Spinning The Color Wheel

Two shows currently on view in Litchfield County, Conn., take their prismatic canvases to the opposite sides of the rainbow's end. At Furnace Art on Paper Archive in Falls Village, Conn., Jennifer Riley's series "Arches and Arrows" gravitates to mechanical imagery — assembly lines of magic marker-colored patterns, domed acorn nuts whizzing by, the holes in a rivet spacer expanding, the inner world of a blinking circuit board. At Standard Space in Sharon, Conn., Louise Sheldon conjures ghosts from behind the yellow wallpaper in "Daisy Dew Diamond," part Victor Moscoso's psychedelic rock posters, part Takashi Murakami's super flat postmodern "Happy Flowers." Eyes, teeth, and glossy lips peak through a dizzying kaleidoscope of wild daisies and butterflies shaken in a souvenir snow globe. In Sheldon's "Slanque," look close within the falling florals to find the petal's disc where a rude face smiles back like Georges Méliès's man in the moon.

"Arches and Arrows" is on view through July 9, "Daisy Dew Diamond" is on view through June 25.

Slanque by Louise Sheldon Photo by Alexander Wilburn

Slanque by Louise Sheldon Photo by Alexander Wilburn

Slanque by Louise Sheldon Photo by Alexander Wilburn

Slanque by Louise Sheldon Photo by Alexander Wilburn

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Photo by Greg Lock

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Curated by Greg Lock, director of the Photography, Film and Related Media program at The Hotchkiss School, the exhibition centers on participants in The Arctic Circle, an expeditionary residency that sends artists and scientists into the High Arctic aboard a research vessel twice a year. The result is a show documenting their lived experience and what it means to stand in a place where climate change is not theoretical but visible, immediate and accelerating.

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Joan Osofsky and Sharon Marston

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Hotchkiss Film Festival celebrates 15th year of emerging filmmakers

Student festival directors Trey Ramirez (at the mic) and Leon Li introducing the Hotchkiss Film Festival.

Brian Gersten

The 15th annual Hotchkiss Film Festival took place Saturday, April 25, marking a milestone year for a student-driven event that continues to grow in ambition, reach and artistic scope. The festival was founded in 2012 by Hotchkiss alumnus and Emmy-nominated filmmaker Brian Ryu. Ryu served as a festival juror for this year’s installment, which showcased a selection of emerging filmmakers from around the region. The audience was treated to 17 films spanning drama, horror, comedy, documentary and experimental forms — each reflecting a distinct voice and perspective.

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Photo by Maira Kalman; Courtesy of the artist and Mary Ryan Gallery, New York

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Ticking Tent spring market returns

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Jennifer Almquist

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