, and more, from a scale ranging from the size of your finger to the height of the room.

Young’s tablet-like Canto for the Anthropocene, a memorial to the death of the earth, features a square pan of lead punctured with a grid of holes, as if they were rows of computer code; black horse hairs sprout out of the lower center holes, like chest hair, lending a kind of vulnerability to the lead sheet, whose whitened patina and scored surface suggest industrial usage and the passage of time. It’s an artifact, a fragment of mysterious text whose wisps of hair yet speak of living beings and the present, a presaged ruin that sends chills up your spine.

Susan Spencer Crowe’s That Way similarly consists of an approximate square whose surface is scored with a grid of incisions. In this case the piece is weightless and light-imbued, spritely and full of movement. The rectangular ground is white cardboard, folded vertically to create a zigzagging relief pattern, with a row of colored triangles partially cut out of each longitudinal section, folded back to reveal the shadowy space within. Along the bottom of the folded rectangle is a gorgeous prismatic pattern of shadows from the folded and scored surface. The substance of the piece is mostly empty space, a gossamer breath stamped with the organizational clarity of tangible substance, energized by the arrows of clear, harmonious color, directing the viewer’s gaze off the page, elsewhere.

Provan’s freestanding Void Oid and Bambi Lambo, the former a bright yellow flattened hollow steel ovoid with Swiss cheese holes in the skin and the latter a series of thin, fluid green steel ribbons, a drawing in space that seems crafted of a single line and whose jutting angles recall the surrealistic sign language of a David Smith, are like Mutt and Jeff, their playfulness echoed by the swirling flower-like lines of Michael Ciccone’s bronze Euphoria, anchored in a chunk of bronze earth.

The descending tiers of Tony Moore’s bulky ceramic Children of Light I, fitted into a tall wooden stool, resemble an ancient pueblo in miniature, a spirit place, given that the pieces of white glass inserted into its circular caves suggest melted candles. The two closed clamshell forms of Miller’s Venus, an elongated sphere of rough-textured bronze, one resting on top and the other inserted longitudinally into an opening at the base, respectively represent a mouth and vulva, conflating pop cartoon and Neolithic fertility fetish.

There are also a number of figurative works that masterfully suggest narratives: Grace Bakst Wapner’s clay pairing of two figures, in which a supine, smaller male rests against a headless kneeling female, Pieta-like, although there is also resistance in the way both the kneeling figure’s and the male figure’s arms are pulled back. Judy Sigunick’s statuesque clay When Viola Turns, a white-faced, red-haired rendition of Shakespeare’s character from Twelfth Night whose white shoulders are submerged into a bulky, columnar dress, suggest a kind of distressed armature, from which a smaller male figure — in a nod to the character’s gender-switching disguise — dangles like a ragdoll from the back.

Melissa Stern’s comic, animated Follow the Leader, present a relief of three plaster heads and half torsos, each gesturing with a single arm, comically conveying groupthink.

Jan Harrison’s two sculptures of cats, one shiny black and stretched out on its back, leg raised in the air with white claw extended and white teeth exposed, the other pale pink, translucent (the matte surface is covered in encaustic), and crouching submissively, are playful but not sentimental. We identify with the intensity of expression — the snarling defenses of the one and tender, will-to-please mien of the other — as though each represents some elemental part of the self.

The late Jan Sawka’s assemblage Torso II is in a category by itself: flat-colored cutouts of the head and shoulders of a man, which get larger as they recede, are tightly bundled with black rope, as if they were hangers. The larger pieces in the back form a sinister, looming shadow figure, imagery that references the political persecution Sawka and other free-thinking artists were subject to in Communist Poland.

A few doors down, at 117 Partition Street, Saugerties resident sculptor Ze’ev Willy Neumann has established a Pop Up Gallery for his clever, inventive sculpture and drawings, in a show entitled “Red Balloon” (referring to a piece on the back wall, in which a grid of colored drawings of balloon-like heads on a collaged surface echoes the form of a shiny red sculpture). The show includes his “Floor to Ceiling” modular series, fishing-pole-scaled strips of painted black-and-color checked wood, squared or rounded, arranged in rows, straight or tilted, from floor to ceiling, and his “Spears into Art” series, which includes wall pieces in which the weapon is defanged, by being twisted into a coiled circle or wrenched into an angled interlocking diamond.

Across the street, the sunken courtyard owned by Bella Luna has been transformed into a sculpture park. The works include Stuart Farmery’s twin chunky, figure-like pieces, each consisting of three pieces of roughly carved wood whose shapes are emphasized by their yellow, green-yellow, red, orange or blue paint; Provan’s diagrammatic-like colored steel constructions, one of which depicts three types of perspectives, in yellow, blue, and red; and the plant-like, volumetric black-steel sculpture, consisting of pieces welded together, as if they were stitched fabric pillows, by late sculptor Jeffry Schiller.

There’s more works in front of Sawyer Savings Bank, the Kiersted House, and Saugerties Beach, as well as at Diamond Mills. Besides the Provan piece, there’s a skinny, faceted columnar-like piece of carved stone, slightly tilted as if were about to keel over, and incised with meandering white lines, as if invested with burrowing worms, by Japanese artist Kenichi Hiratsuka. Hiratsuka also contributed the two rugged stone pieces that frame the restaurant fireplace. (When Hiratsuka was living on the Lower East Side, “he’d carve drawings of labyrinths into the bluestone sidewalk,” Dragon noted.)

This is the second year Saugerties has hosted a town-wide sculpture exhibit in honor of ISD, and Dragon said she envisions the event expanding in the future: “I see sculpture doing what the Festival of the Voice did for Phoenicia,” said the former Phoenicia resident, noting the village and businesses have been very supportive. – Lynn Woods for Woodstock Times

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Catskills, contemporary art, Hudson Valley, isday, Saugerties, sculpture

Mono-a-Mono: Gregory Amenoff and Richard Bosman Monotypes

June 20, 2017 by Jen Dragon

 Mono-a-Mono: Gregory Amenoff and Richard Bosman

 
Mono-A-Mono: Gregory Amenoff and Richard Bosman is an exhibition of monotype prints by two artists and friends. This show is the culmination of weekly sessions at Area 241 print studio in nearby Kingston, NY. For over 30 years, Bosman and Amenoff have separately used printmaking to support their painting process and throughout their careers, have worked with some of the most important ateliers and technicians in the USA and abroad. Mono-A-Mono is the first time these two artists have worked side-by-side, and together with artist/printmaker Stephen Kursh, have produced a body of painterly prints.

     About Gregory Amenoff and Richard Bosman: The careers of both Gregory Amenoff and Richard Bosman began in the early 80’s with their individual transfers to New York City. They are both Guggenheim fellows and their work is in many distinguished museum, university and corporate collections. Although their artistic subjects are quite different as Amenoff paints the drama of telluric forces in landscape and Bosman focuses on open-ended story-telling involving people and habitat, both artists are committed to expressive, gestural brushwork and assertive, dynamic forms. The challenge of the monotype process allows for the transparent mark-making to become apparent as the surface of the paper shines through each individual brush stroke. Mono-a-Mono: Gregory Amenoff and Richard Bosman is the first show for both of these artists that is dedicated to the direct, painterly process of monotype printmaking.

Mono-a-Mono: Gregory Amenoff and Richard Bosman opens Fri. June 30th and continues through Sun. July 23rd, 2017.
 
untitled III © Gregory Amenoff 2017 23.5 x 25 inches monotype on paper
untitled II © Gregory Amenoff 2017 25 x 23.5 inches monotype on paper
Untitled © Gregory Amenoff 2017 23.5 x 25 inches monotype on paper
untitled (crying girl) © Richard Bosman 2017 monotype on paper
untitled (cigarette) © Richard Bosman monotype on paper
copy cats IV © Richard Bosman 2017 monotype on paper

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Filed Under: ARTISTS, Blog, Exhibitions, Featured, Richard Bosman, Work Tagged With: abstraction, amenoff, Artist collaboration, bosman, Catskills, contemporary art, cross contemporary art, Hudson Valley, monotypes, neo-expressionism, painting, printmaking, Saugerties

Conversation: Katherine Bowling & Suzannah Lessard

September 22, 2015 by Jen Dragon

Conversation Between Katherine Bowling & Suzannah Lessard

On Saturday Sept. 26th at 7pm, writer Suzannah Lessard speaks with Katherine Bowling on the union of memory and the landscape in Ms. Bowling’s current show “The Presence of Leaves” at Cross Contemporary Art. Katherine Bowling’s passion for contemplative landscape spaces has long been an essential trait of her paintings and prints. Inspired by the woodlands of the Hudson Valley and Catskills region, Ms. Bowling’s recent artwork captures the luminosity of golden dappled forests and the quiet shadows of moonlit nights. Writer Suzannah Lessard will steer a lively conversation with the artist about her intentions and techniques and the symbolism of the landscape in Ms. Bowling’s artwork.
About Katherine Bowling’s Solo Show “The Presence of Leaves”
Katherine Bowling’s imagery uses the landscape to create intimate spaces. Inspired by the environment of upstate New York, her woodlands are illuminated by dappled light sparkling through a leafy ceiling. Often Ms. Bowling’s paintings compel the viewer to enter this shimmering forest realm down a pathway away from civilization. Other images introduce the contrast between the decay of manmade structures and the grand, renewable cycle of the surrounding trees. And like Albert Pinkham Ryder before her, Katherine Bowling sometimes boldly paints a portrait of the moon with a silvery light that is in elegant contrast to the habitual golds of her sunlit forests. Although Ms. Bowling’s paintings and prints are in the tradition of the Hudson River School, her expressive technique, quiet symbolism and masterful spatial illusions take the idea of landscape painting into the 21st century. Katherine Bowling’s “The Presence of Leaves” closes Sunday, September 26th.
About Katherine Bowling:
Since her emergence in 1980s, Katherine Bowling has been well respected as an American painter and printmaker. Ms. Bowling has been the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Grant, New York State Foundation for the Arts Fellowship and a Mid-Atlantic Arts Foundation Fellowship. Her work is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Brooklyn Museum and the Fisher Landau Center in New York City, the Orlando Museum of Contemporary Art and the Norton Museum of Art in Florida as well as the Phoenix Art Museum in Arizona, the Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art in Evanston, Illinois and St. John’s University in Santa Fe, New Mexico

More information about the artist can be found:
Artist’s website:  http://katherinebowling.com/
Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katherine_Bowling
NYTimes Art Review: http://bit.ly/ccakbnyt
About Suzannah Lessard:
Suzannah Lessard is the author of the critically acclaimed memoir, The Architect of Desire: Beauty and Danger in the Stanford White Family (1996). Ms. Lessard has taught at Columbia School of the Arts, Wesleyan University, The New School, George Mason University, George Washington University, and Goucher College MFA in Creative Non-fiction.  She was one of the first editors of the Washington Monthly and a staff writer at The New Yorker Magazine. She has also published in New York Times Magazine, Architectural Record, Architectural Digest, Wilson Quarterly and Harvard Design. Suzannah Lessard is the recipient of the Whiting Award and the Mark Lynton History Prize as well as a fellowship at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and the Jenny McKean Moore Fellowship at George Washington University. Her latest book, T”he View From a Small Mountain: Reading the American Landscape in the Twenty-First Century” is scheduled to be published in 2016.
katherine_bowling_cabin_2011_og11kb0534_0
katherine_bowling_winter_i_2011_og11kb0535_0
katherine_bowling_winter_iv_2011_og11kb0538_0

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Filed Under: Artists, Blog, Exhibitions, Featured, Uncategorized, Work Tagged With: cross contemporary art, etching, intaglio, katherine bowling, landscape, painting, printmaking, Saugerties, Suzannah Lessard

Katherine Bowling: The Presence of Leaves

August 29, 2015 by Jen Dragon

Katherine Bowling: The Presence of Leaves

Dark Walk © Katherine Bowling 2014 Garage© Katherine Bowling 2014 Leaf © Katherine Bowling 2014 Moonwalk ©Katherine Bowling 2012 Red Cabin©Katherine Bowling 2013 katherine_bowling_cabin_2011_og11kb0534_0 katherine_bowling_winter_i_2011_og11kb0535_0 katherine_bowling_winter_iv_2011_og11kb0538_0
Thumbnails

 Katherine Bowling’s imagery uses the landscape to create intimate spaces. Inspired by the environment of upstate New York, her woodlands are illuminated by dappled light sparkling through a leafy ceiling. Often Ms. Bowling’s paintings compel the viewer to enter this shimmering forest realm down a pathway away from civilization. Other images introduce the contrast between the decay of manmade structures and the grand, renewable cycle of the surrounding trees. And like Albert Pinkham Ryder before her, Katherine Bowling sometimes boldly paints a portrait of the moon with a silvery light that is in elegant contrast to the habitual golds of her sunlit forests. Although Ms. Bowling’s paintings and prints are in the tradition of the Hudson River School, her expressive technique, quiet symbolism and masterful spatial illusions take the idea of landscape painting into the 21st century.
About Katherine Bowling:
Since her emergence in 1980s, Katherine Bowling has been well respected as an American painter and printmaker. Ms. Bowling has been the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Grant, New York State Foundation for the Arts Fellowship and a Mid-Atlantic Arts Foundation Fellowship. Her work is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Brooklyn Museum and the Fisher Landau Center in New York City, the Orlando Museum of Contemporary Art and the Norton Museum of Art in Florida as well as the Phoenix Art Museum in Arizona, the Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art in Evanston, Illinois and St. John’s University in Santa Fe, New MexicoMore information about the artist can be found:
Artist’s website:  http://katherinebowling.com/
Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katherine_Bowling
NYTimes Art Review: http://bit.ly/ccakbnyt
Almanac Weekly: http://bit.ly/ccakbaw

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Filed Under: ARTISTS, Blog, Exhibitions, Featured Tagged With: cross contemporary art, etching, intaglio, katherine bowling, landscape, painting, printmaking, Saugerties

Peggy Cyphers: Solo Show

June 1, 2015 by Jen Dragon

 

Peggy  Cyphers:  Prints  and  Paintings

 

Peggy Cyphers solo exhibition of paintings and prints opens Sat, June 6th at Cross Contemporary Art in Saugerties, NY.   The art of Peggy Cyphers responds to the multi-dimensional experience of the landscape from the various viewpoints of living beings. Gazing skyward from the bottom of a cavern like a fox or towards the horizon in a ruffle of woodpecker feathers, Ms. Cyphers re-imagines the world through different animal consciousnesses, defying both perspective and gravity. For her show at Cross Contemporary Art, Peggy Cyphers introduces a series of cyanotypes (prints created by sunlight) using rare botanical prairie grass samples and mysterious equine imagery whose reverse shadows are suspended in a sky-blue ground.

    In the Brooklyn Rail, Jonathan Goodman writes about Ms. Cyphers: ” Cyphers makes it clear that she has opted for a double awareness, in which non-objective insight vies with close scrutiny of the natural world.” New York Times’ Roberta Smith notes that Cyphers paints “in an effortless style that corrupts and complicates the staining technique originated by Color Field painters like Helen Frankenthaler with various ideas in the air: notational, pattern-prone motifs, landscape references and allusions to textiles and fabric.” Cross Contemporary Art gallery director, Jen Dragon notes that “throughout Ms. Cyphers long and distinguished career, her overarching aesthetic concern has always been the interconnectedness of all beings to the earth and to each other”

About Peggy Cyphers:       Peggy Cyphers’ work can be found in many important museum,university and public collections throughout the world including National Gallery, Washington, D.C.Library of Congress, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. National Museum of Women in the Arts,Columbia Museum of Art, Columbia, SC, Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, Wash. and the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art, Cedar Rapids, Iowa to name but a few. She is a recipient of many Grants include National Endowment for the Arts, Peter S. Reed Foundation, The Elizabeth Foundation, National Studio Award PS.1. Residency awards include Yaddo, Art Omi, Tong Xian Art Beijing, Santa Fe Art Institute, ISCP, Triangle & Clocktower/P.S.1. Currently, Peggy Cyphers is a tenured adjunct professor of visual arts at Pratt Institute. More information about the artist can be found: 
Artist’s website:  http://peggycyphers.com
Video interview: https://vimeo.com/86328765
Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peggy_Cyphers
Future Byzantium© Peggy Cyphers 2015 cyanotype on paper
"Animal Spirits-Floaters" ©Peggy Cyphers 2012
Peggy Cyphers "Future Byzantium" installation at CCA
Peggy Cyphers "Future Byzantium" Cyanotype installation at CCA
Peggy Cyphers "Future Byzantium" monotype installation at CCA
Peggy Cyphers "Future Byzantium" cyanotype and painting installation at CCA

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Filed Under: Artists, Blog, Exhibitions, Peggy Cyphers, Work Tagged With: abstraction, art, Catskills, contemporary art, cyanotypes, endangered species, enviroment, Hudson Valley, monoprints, oils, painter, painting, paintings, printmaking, prints, Saugerties

Portia Munson Solo Show

May 7, 2015 by Jen Dragon

Portia  Munson  “Little  Suns,  Hollow  Bones”

 

Portia Munson‘s solo show, “Little Suns, Hollow Bones”, transforms Cross Contemporary Art into a world of flowers, plants, bones and creatures. From brilliant dandelion wallpaper on the walls to magical mandala prints of blossoms and small animal corpses, this exhibition addresses the artist’s interest in environmental issues while infusing the gallery with the spirit of spring.
     Although a conceptual extension of her 2013 “Reflecting Pool” exhibit at PPOW Gallery in New York City, Portia Munson’s upcoming “Little Suns, Hollow Bones” presents some new imagery derived from the flora and fauna of the Catskills and Hudson Valley region. Munson’s digital scanning of her subjects is a meditative exercise in organizing the chaos of nature as its elements are caught at a moment in time. Choosing flowers that bloom that day in her garden, Munson creates intricate patterns of color and form that, according to Claire Lambe in Roll magazine, “although preserved through the magic of digital technology, are as ephemeral as sand paintings,” and as a reviewer for The New Yorker stated,“(have) a seductive luminosity; each floral element appears to emit light.”
More information about Portia Munson can be found:
Artist’s website: http://portiamunson.com
New York Times Article about Portia Munson: http://bit.ly/pmccanyt
Portia Munson’s recent Public Arts Project for MTA Arts and Design: http://bit.ly/pmcca01
Portia Munson Review in Roll Online: http://bit.ly/pmcca02

About Portia Munson: Portia Munson is a visual artist who works in a variety of media including installation, painting, photography & sculpture. Solo shows include exhibitions at PPOW Gallery, Yoshii Gallery and White Columns in NYC, among others. Her work has been exhibited throughout the US, Canada & Europe in such venues as the Museum of Contemporary Art in Helsinki, Finland; the Kunstahallen Brandts Klaedefabrik, Odense, Denmark; and in NYC at the New Museum, Ace Gallery, Exit Art, DC Moore Gallery and Affirmation Arts. Ms. Munson has taught at NYU, Yale School of Art, Vassar Collage and SUNY Purchase. She holds a BFA from Cooper Union and a MFA from Rutgers. Portia Munson has received fellowships from Yaddo, MacDowell, Skowhegan, Fine Arts Work Center Provincetown, Art Omi, and others. Her work has been reviewed and written about in many publications including The New York Times, Art in America, Newsweek, Harper’s, USA Today, The New Yorker, Flash Art and Artforum.

Portia Munson “Little Suns, Hollow Bones” Solo Exhibition 
May 9-31, 2015
Artist Reception Saturday, May 9, 6-8pm
at Cross Contemporary Art, Saugerties, NY

Cedar Wax Wing ©2011 Portia Munson Witch Hazel Screech Owl ©2013 Portia Munson Downy Woodpecker ©2013 Portia Munson Golden Crowned Kinglet ©2011 Portia Munson Wood thrush ©2011 Portia Munson Narcissus Infinity ©2009 Portia Munson Northern Flicker ©2013 Portia Munson Wild Tulip ©2004 Portia Munson
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Filed Under: Blog, Exhibitions, Featured, Portia Munson Tagged With: art, audubon, Catskills, contemporary art, decor, endangered species, enviroment, fauna, flora, Hudson Valley, interior design, interiors, painting, paintings, Saugerties

Garry Nichols “Water Witch”

February 25, 2015 by Jen Dragon

Garry  Nichols:  Water  Witch

 

Garry Nichols solo exhibition of paintings, drawings and sculpture opens Sat, March 7 at Cross Contemporary Art in Saugerties, NY. Mr. Nichols is a prolific artist who plays with the paradox of space: what should be big is very small and what should be small, is enormous creating a fantastic distortion that torques pictorial space. The feeling of far-off lands, of maybe even the most far-off land of Nichol’s native Tasmania lends his art a sense of adventure and discovery of a new state of nature.
Garry Nichols takes over the gallery and transforms the space into an enviroment of nautical and botanical fantasy reflecting his far-ranging fascination with water divining, sailing ships, tropical plantlife and aboriginal art. Adrian Frost writes: “Nichols is now in his stride. Ultimately an epic painter, a man of the long vision, the big picture, he is intimate with painterly detail yet always pushing for the grand yet haunting vision”. Cross Contemporary Art director Jen Dragon says of Garry Nichols “Mr. Nichols is a wordless storyteller whose art follows the flow of form much as the divining rod discovers the unseen stream of subterranean water. Its exciting to surrender the gallery for an installation of such breadth and ambition!” In an interview with Guy Trebay for the NYTimes, Garry Nichols say of his own work “I have no plan when I go into the studio, I just let the drawings flow.” Just like the divining rod also known as the water-witch.

About Garry Nichols:
Garry Nichols, work can be found in many museum and public collections throughout the world including Samuel P. Harn Museum University of Florida, Art Gallery of New South Wales, National Gallery of Victoria, Burnie Museum, University of Newcastle Australia,Osaka Hilton Hotels, Westpac Bank, ARTBank. A recipient of New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in Painting, Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts and Gottlieb Foundation Awards, the artist has shown at numerous institutions including The Brooklyn Museum, Marymount Manhattan and Kean University. Most recently, Mr. Nichols’ paintings were published in “I Don’t Poem” an anthology of poetry and art edited by Claudia La Rocco. Garry Nichols currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. Garry Nichols currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.
More information about the artist can be found:
Video interview: http://vimeo.com/79713584
Artist’s website: http://garrynichols.com

About Cross Contemporary Art: Cross Contemporary Art is a gallery dedicated to showing mid-career and established artists who have a connection to New York City, Hudson Valley and Catskills region. Open Thurs through Mon 12-6, Tues and Wed by appointment or chance. 81 Partition st Saugerties, NY 12477 Phone Gallery Director Jen Dragon 845.399.9751 for more information

sm_rigging_by_garry_nichols_oil_on_canvas
sm_ship_spiral_by_garry_nichols_oil_on_canvas

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Filed Under: ARTISTS, Blog, Exhibitions, Featured, Uncategorized Tagged With: brooklyn, bushwick, contemporary art, Garry Nichols, Hudson Valley, painting, Saugerties

“Take 5” Group Show of 5 NY Artists

February 4, 2015 by Jen Dragon

 

Take  5:  Group  Show  of  Five  New  York  Artists

“Take 5”, at Cross Contemporary Art in Saugerties, NY, opens Sat, Feb 7, 6-8pm and runs through Sunday, March 1.

This group show presents paintings, drawings and sculpture by five New York artists: John Berens, Jeffrey Bishop, Mike Cockrill, Jared Deery and Shria Toren. Despite their distinctly different styles, the artworks are uniified in that they all identify the infinite encased in the intimate. From John Berens hazy, lonely landscapes, through Shira Toren’s meandering beings, and Jeffrey Bishop’s alternate universes, to Jared Deery’s mysteriously subjective still-lives and culminating in Mike Cockrill’s reduced and deconstructed figures, the paintings and sculpture in this show capture a deep contemplation of winter.

About The Artists: John Berens: An associate professor at Parson’s, John Berens has been the recipient of a New York Foundation for the Arts fellwoship in Painting. Mr. Berens paintings are in numerous public collections and are described by ArtNet’s Stephen Maine as “glazey, moody”. More about the artist: http://johnberens.com

Jeffrey Bishop: Jeffrey Bishop has had numerous solo shows notably at the Danforth Museum of Art, the Miami University Art Museum and the San Diego State University Gallery. In Art in America, Matthew Kangas writes about Mr. Bishop’s abstract paintings as having a “indeterminate light source (which) sites the work on an intellectual rather than an emotional or humorous plane.” Jeffrey Bishop most recently completed the Takt Artists Residency in Berlin. More about Jeffrey Bishop: http://jeffreybishop.com

Mike Cockrill: Although some of Mike Cockrill’s artwork has generated controversy, (notably the “White Papers” with Judge Hughes and “Baby Doll Clown Killers”), the artist is also quite sentimental. His latest paintings and sculpture reference a nostalgic sense of time and the memory of suburban comfort. Anthony Haden-Guest writes about Mr. Cockrill: “The pictures (sources) that turn Mike Cockrill on are neither plunder nor cultural markers. They are his ways and means of at once re-experiencing a seemingly enchanted childhood world and decoding it. They are time machines …” More about Mike Cockrill: http://mikecockrill.com

Jared Deery: The art of Jared Deery can be characterized as both intimate and wistful with titles that evoke visual poetry. A graduate of Pratt (BFA) and Hunter College (MFA), Mr. Deery lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. More about Mr. Deery can be found: http://jareddeery.com

Shira Toren: The paintings of Shira Toren present meandering swirls of migrating forms which evoke both the flight of birds and the unconscious procession of human forms in an indistinct landscape. A graduate of Pratt Institute, Ms. Toren is an Israeli-American artist who lives and works in New York City More about Shira Toren: http://shiratoren.com

Jeffrey Bishop ink on paper Jared Deery oil on board John Berens "February" acrylic on canvas John Berens, acrylic on paper Mike Cockrill, sculptures Take 5 Jared Deery "Eclipse of the Sun" Mike Cockrill, sculptures Jared Deery "Red Was The Color" Shira Toren, "Spiral" venetian plaster on canvas red turk
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Filed Under: Blog, Exhibitions, Featured Tagged With: contemporary art, Hudson Valley, jared deery, jeffrey bishop, john berens, mike cockrill, painting, Saugerties, shira toren

Heather Hutchison: Here Now

December 3, 2014 by Jen Dragon

Heather Hutchison exhibits her latest work into the inquiry of light and transparency at Cross Contemporary Art, Saugerties, NY with an opening reception for the artist Sat Dec 6, 6-8pm. Utilizing bent Plexiglas, video installations or paint on transparent paper, Ms. Hutchison captures the flickering moments of natural light. Cindy Moore writes:  “Hutchison’s paintings are impossible to experience through reproductions. No matter how skilled the photographer, they cannot be captured in a fixed moment.  The work is responsive in a way alien to traditional painting: as the light shifts so does the hue.”  
Relocated from NYC to the Hudson Valley, Heather Hutchison has been the recipient of numerous awards and grants  (Pollock-Krasner, Gottleib Foundation),and her work is in many prestigious collections including the The Brooklyn Museum, Hammer Museum and the Smithsonian Institution. 
More information about the artist can be found:

Exhibition Essay, “boxed light bodies” by George Quasha http://bit.ly/hhcca4
video interview: http://bit.ly/hhutcca1
Artist’s website:  http://heatherhutchison.com

Sleepy Golden
Non-Specific Pacific
More Like the Sky on A Cloudy Day
Another Day
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Filed Under: Artists, Exhibitions, Featured, Heather Hutchison, Uncategorized, Work Tagged With: abstraction, art, artist, Catskills, heather hutchison, installation, painter, painting, post modernism, post-modernist, Saugerties

Peggy Cyphers & Catherine Howe

November 17, 2014 by Jen Dragon


Peggy  Cyphers  and  Catherine  Howe:  Prints  and  Paintings

Cross Contemporary Art is please to present its first Two Person show of the prints and paintings of Peggy Cyphers and Catherine Howe curated by Ford Crull. Both of these New York City based painters have distinguished careers as fine artists and have received numerous awards and fellowships. Opening November 8th, this exhibit showcases the modern expressionist technique grounded in classical tradition of these artists and their individual gestural use of various materials such as sand, metal leaf,ink and oil paint on canvas. Both Cyphers and Howe are inspired by outside world and impassioned brush marks dominate their work. However, the similarities end there as Peggy Cyphers responds to the multi-dimensional experience of the landscape from various points of view (animal and human) and Catherine Howe looks to art history and its exuberant, fleshy subject matter as her starting point.
     In the Brooklyn Rail, Peggy Cyphers art is described by Jonathan Goodman:

“Peggy Cyphers’ painted characters and landscapes vibrate in dialogues of rhythm and repetition that influence sensory perception. Her surfaces recall color field, where abstract forms operate in a psychological dialogue of association – congestion and vast span, hyper-speed and recognizable icons. Cyphers’ painting is automatic writing – a stream of consciousness between geological, primordial and cultural time.”

G. Roger Denson writes about Catherine Howe‘s work:

“Howe especially lingers over exquisite portrayals of beautiful objects, both man-made and organic, envisioned by the Dutch and Flemish masters to convey the transience of life on earth. In this respect Howe disregards the severe and blunt vanitas paintings of skulls and decay in favor of over-ripe and peeled fruit, liquors languishing in food- and lipstick-smudged glassware, and the blooms of flowers showing the first signs of their demise to come.”
Exhibition curator, Ford Crull, has chosen these artists to show together because their personal, emotional engagement in painting is an inspiration to his own career as a painter.
“Both Peggy and Catherine represent what is exciting about gestural and expressionistic art making in the 21st century. They are painter’s painters. The way they both handle the brushstroke and  composition can only be achieved through painstaking time and effort, and continually willing to push the limits. They continue to redefine what can be, and exemplify the continued relevance of painting in our contemporary art forum.This first rate work by these two New York painters is truly art that matters. Its great to curate this two-person exhibit and bring it to a new gallery in the Hudson Valley region where we all derive so much inspiration for what we do.”
 
   Peggy Cyphers & Catherine Howe Two-Person show runs November 7th through December 1st. For more information, please contact Jen Dragon, Director, Cross Contemporary Art 81 Partition Street, Saugerties, NY 12477 845-399-9751
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proserpina_frenchie_catherine_howe
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Filed Under: Artists, Catherine Howe, Exhibitions, Featured, Ford Crull, Peggy Cyphers, Work Tagged With: abstraction, catherine howe, Catskills, contemporary art, cross contemporary art, fine art, ford crull, Hudson Valley, monoprints, monotypes, new york academy, oils, painter, painting, peggy cyphers, pratt, printmakers, printmaking, Saugerties, women artists

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