ADD NOTE: There will be a second reception for The Black & White Show on Friday, Aug. 1, from 5-8 p.m. as part of Albany's monthly 1st Friday events. Enjoy! - David
Show invitation, featuring a detail from Willie Marlowe's installation of acrylic paintings |
What do you think of first when you consider art in black
and white? My thoughts range from line drawings, possibly like those elegant
ones Matisse is famous for, to richly textured photographic silver prints,
whether from the street, the land or the studio, to minimalist paintings on a
grand scale, such as those by artists from the ‘60s.
Photographic silver print by Theresa Swidorski |
Instead, we have a powerful confluence of realism,
abstraction, minimalism, expressionism and more, with a broad inclusion of
media from fiber to flower to photograph. David McDonald, whose deeply worked,
highly structured drawings grace these walls, also contributed a small selection
of the scores of altered books he has created. Willie Marlowe, a painter known
for the brightest of neon colors, brought us similar work in juicy black and
white – but she also turned the show into a stunning example of international
mail art.
A Sharpie drawing on painted door by John Hampshire |
John Hampshire’s labyrinthine Sharpie drawings continue to
expand on his quasi-apocalyptic visions of tornado-wracked landscapes, this
time with large man-made structures included. Barbara Todd has provided bold-yet-soft
minimalist quilts as well as delicate wall-mounted constructions of cut-out
boards, while Evan Euripidou’s mixed-media installation also starts at the
wall’s surface, only to leap full-blown into the gallery’s space as living art.
A large detail of Barbara Todd's wall installation |
Like Hampshire, Scott Nelson Foster depicts starkly
uninhabited built spaces, but he renders them in the subtlest of gray-scale
tones with almost unbelievable watercolor technique. Theresa Swidorski’s
darkroom-made silver prints take us into a deep, black forest penetrated by a
transcendent sunlight, and Blacklight Lighthouse’s monochromatic
videos dare to stare directly at the source of that light, while doing our blinking
and shrieking for us.
In all, The Black &
White Show does what Albany Center Gallery’s mission has dictated for more
than 35 years – it brings out the best from a regional art scene that has very
much to offer and shares it with an eager audience. Thank you, Ms. Salzman, for
unknowingly giving us the inspiration. You are here in spirit.
One of the etchings by Victoria Salzman that inspired The Black & White Show |
1 comment:
In general, I like black and white photos better. They seem more...real?
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