
October 26 - December 22, 2007
Sponsored by Anne & Steve Matter
An invitational exhibition featuring MCAC affiliated artists who have specifically created a work that responds to the exhibition’s title … and i am blue … and stays within the parameter of 15 inches in any dimension. With participation exceeding expectations, the salon style installation will undoubtedly delight the bluest of viewers!
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Above: (Top Row)Sculptor Ian Crawley cuts sections of twine, twigs & soil to create his sculptures. He is shown working on a sculpture for the "...and i am blue..." exhibit that will be in the Artmstrong Gallery at the McLean County Arts Center, Ian Crawley works on mixing oil paint & mineral spirits while exploring possible backgrounds for his sculpture, Ian Crawley sits in a chair while talking about his work. (Steve Smedley), "Lady with a veil", oil painting on linen , by Tracey Frugoli $500, (Middle Row) Left: Johnny Disco produced 'New to the Neighborhood" by overlaying his paper cut-outs onto a TV screen. Turn the TV on and it appears that a television is running in every room of the house, In "Sparky's Gone..." Kevin Strandberg remembers his departed cat. The piece has three layers of infused glass., Artist Tony Preston-Schreck poses with "untitled portrait". He filmed the sky footage playing on his DVD player from his yard. His yard also was the source for grass and dirt, placed in a box (seen to his right). The box goes atop the DVD player. a peephole in the grass enables the viewer to see the sky while feeling and smelling the dirt and grass., "What'll I do (Berlin)" by Doug Johnson, "Blue November' oil painting on panel by Michael Dubina, $3,000., oil painting and encaustic on panel, $350, (Left) "Bluebird of Crappiness" by Jennifer Lapham, Ceramic with wood base, $50 | ||
| Participating Artists | ||
| Jeanine Abels Sheila Asbell Allen Angel Ambrose Nathan Bailey Miles Bair Tim Balboni Jessica Benjamin Gayla Betts Barry Blinderman Barbara Bolser Rick Boschulte Jan Brandt Kaye Buchman Kathryn Capley John Cassidy Pattie Chalmers Sonya Clark Inga Clough Ann Coddington Bill Conger Michael Connelly Lisa Costello Ian Crawley Jennifer Crones Holly DeGrote Johnny Disco Aaron Dugger Michael Dubina Herb Eaton Rhea Edge Matt Erickson Connie Estep Adam Farcus Rob Fifield Peggy Finnegan Tracey Frugoli Erin Furimsky Diana Gabriel Benjamin Gardner Thursday Gervais Joann Goetzinger |
Julia Goos Brandon Gunn Nicole Gunn Eric Hansen Alice Hargrave Rick Harney Julia Heatherwick Kris Hendershott Alicia Henry Marcia Hirst Casey Hochhalter Michael Honn Joe Hooten Noelle Hoover Melanie Hunter Ron Jackson Eleanor Jensen Doug Johnson Stacey Johnson Ron Kovatch Cynthia Kukla Kim Kwee Marie-Susanne Langille Jennifer Lapham KiLee Lidwell-McFerren David Linneweh Lauren Macko Joe Madrigal Nancy Malone Tom Malone Joe McCauley Ed McCullough Gale McCullough Mike McNeil Sean Merchant Brad Mosby Daniel Mrva Dann Nardi Kelly Naschert Hua Nian Pete Olson |
Kim Pace Kendra Paitz Erin Palmer Susan Palmer David Park Catherine Preston-Schreck Tony Preston-Schreck Toni Putnam Amy Richardson Tony Rio Dawn Roe Annette Russo Lyle Salmi Ben Sandstrom Karen Savage Gloria Schabb Robert Schifano Amy Schmierbach Trew Schriefer Molly Scott Melanie Scott-Dockery Kay Seefeld Louis Steinburg Laura Stoland Sarah Stonefoot Kevin Strandberg Gladys Tietz-Mercier Britten Leigh Traughber Jason Urban Angela Waarala Sally Walsh Katherine Webb Pamela Wenger Brad Wheeler Chris Wille Michael Wille Dave Wilson Steven Wirth Ron Wojtanowski Anna Wollenschlager |
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Artists interpret "... and i am blue ..." themeBy Steve Arney The characters in Sheila Asbell Allen's paintings almost always are joyful and vibrant and in dramatic pose. This time, for a new group exhibit, a girl is curled into a ball. The blue acrylic paint swirling around her gives further expression to a moment of sorrow. "Too Blue for You?" the painting asks. Elsewhere at the McLean County Arts Center, in the Armstrong Gallery and in the lobby outside, are 122 iterations of blue by other artists -- each independently developed from the common theme of "... and i am blue ..." The exhibit "... and i am blue ..." continues through Dec. 22. Artists were invited to submit work fitting their individual interpretations of the title. No one was required to think of "blue" in terms of sorry, but primarily, the artists did so. It creates a community of melancholy expressions. But the cumulative result is anything but depressing. Perhaps the shared experience and the richness of the expressions produce the joyful results within the blue, said Alison Hatcher, curator of the exhibit. Think of a great sad song, she suggested. She titled the theme after a line in the Irving Berlin song, "What'll I Do." Or, she offered, think of the goodness in the pain of separation -- the longing that stings only because of the affection toward the missing person. Or a missing pet. Kevin Strandberg honors his now-deceased cat in his fused-glass piece titled "Sparky's Gone ..." A snake and a man are in the foreground, a cat in the background. A sadness comes with passing, but a memory of companionship is made vivid. Strandberg writes: "Visually, he was a striking cat; a reverse tabby with silver stripes on a darker grey body -- looking more like a walking X-ray than a substantial figure. As is the relationship between pet and owner for many people, Sparky was my most devoted friend during a rough stretch in my life." Tony Preston-Schreck, through his piece "untitled portal," enables the visitor to recapture an experience. He made a box 13 inches by 13 inches and 8 inches deep and topped it with grass and dirt from his yard. A peephole from a door is embedded in the grass. Get on all fours to peer into the peephole and you see the sky -- actually, a video of the sky -- being played on a miniature DVD screen. Preston-Schreck has re-created the childhood experience of lying in the grass and looking at the sky. The cheek feels the blades; the nose detects the soil. It may evoke a sadness for an age that cannot be recovered or in facing mortality. But one could take a religious, perhaps Christian perspective, Preston-Schreck said. Instead of looking into a grave or into the finite, the peephole delivers a view of infinite. Hatcher curates an exhibit like this every other year, always in the fall, inviting university faculty, Illinois State University graduate students and other artists she has worked with over the years. The last was 2005's "Dorothy's Red Shoes." This year brought a record response. Pieces arrived from New York, London and other far-away places, but most came from the region. The topic put no prerequisites on the artists, and sorrow wasn't foregone. In a Sarah Stonefoot photograph, an open book is set upon a radiator. Light from an open window beams through the pages. Blue, for her, meant calm contemplation. Painter Michael Dubina deliberately strayed from sadness because the topic leaned so obviously toward it. He portrayed physical cold through "Blue November," a landscape oil painting. A single vehicle drives on a cold autumn day at twilight. Leafless trees, water that appears to be frozen and the blue of the atmosphere all give seasonal clues. Dubina's painting exemplifies another result of the invitational exhibits: They often bring artists to unfamiliar places. In Dubina's case, it altered his style and color palate. Usually, his scenes are bright and portray dusk. |
123-artist exhibit "... and i am blue ..." is an exhibit by invited artists, most of whom submitted works that are for sale. The exhibit runs through Dec. 22 at the McLean County Arts Center. The center is located in the cultural district in the northeast corner of downtown Bloomington. Free admission: donation requested. Hours: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Friday; noon to 4 p.m. Saturday. Read the Pantagraph Article (Online) PDF Version Words of Art November 2007
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