Thursday, October 12, 2017

Curator's Notes: Spotlight on Toni Quest

Toni Quest, U.S. in Us, 1994


Toni Quest (aka "Screaming Woman") is a Renaissance Woman: artist, entrepreneur,  undergraduate professor, life coach, jewelry designer, host of Energy Stoners  Jewelry Design Salons, talk-show host for Talk with TQ (available on YouTube), podcast personality on the internet radio show Seeing Beneath the Surface with Peter Elvidge and Toni Quest, curator, and author.  Best known among her publications are her autobiography Actualized, a Life in Progress and poetry in View of the Middle of the Road, Volume II (PRA Publishing).  She also contributed a photo of her painting U.S. in Us to the book's cover.  And Toni has posted numerous articles on LinkedIn. For Bosom Bodies, Toni painted her self-portrait entitled Giving It All.


Toni Quest, Giving It All, 2017
oil on canvas

Toni explains: "Giving it All is an awkward depiction of a woman who has not experienced a pregnancy. In spite of this, she does feel genuine maternal instincts. So she offers whatever sustenance she can manage to squeeze from her virtually empty breasts. Albeit cumbersome at times,  she generously offers her love  however she can."  And indeed Toni gives her love, her time and her wise counsel generously and unconditionally.  She is Peekskill's "hostess with the mostest" (a sobriquet created for DC socialite Perle Mesta). Moreover, Toni's energy knows no bounds.



Toni Quest with her work U.S. in Us during the exhibition Art Above the Sofa,  NYC
April 28, 2017

Toni teaches "Self-Actualizing Portraiture"© based on her own experience after a debilitating accident in 1994.  "[I] later formally wrote the instructional design for this course while in graduate school in 2008. [The] instructional design focuses on the needs of combat veterans who suffer from the symptoms of PTSD. "  Toni Quest has also taught psychology, sociology, geriatrics, writing and American history at the College of New Rochelle and is a certified Law of Attraction Life Coach, who specializes in artists' careers.

Toni Quest, Self-Portrait, 
on the cover of  Actualized, A Life in Progress (2016)



This Saturday, October 14th, Toni opens the exhibition she curated: Dia de los Muertos, featuring  Sue Zoon, Studio 4, 925 South Street, Peekskill,, October 14-November 17.  Opening hours: 6 - 9 PM.  




Also the next meeting of Energy Stoners  Jewelry Design Salon will be held at Studio 4 on October 20th.  Contact Toni for details and to make a reservation: toniquesttv@gmail.com.


I have had the pleasure of being interviewed by Toni on Talk with TQ and Beneath the Surface with Peter Elvidge and Toni Quest.  Hopefully, they will invite me back for more - great fun, great conversation!

* * *
Bosom Bodies remains open through Sunday, October 29th.  Gallery Hours are Friday, Saturday and Sunday, 12 noon - 5 pm.  SIA Gallery, 1 South Division Street, Peekskill, NY 10566.  For more information, please contact the curator, Beth S. Gersh-Nesic, director of the New York Arts Exchange, LLC at nyarts.exchange@verizon.net.

Bosom Bodies is a 
Project


Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Curator's Notes: Spotlight on Barbara Lubliner


Barbara Lubliner, Muscle, 1997

Barbara Lubliner's sculpture Muscle expresses the very heart and soul of Bosom Bodies.  Far from defined by our biceps' muscle strength like men, the breast gives women their greatest powers!  For the female breast is the location of sustenance and sensuality - the ability to nourish as a mother figure and to seduce for sexual pleasure.  Muscle seems to say that every woman is Superwoman each and every day.

Barbara Lubliner, Suckling Tower, 1992

Barbara calls her work "Aspects of the Female Experience."  In her artist's statement, she explains:  "In this work, the female figure is abstracted, altered, and reconstructed to express a complexity of associations. The forms uncover insight into grappling with the complex layers of meaning in our contemporary world and in the shared primal world of generations of women.   I aim to make meaningfully charged expressive figures that invite the viewer to chuckle and to contemplate gender anew."
Barbara Lubliner, Mother and Child, 1996

Barbara's four contributions to Bosom Bodies summarize the quintessential female experiences: physical and mental accomplishment as individuals, motherhood, and nurturer par excellence at home, at work and in the community.  Over the millennia, women have increased their responsibilities by taking on roles outside the immediate family unit.  They often balance numerous identities to meet the expectations of others and themselves, contributing to an ever expanding concept of the female in society  No longer bound to the kitchen and nursery, women envision "having it all" successfully, every step of the way. Barbara seems to narrate our inner feelings as we forge these paths.


 Barbara Lubliner, Sun Ripe Venus, 1992

In  Sun Ripe Venus, we see the pregnant belly hanging heavily like a luscious fruit from its leafy vine. Here the female form recalls the classic recumbent nude, transformed from a traditional sexual object to a sensual ripening force of nature, at peace with herself in all her fecundity.  Eventually, she becomes Mother and Child, protecting her offspring with her nurturing, comforting body.  But eventually, the burdensome chore of mothering, partnering, and all the rest, feels like the Sucking Tower, weighed down with endless needs that require immediate attention.  Here we see numerous breasts hanging down, pulling on the figure's garment as she leans in to withstand the strain. 


Barbara Lubliner, "Muscle Performance," at A Place at the Table, Brooklyn Museum, 2007


However, all is not gloom and doom in Barbara's work,  In her performances with muscle armbands, she injects plenty of humor and optimism with her chant: "It's power. I'ts power. It's power for the flower!  Work it!  Work it! We can do it!"   In 2007 she performed in A Place at the Table, in the Elizabeth Sackler Wing at the Brooklyn Museum


Barbara Lubliner, Plastic Bottle Sculpture, 2012

Barbara also joined the recycling/repurposing art movement, as have Ruby Silvious and Wilhelmina Obatola Grant.  In the photo above, she demonstrates creating an octahedron out of 30 plastic bottles in 5 minutes.

We are so fortune to have Barbara Lubliner, a NYC artist, with us to celebrate "bosom power" in Peekskill.  Her work is also featured in Duality: Glimpses of the Other Side at, Islip Art Museum, through October 15th, and most recently,  Hampden Gallery at UMASS Amherst,  Ceres Gallery, NYC, and Carter Burden Gallery, NYC.

* * * 

Bosom Bodies remains on view through Sunday, October 29th.  Please join us on:
Sunday, October 22 for the Curator's Lecture "The History of the Breast in Art," 2 pm.
Sunday, October 29 for our Performance Art, Artists' Panel and Closing Reception, 3 - 5 pm.

SIA Gallery, 1 South Division Street, Peekskill, NY 10566
Gallery Hours: Friday, Saturday, Sunday, 12 noon- 5 pm.

For more information, please contact the curator Beth S. Gersh-Nesic, director of the New York Arts Exchange, nyarts.exchange@verizon.net



Bosom Bodies is a 
Project

Monday, October 9, 2017

Bosom Bodies Opens on October 7th at SIA Gallery, Peekskill

Waiting for guests  . . . ,



BB Trisha Wright, second on the left, with her photos,
Trisha's sister,  curator Beth Gersh-Nesic,
and gallery owner/BB artist Nadine Gordon-Taylor



BB artists Barbara Lubliner and Marcy B. Freedman


BB artists Barbara Lubliner and Wilhelmina Obatola Grant




Artist Doris Renza  with BB artist Toni Quest
BB artist Carla Rae Johnson behind Toni

Guests Dusan Nesic and Jim Brennan

Guests Jim Brennan and Emily Miller from Philly!


Guests Khalilah and Lailaa Cunningham

Guest Michele Cunningham with BB artist Nadine Gordon-Taylor



\
Guests Paul Stark and Lawrence Flood


Bosom Bodies' reception: Pink and Bosomy





Bosom Bodies remains open through Sunday, October 29th.
Gallery Hours: 12 noon to 5 pm, Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
Curator's Lecture on the history of breast in art and tour, Sunday October 22, 2 pm.
Closing: Performance and Panel on Sunday, October 29th, 3 - 5 pm

For more information, please write to Beth at nyarts.exchange@verizon.net 

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Curator's Notes: Spotlight on Kathleen Gilje

Kathleen Gilje, Self-Portrait as Bouguereau's The Assault, 2012

Kathleen Gilje has been blessed with the Old Masters' touch.  In her Self-Portrait as Bouguereau's The Assault, she seems to confide that art is not a choice but a calling, inspired by love and relentless forces beyond her control.  Lucky for her that exceptional talent also joined this crowd of cupids (perhaps the little fellow delivering her palette).  Who would not envy her ability to appropriate numerous artists' personalities in paint and pencil with her signature contemporary additions that turn the narrative of the work on its head.  Her term for this magical transformations is "restoration."  She "restores" the work to a meaning that had not been evident before.  Or she makes old art new to us by inserting contemporary cultural artifacts.

Kathleen Gilje, Lady Agnew, Restored, 2009
from 48 Sargent Women, 2007-2008, mixed media on paper

Kathleen Gilje, Lady Agnew of Lochnaw, Restored, 2007
from 48 Sargent Women, 2007-8, oil on canvas

Kathleen Gilje, 48 Sargent Women, 2007-2008
at Francis Naumann Fine Art, February-April 2009


Bosom Bodies is proud to exhibit her drawing after her painting of Lady Agnew of Lochnaw, which has never been shown in public before.  We thank Kathleen for joining her sisters in art.  In fact, Bosom Bodies is a bit of a reunion with Clarity Haynes, Wilhelmina Obatola Grant, Kathleen Gilje and myself, since we all participated on the panel for "The Feminist Breast" for Clarity's show at Tabla Rasa gallery in 2011.  Please click on our names to see our individual presentations.  Kathleen's presentation will explain 48 Sargent Women to you in her own words.  


John Singer Sargent, Lady Agnew of Lochnaw, 1892
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh

As we see in this exquisite Sargent portrait, Lady Gertrude Agnew projects her elegance and social status through her clothing, furnishings and unmistakable ease ensconced within this splendor.  Art historians tell us that she was recovering from influenza at the time, which may account for her extremely pale skin. Kathleen strips away the iconography of class and wealth to re-present the individual herself.  A bit more healthy in complexion, she also seems confrontational in her frontality.  No longer just a trophy wife, Lady Agnew seems transformed into an intriguing femme fatale, scrutinizing our gaze as she returns the favor in a more empowered, discerning way.  Thus we understand Kathleen's decision to embolden all Sargent's women through her ability to copy this modern master and revise his nineteenth-century conception of the person.  Here, we see Kathleen's desire to remember Lady Agnew as an alluring female presence, rather than a fetching accessory for the household.


Kathleen Gilje, The Fable, Restored, 1989


Kathleen's career began as an art restorer in Naples and grew in that area of expertise while she pursued her own painting.  Then one day, while restoring a work of art for a client, it dawned on her that she could copy it and then add a little something to indicate it was not the original.  It was El Greco's The Fable, 1580.  I invited you to figure out where she "restored" the original image.


Kathleen Gilje, Susanna and the Elders, Restored, 1998
after Artemisia Gentileschi, Susanna and the Elders, 1610



Kathleen has also invented the former lives of artworks through painting an "original" and covering it with an identical copy of the version we know so well.  Here, we offer a glimpse of Kathleen Gilje's Susanna and the Elders with the artist's describe of her entire installation.   


* * * 
Bosom Bodies: An Exhibition in Honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month opens on Saturday, October 7th, from 3 - 6 pm, at SIA Gallery, 1 South Division Street, Peekskill, NY 10566.  Gallery Hours are Friday, Saturday and Sunday, noon - 5 pm.  The Closing and Performances are on Sunday, October 29th, 3 - 5 pm.   The Curator's lecture on "The History of the Breast in Art" and tour of the show is on Sunday, October 22nd, at 2 pm.  

Bosom Bodies is a New York Arts Exchange project.  For more information, please contact the curator Beth Gersh-Nesic, at nyarts.exchange@verizon.net


Sunday, October 1, 2017

Curator's Notes: Spotlight on Grace Graupe-Pillard

Grace Graupe-Pillard, Grace Pulled Along by Lamentation, 2014
(based on Niccolo dell'Arca, The Lamentation (detail). с 1485-90. 
Terracotta, lifesize. Sta. Maria della Vita, Bologna)


Grace Graupe-Pillard is fierce!  A feminist with a cause, her work courageously addresses pressing political and personal issues that need our collective attention. Any exhibition about the female body must have a Grace Graupe-Pillard, whose work was featured in The Female Gaze at Cheim & Read  in 2016.  Relentlessly training her sights on human rights, social injustice, political misconduct, and the power of art in history, we find a facet of her relationship to art and life depicted in Grace Pulled Along by Lamentation, from her prolific series Grace Delving into Art.  Here, she is both captive and deliberate interloper, or as she puts it:  "I travel the world to explore historical works of art - and my presence often changes the 'meaning' of these historical masterpieces."  



Grace Graupe-Pillard, Women in Cloisters, 2013

For our Bosom Bodies exhibition, in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness, we chose her medieval self-portrait in  Women in Cloisters, 2013, a riff on "The Boppard Gallery" of  The Cloisters, Fort Tryon, Washington Heights, NYC (a branch of the Metropolitan Museum of Art). Situated between two unknown saints' busts, Grace lifts her arms into the ancient pose for prayer, orans, or, perhaps, ecstasy.  Both meanings body forth her exuberant intentionality.  Art is her canvas and her body redirects the gaze to an editorialized re-presentation.  This is not "Grace Underfire."  This is "Grace on Fire"  -- Grace Graupe-Pillard unfiltered and unfettered by self-doubt, the realization of feminist agency promulgated by our foremothers in the 1970s. 


Grace Graupe-Pillard, Grace in Clover Leaf Gown (James), 2014

Grace Graupe-Pillard, Jeff Koons 3 Ball 50-50 in Tank and Grace, 2013


What can we glean from Grace deconstructing or disrupting the original artist's gazes?   Does she question their purpose through her feminist eyes?   Does she intercede to expose latent misogyny?  Sometimes.  However, most often we see her robust nude body taunting the artwork itself.  She is in dialogue with a fictional figure or a fictional representation of a real object (the installation's real objects) as we see in the modeling of Charles James extravagant creation on view during the exhibition Charles James: Beyond Fashion in 2014 and Jeff Koon's well-known Three Ball 50-50 Tank, 1985.  However, all this playfulness pales in comparison to her more explosive ammunition.   



 of 

Grace Graupe-Pillard, Changes of Life - Nancy, 1994


Grace Graupe-Pillard, Crouching Grace as Blonde, 2014

Changes of Life and Crouching Grace as Blonde take aim at our reception of the body: the former is about breast reconstruction after a mastectomy and the latter attacks  ageism and cultural clichés, such as "Do Blondes have more fun?" (a Clairol compaign from the 1960s).  A visit to Grace's website opens the door to much more of her fight, directed at the subjugation of women in the Middle East, the current U.S. administration, warfare, the Holocaust, her relationship with her mother, and body image.  All received her highly charged critique in various media (painting, photographs, videos, installations, and prints) that demand long periods of concentration. For Grace is a pistol, a force to be reckoned with as an artist determined to fix the world with her provocative creations. 


To find out more about Grace Graupe-Pilllard's prolific body of work, please visit her website on NeoImages:
***


Bosom Bodies: An Exhibition in Honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month is a New York Arts Exchange project, curated by Beth S. Gersh-Nesic, director and owner of NYAE, www.nyarts-exchange.com.  For more information, please contact Beth at nyarts.exchange@verizon.net

B

Thursday, September 28, 2017

Curator's Notes: Spotlight on Marcy B. Freedman

Marcy B. Freedman, French Macaroons (aka Duchamp Macarons), 2017

Marcy B. Freedman is a dynamo.  An artist and art historian, she brings to her work the mind of an academic investigator, insatiably asking questions and sleuthing for answers.  Fueled by her playful, feminist perspective, Marcy first observes, then ponders, then creates, and finally prods us into responding.  There is no right or wrong reaction; she only asks for interaction.  Self-aware in this fully drenched digital atmosphere, she asks us to pause from the phone to pay attention.  Case in point:


Marcy B. Freedman, Breast Implant Series: Titian, 2017

Marcy too has been an inspiration for Bosom Bodies based on the French Macaroons digital collage she showed me a few months ago.  We talked about a "breast" show for Breast Cancer Awareness month and then she mentioned looking for a gallery in Peekskill, where she has her studio. She introduced me to Nadine Gordon-Taylor, whose work is in Bosom Bodies and who owns SIA Gallery,  Nadine graciously offered to donate her gallery to our project.  We were off and running from that moment on.  Not only would Marcy exhibit her "Duchamp Macarons" (based on Marcel Duchamp's Please Touch), but also a new series inspired by art history's masters (men) whose fame depends - to some extend - on their sensuous renderings of the female nude.  But that's not the point of her work.  She asks us "What would we think of men who had breast implants?"  Her digital ruminations are hilarious - and can be yours, if you purchase her limited postcard series or one of the unique works made exclusively for the show.  Marcy will also present her performance piece:

Marcy has boundless energy in so many directions.  So many that I fear she will add to her schedule one more performance or exhibition by the end of today.  (I am typing quickly to keep up. In the future, please check her website or, better, come to her performance at Bosom Bodies so that she will personally add you to her snail-mailing list.)   In addition to her participation in Bosom Bodies, Marcy curated the annual outdoor performances on Saunder's Farm over the Labor Day Weekend, in conjunction with  Collaborative Concepts and performed at Hammond Museum and Japanese Stroll Gardens also in September.




This past Saturday, September 22nd, Marcy installed 24 large series of digital prints called FemFlora: Images for a World in which Women and Plants Flourish  at Echo, at 470 Main St. in Beacon as part of “Windows on Main Street,”  through Nov. 12th. 

On October 1st, she will perform on the Staten Island Ferry as part of this year’s Apres Avant Garde Festival, hosted by Day de Dada, the Staten Island Performance Art Collective. Dressed as the Statue of Liberty, she will present “How Strong is Our Democracy Now?” She tells us the event will serve as a follow-up of sorts to her interactive work, “TRUE of FALSE: We are at a crucial point in the history of the USA,” offered in August at the opening reception of “RADIUS 50” at Woodstock Artists Association and Museum

And on November 12th, Marcy will perform “What the heck is performance art and why should anyone care?” for Talking Arts Foundation in Yorktown. “I will strive to educate and entertain the members of my audience with several re-enactments of famous performance art pieces from the past along with a couple of new solo performances of my own. It will be exciting to put my personal work into an art historical context.”



She is also featured in this month's Westchester Wag magazine blog: "Marcy B. Freedman's Got a Full Plate"
Her video interview on Jackie Suarez's Lively Arts recounts her story from art historian to artist and includes more examples of her work.



Bosom Bodes is a New York Arts Exchange project, curated by Beth S. Gersh-Nesic, director and owner of NYAE.  For more information, please write to Beth at nyarts.exchange.com or visit our website: www.nyarts-exchange.com 

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

Curator's Notes: Spotlight on Clarity Haynes

Clarity Haynes and Beth Gersh-Nesic, in front of Clarity's Robin, 2015
Stout Projects, March 2016

Clarity Haynes has so much to celebrate this fall: two solo exhibition back-to-back.  Clarity Haynes: Bearing Witness, The Breast Portrait Project, 1998-Present,  September 7 through October 15, at Payne Gallery, Moravian College, Bethlehem, PA,  and Clarity Haynes: Baba Na Gig, November 13, 2017-February 16, 2018, at Kniznick Gallery, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA.  In between both, she will exhibition with Bosom Bodies.  Hurray!  


 
Clarity Haynes: Bearing Witness, The Breast Portrait Project, 1998-Present
Payne Gallery, Moravian College, Bethlehem, PA (installation)

Clarity is another inspiration for this Bosom Bodies, because she and I sent a proposal to Professor Diane Radycki, director of the Payne Gallery, for an exhibition on health issues addressed in art. October (Breast Cancer Awareness Month) was available too.  We thank Professor Radycki for accepting our project for the Payne Gallery and we thank David Leidlich, assistant director, for his wonderful installation. As you can see in these photos, most of the works are Clarity's gigantic portraits.  The smaller ones are view on the second floor balcony along with videos on Clarity's work and tablets to read the sitters' entries in The Breast Portrait Project Book.  



Clarity Haynes, Breast Portrait, 2014


For our Bosom Bodies, Clarity selected Breast Portrait, a small oil on canvas that depicts a woman who has undergone a mastectomy.  This portrait examplifies her Breast Portrait Project which began with the artist's self-portrait and then expanded to drawing and painting other women's torsos at women's fairs and in Clarity's studio.  She discovered that these intimate sittings and her sensitive renderings truly touched the sitters deeply.  It gave them an opportunity to  reflect on how they felt about their bodies.  For some, they expressed a sense of healing.  The sitters wrote down their thoughts in The Breast Portrait Project Book, which has been digitized for reading at the Payne Gallery exhibition. One of the artists in Bosom Bodies, Wilhelmina Grant, sat for her breast portrait, which was exhibited in Radical Acceptance, at Tabla Rasa, Brooklyn, NY, in February -March 2011.  I met Clarity and Wilhelmina through this exhibition when we both participated on a panel called "The Feminist Breast," part of the College Art Associate Conference in 2011.   

Clarity Haynes, Janie, 2015 in The Outwin 2016.
Smithsonian, National Portrait Gallery,

Clarity's work is also part of The Outwin 2016: American Portraits Today which has been on tour in the US this year.  From October 6, 2017 through January 7, 2018, it will be on view at the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, MO.  The Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition "celebrates excellence and innovation, with a strong focus on the variety of portrait media used by artists today."  Organized by the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC., the funding comes from an endowment left to the museum by Virginia Outwin Boochever, who was a passionate docent at the NPG.  Bosom Bodies congratulates Clarity for this honor and for being part of this outstanding show.  


Clarity Haynes, Breast Portrait Triptych, 2002


Also,  if you find yourself in Philadelphia, please visit the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art's museum where Clarity's triptych is on display upstairs.  More exhibitions are in Clarity Hayne's future. Please consult her website to keep abreast (pun intended) of these announcements.

Bosom Bodies is a New York Arts Exchange project.  For more information, please contact the curator, Beth S. Gersh-Nesic, director and owner of NYAE:  www.nyarts-exchange.com or nyarts.exchange@verizon.net..



Christina Thomas: Healing Through Art

Christina Thomas,  "Hope" Prayer Box,  2017, featured in the  Bosom Bodies  exhibition, 2017 Spring is finally here!  And w...