Saturday, July 25, 2009

Ppp’s, Three Artists Fill the GEM Gallery with Pottery, Painting and Fine Prints

Between August 20 – September 2 potters Rick Boyd and Pamela Williamson and printmaker and painter, Jane Banquer join to fill display stands and walls with new and recent work. You are invited to the opening or to make a picnic day of island art along with walking and biking on village roads or rocky shore.

The exhibit features thrown pottery in elegant decorative and utilitarian forms with glazed surfaces that vary from subtle color and texture to a reflective metallic sheen and black and white and color reduction woodcut prints reinterpreting paintings in oil and acrylic. Visit the GEM Gallery at 62 Island Avenue, Peaks Island, 207-766-5600 or Pamela and Rick at 766-3050 and Jane at 766-2246. An opening reception is Thursday, August 20 with daily gallery hours 10 AM to 7 PM.



After 35 years as a potter Rick is still amazed with the process of transforming balls of clay into works of art. It's about centering the human body and making a connection with the clay. He works with a variety of clay bodies each with its own characteristic's and his energy and the feel of the clay defines the shape of the piece. Rick does the throwing and trimming and Pamela does the cleaning and glazing. This is a great collaboration as he admits to being somewhat colorblind and she is wheel challenged. Surface color is achieved by using various firing techniques and by using slips and glazes made in the studio on Peaks Island. Pottery is a marriage of art and science and he’s always looking for new techniques and advances while never forgetting the basics. Success sometimes comes from failure and circumstances beyond control, after all in the end it is the firing process and the Kiln God who retain final control of the piece.

Rick has refined his craft with courses at Vanderbilt University, Maine College of Art, Haystack Mountain School of Crafts and Warren Mackenzie at Red Lodge Clay Center, Montana and has served as visiting Artist at Nicolet College in Wisconsin. Rick and Pamela’s work has been shown at galleries and shows across the United States. He is a member of the American Ceramic Society Potters Council, National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts and the Maine Crafts Association.



Jane Banquer studied at the DeCordova Museum, the Boston Museum School and at Smith College with Leonard Baskin and Amy Namowitz Worthen. She was a state juried member of the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen, where she served to set fine art print and photography standards and to review the work of new artist applicants for exhibition and sales throughout the state. She is represented by Addison Woolley Gallery, Portland, Maine and formerly by Wenniger Graphics, Boston, Rockport, and Cape Cod, MA, among others. Her work has been seen in juried exhibitions throughout the region and was included in the 2006 Maine Print Project.

Images in her painting, relief and intaglio prints are derived from the tangible world around her of human form, sea, land and creatures of her surroundings. As objects they’re both contained in natural and manipulated, reconstructed space.

Friday, July 10, 2009

summer shows begin

The Gem Gallery has moved into it's summer season of wham bam shows: one or two week shows in the back gallery featuring one or more of the full-time members. Victor Romanyshyn's fabulous display of photographs came and went before I could blink. Or document them.

Currently in the gallery are a mother and daughter duo who visit the island every summer. Here is one of Chris (mom) Harper-Fahey's watercolors:



Her daughter, Dustine Price, has a bolder approach, working in several mediums: painted furniture, painting, assemblage. Between the two of them, they have the gallery covered.



Next up will be Paul Brahms, who will open his solo one-week exhibit of oil paintings on July 16. These two are already in the gallery. Love this funky car in front of a cabin. Many of Paul's paintings document his road travels.



The Gem Gallery is at 62 Island Avenue, left on Welch Street after you hike up from the ferry landing. Hours vary with each artist, but core hours (in a perfect world) are:

Monday to Wednesday: 10 AM - 3 PM
Thursday and Friday: 10 AM - 8 PM
Saturday and Sunday: 10 AM - 5 PM

Stop in, just to meet the artist of the moment and discover what islanders do between boats.

Monday, June 22, 2009

affordable art



Thanks to the talents of Gem member, Paul Brahms, the gallery now features a lovely display cabinet. We moved up from a lucky pile of vintage crates to this white birch arrangement. Carol Cartier directed the new display, which shows off the affordable art from the last group show before the new Summer Season begins. Bravo, Paul!

Plenty of Peaksfesters stopped in to the gallery this past weekend, in search of bargains on locally crafted work and maps for the inaugural Art Walk and Wander for 2009.

Diane Wiencke sold some of her miniature delights, fluid abstractions.



Norm Proulx sold this energetic and powerful portrait of birches.



Fran Houston exhibited stunning photographs, such as this intimate view of a bemused turtle.



There was much more, but now the gallery gears up for a summer rotation of weekly shows.

Our artist/craftsperson cooperative includes over 25 year-round and seasonal individuals in the varied media of painting, drawing, glass, sculpture, pottery, jewelry, photography, printmaking, assemblage, fiber arts and writing. The gallery mission is to “share and sell fine art and contemporary crafts and to reach out and create an inviting, professional, friendly space that shares, educates, and celebrates art.”

SUMMER 2009 SHOW SCHEDULE:

6/25-7/1 Victor Romanyshyn, photography
7/2-7/8 Dustine Price and Chris Harper-Fahey, mother and daughter multi-media
7/16-7/22 Paul Brahms, painting
7/23-7/29 Diane Wiencke, painting
7/30-8/5 Carol Cartier, multi media
8/6-8/19 Norm Proulx and Claudia Whitman, multi media
8/20-9/2 Pam Williamson, Rick Boyd, Jane Banquer, pottery, prints, painting
9/3-9/9 Lavendier-Myers, painting
10/9-10/15 Suzanne Parrott, fiber arts

SUMMER CORE HOURS*:

Mon. – Wed. 10 AM – 3 PM
Thur./Fr.i 10 AM – 8 PM
Sat./Sun. 10 AM – 5 PM

*Some artists may extend these core hours. Reception nights are Thursdays, but may vary.

Keep checking back for the latest in island art!

Monday, June 8, 2009

welcome Michelle!



Our newest member, Michelle Estell, debuted her very fresh jewelry and beadwork at the Gem Gallery this past weekend. Michelle is also known as Beadalicious, which aptly describes the luscious nature of her designs. She used this curvy octopus as a signature tile for the show.



This was a fun still life of adornments.



Jocelyn and Dani happily modeled her necklaces, earrings, and hairclips. Gorgeous!



Michelle creates original looks from vintage fabric scraps, handmade beads, silver, leather, and unexpected combinations.

Next up for the Gem: the Affordable Art show. Everything $125. and under. For all those first-time buyers of art or those in need of a bargain, this show is for you.

Members of this Maine island collective will be on hand in the gallery, so do drop in.

Check for ferry times!

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

new shows new look

Things are moving full speed ahead. The gallery has been thawed, refreshed, and rehung. The working clock/assemblage below is by Tim Nihoff, master of playful works in rusted objects and plastic repurposing. We have a saying around here, what goes around, comes around.



Our youngest Gem collective member, high schooler Connor Flynn, has recently moved from bowls to vases. Bravo!



We specialize in variety: glass, felted wool, ceramics, pastel, oils, photography, watercolor, printmaking, jewelry, encaustic. Spare parts, flotsam, jetsam... we make art from what the tides wash up, or the latest yard sale yields, or whatever the moon pulls from our dreams.

Small painting on the left by Norm Proulx, larger painting on the right by Lavendier Myers.



This is Kristen, our intrepid gallery host, who gave up two rooms of her house to create a venue for island artists. As a veteran preschool teacher, she is equipped to deal with our crazy collective.



We are still in pre-season mode: upcoming show this weeknd with new member,
Michelle Estell. Her opening reception is this Friday night, June 5 from 6 - 8 PM.

Hours: Saturday and Sunday Noon - 5 PM. The Gem Gallery is at 62 Island Avenue, a left up the hill from the boat landing, past the ice cream store, but before the post office.

Come look!

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Here we go again!



We are fiddling with our blog presence. As an artists' collective, we can't seem to come to a concrete consensus on a good address name. You know, image is everything. We're at the Island Inn, spilling wine, writing ambitious lists, and generally enjoying the profile of artists with a plan.

The above image is a mixed media piece by Carol Cartier, who has a way with whales, bones, skulls, pick your fancy. She makes magic with found bits, sacred and profane. I think it's the juxtaposition of whales that are really soles thrown up on the beach that makes me conjure up the Gem Gallery. In a good way, honest!

The Gem Gallery is a cooperative of 26 artists living and working on Peaks Island.
That's the amazing part. In these spotty times, we are a crusty lot, ever hopeful, ever resourceful. We do art whether you notice or not. We can't help ourselves. It's as inevitable as the next tide.

We work in a variety of media: painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, assemblage, fiber arts, music, writing, jewelry, ceramics, and glass. Our mission is to share and sell fine art and contemporary crafts, and to reach out and create an inviting, professional, and accessible space that celebrates art.

We have a fantastic calendar of weekly shows that will begin in late June. But first,
we are closing out our spring show, Thaw.



The show is still up, in a refreshed form, as some pieces sold and some have been replaced with new work. (Like I said: we can't help ourselves.)

The Gem Gallery, located at 62 Island Avenue on lovely Peaks Island, Maine is open right now (off-season, it's called)on Saturdays and Sundays from noon - 5 PM. The gallery is staffed by any one of us. Come visit. Ask us how we work, how do we get through the bitter winters, how do we keep being creative against all odds?

It helps us to talk about it. Sometimes.

Stay tuned for more details. Or call the gallery at 207-766-5600. Or make a comment right here!