Archive for January, 2010

Masako Kamiya Awarded Mass. Cultural Council Fellowship

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

"Grassroots Dream", acrylic gouche on panel, 47" x 44"

"Grassroots Dream", acrylic gouche on panel, 47" x 44"

Faculty member Masako Kamiya has been awarded a 2010 Mass. Cultural Council Fellowship in the Painting category.

MCC’s Artist Fellowships provide direct support to Massachusetts artists across a range of disciplines, to recognize exceptional work and to promote the further development of their talents. These highly competitive awards provide artists recognition and affirmation among their peers and the public. They catalyze crucial artistic advancement and pave the way for creative innovation of enduring cultural value.

Masako has two one-person shows coming up this spring at The Danforth Museum and Gallery Naga, so everyone can see her latest, post-sabbbatical work.

Warmest congratulations, Masako!

Dean Laura

“Diane Ayott: Diction”

Monday, January 25th, 2010

"Lost Again", 2009, mixed media on paper, 22" x 15"

"Lost Again", 2009, mixed media on paper, 22" x 15"

February 11 – March 13, 2010
Artist’s Reception:
Thursday, February 11, 6 to 8 pm

NEW YORK, NY – January 20, 2010 – Kathryn Markel Fine Arts is pleased to announce the first solo exhibition of artist Diane Ayott. Ayott’s paintings and works on paper shift between balance and distortion, building on the foundations of color, pattern and repetition.

Ayott’s painted surfaces are worked in great detail; often using bottle caps, lids, and other quotidian objects as stamps in repetitive patterns. The works are an accrual of layers upon layers of marks upon marks, stamps upon stamps and patterns upon patterns. Beneath the quilt, the patchwork of marks, we find geometric shapes, the color developing strata and fields. The textured paint application and obsessive mark-making engage viewers viscerally and are further complimented by painterly considerations of color and form. Ayott hints at narrative, with the additional assistance of titles and bits of collage. In fact, a crucial aspect of Ayott’s studio practice is spent with a notebook and dictionary. Ayott says of her work, “From a distance, viewers may experience an overall color palette but once close to the work, small bits of distinct information reveal themselves.” The “small bits’: circles, dots, and ovals, resemble data but handwritten. Ayott’s lines and marks come into focus as we near and the penmanship takes on a precision. But Ayott’s precision avoids rigidity and is often a loosely applied geometry as evidenced in her method of patterning. There is a sense that the work is both a study and a doodle, serious and curious; a habit that enjoys fleshing out the meaning by writing it out over and over again. As viewers we read the results, the surface, the play of line, color and the again and again.

Diane Ayott is an associate professor in art education, painting and drawing at Montserrat College of Art. She had a one-person exhibition at the Danforth Museum of Art and exhibits in museums and galleries throughout the Northeast. She received her MFA from the Massachusetts College of Art and currently lives and works in Boston.

Kathryn Markel Fine Arts is located at 529 W. 20th Street 6W, New York, N.Y.
Gallery hours are Tues. – Sat. 10AM – 6PM.

Mary Bucci McCoy Solo Exhibit

Friday, January 22nd, 2010
"Lost, Found," acrylic and graphite on plywood panel, 8" x 8" x 3", 2009

"Lost, Found," acrylic and graphite on plywood panel, 8" x 8" x 3", 2009

Instructor Mary Bucci McCoy is exhibiting panel paintings and works on paper in “Mary Bucci McCoy: Paintings” at the Kingston Gallery in Boston’s SoWa gallery district through January 31.

“It’s easy to get intimidated by Mary Bucci McCoy’s artist statement — there’s a poem in French, free use of the backslash, and we think we caught the word ‘dialectical’ in there somewhere. Her work itself, on the other hand — elevated or impressed blocks painted with minimalist abstractions — is warm and inviting, to the point that you’ll be tempted to touch the thick splotches of paint.”
— Weekly Dig, 12.23.09–1.6.10

Kingston Gallery
450 Harrison Ave., Boston, MA 02118
617-423-4113
Hours: Weds–Su 12–5 and by appointment
www.kingstongallery.com
www.buccimccoy.com

“Fixed Chaos” in Artscope

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

artscope1

“Fixed Chaos” received a great write-up by Gine Fraone in the Jan/Feb issue of Artscope.

Please click here to view.

The exhibit is up for one more week-invite your friends to visit!

Montserrat Gallery
“Fixed Chaos”
Friday, October 30, 2009 – Saturday, January 23, 2010

$1000 grant from CinemaSalem

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

We’re happy to announce that Montserrat College of Art is the recipient of a $1000 grant from CinemaSalem that will go towards student scholarship. CinemaSalem gives grants to innovative and effective nonprofit organizations, funded by a $.25 contribution from each movie admission ticket they sell each month, up to $1000. In their announcement, CinemaSalem notes that Montserrat “enriches the cultural life of the North Shore by providing an intensive visual arts education to its students and a continuing array of public exhibitions, art talks, and master classes to the public. Montserrat has supplied CinemaSalem with excellent employees, art for our lobby gallery, and professors to collaborate on the Salem Film Fest.” A special thanks to Ethan Berry for building the strong relationship we now have with CinemaSalem.

csgreenwee1

2 E India Square Mall, Salem, MA
(978) 744-1400
www.cinemasalem.com