Archive for August, 2010

An emerging idea

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

Cofounders of artists collective Rifrákt transform their mission to book form

The Boston Globe
Aug. 28, 2010
By Cate McQuaid, Globe Correspondent

Stephanie Goode (left) and Carolyn Hulbert (Montserrat College of Art Class of 2007) co-produced “25 Emerging Boston Artists 2010,’’ a coffee-table book that is made to order. (Dina Rudick/Globe Staff)

Ten years ago, if a scrappy group of young artists wanted to get their work seen, they’d find a dusty loft in a neighborhood where the rent was cheap and call it a gallery. Any art scene habitué older than 30 remembers Oni Gallery and Bad Grrls Studio. These days, it’s harder to find spaces where you can throw a show on the wall. Rents are higher. Many of the old, cheap neighborhoods have been gentrified.

Rifrákt, a nomadic collective of artists that first met a year ago in printmaker Carolyn Hulbert’s Jamaica Plain living room, has taken other routes to showing their art. They have mounted exhibits in people’s homes, taken over Hallway Gallery in JP for the month of April when its owner got married, and now they’ve published a hard-cover, coffee-table book of 56 pages, “25 Emerging Boston Artists 2010.’’

“We didn’t know how big it was going to be,’’ says Hulbert, 25, in a conversation with her Rifrákt cofounder, photographer Stephanie Goode, 27. The two have met for a bite to eat in Fort Point Channel, where Hulbert works full time as a receptionist at a law firm and Goode retouches photography for an online shopping site. (Hulbert is a 2007 alumna of Montserrat College of Art) Read more…

Montserrat All‐School Kickoff

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

Excitement is high as Montserrat students, faculty and staff return to campus to start the 2010-’11 academic year with a lunch on Beverly Common, registration and orientation activities.

Montserrat Freshman enjoying the Kickoff celebration. From the left: Morgan O'Donnell-Curry, Merriweather McCarty, Chelsea Stewart and Marissa MacPhee

Montserrat community meet and catch up with each other on the common while making plans for the coming year.

A scrappy approach

Monday, August 30th, 2010

The Boston Globe
Monday, Aug. 30, 2010

Galleries usually show finished products, but you can watch the artist create her installation through Sept. 3 at “Subtle: An Intervention by Alison Owen.’’ By focusing on everyday stuff including dust and scraps, Owen brings our attention to ordinary objects we look at but don’t really see (we could supply the artist with a lifetime of material). The exhibit is presented by Montserrat College of Art. Today from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. (through Sept. 25; reception Sept. 8 from 6-8 p.m.; artist talk Sept. 8 at 11:30 a.m. at 22 Essex St., Beverly). Free. 301 Gallery, 301 Cabot St., Beverly. 978-867-9623. www.montserrat.edu/galleries

© Copyright 2010 Globe Newspaper Company.

Diane Ayott in “Pattern and Repetition” Exhibit

Monday, August 30th, 2010

Diane Ayott, "Floater", acrylic on panel, 12 x 12 in., 2008

Montserrat College of Art Professor Diane Ayott is one of four artists in the exhibit “Pattern and Repetition,” at the Simmons College Trustman Art Gallery, fourth floor, Main College Building, 300 The Fenway, in Boston, Sept. 1-30. The other artists are Kristina Bell DiTullo, Candy Nartonis, and Sarah Sutro.

A reception with the artists will be held Tuesday, September 7, from 5:00-6:30 p.m. The exhibit and reception are free and open to the public.

Curated by Trustman Gallery Director Michele Cohen, the exhibition brings together the work of four artists, who despite stylistic and conceptual differences, all intuitively employ pattern and repetition as a formal device. Using a variety of techniques and materials that range from painted wood panels to collaged Band-Aids these artists share a fascination with structure derived from repetitive shapes and color: the whole is the sum of its parts. Each artist generates myriad visual solutions using a limited palette of color and form to test their ingenuity and delight the viewer with subtle variations of texture, pattern, and color. As Cohen observed, the exhibition is fundamentally about “careful looking.”

Timothy Harney Paintings and Collages

Monday, August 30th, 2010

"Table", mixed media collage, 24” x 18”, 2010

Professor Tim Harney has an exhibit of his collages and paintings from his series “The View from Andrew’s Room” on display at the George Marshall Store Gallery, through Oct. 3. The gallery is located at 140 Lindsay Rd., York, Maine. Gallery hours are Wednesday-Saturday, 10 am to 5 pm and Sunday, 1-5 pm.

See www.georgemarshallstoregallery.com.