Romantics, Inventors and Nonconformists

Three painters with quite different styles are on display at Bachelier Cardonsky Gallery in Kent; you’re bound to love one of them if not all three. Marguerite Takvorian-Holmes paints rich, energetic landscapes which hark back to English romanticism but carry their own bite. “Coming Storm,†(oil on linen) is all about the light coming over the hill, cut abruptly by the dark clouds covering the neighboring woods. It’s both beautiful and spooky. William Thomson is a painter who gave up the New York scene, where he was successful, for the peace of Litchfield County. Obviously the move didn’t curtail his inventiveness. His subjects range from portraits to landscapes and incorporate everything from egg tempera to alkyd and wax. My personal favorite of the show is mixed-media artist Diane Brawarsky, whose works mostly depict stick-figure women adorned with found objects, mostly buttons of a wonderful mix, against flat panels of vivid color. They have a primitive yet sophisticated feel. This is a terrific show. Through Sept. 2. Hours: Friday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

    Down the street and around the corner, the Ober Gallery has extended its first anniversary show until Sept. 5, which is good news indeed. This is a show you’ll want to see. The big draw, so to speak,  is a Matisse drawing, “Atelier D’Artiste†(crayon on paper), which is charming, but there’s lots else to see in this eclectic show, which includes prints, paintings and works on paper of 22 artists from the likes of Harding Meyer, Sigmar Polke and Katherine Bradford. Represented are a handful of the gallery’s specialty, Russian nonconformists. I was particularly taken by the folkloric works of Elena Figurina, featuring bold colors and a childlike perspective. Come for the Matisse, but stay for the rest of the show. Hours: Wednesday-Thursday, 1-4 p.m.; Friday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.  www.obergallery.com.

      Elsewhere, around and about:

     Have some tea with your art and check out Joan Jardine and Jane Zisk’s show of landscapes and houses at Salisbury’s Chaiwalla Tea House; the work of both women evokes a wonderful sense of place (Wednesday-Sunday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.).  “Barnyard Beauties,†works by Sonia Halapin, Shauna Shane, Tillie Strauss and Joan Jardine, continues at the Sharon Historical Society, 18 Main St. in Sharon. Hours: Tuesday-Friday, 1-4 p.m. Save the date! “Copper Field Suite,†works by landscape artist Eric Aho, opens this Saturday, Aug. 18,  at Argazzi Gallery in Lakeville. Hours: Saturday and Sunday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Argazziart@sbcglobal.net.

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