The beauty of printed words on paper

SHARON — Many of us count on libraries for publications that feature and celebrate artists. But there’s a delightful bit of table-turning in progress at the Hotchkiss Library of Sharon. In a provocative twist, comes a double-header library art show in which artists feature and celebrate books.

“Bookish” is a group show in two parts. Part one, which is the subject of this article, opened May 5 and runs to July 6. It displays the work of five diverse contemporary artists, each of whom was asked for work that reflects his or her personal relationship to the bound, published printed word. 

The result is a mix in which the transformative power of books is expressed in five totally different, compelling ways — both as image and object, as subject matter and surface material. 

Duncan Hannah’s reverence for books is evident in his vast collection of early Penguin paperbacks. This widely acclaimed artist (who was profiled in the Sunday, May 8, New York Times)rates them “the best graphic design I’ve ever seen,” and he has fashioned oil paintings of vintage Penguin covers as an homage — complete with every cracked facade, finger smudge, and worn edge. Then he began to invent titles and authors‚ books people might have or should have written and then published in the Penguin format. Hannah has shared some of these (as well as collages made using old books) for the show. 

 Megan Wilson is a name that might not initially resonate, but chances are that you’ve seen the witty, stylish book covers she has created for Random House.  The intuition and simplicity of her designs for works from authors such as Truman Capote, Julian Barnes and Edith Wharton have earned her justifiable admiration in both the publishing and art worlds. These are visual narratives that capture the essence of the subject matter with piercing precision. 

Colleen McGuire is well known in Sharon for her lush oils depicting nature, domestic interiors and, in many cases, charming and sometimes haunting local scenes. McGuire has an uncanny way of seeing the familiar and infusing it with a startling new atmosphere and attitude. For this show, she has turned her keen attention to the book as still life — as object for observation, image of an image, picture of a picture. 

Jeff Joyce’s polyptychs of watercolor and vintage book papers explore the intersection of landscape painting and literary romanticism — particularly in the poetry of P.B. Shelley.  

Joyce has salvaged actual book covers and used them as a surface on which to paint. Thus the simplicity and sparseness of his atmospheric landscapes — a hallmark of this artist — are now combined with fragments of text, verses from poems.  The result is that the book, as found object, is reborn as visual art.

Zelina Blagden is an imaginative painter, accomplished photographer, devoted collage-ist and self-proclaimed Dumpster diver. Her work often combines all of these and incorporates her vast collection of diverse objects into mixed media pieces. Her contributions to this show include black-and-white photography, books and “finds” that express her fascination with time, with age and with memory.  

For more information, go to www.hotchkisslibrary.org.

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