Art, Earnest and Likable At New Show in Sharon

Karen Kellogg’s paintings remind me of a picture I inherited from my mother. It is a Texas scene of yellowish hills, low mesquite trees, fields of bluebonnets and cactus. Nothing is quite right: the perspective is off, the trees unnatural, the cactus out of shape. Yet I keep it for the memories of my grandmother and mother and Texas, and I like it. Kellogg’s 54 pictures hanging in Sharon’s Hotchkiss Library vary in size and quality. A charming winter scape hangs next to an awful waterfall, a terrible painting of stripes next to a nice depiction of a gray day. But many of the works are likable, for Kellogg’s earnestness and honesty; and many have been sold. The artist is very good at skies: “A Grey Day,” “Clearing Sky” and “The View, Winter” are mainly about clouds and sky in blues and whites or various shades of white and gray. They hang above sometimes unnatural landscapes with billowing authority. One problem is that Kellogg, owner of the busy Garuda Gallery framing shop, paints in so many styles. (There is a painting in the show called “Wassaic ala Cezanne.”) Another is that some works are realistic, some abstract. Often canvas is not entirely covered, as if the artist ran out of ideas. Yet thick layering of paint in others gives them a tactile depth. Kellogg does not paint from life nor from photographs. She paints from memory, feeling. The work is intensely personal. “Choate Island III” is clearly a happy trip remembered cheerfully. But “Choate Island I” is a messy mix of blues and greens that communicates little. Still lifes pop up here and there. “Garden Still Life” and “Cherry Tomatoes” are colorful, realistic. “Max’s Bouquet” is alive with the freshness of flowers. But it is the landscapes, the outdoor paintings that dominate, and I think the smaller the better: Two little pictures, “Along the Brook” and “Pond at Dusk,” are both atmospheric and charming. They are gentle, modest reminders of our amazing Northwest Corner environment. Both are sold, and both will be easy to live with. Karen Kellogg’s paintings will hang in the Hotchkiss Library of Sharon through March 31. The library is open every day. Call 860-364-5041 or go to www.hotchkisslibrary.org.

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