Wednesday, April 13, 2022

Meet BWAC Member: Hyacinth Paul

I "met" Hyacinth because I uploaded her work to the BWAC Artsy gallery. I enjoyed seeing her paintings and became especially curious about her art making when I learned about her background as a scientist.

 

A Walk in the Woods,  16X20 inches without frame and 18X22 inches with frame    

 
Hyacinth is donating this painting to BWAC's Ukraine fundraiser.

Why do you make art?

 I make art because it makes me feel happy and I was surprised that it moves people and they respond to it positively as well.  It starts a conversation and that is so satisfying to me.  It is a way for me to communicate my thoughts I feel in a particular moment through the colors on my palette. I stopped creating art on a canvas after I turned nine years of age once I picked science as a subject of study, I did not have the time to create paintings.  But after 2018, I just can’t stop creating!



What tools/materials do you find essential in your studio?

 I need a peaceful place to create, above all.  The stillness of the night where my thoughts are free is key.  In terms of physical materials, a good painting surface, quality paints - both oils, & acrylic and more recently water colors are essential. I also like experimenting with different mixed media that I incorporate into my paintings as well as implements other than brushes. 



Where do you find inspiration?

 My inspiration is the beautiful world around me.  I am inspired by bright colors.  I love the interplay of color and believe that color sparks synesthesia and involuntarily evokes feelings of joy.  I was always drawn to bright colors and used it in my everyday life.  Unbeknownst to me, when I created 58 paintings in the 58th year of my life and arranged it on my website, I was shocked to see how colorful my paintings were. Upon analyzing the reason why that was so, I came to the conclusion that I was using color all my life to lift up my spirits.  

Monday, April 4, 2022

Meet BWAC Artist: Renee Radenberg

 

Globe,cast glass, 7"x7"x7"

I met Renee through the Makers Mart, instantly intrigued by her creations in glass. I am not well versed in the techniques used to work with glass and to me it's just magic. I have enjoyed following her work and getting an idea of the very wide range of objects she creates.

 

1. Why do you make art? 

I create so people can experience the wonderment of glass. Glass has a wonder-ful physical property - transparent or opaque - allowing you to see the illusion of space and depth, the constant play of positive and negative spaces.  This causes a magical flow within the glass, embodying fun, playfulness, and the spiritual energy of nature. This can be healing - by holding you in the present moment to enjoy that magic, be enthralled and charmed so you forget the world’s challenges. 

2. What tools/materials do you find essential in your studio?

As a glass artist I need a lot of equipment and materials to create the different techniques of fused glass. The most important piece of equipment is the Kiln (I have 2 kilns) where the ‘magic’ happens. Then there are equipment needed to grind the glass, such as wet saw, lap grinder, wet belt sander, ring saw, and a sand-blaster.
Of course glass is the number one material. Glass has numerous colors that comes in sheets, glass powders, crushed glass (called Frit), glass ‘stringers’ (looks like spaghetti), and billets (large thick ‘bricks’ of glass used to cast glass).  


Sunday, February 27, 2022

Meet The Elements Juror: Scout Hutchinson

The juror for The Elements exhibition is Scout Hutchinson, Curatorial Fellow at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. It occurred to me that it might be informative to have her discuss her process as a juror. I was looking for information that could potentially help artists decide which pieces to submit. I was pleased that Scout was amenable to the idea and responded to these questions I asked her about her work as a juror and this exhibit in particular. 

1. What interested you about this theme, The Elements.

For a few years now, my research has centered around work that engages with land, weather, and the elements as material and subject. While my master's thesis focused on Land art from the 1960s and 1970s (analyzing these earthworks in relationship to events of the contemporaneous Red Power movement), I am equally excited by how contemporary artists are expanding our understanding of place-based art today. This exhibition's theme is especially pertinent given the current climate crisis—how are the elements as we've understood them shifting, and what does the future of weather look like? I'm looking forward to seeing what submitting artists are thinking about in terms of the elements!

2. Do you recommend that submissions are consistent in media, with similar colors and style, so the art is seen as a body of work.?

Not necessarily! I think this could work for some bodies of work, but certainly not all. I would encourage artists to submit whatever works they feel strongly about while still relating to the "Elements" theme.

3. How important is scale? Do you have tricks for seeing the impact of scale from digital images?

It can be a challenge to determine scale from digital images of work, but that is the nature of reproductions! Having the dimensions is always helpful.

4. Do you review all of the work and then make selections based on the pieces that “work well” together?

I like to evaluate each artists' submission individually, looking for work that is both strong on its own while still closely aligning with the exhibition theme. 

5. What are your areas of greatest expertise and interest?

My background is in modern and contemporary American art with a particular focus on art of the 1960s and 1970s. Though I am currently working closely with works on paper as a Curatorial Fellow at the Whitney, I am also interested in performance, film and video, sound, and installation. I have always had a special interest in art that pushes the boundaries between media (photography and sculpture in particular), artist collectives, and site-specific work.

Thank you, Scout. I can't wait to see how this show comes together. Don't delay, the deadline for submitting work is March 13. Submit here.


Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Get a Jump on Spring with The Elements!

 BWAC is excited to open the Spring season with the juried show The Elements. Don’t delay, entry deadline is March 13.

Link to the prospectus for The Elements.

Submit your entries here.


 

BWAC is pleased to have Curatorial Fellow Scout Hutchinson of the Whitney Museum of American Art as the juror for this exhibition.


The theme of this juried show is the five elements. Many cultures and traditions have wanted to simplify the workings of the universe to five components/building blocks.  The different philosophies have their own unique lists but with much overlapping. This exhibit defines the five elements as wind, fire, earth, sky and air. 


This is the BWAC challenge: visualize what this ancient tradition means in our modern world. What can you add to this age old dialogue?


Prizes

What’s in it for you? First, second and third Best of Show winners will be featured on BWAC’s Artsy page. Every accepted entry will be on exhibit at the BWAC gallery space in Red Hook, Brooklyn from April 30th to June 5th, 2022 and on sale to gallery visitors. 




BWAC's Artsy gallery 



The prospectus for the show provides all the details about the submission process, please read it carefully.  Here are a few highlights. 


Submission is through SmarterEntry with online payment starting the process. The fee for three images is $35 and $5 for each additional image. There is a discount for BWAC members, be sure to check the BWAC newsletter for details. This show is open to all residents of the US and territories who are 18 years or older. 


Submitted images need to be JPG, TIF, or PNG files with the longest side 1,280 pixels or less, up to 2MB each. The image entry number is to be included in the filename when submitted.


This is a wonderful opportunity for BWAC members and artists all over the country to exhibit their work at our fabulous space in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Be sure to share this information with friends.


Link to the prospectus for The Elements.


Submit your entries here.





Thursday, January 6, 2022

Why I'm A Member of BWAC: Join Us

Kristin Reiber Harris:

I have been making animation, prints, drawings and teaching for over 40 years. I moved to NYC (Bay Ridge) three years ago. I came for family reasons but liked the idea of being in such a creative environment. As luck would have it, Alicia Degener (BWAC co-president) is a neighbor and I met her soon after I arrived. She was very generous to include me in a number of shows last year as a non-member. I am now officially a member and on the Board of Directors. 


I enthusiastically embrace my active participation in BWAC because it is inclusive, ambitious and truly invested in supporting the arts and its members. The space is an exciting venue. I have seen some incredible artwork and met (despite this crazines) many wonderful artists. The more the merrier, JOIN US!  KristinHarrisDesign.com




Brooke Lambert:


Although I live and work in Lowell, MA, I am always looking for new ways to expand my network and exhibit my art beyond the Boston area. I first discovered BWAC while searching for printmaking calls for art in New York. I applied for BWAC’s juried show Prints 2021 and was excited to get in. At the show opening and closing, co-presidents Susan and Alicia both encouraged me to join BWAC. I was so thrilled! Living in Massachusetts, BWAC membership involves  traveling 4-6 hours to participate in shows and my volunteer contributions are done remotely. I think it’s well worth it for this amazing opportunity to enter into the New York art scene and share my art with the impressive community of artists in this gallery and beyond. JOIN US!



                                         


Alicia Degener:


I am a member to work with fellow artists to run one of the most inspiring exhibition spaces in NYC.


I have no less than 25,000 sq ft of civil war warehouse space overlooking the Statue of Liberty in Red Hook Brooklyn to dream up and curate shows with my fellow members. Providing artists with an amazing space to realize even their biggest ideas is very rewarding as well as the appreciation folks express when they interact with art in person. JOIN US!  www.etsy.com/shop/BrooklynLish




                                         



Susan Handwerker


Why I’m in BWAC? So many reasons! I’ve learned so much about making and displaying art, jurying, curating, publicizing shows, interacting with other artists and visitors, the extraordinary complexities of maintaining a gigantic gallery space and a volunteer organization simultaneously. But mostly, i just know it’s the best deal in town for artists, friends, visitors and collectors! It makes the New York art scene a little more friendly and encouraging for artists to engage with other artists, to access professional feedback and have a beautiful space to exhibit. Bwac allows our diverse community to give voice to new creative directions and push past boundaries with each other’s help. Artists helping artists. Really! JOIN US!

susanhandwerker.com


Check out the BWAC website for information about membership benefits.


BWAC Membership Application


Saturday, November 27, 2021

BrooklynSeoul: Meet the Curators Lee Geuryung and Lee Hojin

BrooklynSeoul is currently on view at the BWAC gallery in Red Hook through December 12. Don't miss this exceptional exhibit. You can read this review in the BWAC Buzz for a preview.


                    Lee Geuryung  The self-portrait _ acrylic on canvas_38 x 60 inch


The Curators

Sister and brother team, Lee Geuryung and Lee Hojin are the co-curators of BrooklynSeoul. It's always informative to learn about the curators, their point of view and their objectives with an exhibit. I had the opportunity to meet Lee Geuryung at the Chashama Studios Open House in October. I learned about the exhibit she had proposed to Alicia Degener that was going to open November 13. She told me  she was soliciting Korean, Korean-American artists and artists whose work represented Korean artistic traditions and current Korean contemporary art. As a long time student of Asian art, I was already looking forward to seeing the artwork she would put together. Extra bonus, I love the pun of the title.

As you will learn in the interview, Geuryung is a very new member of BWAC. How incredibly exciting to welcome new members with this kind of vision and energy to  our community!

Monday, November 15, 2021

BWAC Ends the 2021 Season with Blockbuster Exhibits

BrooklynSeoul shines as part of a trio of exceptional exhibitions that opened at BWAC on November 13, running through December 12. Don’t miss any of these exciting exhibits; BWAC Fall Member Show, Brooklyn Seoul and the Holiday Market. 

BrooklynSeoul was co-curated by BWAC member Geuryung Lee and her brother, Hojin Lee and features their work and art from a selection of Korean and Korean American artists. I had the delightful experience at the opening of interviewing four of the exhibiting artists. This provided the opportunity to engage with the artwork while I could ask each artist questions about their process and technique.  


                                                      Aaron Chung

Dear Mother 
Acrylic on Cut Canvas and Mesh
99" X 48" X 8"
2021


Aaron Chung’s contribution to the exhibition was my first destination.  I had noticed his work on the BWAC promo for the show and was immediately motivated to see more. Aaron’s work on display are large multi-layer hanging scrolls in a subdued palette featuring botanical subject matter. Aaron is the only one of the four artists I spoke to who was born in the Unites States. He talked about growing up in San Francisco to parents who owned a dry cleaning business. When speaking of the significance of his ethnic background, he remembered he interacted with few Koreans as a child. Aaron acknowledged working hard to learn about his Korean heritage including a Fulbright Fellowship in Korea. 


                                                
                                                                 Detail Stream of Thought
                                                             Acrylic on Cut Canvas and Mesh
                                                                            104" X 48" X 8"
                                                                                    2020      
    
When Aaron talked about his concept development, I appreciated the depth and complexity of his thinking. He is referencing flowers, composition and materials of Asian and specifically Korean art and culture while reflecting his contemporary sensibilities. The pieces hang as scrolls in two layers so that cast shadow of the cut canvas is an important component of the work. Enamored by the imagery and scale, I am also intrigued by his technical process. He is drawing botanical imagery, cutting it out of canvas and gluing it on mesh. This scroll hangs in front of another painting. A detail above shows how Aaron incorporates tickets from his parents dry cleaning business in his art...a kind of reference to home.  My favorite is Dear Mother, dedicated to his mother and including flowers associated with mothers in Korean culture. The large botanical imagery of his scrolls captured my heart and spoke to me directly. The pieces are elegantly imposing yet delicate.



Remembrance
Acrylic on Cut Canvas and Mesh
104" X 48" X 8"
2020


Jung Eun Park’s work includes a table with a piece she is working on and the tools she is frequently using, adding a unique dimenions to her installation.  My conversation with Jung Eun focused on her separation from her mother in Korea and the frustration of meaningful communication from such a distance. A recurring image in her work is an icon of a house and vegetation. She explains it this way, “Since I moved to New York from Korea and being separated from my family in a long-distance, I’ve been obsessed about fear of unconnected relationship and uncertainty of where I belong. In my work, I investigate the meaning of home by observing my relationship with people, objects, and environments.”




Jung Eun Park, view of exhibit




Grass is still growing to protect my home, 2021

Pencil, thread, ink, cut-and-pasted paper on coffee dyed Korean mulberry paper

14.5 x 14 inches




I found her most compelling work on the table. It’s the back of a letter to her mother that she has embroidered. It is unreadable to the viewer and speaks to her frustration. As she explains, “In a series of text-embroidered drawings, I use text as imagery of communication difficulty, showing a backside of embroidered text. This was started from the work, “Letter to Mother, 2009”. I embroidered my handwritten letter with red thread and showed the backside of the letter so that viewers including my mother cannot read. The stitched text has been developed as a drawing element combined with a shape of a house to evoke a silence in a relationship." There is a quiet consistency to her work that is comforting while inviting investigation.


http://www.jungeunpark.com







As a star gazer and lover of the color blue, Mars Heejung Kim’s work was a knock out for me. The Eclipse series she is exhibiting references her love of the night sky and her desire to be an astronaut as a child growing up in Korea. These paintings resemble mandalas as a symbolic representation of the universe in Buddhism philosophy. On her website she explains “I had the opportunity of studying Tibetan Mandala paintings and I was fascinated by the patterns and symbols found in them.  In my drawings, the concept of Karma plays an important role. It appears as the line that constantly meets and separates throughout the entire picture plane. That line represents the path of my life.” The intensity of the color in these watercolor images is heightned by overpainted white lines that shimmer like the night sky. 



Eclipse 1, 2019, watercolor on paper, 20 x 16 inches



She spoke of dreaming about stars dancing and these express that joyous idea perfectly.


https://heejungkim.weebly.com



Eclipse 2, 2019, watercolor on paper, 20 x 16 inches



Ji Yong Kim’s playful nature radiates from his work. Truly a multifaceted artist, his work in the exhibit includes mixed media pieces, 3D wall sculpture and 3D animation. The work that captured my attention I knew referenced Buddhist mandalas but with great humor and unique materials. At the center of the large piece is a penis and breasts. Forever Young is in effect a paper collage, but in the most complex sense. Ji has created the paper textures and added glitter as the image is glued and built. The end result is a substantial piece that to me almost felt like leather. We talked about the construction of Tibetan mandalas, which I was fortunate enough to witness at the Freer Gallery in Washington, DC and how the glitter did references the sand used in that process.


Forever Young



What appealed the most to me about mandala piece are the botanical images in the four large outer edges. We had fun joking about how his process involved making things as complicated as possible to create a nuanced texture and meaning.


https://www.jiyongkim.com


Detail, Forever Young


I can’t emphasize enough how impressed I am with the range of offerings at BWAC as the 2021 season comes to an end. Do yourself a huge favor and don’t miss out on these shows and the holiday market. In the future try to come to the openings if you can, talking to the artists is a golden opportuity to expand your understanding of the creative process as it is reflected in the variation of every artists work. It certainly was for me.


COMING SOON: I will interview curator Geuryung Lee and find out about her motivation and process of co-curating this exhibition with her brother, Hojin Lee. I am particularly interested in exploring the idea of the impact of ethnicity and culture on an artist's work.