‘The Shape of Color’ at Berkshire Botanical’s Gallery

Brilliant colors greeted us last week at the Leonhardt Galleries at the Berkshire Botanical Garden in Stockbridge, Mass. On a cold, sunny November morning we arrived at the gallery to a giant fresh floor to ceiling wall of green plants designed by the garden’s chairperson Matt Larkin, and then we saw painter Cynthia Wick’s recent explosions of color. 

Wick, a Lenox artist, was asked three years ago by Larkin to do an exhibition of paintings for the gallery in the newly restored and renovated historic 18th century Center House. The gallery, unlike most colonial houses, is fresh, spacious and bright. Because of Larkin’s furniture and lighting design, the rooms feel contemporary.  The inspirations for the 36 paintings are a mix of the Berkshires, Maine, and Southern California. Wick’s bright bursts of different sized, landscape-hued canvases are in their natural home in this gallery. 

The Los Angeles native has lived in Lenox for 10 years but she refuses to let these grim, gray winter surroundings define her colors. Wick worked for many years in the movie business in New York and LA. In New York, she also studied painting, and then moved back to LA. After leaving the movie business in 2009, she and her husband, Channing Gibson, a screenwriter, moved to Lenox, Mass. where two of their three sons went to high school and Wick continued painting full time. 

The current work at the Leonhardt is bold, bright and profoundly colorful. In each tiny section of every painting  many colors make up what looks like one color shape. These works, all collages (but not obviously so) are a mix of oil, acrylic and painted paper and are mostly of natural subjects, but Wick says that the paintings are not about nature as much as light. In these paintings, inspired by the Bay Area Figurative painters, Diebenkorn, Park and Bischoff, in their Southern California brightness, I also glimpse a nod to David Hockney. The artist is moved by the way light hits the subject, be it a tree, a face or a flower. A flower is not just a flower for Wick; there is something anthropomorphic about her forms. If you look closely and squint maybe you’ll see the shape of a woman there. 

Wick says, “These are my most intuitive paintings ever. When I paint, I use my gut. Before, I would use my brain to talk myself out of a gut instinct, but now I trust my instinct implicitly.” What moves her most is color, she says. “I trust my color sense implicitly, I’d rather let form and something knowable lose out to color.”  

Wick says, “Color is my way in.” Luckily for us,  she lets us in too. 

On Saturdays through Nov. 30, visitors to the garden can meet the artist in the galleries for an informal overview and discussion; and on Sundays through Dec.1, docent-led gallery tours will be offered at 1 p.m.The Leonhardt Galleries are located at 5 West Stockbridge Road. For more information, visit berkshirebotanical.org.

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