Friday, July 13, 2012

Co|So Events:: Jeanne Rosier Smith Demonstration


Summer at the Copley Society of Art is characterized by bright, vivid colors, and exemplified in the work of Jeanne Rosier Smith. This Sunday, July 15th, the pure colors in the medium of pastel will be explored by Smith in an artist demonstration from 1-3 pm.  Three of Smith’s works are presently on view as part of the Summer Members’ Show: New England Perceived and Co|So Artists’ Small Works: Juxtapositions. Before switching careers and discovering her love of pastels twelve years ago, Smith lived another life in the written word, receiving both a Master’s and PhD in English.  Of her preferred material she says: “[t]he velvety richness, the pure color, the directness of pastel seduced me.”
Jeanne Rosier Smith, On the Cusp, 24 x 28, pastel
Her mastery of the medium is apparent in her work On the Cusp, which was awarded Juror’s Choice Fourth Place by jurist Jonathan Fairbanks.  The range of saturated cool tones Smith uses to depict a single wave gives the water a gem-like quality, while the cool, white sea foam surrounding the wave enhances the realist quality of the image.  Inspired by time spent on the coast of France in Nice, On the Cusp is part of a series that explores the crashing and curling of waves. Smith submerges us into the wave as it is literally on the cusp – the last moment of calm before it crashes. Her wave is imbued with a sublime quality that presents the viewer with the immenseness of nature. Her expert draftsmanship realistically captures the turbulent water as it crests and falls. The roughness of the water depicted directly contrasts with the soft smoothness of the pastels used to create it. Smith explains this complexity: “The feeling of motion and sound captured in an image fascinates me.  The splash and spray of wet mist with a dry medium is a continual challenge and delight.” 

Jeanne Rosier Smith, Rosy Red, 11 x 13, pastel 
Smith’s smaller works Pomodori and Rosy Red, which are currently on display in the lower gallery, again expose the viewer to the vibrancy of pastels.  Smith claims to “think in colors,” a fact made apparent in both works.  Rosy Red depicts an apple on a windowsill, the realism of the work highlighted by the texture of the pastel. The intricate details of the apple are emphasized by the nondescript background– this in turn allows the colors in the fruit and its leaves to pop and become the focal point. In Smith’s work Pomodori, she once again employs a rich red pastel to depict the ripe, fresh fruit in a bushel of tomatoes. She utilizes the vibrancy of the medium to emphasize the contrast between light and shadow, thus extracting a full array of colors from the fruit. Pomodori and Rosy Red are so well executed that the viewer can imagine what the subject of each work would taste like, making these paintings good enough to eat!

Jeanne Rosier Smith, Pomodori, 11 x 13, pastel
Join us on Sunday, July 15th from 1-3 pm at 158 Newbury Street when Smith gives insight into her process during her demonstration of pastel. This event is free and open to the public!


Thursday, July 5, 2012

Artist Spotlight :: Doron Putka


Copley artist, Doron Putka currently has work featured in both our Summer Member’s Show: New England Perceived and also in theCo|So Artist’s Small Works: Juxtapositions. 

Originally from Israel, Doron began her artistic career as an illustrator.  She is always inspired to reinvent her work.  Claiming that she was born with a pencil in her hand, she describes her art as, “constantly evolving.”  What she creates today is unlike something she painted five years ago.  Inspired the most by people, the unique colors and expressions that are particular to each person’s face is what is most enchanting to Doron.  She loves color and the unique ways in which she can incorporate it into her landscapes, still lifes and portraits.  

Doron Putka, Star Magnolia, 12 x 15, oil on paper
Doron’s work is representational of its subject matter.  Star Magnolia, winner of the Jurors Choice for honorable mention is currently on display in our Summer Members Show: New England Perceived.  The gestural brush strokes hints at the process in which the work was created. Thickness of the paint creates an emphatic piece that brings inanimate objects to life. The feather-soft white magnolia flowers pop from the subdued, impressionistic background; and intermittent dabs of bright orange and lime green give Star Magnolia depth as well as substance. 

Doron Putka, Galilee Rooftops, 9 1/2 x 7, oil on paper
Putka’s painting Galilee Rooftops received an Award of Merit in this year’s Copley Society’s Small Works Exhibition. Doron’s stylistic approach is apparent once more with gestural marks of thick paint. The autonomous strokes come together on the small 9 ½ x 7 inch canvas to create the sense of looking over rooftops onto a lush landscape. Doron uses light blues, forest greens, and light pinks which provide a tranquil tone throughout the work.


Doron Putka, Ranunculus, 14 x 11, oil on paper
The second work of Doron Putka in the Copley Society’s Small Works Exhibition is Ranunculus. The 14 x 11 inch painting depicts pink Persian Buttercups placed in a vase. Putka’s flowers, the Persian Buttercup, are a protected species of plant in Israel, where she is originally from. These flowers are unique in that they contain more petals than the traditional flower, making this a hearty and aesthetic subject for Ranunculus. Putka juxtaposes the bright pink flowers in front of an unmodulated light green wall that causes the plants to be the undeniable focal point of the painting.  From the detail of the petals on the flowers to the rust on the vase, Doron Putka displays her talent in composition and form.

Doron is inspired by old and new painters.   She loves color and is most inspired by people, although that is not what she typically exhibits at the Copley Society.  She describes her work as ‘representational’ and typically paints still-lifes, portraits and landscapes. 

 “You could say that what I love in painting is the little secrets that I find when colors and shapes are put next to one another, that when you find it, you get a certain vibration of truth and beauty.” – Doron Putka

Both exhibits will be at the Copley Society of Art until August 22nd.


Saturday, June 30, 2012

Co|So Exhibitions :: Martha’s Vineyard Artists of the Copley Society


The Copley Society’s newest offsite collaboration brings the works of prominent Co|So artists to the beautiful island of Martha’s Vineyard. Martha’s Vineyard Artists of the Copley Society opens Sunday, July 1st at the Featherstone Center for the Arts and features 12 esteemed Copley Artists influenced by the island. While each artist is linked to the beautiful Massachusetts landmark, the individual inspirations are evidenced through a variety of subjects and mediums. From seascapes to cupcakes, visitors will have the unique opportunity to view a diverse display of works that capture the range of artists represented by the Copley Society. 


Jessica Pisano, Sea Green no. 12, 14, 15,18 x 6 acrylic, oil and gold leaf on wood panel


Artist Jessica Pisano grew up on Martha’s Vineyard and has always been captivated by the breath-taking landscapes that surrounded her. This idyllic scenery can be found at the heart of many of her paintings, such as Sea Green no. 12, 14, 15 (Triptych). In this work, Pisano uses a stippling technique to portray an ocean view in shades of bright blue, aqua, and white. Her incorporation of gold leaf allows light to shimmer and reflect off the canvas in a way that echoes how light interacts with water in nature. Her dynamic triptych transforms with the light, and is certain transport the viewer to his/her preferred seaside escape. 


Ovid Ward, Into the Fog, 43 x 35, acrylic on board


The work of Martha Vineyard resident Ovid Ward is also featured in this exhibition. Living on the water has enhanced his love for all things nautical, which is reflected in his work. Both Into the Fog and Dawn on South Beach explore the subject of the ocean in an exacting, hyper-realist style. Ward utilizes the “clear light” of the island to capture the atmosphere of the Atlantic, and explores the effect of the sun at different times of day.  Into the Fog allows the viewer a glimpse of the sea-faring life of the Vineyard as only a native would experience.
Laurie Brown, Peep Hole Slant, 12.5 x 22 x 1.5, gouache on cut paper
 With a style completely her own, children’s author turned artist Laurie K. Brown creates fine art out of paper. Brown collages together colorful pieces of paper that are manipulated to achieve various textures and shapes, and formed into relief sculptures. Peep Hole Slant features a series of white squares punctuated by colorful circles and crescents. The clear geometric shapes allow the colors to become the focal point of the work. Her intricate pieces are playful, intriguing, and her innovative use of paper to articulate color and shape invites the viewer to look closer and explore each work.

If you find yourself on the Vineyard this July, stop by the Featherstone Center for the Arts to see the range of artists featured at the Copley Society who are influenced by the wonderful Island of Martha’s Vineyard. Martha’s Vineyard Artists of the Copley Society continues through July 18th and is sure to be a great success.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Co|So Exhibitions :: Nancy Colella's "Beach Peeks"


To help put you in a summertime frame of mind, Copley artist Nancy Colella is exhibiting her atmospheric images that depict the effect sunlight has on sea side architecture. “Beach Peeks” is her first solo show at Co|So, and brightly fills the Red Room with the feeling of being on a summer vacation. Each painting uniquely captures the essence of light and air that she experiences in her coastal neighborhood.  Colella describes her work as, “immediate and spontaneous impressions of my reactions to everyday life.” Colella reduces her work down to its primary elements by limiting brush strokes, and approaching each subject abstractly while working gradually to add details.  Her strong contrast between light and dark colors helps unify the composition, achieving an organized rhythm and balance of brush stroke, color and texture.  

Nancy Colella, Outdoor Shower, 8 x 10, oil on canvas

In “Outdoor Shower,” Colella captures one of the most recognizable features of a beach house:  the outdoor shower. The shower, while situated in the center of the work, is integrated into the side of the house and almost lost in the overall compositional focus on the contrast of light and shadow. Colella achieves varying textures via thick application of paint, which increases the sense of depth in the image.  The shrubbery and the landscape are defined by painterly brush strokes, and balance the flattened lines used to identify the prominent architectural features. The cast shadows and quality of light place the viewer in mid-afternoon on a summer’s day.   

Nancy Colella, Private Road, 16 x 20, oil on canvas

Like “Outdoor Shower,” on the surface “Private Road” features the typical South Shore beach house, but in essence portrays the atmosphere and feeling of the summer light and air. The dramatic shadows delineated by sharp tonal contrasts in the house in the foreground are clearly distinguished from the sunlight-steeped yellow house in the background. This delineation in tonality allows a greater sense of depth and atmosphere. Similarly, the bright blue sky, which sits almost flat on the canvas, reinforces the pure air quality that the viewer can almost feel. 

Nancy Colella’s “Beach Peeks” will be on display at the Copley Society of Art until August 21.  The artist will speak about her work in the gallery on Saturday, June 30 from 1:00 to 3:00pm.  We look forward to seeing you in the gallery during these upcoming warmer months!

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Co|So Exhibitions :: Jim Connelly at Boston Private Bank


To celebrate the arrival of baseball season, the Copley Society of Art presents a series of Fenway Park paintings by Jim Connelly on display at the Boston Private Bank in the Prudential Center.  Accepted into Co|So last year, Jim Connelly is fresh painter whose works displayed at Co|So have been popular and well received by both patrons and collectors.  Connelly's background in commercial art and illustration lends a stylistic perspective to his works, which present Boston viewers with novel takes on familiar Fenway landmarks, such as like the CITGO sign and Yawkey Way.  

Jim Connelly, CITGO Sign, 20 x 24, oil on canvas

These painterly snapshots are derived from the artist’s technique of cropping sections of complete compositions just enough to develop an energetic composition without pushing the subject matter into complete abstraction.  As seen in CITGO Sign, Connelly’s work captures a view of Boston’s beloved “north star” that a passerby wouldn’t normally see but for more than a split second.  Connelly, on the other hand, is inspired by these typically unnoticed and fleeting moments in the city, and skillfully transforms his unexpected observations into eye-catching paintings.  He has been known to climb up to great heights or sit level with the ground to explore new perspectives whose viewpoints provide fresh appreciation for ordinary surroundings.  Connelly aptly shares these insightful observations through his paintings.  

Jim Connelly, Foul Pole Fenway, 24 x 36, oil on canvas

In the painting Foul Pole Fenway, a grid of yellow poles occupies the foreground of a day-lit scene of Fenway Park. The composition of this painting reveals the highly-geometric underlying structure of the park. Additionally, Connelly uses keen attention to light and shadow to reveal variegated dimensions to the greens, blues, and reds that saturate Fenway Park. Commenting on both his passion for light and the Red Sox, Connelly says, “Living close to this historic park and being a loyal Red Sox fan provides me with ample opportunity to see the ever-changing way the light transforms the building, not to mention the many angles of the structure.”

Jim Connelly, Yawkey Way Fenway, 24 x 36, oil on canvas
 The final painting included in Connelly’s series at the Boston Private Bank is Yawkey Way Fenway. Connelly reverently presents a lamppost displaying the street signs of Van Ness & Yawkey Way before a triumphant deep blue banner, curled and rippled by the summer air. The visceral feel of summer in the city brought to life by this work will resonate with devoted fans and native Bostonians alike. 

Jim Connelly’s innovative depictions of Kenmore and the ballpark will be on view at the Boston Private Bank located at the Prudential Center at 800 Boylston Street thru July 17, 2012. 

Click HERE to view the online exhibition!

Friday, April 20, 2012

Co|So Events :: Upcoming Artist Demonstrations

With the return of spring and beautiful weather in Boston comes the return of weekend artist demonstrations at the Copley Society of Art! Stop by the gallery from 1-3pm on Saturday, April 21st, Saturday, May 5th, and Sunday May 27th  to watch three of our artists create works and answer questions.

On April 21st, Boston-native Ian Factor will be painting a portrait of artist and musician Valerie Forgione. A member of the Copley Society for many years, Factor is a seasoned portrait painter and has studied in numerous art institutions both State-side and abroad. Factor's desire to paint from life extends past his realist work in portraiture and the figure, as he also paints landscapes en plein air. His paintings, as seen in December Morning featured below, are imbued with both his devotion to the human form as well as "the fine art of realist painting.” 

Ian Factor, December Morning, oil on canvas, 30 x 24

Whether painting figures or landscapes, the goal for Factor's art remains universal: “Through my work I am not searching only to explain my own theories and opinions to others, alone. I am searching for the common ties and lines between all human beings that break down all barriers, walls and separations, and am searching for the means and techniques to bring these commonalities to the minds, hearts and emotions of every person who makes contact with these works. The supreme ultimate is to transcend all cultural and personal relativity, to link all human beings together.”

Currently, Factor lives and paints in Boston while teaching Anatomy at the Montserrat College in Beverly, MA, which allows him to focus on his passion, the human form. 


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On Saturday, May 5th, Co|So will host Copley Artist Anne Heywood as she demonstrates how she creates a pastel masterpiece.  Like Factor, Heywood creates realist landscapes, but works primarily in pastel. Her pastel evocations of both traditional and modern spaces and objects reflect her dual life spent in both New England and Italy. Both her landscapes and still lifes feature strong compositions and a natural color palette that combine to create a strong sense of mood. Recently featured in the Copley Society's 2012 Winter Members' Show: Impressions was Heywood's intriguing rendering of an Art Deco glass bowl suggestively placed on top of a small table. 


Anne Heywood, CA, Desideri Fugiti (Fleeing Wishes), pastel and glitter, 28 x 20

Heywood says of her art: “I strive to entice the viewer into my world, beyond what is seen and known, to what is felt.” A New England based artist, Heywood works out of her studios in East Bridgewater, MA and Waldoboro, ME. Her works can be found in both national and international corporate and private collection. She is author and illustrator of Pastels Made Easy (Watson-Guptil Publications, 2003) and has published articles in books and magazines such as “Australian Artist” and The Best of Pastel. 

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On Sunday, May 27th Pamela duLong Williams will be in the gallery demonstrating oil painting to visitors. Also a portrait painter, Williams' work focuses on a specific object, either in the form of a person, a flower, or a house. Her loose, impressionist brush strokes add a lively, dynamic energy to her subjects. Williams diverse subjects allow her to fully explore her impressionist style, most recently seen in Co|So as a feature of last summer's Contemporary Still Life show, Reflections. According to Williams, "...working from life is essential with still life and plein air painting as well as portraiture." 


Pamela duLong Williams, Reflections, oil on canvas, 16 x 22

Stay tuned for more information on this wonderful artist's demonstration amidst the display of Fresh(ly) Paint(ed) works in the gallery from May 20th until June 2nd!

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All three demonstrations represent a special opportunity for these artists to present their creative processes to the general public.  We hope to see you there!

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Co|So Exhibitions :: J.B. Jones - Still Light

This spring, the Copley Society of Art has the pleasure of presenting the solo exhibition of realist painter J.B. Jones entitled Still Light.  An architect turned artist, Jones has devoted himself to painting since 1994 and specializes in large, abstract works depicting ordinary objects.  Jones’s hyper-realistic paintings combine the ambiguous with the familiar on a monumental scale in an effort to engender a heightened sensory experience in his viewer.

J.B. Jones, Pink Suite, oil on canvas, 46 x 50

In Pink Suite the object of focus is a rectangular glass sugar dish filled with different colored packets of sweetener.  The dish is positioned on an angle and is reflected on an unknown surface.   The transparency of the glass dish magnifies and distorts the sugar packets into staggered abstractions that electrify the canvas.  The reflections of the packets become live-wires of energy as they extend down and out of the painting into the space of the viewer.  The precise use of light brings out the most minute details and highlights the contrast of bright colors against a dark background.  The ordinary is transformed into the extraordinary as the painting pulses with the creative force of the artist.

J.B. Jones, Blue Clip, oil on canvas, 42 x 54
In Blue Clip the small-turned-monumental objects take over the canvas, merely suggesting a sense of pictorial space.  The viewer is confronted with a close-up of a glass jar filled to the brim with blue metallic paper clips.  Colors swirl and collide as they are reflected off of the metal and glass surfaces and the use of line creates a dizzying sensation as the eye attempts to trace any one path of movement.  The attention to extreme detail and texture suggest the use of airbrush though the artist remained loyal to his paint brush.  Jones rejects the static, functional qualities of these office supplies and transforms them into pictorial inventions of dynamism and energy.  


These two works are but a few examples of the possibilities explored by J.B Jones in his unique creative process. The rest of J.B. Jones’s work can be viewed in the exhibition on display from April 5th until May 10th or online at copleysociety.org. We look forward to seeing you in the gallery soon!

Members' Reception*
Saturday, April 7 5:30 - 7:30
Members: Free | Non-Members: $10

Artist Talk
Saturday, April 14 | 1:00 - 3:00pm