Previous Craddock-Terry Gallery Exhibitions

Previous exhibitions in chronological order.

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Cinematograph: Sandra Gibson + Luis Recoder

Each January, Riverviews welcomes the new year with a unique, precedent-setting show.  This year, we welcome the film installations of internationally renowned artists, Sandra Gibson and Luis Recoder in Cinématograph.  The show will open with a First Friday reception on January 6th and will feature an artists’ talk the following Friday, January 13th.

First Friday Opening Reception: January 6th, 5:30-8:00pm

Cinématograph by Sandra Gibson and Luis Recoder

 

Sandra Gibson and Luis Recoder have exhibited their work at major international art museums, galleries, and film festivals such as the Whitney Museum of American Art (NY), Light Industry (Brooklyn), Redcat (Los Angeles), Conversations at the Edge (Chicago), Ballroom Marfa (Marfa), Sundance Film Festival (Park City), Toronto International Film Festival (Toronto), International Film Festival Rotterdam (Rotterdam), MuHKA (Antwerp), Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art (Porto), and Image Forum (Tokyo). They are currently artists-in-residence at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts.

One of the first motion picture cameras ever to be invented doubled as a film projector. This “primitive” apparatus was given the name Cinématographe in 1895 by its founders, Auguste and Louis Lumière. Camera and projector in one, the same strip of celluloid film was exposed, printed, and projected in the selfsame machine. The title of this exhibition borrows the original model of the cinema as a multiple and complex idea that perhaps foreshadowed movements and practices in the contemporary field of “expanded cinema.”

Gibson and Recoder describe the installations in their own words:

In our installation work, we use projected light to articulate space and time. Film projectors and celluloid are the material base of our constructions in light and shadow, the elemental properties of cinema. These things are deeply imbued with a history of viewership in the dark of the theater. To remove it from darkness is to flood this history and cast a certain illumination upon it. A certain exposure. Light spills in the shifting of film from its native darkness in enclosed chambers (camera obscura) to the uncanny openness and defamiliarized illumination of installation. We are exploring the shift, elaborating the displacement, recasting the light mechanics of a peculiar estrangement of the medium. The art of cinema, yes. But more timely: the becoming cinema of art. That is the coming attraction for us.

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September 2nd – October 23, 2011

This fall, we will celebrate one of Lynchburg’s most prolific and beloved folk artists, Willie Shouse.  Shouse produced hundreds of his trademark paintings throughout the course of his life.  Much of his imagery focused on scenes and gatherings of people, both real and imagined.  Shouse had a very unique perspective on the world around him and conveyed it through loose, abstracted, and very colorful works. This exhibition will serve as a retrospective of the work of a man whom many still remember as a quintessential Lynchburg personality.

Willie Shouse Retrospective: September 2nd, 5:30-8:00pm (free and open to the public)

Folk Art, Outsider Art, Visionary Art, Art Brut.  People have come up with numerous terms to describe artists who are working outside the mainstream. Local artist, Willie Shouse somehow manages to embody all of these labels and more. The main definition for Folk Art is that it conveys a shared community aesthetic; Willie Shouse not only represented the look and feel of Lynchburg, but influenced that aesthetic as well.  His pieces have become known throughout the area and have come to posses a very “Lynchburg” look.  Colorful, loose, vibrant, and mysterious, they capture the people we see around town day in and day out.  “As I gathered work for this show, I found myself in an Elk’s Lodge, a local pizza shop, an artist’s basement, and a band’s party house. I loved seeing how these pieces had scattered to so many corners of the city and affected such a range of people in so many different ways”, says Erin Stover, the show’s curator.

Because of this Shouse’s influence, some may qualify his work as Visionary Art. Visionary Art is typically defined as art that comes from ones’ own personal vision.  The focus is generally on the act of creating versus the finished product.  While Shouse certainly was proud of the finished products (he once created a series of work which he tried to sell to Long John Silver’s corporate office), his joy is clearly in the creation of the work. Like many others, his paintings were often cathartic ways of expressing his emotions.  Shouse never had any formal training and created most of his work as immediate reactions to his thoughts, experiences, and dreams.  Suffering from Schizophrenia, he would sometimes have nightmares and strange dreams which he would immediately depict on his canvases. If he couldn’t handle a hardship, it seems that he would be able to sometimes work through it with paint.

Lynchburg was fortunate to have an artist such as Willie Shouse, but he was certainly not alone in his background or in his approach. Throughout the years, Folk Art and Visionary Art have gained more and more recognition in the mainstream art world.  The American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore (which is currently considering some of Shouse’s work) draws hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. The Smithsonian Museum of American Art currently houses 70 artists who are classified as Contemporary Folk Artists.  The common thread between these artists is that they are all self-taught and have mostly created their work in isolation or in small communities.  The same could be said of Willie Shouse.  Willie may have lived an isolated life, but it was certainly not a lonely one. He had a community who supported him, encouraged his work, and engaged with him socially.  He worked feverishly with a small group of artists in Lynchburg and would take his finished pieces to show off at whatever party was happening that weekend.  Most of the time, he could be found talking about art and life at the Firehouse or Rivermont Pizza.

Born and raised in Lynchburg, Shouse dealt with Schizophrenia throughout his life and later developed a debilitating lung disease and cataracts, which made painting more difficult and changed the look of his work.  Never deterred in the slightest, Shouse was a prolific painter (and occasional sculptor) until his death in May 2010.

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Riverviews is excited to open its third annual Regional Juried Art Show. The exhibition, juried by Caroline Cobb Wright, of the Visual Arts Center in Richmond, features over 60 distinct and creative works, all produced by artists throughout the state.   The pieces selected by the juror represent the variety and breadth of work throughout the state.  Featuring over 60 pieces by 46 artists (our largest juried show yet!), the show consists of painting, sculpture, drawing, photography, media, and installation.

Congratulations to our prize winners

1st Place: Together Forever Sheal Eum

2nd Place: The Daily Settlement Edgar Endress

3rd Place: SpaghettiOs Yum? Brooke Marcy

Our juror is Caroline Cobb Wright of the Visual Arts Center in Richmond. Caroline received her BA from Washington & Lee University and her MA from University of Virginia. She has worked at the National Gallery of Art, Monticello, and is currently the Director of Exhibitions at the Visual Arts Center in Richmond. She has served on the board of Second Street Gallery and is a Governor-appointed board member of the NC Museum of Art, where she approves museum acquisitions. Also a practicing artist, Caroline maintains a studio in Richmond, VA. As an artist and as an exhibition director, Caroline is intimately familiar with a wide variety of media and subject matter.

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July 1st – August 21, 2011

Free and open to the public.

Participating Artists:

Other Artists:

Larry Bowden

Greg Boyd

Michael Creed

Judi Crespo

Judy Noon

Sue Saandholland

Erin Stover-Zumwalt

Gay Tucker

RIVERVIEWS BLOOMS IN TIME FOR SUMMER WITH NEW EXHIBITION, BOTANY

Botany; featuring Tamra Harrison-Kirschnick and Kristin Reiber-Harris:

Riverviews welcomes the warm weather and the green season with a new exhibition, Botany; featuring new work by Tamra Harrison-Kirschnick and Kristin Reiber-Harris. Being Virginia artists, both women paint and draw representations of the nature we see daily in this area.  Their pieces serve as more than strict representations, however.

Tamra Harrison-Kirschnick‘s work uses a dark sense of beauty to portray twisting vines, colorful flowers, and deep nests of grass. She states that,

Plant environments allow me to explore intense color, edges, and forms, building discontinuous abstractions that exaggerate and intensify the realistic natural world. Heightened color combined with aggressive plant imagery disrupt ideas of the traditional landscape, where close-up details of nature become catalysts for expressionist friction.”

The result is a familiar, yet seductive scene that draws the viewer in to explore the details of these environments.

Kristin Reiber-Harris grew up on a farm, spending much of her outdoors where “plants, animals, and insects informed [her] sense of the world.”  As an adult, Kristin has managed to retain her child-like curiosity while bringing a new wisdom to her work. The pieces she will exhibit at Riverviews elevate simple plants and grasses to a more reverent level. The work is bright and colorful, yet mature and thoughtful.  In addition to numerous drawings, Kristin will also display her latest woodcuts, a style she is recently revisiting after a long hiatus. For her, the act of cutting into the wood to make the print ties the tree directly into the process and the final product.  Each woodcut illustrates a water garden scene, focusing on “the real and the reflected”

March 4 – April 20, 2011

Gallery Hours: open Wednesday through Sunday, noon-5pm (or by appt.)

Riverviews is excited to open its first portraiture exhibition, featuring five distinct takes on the subject. Will May, founder and former director of LOOK3 Photography Festival, will show his photography and video work which focuses on the idea of interference.  Matt Kleberg and Lavely Miller paint expressionistic, but representational portraits. Kleberg’s close head shots are colorful and approachable, while Miller’s full-body work has an ominous tone. David Garratt, artist in residence at the VCCA, will include two of his newest sculptures which combine clay, encaustic, cement, and iron. Danica Novgorodoff, a graphic novelist from Brooklyn, rounds out the group with an exciting collection of in-process drawings from her latest book.

AKC installation

January 7th – February 20th

Andrea Keys Connell presents life-size ceramic sculptures in the Craddock-Terry Gallery

Andrea Keys  Connell’s sculpture may be a bit unsettling when first entering the gallery.  While they are simply representations of Hummel figurines (dolls, really), their intent stares and tumultuous poses transform them into something entirely different.  They are at once fantastical, whimsical, and yet troubling. Keys Connell describes the concept behind her work:

The sculptures that I make are driven by a desire to investigate how an individual’ s personal history affects their identity, behaviors, and actions. I am especially interested in intergenerational trauma and how a person’s past, particularly a past that has been interrupted by a traumatic event such as war, can influence patterned behaviors that are passed through the family.I am exploring characteristics of the Western collective identity by referencing both Social Realist Monuments and Hummel Figurines. The rendering qualities of the Hummel figurine are a visual trigger of a specific language of social idealization of the child/childhood. Their chubby, red cheeks and full bodies, their curious, sweet gestures, doe eyes and sturdy wide stance represent health, happiness and an uncorrupt innocence. The Hummel is a symbol of unblemished purity. The pedestal that both the monument and Hummel are presented on is a stage that represents their unrealistic social idealization and removes them from reality. When the pedestal is removed, turned over, or sinking, their vulnerability is revealed and their true, flawed human psyche is apparent.

The Craddock-Terry Gallery supports the mission of Riverviews by exhibiting the work of professional level artists in a variety of media for the enrichment and enjoyment of the citizens of Central Virginia.

November 5 – December 19, 2010

The pieces selected by the juror represent the variety and breadth of work throughout the state.  Featuring 33 artists, the show consists of painting, sculpture, drawing, photography, and video. While the styles of work vary from conceptual to representational, all the pieces in the show compliment one another visually.  Artists include some past Craddock-Terry artists, Riverviews building artists, and many fresh new faces.  Virginia is a prolific and creative artistic region and Riverviews is pleased to represent the great work being developed here. The Regional Juried Art Show will be on display through December 19th.

Our juror, Emily Smith served, until recently, as the Curatorial Fellow in Modern and Contemporary Art at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. She has just accepted an exciting new position as the Executive Director of 1708 Gallery.  Smith received her MA in art history from the University of Virginia in 2002. Smith assisted co-curators John B. Ravenal and Matthew Affron on the exhibition Matisse, Picasso, and Modern Art in Paris, and she co-curated Labor and Leisure: Works by African American Artists in the VMFA Permanent Collections. Prior to her position at the VMFA, Smith was Director of Exhibitions at Piedmont Arts in Martinsville, Virginia, and the Assistant Director at Second Street Gallery in Charlottesville, Virginia. Her exhibitions include Hush Lush: Craft Materials in Contemporary Art (co-curated with Sonya Clark); Virginia Painters: Philip Geiger and Robert Stuart; and Ted Turner: A Retrospective.

September 3 – October 24, 2010

Babes in Toyland: In Search of Humanity features new work by painter Greg Jones.  The often larger-than-life toy figures he paints are arranged in installations, hovering over the viewer in a playful yet slightly ominous matter.  Most of Jones’ work comments on politics and government structure, but can also be appreciated as colorful representational work with a sense of nostalgia.

Jones, who has shown prolifically across the US and abroad, received his MFA from University of Illinois-Chicago and is now living and working in Ohio.  Jones describes his work in his own words:

I have always been intrigued by the paradoxical nature of humans, and my current body of work is a response to my inability to reconcile the many contradictions within the human condition. Using toys as stand-ins for humans, I hope to put a playful spin on both the images and the darker acts of human nature.

The overall appearance of this exhibit reflects my fascination with toys as cultural artifacts created to illustrate the endless stories written for children. From the fairy princess to the prince of darkness stories are told to children with the help of toys that ultimately shape their view of the world.

works by MARC-ANTHONY POLIZZI

July 8 – August 22, 2010

The installations are constructed of large-scale found objects such as pianos and occupy entire walls and corners of the gallery.  The exhibition is colorful and contemporary with an appropriately summer-time focus on water.

Polizzi, originally from upstate New York, received his MFA from Tulane and is now living and working in Kansas City.  He has worked at Sculpture Space in NY and served as a visiting artist at PRATT and Tyler School of Craft.  Polizzi’s background is in glass-blowing, but over the past several years he has expanded his work, creating new pieces based on everyday objects which he can transform. Polizzi describes his work in his own words:

My work uses a process of reconstruction and unification to examine the domesticated chaos of the post consumer world. This area where the relatively ordered and relatively disordered coexist and interact might seem like a contradiction, considering the more austere and violent sense of chaos. However it is in this gray area in which I construct my work. These installations draw on the history and narrative properties of found objects, to bring out the human connection often lost in the glimmer and glitz of an ever growing material culture.

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