People, Landscapes . . . and a knife


In one of its many ways of enhancing community life, The Moviehouse in Millerton, NY, shows works of art in its upstairs hall and gathering room, aka


The Moviehouse Gallery , where you can sip your coffee, wait for your movie and look at art, almost always the product of someone in the area. It’s a great resource and right now the gallery is showing black-and-white photographs by two area photographers: Marsden Epworth and Sarah Blodgett; and works by the late H.H. Clark, who died in 1984. Blodgett’s works are big and bold and close-up: her flowers show detail you didn’t know was there. Clark’s "Views of New York City," (1938-40) are largely scenes from Central Park, in a more romantic time. Epworth’s "See All About It": The News (Some of It) In Pictures, is a collection of images that have appeared in this newspaper over the last two years, illustrating stories on everything from dance to reiki to tomato soup.

 

If there’s a unifying theme here, it is the quirkiness of each artist’s vision, the peculiar and particular way each one views the world. Blodgett ‘s work has a straight-forward feel about it, as if to say, "Here’s a flower. Look at the detail, see how beautiful it is." Clark’s work has a nostalgic feel (as well it might), showing the city in soft silhouette, Central Park covered in a blanket of white snow, the Boat Basin glassy, reflecting street scapes, ducks diving for scraps. Epworth’s pieces, as she has written, don’t replicate the surface of things and people so much as "reveal the mystery in them." To illustrate tomato soup, for instance, a not terribly photogenic dish, Epworth photographed a fat, ripe tomato with a slender silver spoon stuck in it, juice flowing down its side. An illustration of a story on knife sharpener Theodore O’Neil shows a close-up of a large blade, laid between two halves of a tomato, all on a wood cutting board; the sheen of the blade, the glossy innards of the tomato and the grain of the cutting board produce an amazingly textural photograph, lovely, and just a shade dangerous. Delightfully, Epworth has included an explanation of how she decided to stage each photograph. This engrossing show is on through Jan.31. Hours are one-half hour before and during movie times. For information, call 860-435-2897.

Elsewhere, around and about:

"Portraits & Self-Portraits," works by Sharon artist Peter Steiner, is showing in Lakeville at

Hotchkiss School’s Tremaine Gallery . A reception for the artist is scheduled this Saturday, Jan. 12, 4-6 p.m. Through Feb.2. Hours: Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday noon-4 p.m. Tel.: 860-435-4423.www.hotchkiss.org/arts. "An Artful Season" continues at The White Gallery on Main Street in Lakeville, where new works are on display from many of the gallery’s well-known artists, including David Dunlop, Penny Putnam, Robert Natkin, Tim Cahill, Susan Rand, Joan Jardine and others. Through Jan. 30. Hours: Friday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Tel.: 860-435-1029.www.thewhitegalleryart.com. Up the street on Route 44 in Lakeville, Argazzi Art is showing "Holiday 2007," a group show including some new and old favorites, including Ann Coulter, Eric Aho, and Michael Kessler, along with Lakeville residents Hilary Cooper and Marjory Reid. Through Jan. 31. Hours: weekends, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Tel: 860-435-8222.

 

In Kent’s

Morrison Gallery , works by German landscape artist Wolf Kahn are on display through Jan. 13. Hours: Wednesday-Saturday, 10:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m., Sunday, 1-4 p.m. Tel.: 860-927-4501. www.morrisongallery.com. "Gallery Selections," an eclectic show of works from some 20 artists, including Allen Blagden, Paul Resika, Elaine de Kooning and Frank Stella is at the Ober Gallery , also in Kent. Through March 2. Hours: Thursday and Sunday, 1-5 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Tel.: 860-927-5030. www.obergallery.com.

 

Latest News

Local talent takes the stage in Sharon Playhouse’s production of Agatha Christie’s ‘The Mousetrap’

Top row, left to right, Caroline Kinsolving, Christopher McLinden, Dana Domenick, Reid Sinclair and Director Hunter Foster. Bottom row, left to right, Will Nash Broyles, Dick Terhune, Sandy York and Ricky Oliver in Agatha Christie’s “The Mousetrap.”

Aly Morrissey

Opening on Sept. 26, Agatha Christie’s legendary whodunit “The Mousetrap” brings suspense and intrigue to the Sharon Playhouse stage, as the theater wraps up its 2025 Mainstage Season with a bold new take on the world’s longest-running play.

Running from Sept. 26 to Oct. 5, “The Mousetrap” marks another milestone for the award-winning regional theater, bringing together an ensemble of exceptional local talent under the direction of Broadway’s Hunter Foster, who also directed last season’s production of “Rock of Ages." With a career that spans stage and screen, Foster brings a fresh and suspense-filled staging to Christie’s classic.

Keep ReadingShow less
Plein Air Litchfield returns for a week of art in the open air

Mary Beth Lawlor, publisher/editor-in-chief of Litchfield Magazine, and supporter of Plein Air Litchfield, left,and Michele Murelli, Director of Plein Air Litchfield and Art Tripping, right.

Jennifer Almquist

For six days this autumn, Litchfield will welcome 33 acclaimed painters for the second year of Plein Air Litchfield (PAL), an arts festival produced by Art Tripping, a Litchfield nonprofit.

The public is invited to watch the artists at work while enjoying the beauty of early fall. The new Belden House & Mews hotel at 31 North St. in Litchfield will host PAL this year.

Keep ReadingShow less