Peter Busby’s Monumental Vessels in Torrington

Works on a large, even monumental, scale are nothing new for Cornwall’s Peter Busby. The sculptor is perhaps best known for his super-sized works in steel: horses, trout, a great blue heron. A photo on Busby’s website shows the artist in his studio, a welding torch in hand, while two of his gargantuan creations loom overhead. In that case, a pair of long horn cattle. The works in his show, “Amphorae,” which has just opened at Five Points Galley in Torrington, represent a different consideration of the monumental.

While the corner of Water and Main Street in Torrington is not the first place to call to mind the ancient Egyptian temples at Karnak, it was that complex of structures that inspired the pieces that make up “Amphorae.” According to Busby’s notes on the show, a long-ago trip to Egypt left a lasting mark on the artist, and the creation of the sculptures that form the show, “represent the realization of an idea I’ve carried with me for decades.” The show features a series of large vessels, fabricated from wood that has been encased in steel rods. Juxtapositions work to interesting effect: the sharp, angular lines of the wood against the rounded lines of the metal; the classic shapes of the urns against their unexpected, contemporary construction. In some, the work of creation has even been left on obvious display, visible pencil lines marking the wood. Many of the pieces reach over viewers’ heads, causing the gaze to lift upward, and are set in close enough proximity that one must snake between them. This appears to be the artist’s intent: to bring to the art and viewer into an ongoing exchange, to create, as Busby notes, “that humbling feeling of existing among something so much greater than oneself.”

Two other Connecticut based artists also have work currently on exhibit at Five Points Gallery: Pamela Stockamore, “Looking Back — 30 Years” and Joseph Byrne, “Connemara Paintings.” Some of Stockamore’s paintings perform a trick on the eyes. Working with a combination of earth and mineral pigments, at first glance, it can appear that she has painted on metal. Closer examination reveals the material to be rag paper, upon which some of the abstract works reach unexpected and earthy depths. Joseph Byrne’s small-scale, abstract landscapes depict the Roundstone Bog in Connemara. The casein with which he paints creates a softness that suggests the lush, green mists of Ireland. 

Two doors up at 17 Water Street is the recently opened Five Points Annex. “New New,” the first show at the Annex, showcases the work of artists in The Five Points Gallery, Hartford Art School, University of Hartford Launchpad Initiative. The Launchpad Initiative works to provides affordable, shared studio spaces to up-and-coming, young artists. “New New” features 14 artists, including Lakeville resident Tara Nugent whose image “Handcuffs” is a compelling photograph of an old car’s interior sprouting dead foliage.

 

 “Amphorae,” “Looking Back — 30 Years,” and “Connemara Paintings” run through January 13 at Five Points Gallery, 33 Main Street Torrington, CT. “New New” runs through January 6 at Five Points Annex Gallery, 17 Water Street in Torrington.

 For information, visit www.fivepointsgallery.org or call 860-618-7222.

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