Straining for Similarities, But Still Good

Even though Lakeville Gallery Night is a month in the future, Morgan Lehman Gallery is opening a new, four-artist show this Saturday, Aug. 8. (The obligatory artists’ reception is that evening, 5-7 p.m.)

   Titled “Strangers in a Strange Land,â€� the show presents four very different artists in a rather strained effort by the gallery’s owners — whom I respect and like — to identify similarities in purpose. In fact, each artist should and does command attention on his own, and you may be jarred by the difference in mediums and techniques.

   Charles Browning paints scenes from Colonial America that are really beautiful: wonderfully realized figures, luxuriant landscapes and fabrics you can almost feel.  At the same time he stresses exploitation of native people, animals and land.  These are not the idealized paintings of the 19th century. They are historically revisionist.

   Carl D’Alvia is wildly different and fascinating.  In both drawings and cast sculptures he combines toy figures, animals and imaginary objects, then covers them entirely with grassy or furry overgrowth. The resulting pieces are shrouded from their original details and context, garnering a protective uniformity along the way. We can fantasize about each work as we choose.

     The small paintings Duncan Hannah executed for this show are recreations of Penguin Classics book covers.  The surfaces are realistic, and there is detail of the old, worn covers themselves in the pictures.  They are quite pretty in a positive way, and you do get a sense of past and present coming together.

   Todd Hebert recently left Los Angeles for Rhinebeck. His paintings of ghostly snowmen set in dark, urban LA nightscapes slowly yield to newer works in which the same, sepulchral snowman now appears against a country landscape.  His colors against the nighttime backgrounds are misty and interesting. This is a show worth seeing. Through Sept. 6, at 24 Sharon Road, Lakeville, CT. 860-435-0898.

   Now if you want to know about the worldwide market for contemporary art, Sima Familant’s upcoming talk at the Gunn Library in Washington, CT, may be for you.  Familant is a private curator and art advisor to galleries and clients trying to build collections of established, mid-career and emerging artists from around the world.  She travels over half the year following the trail of contemporary art.

   Her talk, “Art in a Suitcase,â€� will be illustrated by 10 examples of the best work Familant saw over the past 12 months:  a great looking “Arkâ€� by Mark Bradford from the New Orleans Biennale, Yoshimora Nara’s “Houseâ€� from Basel, Switzerland and work by  Iraqi Ahmed Alsoodani from the Saatchi Gallery in London, U.K.

    This talk is scheduled for  Thursday, Aug. 13, 6:30 p.m., at the Gunn Memorial Library, 5 Wykeham Road, Washington: 860-868-7247.

     

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