M Studio Gallery features art of Harper Blanchet

MILLERTON — For The M Studio Gallery, the first day of July began with opening the gallery’s doors to local artist Harper Blanchet and welcoming his abstract paintings as this year’s summer exhibition.

Fresh off a recent show at the Deborah Berke Gallery in New York City, Blanchet worked diligently to transfer his paintings to the M Studio Gallery at The Moviehouse by July 1. An opening reception for his artwork was held on Saturday evening, July 8, and was met with great admiration from the public.

Blanchet’s artwork has taken inspiration from a variety of locations in the Northwest Corner of Connecticut, Dutchess County, N.Y., and Vermont. Along with his vibrant collection of abstract paintings, Blanchet’s resume encompasses photography, poetry and writing, much of which can be viewed online at www.harperblanchet.com.

Growing up in the rural town of Harrington Park, N.J., Blanchet first glimpsed his future as an artist after taking a career test in the sixth grade. He became familiar with the art of photography at age 7 when he received a camera as a Christmas gift. By the time he moved to Sharon, Conn., at age 15, he had already devoted eight years to practicing photography, a talent that was further inspired by the town’s scenic views. 

Reflecting on a few cherished sites in Sharon, Blanchet recounted how he practiced composition in the privacy of Hillside Cemetery, photographing water at the man-made Hatch Pond and light and hues in the Sharon Congregational Church. During his high school career at Housatonic Valley Regional High School, he came across numerous waterfalls that also influenced his photography, including Bash Bish Falls in Mount Washington, Mass., and Sages Ravine in Salisbury, Conn.

Among the key themes in his photography, Blanchet said, that he tends to focus on are water, composition, line, nature and figure. He has employed several camera models and captured a range of subjects, from natural light to musicians and from waterscapes to full term pregnancies. Between 1966 and 1968, he spent his summers applying his skills as a staff photographer at Silver Lake Conference Center in Sharon.

Following his art studies at Southern Connecticut State College in New Haven, Conn., Blanchet returned to Sharon where he co-founded and painted houses with The Right On Paint Company. By 1970, he began writing poetry and he continues keeping a journal to this day. In June of 1972, he moved to Cherry Hill Farm in West Cornwall, Conn., a 133-acre farm that served as a prominent “paradise” in his mind’s eye. While residing in his “primo” home on Cherry Hill Farm, Blanchet established a full state-of-the-art darkroom, a second floor studio and an outdoor stage in the apple orchard to host musical concerts and parties. 

Around 1977, Blanchet was inspired by his best friend and fellow painter Carl Bates to come live among other artists in the Prickly Mountain community, an artistic community formed by well-renowned architect David Sellers in East Warren, Vt. Describing the experience as “another world of alternate energies,” it was in his one-room cabin that Blanchet first started canvas painting.

“By far and large, it was like nothing I had ever experienced in my life,” Blanchet said when recalling his memories of Vermont.

Between 1986 to 2014, Blanchet’s artwork continued to flourish from an abundance of studios, three of which were located in Millerton. By 2014, Blanchet’s artistic talent took root at the Twilight Studios and Blue Star Gallery in Falls Village. Nowadays, in addition to capturing the studio’s light in his photography, he is currently working on a memoir as well as a book of poetry.

For every step in his journey as an artist, Blanchet gained a new subject for his photography and unique ways of expressing himself visually in his artwork. 

“It’s all there and I’m living it ever second of the day,” said Blanchet on his life as an artist. “It’s my passion and I love it. As long as my eyes are working and my hands are working, I’ll continue to do this.”

With so many ideas at his fingertips, Blanchet also remarked on his luck with the constant flow of inspiration without any artistic block.

“I’ve got ideas coming out of my head all the time,” he explained. “When I wake up in the morning, it’s like the life of an artist and the idea that it could be blocked just doesn’t happen. If anything, it’s more of the feeling of there never being more hours in the day.”

Above everything else, Blanchet’s largest goal is finding that dream patron who will “fund me in a major way” and support him in some degree in exchange for some of his artwork. 

Blanchet’s exhibit, “Abstract Paintings 1980-2016,” will be on display at the M Studio Gallery until Wednesday, Oct 4. On Aug. 1, Blanchet said that he plans to swap out his artwork for new paintings and conduct another swap on Sept. 1.

For more information, contact Blanchet online at www.harperblanchet.com or call the Twilight Studios and Blue Star Gallery at 860-824-9904.

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