| “PIECE
BY PIECE”
November 11 to December 13, 2002
BOSTON (Nov. 5, 2002) — The Simmons College
Trustman Art Gallery presents “Piece by Piece,” an
exhibit that brings together the recent work of Sarah Gindel,
Karen Moss, and Maxine Yalovitz–Blankenship, three artists
who work in divergent styles and media but who all assemble their
work piece by piece. The exhibit will run from Nov.11 to Dec.
13 at the Simmons College Trustman Art Gallery, fourth floor,
Main College Building, 300 The Fenway. There will be a reception
from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 18, with a gallery talk at
5:00 p.m. The event is free and open to the public.
“Art for me, has always helped to ‘make
things right’ in a troubled world. It has served as a medium
to express, an attempt to comprehend and unify the chaos around
me in metaphorical terms,” said Yalovitz–Blankenship.
Her statement reflects the creative motivation of each of the
artists in the exhibit.
Moss shreds consumer catalogs into strips that
create the foundation for her collage paintings. While these abstractions
emphasizing surface and color are the least didactic images Moss
has produced in years, they subtly convey a message relating to
consumerism and waste.
Both Gindel and Yalovitz–Blankenship
use the grid as the underlying structure for their work. Yalovitz–Blankenship
creates multiple abstract images of torn, sewn, or cut paper painted
with acrylic and sand, which she assembles into a grid format.
Gindel’s quilts use internal body imagery such as cells,
tumors, organs, and bones as inspiration for her abstract compositions.
The images are “pieced” together in a grid structure,
which is part of a quilt-making tradition and a conscious means
of creating the order that stems from the artist’s training
as a painter. Largely composed of hand-dyed fabrics, these quilts
explore the beauty of a biomorphic world tragically precipitated
by the cancer diagnosis of Gindel’s father.
These three widely exhibited Boston-based artists
will be seen for the first time together at the Trustman Art Gallery.
Exhibit hours are from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday. The gallery is wheelchair accessible. For
more information, contact Christine Kromer at 617-521-2268.
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