Showing posts with label bay hallowell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bay hallowell. Show all posts

Monday, October 3, 2016

Member News- San Luis Obispo Museum of Art



Pressing Matters
October 7-November 13 2016

In conjunction with Central Coast Printmakers, the San Luis Obispo Museum of Art presents
Pressing Matters
A juried print exhibition open to artists in California, Oregon and Washington.
Work will be on view in the Gray Wing
from October 7- November 13, 2016

Karen L Brown has two pieces in this exhibition 
"Kee"

" Century's Flight"

Bay Hallowell

The Inkspots Book was also accepted into the exhibition:



Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Currently on exhibit at Center for the Arts in Eagle Rock

Bay Hallowell's work " Blood Water"
Monica Wiesblott's piece in the heavy black frame
on the top row

Learn more HERE

Monday, April 11, 2016

Member News- Center for the Arts Eagle Rock

OPENING RECEPTION 
Sunday, April 17th from 6-8 PM 

Invited image: Clovis Blackwell, "Silicate Sea", Serigraph, 20"x26"
Artists: Judith Amdur, David Avery, Clovis Blackwell, Joan Dix Blair, Mary Sherwood Brock, Karen Brussat Butler, CathyJean Clark, Judy Dekel, Lise Drost, Beth Fein, Karen Fiorito, Kirsten Flaherty, Susan Gesundheit, Dorothy Grow, Dirk Hagner, Bay Hallowell, Linda Lyke, Kathryn Maxwell, Diane McLeod, Irena Raulinaitis, Marianne Sadowski, Masha Schweitzer, Katherine Sheehan, Noriko Uriu, Joseph Vorgity, Sylvia Walters, Monica Wiesblott, Michele Winkler, Pamela Zwehl-Burke


CENTER FOR THE ARTS EAGLE ROCK

2225 Colorado Boulevard

Los Angeles, CA 90041
phone: 323-561-3044 
www.cfaer.org

Saturday, December 26, 2015

Poets Respond

The Santa Barbara Printmakers’ 22nd Annual Juried Exhibition provides a unique opportunity to the Santa Barbara community to view and learn about fine art printmaking today. Artists throughout California were invited to submit up to three works for the exhibition.
As part of the programming around the Printmakers' exhibition, the Poets Respond to Prints event will take place during 1st Thursday Jan. 7, 2016, from 5-8 p.m, with the reading beginning promptly at 6 p.m. in the Planning Commission Hearing Room adjacent to Channing Peake Gallery in the Santa Barbara County Administration Building, 105 E. Anapamu Street.
The event is moderated by co-curators Santa Barbara Poet Laureate Sojourner Kincaid Rolle and Linda Saccoccio.
Other participating poets include Santa Barbara Poets Laureate Emeriti Perie Longo, David Starkey and Chryss Yost; Rhode Island Poet Laureate Rick Benjamin; Ron Alexander; Susan Chiavelli; Carol DeCanio; Richard Jarrette; Enid Osborn; Emma Trelles and George Yatchisin.
Starry Abyss by Bay Hallowell
The poets were inspired by prints created by artists using a variety of techniques, such as woodblock printing, photopolymer etching, viscosity monoprints and chine-collé.
Poets responded to artworks by Tony Askew, Cody Cambell, Rosemarie Gebhart, Colleen Kelly, David Graves, Bay Hallowell, Patricia Post, Karen Schroeder, Garrett Speirs, Nina Ward, Sara Woodburn and Don Zimmerman.
“Santa Barbara poets have an honored tradition of creating ekphrastic poetry inspired by the work of visual artists," Santa Barbara Poet Laureate Rolle said. "We are honored to be invited by the group to interact with their work. This symbiosis of words and images offers an expanded interpretation of the individual works for both the printmaker and the poet.” 
For more information on the Santa Barbara Printmakers, please contact Bay Hallowell at bayhallowell@gmail.com.
For information on Channing Peake exhibitions and 1st Thursday events in the gallery, please contact the Santa Barbara County Arts Commission at 805.568.3990 or online at www.sbartscommission.org.
— Elizabeth Hallowell represents the Santa Barbara Arts Commission.

Monday, November 9, 2015

Focus on the Masters Discussion

Organized by Mary Galbraith of Focus On The Masters
The Spotlight interview featured the inkspots, our collective made up of area printmakers. 
Member Virginia Furmanski was joined by Bay Hallowell and Inés Monguió in a panel discussion led by Dr. Judy Larson. 
It was a lively and interesting night that explained the many nuances of printmaking to the crowd in attendance.
The Focus on the Masters afterglow followed at Project 643





Monday, September 28, 2015

Opening October 1st 2015-Channing Peake Gallery


Several Inspot members were juried into this exhibition 
curated by John Grecco

Beverly Decker
Ginny Furmanski
Rosemarie C Gebhart
Bay Hallowell
Colleen Kelly
Monica Wiesblott


Saturday, May 9, 2015

VITAL at Westmont Ridly Tree Museum of Art



Inkspot Member Bay Hallowell's 
 two monoprints from my Marginalia series were accepted for 
VITAL, the annual tri-county juried exhibition at the Westmont-Ridley Tree Museum of Art 
May 21-June 20, 2015
Opening Reception & Awards on Thursday, May 21, 4-6 p.m.

Saturday, April 18, 2015

JCC Reception April 12th-Santa Barbara



Bay Hallowell

Bay Hallowell's
Two Ways of Seeing a Blackbird
won an award at the SB Printmakers Annual Juried Exhibition at the JCC

Juror was Lynne Holley

Photos from the reception provided by Asandra:





Inkspot artist Karen Schroeder

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

New exhibitions for the New Year


 Inkspots members are in the "Best Impressions" 
exhibition at the Arts Fund in the Funk Zone of Santa Barbara.
 This exhibition is featuring the award winning pieces from the 
Santa Barbara Printmakers

Also opening this Friday at Michael Kate, The Abstract 10
will hold for a Panel Discussion with the Artists (moderated by Ted Mills) 
at 6 PM at Michael/Kate.

And finally several Inkspot members are included in:


IMPRESSIONS: Original Prints from Ventura County Print Studios
Curated by Linda Taylor, owner of The Spotted Dog Studio, Ojai, CA
January 9 - February 18, 2015
The Atrium Gallery
Ventura County Government Center
800 Victoria Avenue
Ventura, CA
Opening Reception - Friday, January 23 from 5 to 7:30 PM

Friday, August 15, 2014

Auction Event at Westmont Ridley-Tree Museum of Art


A large portion of the Inkspots were invited to participate in this years
 5x5 Celebration Auction 
at Westmont Ridley-Tree Museum of Art.
This is an auction that benefits the Museum and it's programs.

5x5: Celebrating Five Years

August 28, 2014 – September 11, 2014
5th Anniversary Party & 5x5 Reception – September 2, 2014 | 4-6PM
Online auction opens on August 28, 2014 and closes at 5:00PM sharp on September 11, 2014 (Pacific Standard Time)
To see all the work, and place bids once the exhibition opens CLICK HERE

Inkspot artists participating:
Asandra Lamb
Karen L Brown
Beverly Decker
Virginia Furmanski
Rosemarie Gebhart
Judy Gibbs
Bay Hallowell
Karen Schroeder
Monica Wiesblott

Sunday, August 3, 2014

Art Review "Marginalia" Bay Hallowell

BEYOND THE MARGINAL
PRINTMAKER BAY HALLOWELL WORKS AT THE JUNCTURE OF TEXT, GRAPHIC DESIGN AND MANIPULATIONS IN THE MARGINS, IN HER FAULKNER SHOW ‘MARGINALIA’

By Josef Woodard
News-Press Correspondent

Photos by Wayne McCall


Printmaker Bay Hallowell often seems to surf around available and accidental influences and idea-triggers, which may give rise to a new series of expressions.  Such is the case in her deceptively simple and enigmatic exhibition called “Marginalia,” now aptly nestled in the cozy nook of the Faulkner West Gallery at the downtown public library.

In that small, long room, the artist can be found experimenting and improvising, visually mumbling and snooping in the margins of a good idea, shuffling letters and linguistic meanings, and generally ferreting out the theme of the very word of the show’s title.  Using monoprints and stencils, collographs and other media, she stacks the letters and reorders them, scruffs them up, leaves them polished or affects them with sundry printmaking techniques.  But whatever the variation or accentuation of each piece, “Marginalia” is the word in the epicenter of this artist’s playful arena.

Artists have long been fascinated by the power of select words and phrases, fodder for treatments and distortions in a more visual than language-related way.  Ed Ruscha has made a career out of painted, loaded words on canvas, and Jim Dine has found himself in love (ironically and otherwise) with the word—and heart-shaped symbol for—“love.”  Deeper in art history, Bauhaus design notions explored the expressive potential of letters and Kurt Schwitters and other Dadaists and deconstructionist types have latched onto language for reuse and recycling in their artistic language. 

In this case, Ms. Hallowell has a ripe word to mess around with, as visual putty, having to do with the digressionistic scribblings in the margins of a text, or the quality of that which is presumably “marginal,” but possibly a case of profundity in the periphery.

By virtue of the artist honing in on a very specific thematic target for her “variations on a theme” series, the word itself becomes a hypnotic blur.  Following the progression and sequence of pieces, especially in those numbered 1 to 16, we intuitively sense a kind of quasi-narrative flow, through the investigations and reinventions.  No. 10 has a dreamy, liquid-y overlay, while 12 finds the letters subjected to a mad scramble and fragmentation effect, rendered nearly illegible except as pure design, and 16 pits the word—in an early 20th century, Art Deco font—sandwiched between a warm yellow-orange-green foundation and the random ratatat of black dot-splatters on the surface.

Other later variations continue the process of plumbing expressive possibilities within the artist’s self-limited source.  In a few pieces, commercial letters are placed in a hip pattern with a shambling, tumbling charm a la Mr. Schwitters’ “Merz” aesthetic.  As if capping off the series with a ghostly echo of a finale, “Marginalia Trace 1, 2, 3” consists of the hand-scrawled word in positive and negative forms, suggesting a palimpsest-like hint of archeological enigma.  Marginalia rarely seemed so centered, and curiosity inflaming

July 11 – July 17, 2014
Santa Barbara News-Press, Scene Magazine (p. 51)

Saturday, June 21, 2014

Member News- Bay Hallowell Exhibiting in Santa Barbara



Bay Hallowell is pleased to announce an exhibition of her work, 
titled MARGINALIA: Recent Prints, 
in the West Gallery of the Santa Barbara Public Library during the month of July.  
You are invited to attend a 1st Thursday reception on July 3, from 5 to 8:00 PM.

This series of unique monoprints was inspired by her unexpected encounter with the word “marginalia,” the title of an essay by Glenn Adamson in The Female Gaze: Women Artists Making Their World, an exhibition catalog published by the Pennsylvania Academy of Art in Philadelphia.  Throughout a year of printmaking, Hallowell created more than twenty dynamic, multi-layered abstractions of this word using stencil, collograph, and trace drawing techniques.  
She attributes her on-going fascination with words to the sense of pure joy she experienced when she first learned to read.  For her, marginalia evolved from its dictionary definition[1] and from Adamson’s metaphorical focus on women artists, to include a wide range of people, places, art objects and values located in the margins--on the edges--of whatever the main “text” was or is[2] 
This new series continues her use of words and letters as a point of departure in making monoprints.  In earlier work, she focused on the word “redact” by forming the word itself with pieces of torn masking tape on a plate, then inking the plate in various ways and running it through a press with paper.  In 2013, when the Redact prints were exhibited at the Leslie Sacks Gallery in Los Angeles, the gallery’s director, Lee Spiro, commented, “(Hallowell’s) work is a perfect balance of aesthetic and conceptual concerns, not unlike the work of Jasper Johns and Ed Ruscha.”
Her 2011 exhibition at the Santa Barbara Public Library, “Tick Tock (R)Evolutions” consisted of a series of prints based on the phrase, “tick tock.”  Critic Josef Woodard observed: “This integrated and evolving series of monoprints brings together fragments of language and semi-abstract imagery, which play off of general ideas of time, clockworks and the cosmos, with nods to proto-Modernist styles such as Orphism and Constructivism.  That’s not to say, however, that Hallowell leans excessively on the cerebral or conceptual: it’s all in good, brain-puzzling fun.”
Hallowell exhibits her prints with the Los Angeles Printmaking Society, Santa Barbara Printmakers, Central Coast Printmakers, Inkspots of Ventura, Santa Barbara Art Association, and Goleta Valley Art Association.  Her prints are collected on both east and west coasts and were recently featured in the Flat File Project at Jane Deering Gallery.
Formerly a museum educator at the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, PA, Hallowell has taught and written extensively about art from many periods and places for diverse audiences. She studied painting, drawing, and art criticism at Bennington College in Vermont and completed her M.A. in education at the University of Pittsburgh.  Shortly after moving to Santa Barbara in 2008, she began learning monoprint techniques from Siu and Don Zimmerman in Santa Barbara City College’s Adult Education classes.
[1] Marginalia are scribbles, comments and illuminations in the margins of a book (Wikipedia, 4/28/2014).
[2] I always feel that the margins tell you more than the center of the page ever could.” Marcia Tucker (A Short Life of Trouble: Forty Years in the New York Art World, University of California Press, 2008, page 1.)

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Member News- Pushing the Limits SLO

 
Inkspot members Bay Hallowell and Monica Wiesblott
were juried into the Traditional Printmaking-Pushing the Limits
exhibition at the SanLuis Obispo Museum of Art
This years Juror was Linda Lyke from Occidental College

Monday, March 10, 2014

Member News-Bay Hallowell

Orange Spot by Bay Hallowell
 
Bay Hallowell's monoprint, Orange Spot, was awarded Honorable Mention
at the JCC SB Printmakers exhibition.
Juror: Dr. Judy Larson, Director, Westmont-Ridley Tree Museum of Art, Westmont College

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Member News

 
A big congratulations to the following Inkspots members who were juried into the
Artist Union " The Art of the Book 5"
exhibiting at the Sylvia White Gallery
 in Ventura:

Christina Altfeld
Karen L Brown
Beverly Decker

Judy Gibbs
Bay Hallowell
Ines Monguio
Betsy Quinn

 


Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Guest Visitor- Master Printmaker Michael McCabe

photo by: Bay Hallowell
 
The Inkspots hosted an in house visitor,
the wonderfully talented Master Printmaker
Michael Mc Cabe. 
Four Inkspot members participated in a Saturday critique by Mr. McCabe.
Ginny Furmanski, Karen L. Brown, Karen Schroeder, and Bay Hallowell
 received valuable feedback and tips.
 Here, he is inspecting one of Karen Schroeder's prints.

Monday, January 27, 2014

Member News-Bay Hallowell

Out of the Blue by Bay Hallowell

One of Bay Hallowell's prints was selected by juror Randy Sommer,
co-owner of the Acme Gallery in LA,
for the upcoming Santa Barbara Art Association exhibition at the Channing-Peake Gallery.
There will be an opening reception on Thursday, February 6 from 5 to 8 PM.
The show will be up until May 22, with additional receptions on March 6, April 3, and May 1.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Member News- Two Inkspot members accepted into LAPS


Opening reception January 31st, 2014 5:00PM to 8:30PM
 
of the LOS ANGELES PRINTMAKING SOCIETY

Hours: Tuesday -Friday 11 AM -4PM
Pacific Design Center
, 
8687 Melrose AvenueSuite #B273 

West Hollywood, CA 90069
Contact
 
Ariell Brown, Gallery Director:
310-776-2414 
laprintspace.ariell@gmail.com

Friday, October 4, 2013

Member News

 
 
* MEMBER NEWS *
Christina, Asandra, Karen B, Ginny, Karen S, Bay, Ines and Monica
were all juried into the
Santa Barbara Printmakers 2013 Faulkner exhibition.