The Body in Revue: A.I.R. at ARC

CAM00847-1A.I.R. Gallery, NY presents “The Body in Revue” at ARC Gallery through June 20, 2015. Following is an essay by Lynne Warren, curator of the exhibition:

There has long been a bond between the women artists of New York and Chicago. In the 1960s as the feminist movement began to influence thought and politics and in the early 1970s as inroads were being made into the arts, women artists in both cities shared a common cause—a critical lack of opportunities to get their ideas out into the world through exhibiting their artworks. Out of networking (especially through the activities of the West-East Bag, or WEB), information exchange, and a desire for change, in September 1972 A.I.R. Gallery (Artists in Residence, Inc.) opened as the first artist-run cooperative to exhibit women artists in America. And in part as a result of the exchanges between New York and Chicago, ARC (Artists, Residents of Chicago) opened exactly one year later. Although accused by traditionalists defending the male-dominated bastion of the fine arts of offering “dabblers” undeserved opportunities, in Chicago ARC allowed a generation of women artists finally to have a voice. A.I.R., founded by a number of pioneering and now nationally and internationally significant female artists, had less overt skepticism to face, perhaps, but it was not easy to be a woman artist in the 1970s in either city. Both galleries have persevered now for over forty years, providing supportive resources for literally hundreds of women in the difficult enterprise that is a career in the arts. And while times have changed, sadly the underrepresentation of women artists is still endemic in many artworld venues. As an expression of this reality, and the strong bond that exists between the two galleries, A.I.R. arranged for an exhibition at their sister institution ARC and asked me to curate a show of the current members. Of the over one hundred works submitted by the twenty-three artists, I have chosen twenty-five pieces, including sculpture, painting, drawings, photography, and various printmaking media. It became immediately apparent that the body was a major motif in many of the submissions; I thus chose the body as the organizing concept. There are works that clearly present the body: the doll-like imagery of Liz Biddle; the darkly reworked comic strips of Francie Shaw; the compelling cast-paper sculpture of Louise McCagg. A rather malevolent figure peeks out of Daria Dorosh’s corner piece; a nude woman drawn in dramatic perspective from above reaches her imploring hand toward the viewer in Cynthia Karasek’s drawing. There are negative and positive profiles presented against geometric shapes in Catherine Mosley’s work; legs and a face surface in richly layered montage of imagery by Joan Snitzer. Barbara Siegel’s mixed media collage combines the human visage with natural forms.

And then there are the works that insinuate the body: a face emerges from Jayanthi Moothy’s abstract, linear forms. The garlands of forms in Sylvia Netzer’s whimsical India ink drawing form a delightfully silly face. The blurred, richly colored forms in Maxine Henryson’s photograph can be seen as side-by-side robed figures. Similarly, Luisa Sartori’s frieze of old-fashioned streetlamps have some of the anthropomorphic feeling of the bewitched brooms in the Sorcerer’s Apprentice section of Disney’s Fantasia. Other works refer more obliquely to the body: Ann Pachner’s print featuring hypnotic, radiating color patterns is titled Abundant Heart and calls to mind both the physical beating and emotional emanations of that vital organ. Elisabeth Munro Smith’s abstract painting, All gone, with its cuplike shape and title evokes a baby (although it also calls to mind more adult concerns given the trickle of black that falls out of the shape). Even those works that do not depict or insinuate the body allude to it. The bow-like shapes of Erica Stoller’s scrap-plastic tubing sculptures are human scale and therefore evoke tools or instruments of some sort. Nancy Storrow’s hypnotic rendering of whirled lines and forms seems a metaphor for the tornado of emotions that can beset us. Jane Swavely’s poetic painting Hudson River June trip #1 reveals the viewpoint of an individual standing, observing a particular, and seemingly much-loved, landscape. Several works allude to the body by presenting images of houses and domestic items. Ann Schaumburger uses the most basic form of the house in diminutive but insistent geometric abstractions. Julia Westerbeke presents a viscous substance oozing out of an electrical socket in a disturbing vignette of small, everyday things gone wrong. Laura Petrovich-Cheney’s Block by Block assembles bits of recycled wood into a colorful, abstracted map of a neighborhood, the title a delightful double entendre. Kathleen Schneider’s Rosette III, a colorful mandala of flower-like forms, evokes a charming formal garden. Bodies other than human are also present: Yvette Drury Dubinsky fashions a lovely flow of forms that features fish and frogs ‘swimming’ in the blue offered by the technique of cyanotype. And finally, Mary Sweeney’s poignant White Bees, a resin rendering of dead bees, reminds us of our own mortality in evoking bleached bones, and in the consequences we human can rain down on the other creatures of the earth. It is not surprising a group of women might focus on the body and various implications of the body. “The Body in Revue” with this particular spelling is meant to evoke a showing, a parade of artworks, but it also should call to mind a review, a re-seeing. The works of the artist-members of A.I.R. have a collective weight as certainly as each artist has a unique and expertly expressed vision.

A.I.R. Gallery, NYC

5/27/2015 to 6/20/2015

Join us for our Opening

Friday, May 29  from 6-9 pm

The Body in Revue is reflected by works that clearly present the body: doll-like imagery, darkly reworked comic strips, compelling sculptures of cast-paper. Sometimes a rather malevolent figure peeks out of a corner piece; a nude woman drawn in dramatic perspective from above reaches her imploring hand toward the viewer. There are negative and positive profiles presented against geometric shapes, as well as legs and a face surface in richly layered montage of imagery. A mixed media collage combines the human visage with natural forms.

And then there are the works that insinuate the body: a face emerges from ab- stract, linear forms, garlands of forms in a whimsical India ink drawing form a de- lightfully silly face and blurred, richly colored forms in a photograph can be seen as side-by-side robed figures. Similarly, a frieze of old-fashioned streetlamps have some of the anthropomorphic feeling of the bewitched brooms in the Sor- cerer’s Apprentice section of Disney’s Fantasia while other works refer more obliquely to the body: a print featuring hypnotic, radiating color patterns which calls to mind both the physical beating and emotional emanations of that vital organ.

Curated by Lynne Warren, Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago

Participating A.I.R. artists:

Liz Biddle, Daria Dorosh, Yvette Drury Dubinsky, Cynthia Karasek, Maxine Henryson, Louise McCagg, Jayanthi Moorthy, Catherine Mosley, Sylvia Netzer, Ann Pachner, Laura Petrovich-Cheney, Luisa Sartori, Ann Schaumburger, Kathleen Schneider, Francie Shaw, Barbara Siegel, Elisabeth Munro Smith, Joan Snitzer, Erica Stoller, Nancy Storrow, Jane Swavely, Mary Sweeney and Julia Westerbeke

 

Cheri Reif Naselli

5/27/2015 to 6/20/2015

Join us for our Opening

Friday, May 29  from 6-9 pm

The fiber installation, pensee, investigates the physical manifestations of thought; the process, the dynamics, and an inquiry into how those various manifestations appear in a dimensional visual form. Demonstrating a longtime interest in what’s behind our eyes, Reif Naselli plays with various materials in an attempt to illicit the viewers’ visceral response to the imagery and materials.

Kenneth Don

4/29/2015 to 5/23/2015

Join us for our Opening

Friday, May 1  from 6-9 pm

Film photographer, Kenneth Don, has spent most of his life living the visual and emotional impact of agriculture and dust storms of West Texas along with a deep family connection. Always camera-in-hand, Don shoots film with a passion and desire for the art of photography and the beauty of life. Acutely aware of his surroundings, he conveys, through this photographic expression, his world and his emotions during this journey.

In his exhibit, Transcending the Realm of One-Dimensional Thinking, his images depict the state of mind and the language of his emotions. Every image is a self portrait. The composition of his artwork comes from psychological and physical extremes and conditions that play on every human sense and evoke a visual and cerebral language.These images are captured in a straightforward manner, there’s no contrived theme, there’s no documentary and there’s no planning– they are not about conveying the literal truth of the subject, but more the personal interpretation of the subject.

Kina Bagovska

4/29/2015 to 5/23/2015

Join us for our Opening

Friday, May 1 from 6-9 pm

George Tantchev

Performance at 7:30 on Friday
He will play: IMPROVISATIONS ON AUTENTHIC PERCUSSION INSTRUMENTS

Born in a family of professional musicians George first began studying piano at the age of 6 and percussion at 8 with Dobri Paliev and graduated from the State Music Academy in Sofia, Bulgaria in 1995. In 1998 he earned his Masters of Music at Ithaca College, NY, with Gordon Stout and was awarded Doctor of Musical Arts degree at the University of Oklahoma in 2004 where he studied with Richard Gipson.

Since 2010 he has been performing and conducting various orchestras in Chicago and the North Shore. Most currently George performs and conducts his Chicago Soloist Orchestra, featuring soloists and singers in one of a kind entertaining show program of pop, ragtime, world, and classical standards in the style of Andre Rieu with percussion in the forefront.

Since 2005 George serves as Director of the Northfield School of Music serving Chicago and the North Shore offering quality music instruction:Drum lessons, Guitar lessons, Piano lessons, Violin lessons, and all band and orchestra instruments. Those looking at picking up a new string instrument may want to check out beginner cellos to get started with.

As an artist in residence a year ago, Kina Bagvoska accidentally found ancient stones in the medieval city of Auzits, France. It led her to paint forty ritual figures on stones completely in contrast to the figures she painted on raw silk. Silk or stone, paper or canvas, these media for expression are like platforms of discussion, which ask the questions and search for responses to imbue the matter with insight and spiritual substance. In this exhibit, Lost and Found: as a metaphor of life, she often combines elements of ancient historical layers and turns them into ritual with a new meaning.

Kerry Hirth

4/29/2015 to 5/23/2015

Join us for our Opening

Friday, May 1  from 6-9 pm

Artist’s talk starts at 7 pm

Hollow Lands and Hilly Lands is an exhibit of artwork merging the experience of creating and perceiving patterns of music with other significant life experiences, and in that way, perhaps, providing a testament to the source of music. – W. B. Yeats

hWAO77qV8rWSR_MWq-ZRqKxcPeJebO1UWcSw0b0bCeHNZ0SIHBAWBSdmkRde5YFIusnVFnTeEOfmwkn0JmGj9MzPsropNtCfTfqde2MCyJyGGtN38evlhd3m_6CIoVdSAgyn=s0-d-e1-ft

Apply to be member of ARC Gallery

ARC is accepting applications from POTENTIAL NEW MEMBERS OF ARC

Consider joining a women-run cooperative gallery that has just celebrated its 40th year of serving artists.  Be mentored by artists who have learned how to navigate the art world in a cooperative, nurturing way.  Learn how to work with others to put on exciting exhibitions.  Explore the art world outside of the commercial-gallery system.

And please feel free to pass this information on to your women-artist friends!

Click to apply for membership