Art and Really Long Hours To Enjoy It

If you hurry, you can still take in Allen Blagden’s comprehensive show in the Tremaine Gallery at The Hotchkiss School (ends Sunday, June 14).  Mostly large paintings show off his careful attention to line and use of brilliant color.  My favorites, however, are a group of small, brilliantly colored pictures of birds and other animals.  There are also three terrific works in pencil huddling together perhaps a little intimidated by the riot of color around them.  All three are from 2007 and seem to represent a reflective mood in the artist.

   Popular Cornwall landscape painter Ira Barkoff’s new show—the first since 2007 — opens Friday, June 12, at the Ober Gallery in Kent.  Barkoff paints with brush and palette knife (60/40 percent mix, he figures,) so the pieces have great texture and — in the best — great depth and energy.  He paints from his imagination and thinks of the pieces as visual poems, an idea that turns out to be more interesting and less precious than it sounds.

   New since Barkoff’s last show are pictures of forests and the sea. The forests draw you in with the thick globs (or as a reporter termed them in a piece for this newspaper two years ago, gouts) of paint and new colorations.  There is both energy and calm in these works and more than a little mystery in some.  Gallery-goers familiar with his work will notice a new love of the moon and moonlight and increased — and dramatic — use of the color mauve.  This is a good show.  Go.

       And Some Other

Notable Openings

    Lovers of sculpture and a day away from home, will like The Fields Sculpture Park in Ghent, NY. The center opens its summer exhibition on Saturday, June 13.  More than 80 modern and contemporary pieces are displayed on 150 acres of fields and wooded areas.  New works from Heather and Ivan Morrison, Julian Opie and Margeaux Walter will be exhibited as will large-scale, site-specific pieces by Orly Genger and Richard Nonas. The Fields is open every day, dawn to dusk (and you can’t say that about many other art destinations.)

   At the Mattatuck Museum, its 5th annual Connecticut Open House Day will feature a “family kinetic sculpture workshopâ€� in which — presumably — families can be inspired by Alexander Calder and Tim Prentice and create their own motion pieces to take home.  For those less creative, the museum offers a collection of Connecticut artists across three centuries:  John Trumbull, Erastus Salisbury Field, Frederic Church, John Frederick Kensett, Arshile Gorky, Kay Sage, Yves Tanguy,  Peter Poskas, and Abe Ajay.  All this and a display of over 10,000 buttons.  What’s not to like?

   The Tremaine Gallery at The Hotchkiss School is open Monday through Saturday, 10 am to 4 pm, Sunday noon to 4 pm.

     Ober Gallery, 14 Old Barn Rd, Kent.  Open Thursday, 1 to 4 pm; Friday and Saturday, noon to 5 pm; Sunday, 1-4 pm.

     The Fields Sculpture Park, 1405 County Route 22, Ghent, NY.  Open every day, dawn to dusk.

     The Mattatuck Museum Arts and History Center, 144 West Main St., Mattatuck.  Connecticut Open House Day, Saturday, June 13, 10 am to 5 pm.

Latest News

Love is in the atmosphere

Author Anne Lamott

Sam Lamott

On Tuesday, April 9, The Bardavon 1869 Opera House in Poughkeepsie was the setting for a talk between Elizabeth Lesser and Anne Lamott, with the focus on Lamott’s newest book, “Somehow: Thoughts on Love.”

A best-selling novelist, Lamott shared her thoughts about the book, about life’s learning experiences, as well as laughs with the audience. Lesser, an author and co-founder of the Omega Institute in Rhinebeck, interviewed Lamott in a conversation-like setting that allowed watchers to feel as if they were chatting with her over a coffee table.

Keep ReadingShow less
Hotchkiss students team with Sharon Land Trust on conifer grove restoration

Oscar Lock, a Hotchkiss senior, got pointers and encouragement from Tim Hunter, stewardship director of The Sharon Land Trust, while sawing buckthorn.

John Coston

It was a ramble through bramble on Wednesday, April 17 as a handful of Hotchkiss students armed with loppers attacked a thicket of buckthorn and bittersweet at the Sharon Land Trust’s Hamlin Preserve.

The students learned about the destructive impact of invasives as they trudged — often bent over — across wet ground on the semblance of a trail, led by Tom Zetterstrom, a North Canaan tree preservationist and member of the Sharon Land Trust.

Keep ReadingShow less