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Arts

Founding feminists: Two artistic women in 18th-century London take on high society

Makers. Mistresses. Proto-feminists. Those are a just a few of the titles reserved for the artists represented in The Fralin Museum of Art’s “Two Extraordinary Women: The Lives and Art of Maria Cosway and Mary Darby Robinson.” Guest curator Diane Boucher explores the work, themes and ideals that united these 18th-century artists, including the political activism that flew in the face of their own opulent lifestyles.

“The term ‘proto-feminist’ is generally used to describe women whose philosophical ideas anticipate the feminist movement of the 20th century,” Boucher told C-VILLE via e-mail.

It’s an apt description for Cosway and Robinson, who prioritized the education of girls at a time when women were “generally expected to be either modest wives confined to domestic spaces or decorative ornaments,” Boucher writes.

Cosway, best known as the woman Thomas Jefferson fell in love with while serving as American ambassador to France in 1786, “abandoned her career as an artist in 1803 to pursue her dream of educating young girls, at first in Lyons, France, and later at Lodi in Italy.”

Robinson, for her part, was an outspoken champion of women’s rights. A celebrated English actress, former royal mistress, novelist and poet, her work on themes of romantic disillusionment, transience of beauty and the follies of the fashionable world frequently appeared in the newspaper.

“In 1799, she published ‘A Letter to the Women of England, on the Injustice of Mental Subordination,’” Boucher writes, “in which she argued for, among other things, a woman’s right to leave an unhappy marriage, that women were unjustly excluded from parliament, a university for women and that girls ‘be liberally, classically, philosophically and usefully educated; let them speak and write their opinions freely; let them read and think like rational creatures…expand their minds.’”

Cosway and Robinson’s ideas were revolutionary at this time. Though they were not members of the aristocracy, they were welcome in high society London as talented artists. They visited theaters, pleasure gardens, art exhibitions and the homes of the wealthy.

But rather than obey cultural expectations, Boucher writes, both Cosway and Robinson embraced and promoted their beliefs in freedom, equality and democracy. And like other revolutionaries of their time, they sought to fight back against a tradition of silence by seeking alliance in each other.

In 1800, Cosway and Robinson joined artistic and political forces to create “The Wintry Day,” an illustrated poem that contrasted “the evils of poverty with the ostentatious enjoyment of opulence” in Regency England—a critique that belied their own enmeshment in patrician affairs.

“The Wintry Day” juxtaposes scenes of upper class luxury with those of abject poverty. Boucher writes that these women were intensely self-conscious in their choices. Cosway, for example, hosted musical parties (with her wealthy husband, Richard) for visitors such as the prince of Wales,  and she likely based her illustrations of beautiful interiors on her own magnificent home, Schomberg House.

What’s more, “the scene of women trying on hats at a milliner’s shop in ‘The Wintry Day’ would have been very familiar to both Cosway and Robinson who were considered among the best-dressed women in London,” Boucher writes.

In 1804, “The Wintry Day” was published by Rudolph Ackermann’s Repository of Arts, whose involvement ensured a wide readership among the bon ton of London, according to Boucher. In fact, one such reader was Jefferson, who enclosed a copy of the magazine in a letter to his daughter Martha. “You will see in the magazine an account of a new work by Mrs. Robinson, Mrs. Cosway and Mrs. Watson [the engraver],” Jefferson wrote, “which must be curious.”

Though it’s difficult to judge the popular reaction to Cosway and Robinson’s work, Boucher suggests we view it “through the contemporary thinking of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and other philosophers of the French Revolution, that both Cosway and Robinson supported, along with many British intellectuals and radical politicians, for its promise of liberty and equality.”

The exhibition includes two original drawings from “The Wintry Day,” additional works by the artists themselves and paintings, prints and engravings that illustrate London life as Cosway and Robinson experienced it.

Highlights from the show include “a contemporary print of the London theater where Mary Robinson was first seen on stage by her lover, the 17-year-old prince of Wales, and another showing the pleasure gardens at Vauxhall where Robinson and the prince can be seen enjoying themselves.” Also on display will be an engraving from a 1787 exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts, where Cosway exhibited five of her paintings, alongside a contemporary print of a self-portrait by Cosway.

Robinson’s books and writings, including UVA’s copy of “The Wintry Day,” will be on display, as will “cruel caricatures” of the women by Isaac Cruikshank, Thomas Rowlandson and James Gillray, “the most important satirists of the day.”

The show is a collaboration and it’s also an attempt to resuscitate the spirit and voice these women fought to express. “Many people view Maria Cosway as a footnote in the Thomas Jefferson narrative,” Boucher writes. “I hope this exhibition will illustrate her importance as a talented artist, musician, composer and educator.”

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Arts

From the outback to the runway: Kluge-Ruhe collaborates on indigenous Australian fashion show

Fashion-forward isn’t how most would describe the local aesthetic in Charlottesville, which tends to center on khaki and collared prep or moisture-wicking running gear. The Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of UVA is hoping to change that this month, by borrowing a bit of inspiration from halfway around the world.

On March 19, the museum will host the Culture Couture fashion show and performance at The Jefferson Theater, showcasing one-of-a-kind designs crafted by UVA students with help from some of Australia’s indigenous textile and costume designers.

More than a year in the making, Culture Couture grew out of an idea that came to Kluge-Ruhe Education and Program Coordinator Lauren Maupin after a visit to Australia. Inspired by the textile patterns and fashion that she saw during the 2014 Cairns Indigenous Art Fair, Maupin returned to Charlottesville with a desire to draw greater awareness to indigenous design.

She enlisted the help of others in the local community, including Marcy Linton, associate professor of costume technology in UVA’s drama department. After a series of brainstorming exchanges, the groundwork fell into place for an event that includes a design competition, UVA course curriculum and a finale fashion show open to the public.

In January 2015, Kluge-Ruhe launched the inaugural fashion design contest, encouraging UVA students to create sketches for garments inspired by and celebrating indigenous textiles and aesthetics. Indeed, one of the primary goals of the project was to share “ideas about what indigenous creativity looks like—that it’s contemporary, sophisticated and diverse,” says Maupin.

Between 20 and 30 designs were submitted by students, and 10 were selected and matched with a specific fabric made by one of four community groups in northern Australia.

Local seamstresses and patternmakers Dorothy Smith, Beth Neville Evans and Linton then translated the sketched designs into workable patterns over the summer. When classes started in the fall, Linton’s costume technology students began creating mocked-up versions of the garments out of practice fabric, then tweaked the designs under her guidance, before cutting and sewing the final products, which will be showcased at the fashion show.

“As the project continued, I felt more and more inspired and excited about the accomplishments of the students involved,” says Linton. “Each stage of the process for the students seemed to be met with excitement that the last stage had been finished successfully and looked better than they could have ever imagined.”

Throughout this process, Linton and Maupin engaged the students in an interactive study of indigenous aboriginal art and culture, which included Skyping with some of the textile designers whose fabric was incorporated into the designs.

“I’ve been really impressed with all the work and enthusiasm that the students have put into the project on their own time,” says Maupin. “We have students who have volunteered to do so many things, from photography to music production to graphic design to styling to modeling and model coaching.”

One of those students is Olivia Tritschler, a global development studies major who was president of the UVA Fashion Design Club.

“My role in this project started as a designer and fabricator of one garment, but in October I took on more responsibilities within the planning and the production of the fashion show,” says Tritschler. Since then, she has volunteered regularly at the Kluge-Ruhe and is co-manager of the project. According to Tritschler, an interest in museum and nonprofit work after graduation was part of her motivation to get more involved. Along the way, she’s experimented more with her own look and come to learn a lot about indigenous traditions. “I have gained some useful skills that will help me in my future career after college, but mostly I [have] come away from Culture Couture with inspiration for my own fashion, new knowledge about indigenous art [and] supportive relationships,” says Tritschler. “I hope my garment respects these talented artists’ work and culture.”

Strutting on catwalks in the Jefferson Theater, volunteers will model the final couture dresses—plus one pantsuit—made during the collaborative project. Garments and accessories by indigenous Australian designers will be highlighted alongside student work, and the evening will also feature live music by the aboriginal trio Biliirr, comprised of sisters from the Yuwaalaraay country of northern New South Wales (this will be the first American performance for the group). In addition, DJ Kris Cody will host an after-party.

The culmination of work won’t necessarily mark the end of the budding relationship between the Kluge-Ruhe and UVA’s drama department, however. “Lauren and I have already been brainstorming about how we could do certain things differently if we do it again,” says Linton.

What cultures influence your fashion choices?

Tell us in the comments below.

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Living

LIVING Picks: To-do for the week

Nonprofit

Jimmy Miller Bracket Breakfast

Ralph Sampson, Barry Parkhill, Antonio Rice and Jay James return for the third annual bracket breakfast, which gives you the inside scoop on college basketball and benefits Piedmont CASA.

Monday 2/14.$125, 7am. Omni Hotel Ballroom, 212 Ridge McIntire Rd. bb@pcasa.org.

Health & Wellness

Sugar Hollow Three Bridges 5K and 10K

Sponsored by the White Hall Ruritans, the race starts on Sugar Hollow Road and is followed by a pancake breakfast. Proceeds aid in the restoration of White Hall Community Center in Western Albemarle.

Saturday 3/12. $30-40, 8am. 5275 Sugar Hollow Rd., White Hall. 293-3367.

Festival      

Wild About Art

Participate in a silent auction of local art and enjoy hors d’oeuvres and beverages. All money raised goes to the Rockfish Wildlife Sanctuary.

Saturday 3/12. $20, 5-7:30pm. City Space, 500 Fifth St. NE. 760-2695.

Food & Drink

Artisan cheesemaking

Caromont Farm’s Gail Hobbs-Page teaches the essentials of artisan cheesemaking at home and shares a cheese-centric meal.

Saturday 3/12. $125, 11am- 3pm. 9261 Old Green Mountain Rd., Esmont. caromontcheese.com/classes.

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Arts

March First Fridays Guide

Local artist Eliza Evans has been painting acrylic portraits from real-life scenes since 2006, and she always tries to capture a good likeness as quickly as possible so the subject doesn’t get uncomfortable sitting. Her latest exhibit is a collection of self-portraits along with some portraits of her close friends and family on canvas, wood and dipper gourds that she grew. “There is something a little different about painting myself from the mirror,” says Evans in her artist statement. “I feel like I can loosen up and do more experimenting with my painting technique.” Evans hopes that even though the exhibit displays her face over and over, people will understand she doesn’t take herself too seriously.
Her #selfies exhibit opens on March 5 at The Garage.

First Fridays is a monthly art event featuring exhibit openings at many Downtown art galleries and additional exhibition venues. Several spaces offer receptions. Listings are compiled in collaboration with Piedmont Council for the Arts. To list an exhibit, please send information two weeks before opening to arts@c-ville.com.

 First Fridays: March 4

Art on Ivy 2125 Ivy Rd. #5. An exhibit of colorful, textured book art by Lyall Harris. 5-6:30pm.

C’ville Arts Cooperative Gallery 118 E. Main St. “Love What You Do,” featuring ceramics by Trina Player. 6-8pm.

Graves International Art 306 E. Jefferson St. “Roy Lichtenstein & Company,” featuring paintings, drawings, watercolors, silkscreens, lithographs, and etchings by Roy Liechtenstein, Sam Francis, Erte, Jacques Villon, Jim Dine, John Chamberlain, Paul Cesar Helleu, Pierre Marie Brisson, John James Audubon, Mark King, Pierre Bonnard, and Edgar Degas. 5-8pm.

JMRL Central Library 201 E. Market St. “On Our Own,” featuring works by a peer support recovery center for people with mental health challenges. 5-7pm.

McGuffey Art Center 201 Second St. NW. “Rock, Paper…,” featuring photography by Scott F. Smith in the Sarah B. Smith Gallery; “Studio Things,” featuring works by Bruno LaVerdiere and J.M. Henry in the Lower Halls; and “ArtReach,” featuring children’s art in the Upper Halls. 5:30-7:30pm.

Mezzanine Gallery @ New Dominion Bookshop 404 E. Main St. “A Splash of Color,” featuring oil paintings by Nancy Campa. 5:30-7pm.

Second Street Gallery 115 Second St. SE. “Vestiges and Relics,” featuring paintings by Chrissy Baucom, “Periodicities in Chaotic Forcing,” featuring installation of found objects by Heather Harvey, and “Pretty on the Inside,” featuring 3D forms and 2D drawings by Kortney Niewierski. 5:30-7:30pm, with an artist talk at 6:30pm.

Spring Street Boutique 107 W. Main St. “Beach,” featuring watercolor and sketches on paper by Barbara Grandis. 6-8pm.

The Bridge PAI 209 Monticello Rd. “A Portrait of Collaboration: Devising NO WAKE,” featuring multimedia works by Jennifer Hoyt Tidwell, Martha Mendenhall, Ted Coffey, Allyson Mellberg Taylor, Jeremy Taylor, Thadd McQuade, Sian Richards, Marianne Kubik, Deandra Irving, Miller Susen, Trina Candia, Sydney Wynn, Jennifer Downey, Samantha Pagni, Aaron Farrington, Stephen Thomas, Matt Thomas, Kim Boggs, and many children. 6-9pm.

The Loft at Freeman-Victorius 507 W. Main St. “Pottery and Paintings,” featuring clay and mixed media works by Ken Nagakui. 5-8pm.

The Women’s Initiative 1101 East High St. “The Feel of Greener Pastures,” featuring acrylic landscapes by Janet Pearlman. 5:30-7:30pm.

Welcome Gallery @ New City Arts 114 Third St. NE. “Deepsea Collaborations,” featuring prints, watercolor paintings, and drawings by Kaki Dimock and Josef Beery. 5-7:30pm.

WVTF & Radio IQ Studio Gallery 216 W. Water St. “We Dream of the House We Were Born In,” featuring paintings by Roger Williams, presented by New City Arts. 5-7pm.

Other Exhibits

Chroma Projects 107 Vincennes Rd. “Gathered from Available Data,” featuring prints, drawings, photography, paintings, and poetic text by Tanja Softic, with a reception on Sunday, March 6 at 4pm.

City Clay 700 Harris St., Ste. 104. “Functional Elegance,” featuring clay works by Patrick Gibson, with a reception on Friday, March 11.

CitySpace Gallery 100 Fifth St. NE. An exhibit by Albemarle County Public Schools, beginning March 7.

Ix Art Park 522 Second St. SE. “Hello Again,” featuring drawings and mixed media works by Polly Breckenridge.

Java Java Café 421 E Main St. “Rambunctious Still Life,” featuring paintings by Karen Siegrist.

Jefferson School African-American Heritage Center 233 Fourth St. NW. “The 1963 Danville Civil Rights Movement: The Protests, The People, The Stories,” featuring documentary portraits by Tom Cogill and text panels by Emma Edmunds.

Senior Center 1180 Pepsi Pl. “Scarlet Waterway,” featuring watercolor paintings by Rosemary Nothwanger.

Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital 500 Martha Jefferson Dr. An exhibit of paintings and photographs by BozART Group artists Craig Lineburger and Madeleine Watkins.

The Fralin Museum of Art at UVA 155 Rugby Rd. “Struggle…From the History of the American People,” featuring paintings by Jacob Lawrence; “Richard Serra: Prints,” from the collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer and his Family Foundation; “Fish and Fowl,” featuring sculptures, paintings, and prints; “Navajo Weaving: Geometry of the Warp and Weft,” featuring textiles; and “Two Extraordinary Women: The Lives and Art of Maria Cosway and Mary Darby Robinson.”

The Garage 100 E. Jefferson St. “#selfies,” featuring acrylic portraits by Eliza Evans, with a reception on Saturday, March 5 at 5pm.

Thomas Jefferson Memorial Church 717 Rugby Rd. An exhibit of watercolor paintings by Ken Chasin, with a reception on Sunday, March 6 at 12:30pm.

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Arts

A closer LOOK3: New director brings new approach to photo fest

This year marks the 10th year of LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph but promises to bring a new approach to the popular programming, taking place June 13-19. The festival has continued to evolve throughout its decade of public programs to meet the interests of the field’s amateurs and professionals alike. While doing so, it has provided local community members with opportunities to view work and engage with some of the most challenging and respected photographers in the world. Though it’s still one of Charlottesville’s young festivals, LOOK3 is established and well-regarded within the worldwide photography community.

LOOK3 leadership has always reflected this high esteem as well, boasting accomplished photography consultants and practitioners on the festival’s staff and board over the years. When the executive director stepped down in 2015 to pursue other projects, an intensive search followed, resulting in the selection of Mary Virginia Swanson.

As an educator, consultant, mentor and writer, Swanson has remained deeply embedded in photography since earning her MFA in the field in the late 1970s. She was the founding director of the American Photography Institute at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts and has organized special projects through Magnum Photos and education initiatives such as the Ansel Adams Workshop, among others. She is also the author of three books on the business of photography, advising aspiring and professional photographers on the ins and outs of marketing and selling work, publishing art books and other industry nitty-gritty.

In 2013, Swanson joined the education faculty for the festival, leading a program on long-term project proposals and assisting with portfolio reviews. “I found LOOK3 to be completely engaging,” she says. “It was an atmosphere where everyone mattered, no matter if you had forged a reputation in our field or not. We were all made to feel special and very welcome in Charlottesville.”

Last fall she accepted the executive director position, while remaining a dedicated teacher and mentor—she speaks to groups and reviews portfolios for the Aperture Foundation in her spare time.

As she takes the reins of the festival, Swanson’s interest in education remains strong, as does her focus on continuing the feeling of inclusivity that she experienced first-hand. “My passion for relevant education is powerful,” says Swanson. “I want LOOK3 to offer a continuing education program that serves photographers of all ages and levels of expertise. We are expanding education at the start of the week, offering one-day seminars on the technical as well as the business side of photography. With changes in digital imaging capabilities, the photography world is changing fast.”

Swanson and her small staff have already announced the 2016 LOOK3 lineup of featured photographers, including Nick Brandt, Graciela Iturbide, Yuri Kozyrev, Frans Lanting, Olivia Bee, Binh Danh, Sheila Pree Bright, Doug DuBois and Radcliffe “Ruddy” Roye.

The international representation among the artists is broad, but this year the focus is more on the subject of each photographer’s work than on the artists themselves. This move away from the celebrity-photographer to the documentarian and activist-photographer is an important part of Swanson’s issue-focused approach to the festival. “Whatever area of work they’ve championed is just as important as their name,” she says.

Iturbide is a Mexican documentary photographer who captures everyday life of indigenous communities, while Kozyrev is a Russian photojournalist covering Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya, among other sites of international conflict. Pree Bright explores cultural identities and the African-American experience through her work, while DuBois focuses on American portraiture. Danh is a Vietnamese photographer best known for his chlorophyll prints that photosynthesize images directly onto a leaf or a blade of grass, with the Vietnam War recurring as a major theme through his work.

“I am inspired by artists engaged in documentary practices where we learn about our world and those who came before us, as well as those expressing themselves through historic processes,” says Swanson.

LOOK3’s unique schedule offers a full festival three out of every four years, with LOOKbetween educational programming on the off year of each cycle. This year’s full program includes educational events, artist exhibitions and talks, and the outdoor projections—a perennial crowd favorite—will return. The Sunday of the festival coincides with Father’s Day and will feature a new draw for locals: Family Photo Day. The program will offer free family portraits taken by professional photographers, plus plenty of kid-friendly activities at the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center.

LOOK3 passes are on sale at look3.org.

What is your favorite festival event? Tell us in the comments below.

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Arts

Below the surface: ‘Visions for 2016’ is a meditation on abstraction

Janet Bruce’s “Shorelines” paintings sneak up on you. Standing in front of them, you see them come alive, as things you didn’t notice at first become apparent.

She builds up surfaces with many layers of paint, adding texture and visual interest, as glimpses of the various undercoats are visible.

In some, she adds animated squiggles of oil stick. These marks have an almost casual quality, but also complete assuredness. There’s a fearlessness to her approach.

In 2013, she moved to New York from Virginia, trading in a familiar landscape for something completely different, which is reflected in her work. “In New York, I had moved from the space of mountains and clouds to the seashore,” she says. “The question now was how do I transform perceptions to essences with abstraction? To return the paintings to a realm of their own.”

Bruce joins artists J. M. Henry, Deborah Kahn and Martha Saunders in the exhibit “Visions for 2016,” on display now at Les Yeux du Monde.

“This show took a long time to percolate,” says Lyn Warren of Les Yeux du Monde. “I like all these artists individually and think they all have very distinct styles, but I also feel they work well together because of the way they treat their surfaces.”

Henry’s minimalist landscapes are lovely meditations on color and paint. His large canvases feature an anodyne smoothness bisected by slashes of pigment into which he manages to invest enormous visual interest. Although the black mats with title and signature used on his smaller oils are distracting, the paintings’ evocation of J. M. W. Turner’s atmospheric studies still shine through.

Throughout, the low horizon line imparts a contemplative quality. “With the landscapes in the current show, I was transitioning from oil paint to acrylics, and experimenting with translucency by adding various materials to the paint,” says Henry. “As with all of my work, I am primarily interested in color, and by returning to a familiar (landscape) format I can better gauge the effects I am creating.”

Kahn is the only artist of the four to incorporate figures in her work. They’re highly stylized, not fully realized, of uncertain age and sex, and arranged in space or within the suggestion of a room.

Intentionally enigmatic, Kahn uses her figures to strike emotional chords with the viewer, creating feeling through form.

“For me, form is created through space,” says Kahn. “Space in painting is complicated, but tension in forms create space. A painting is complete when forms contain contradictions: Figures are separate yet one; forms appear masculine and feminine; figures are moving and still. The contradictions signify simultaneous conflicting feelings.”

Kahn refers to herself as a colorist, and her sophisticated palette has the curious quality of being both rich and subdued. She builds up her surface, carefully modulating the color to create varying tonalities.

Saunders’ lyrical paintings seem to speak of both macro and micro worlds. “Dissolving,” a mysterious vision of line, volume and light, could be either celestial or cellular. She is interested in the physical world, relying on both scientific data and personal observations to create her poetic responses. Her encaustic paintings feature wonderfully inventive patterns, translucent and opaque areas and a muted palette of grays, mauves and browns that seems to suggest a primordial, elemental color scheme.

“When I’m working I am interested in describing states of matter if things are solid or not,” she says. “They’re pictorial, but I hope that I convey the physicality and the energy. I think people get the sense that the material (the wax) itself can change. I’m trying to create fields that are pushing at each other within the composition, trying to get the fields to interact in the right proportions.”

Surface is certainly one of the unifying elements in “Visions for 2016,” but all of the work shares a meditative, transcendent quality. Verging on abstraction, the paintings invite introspection while providing a means for the artists to explore their media in highly personal ways.

Janet Bruce’s “Shorelines: Lakeside Littoral” is part of the “Visions for 2016” exhibition on view at Les Yeux du Monde through March 6. Image: Courtesy the artist

Visions for 2016

Les Yeux du Monde

Through March 6

–Sarah Sargent

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Arts

Double take: Liz Rodda pairs up the unexpected at Second Street Gallery

Ever notice how a small shift in perspective can transform the way you think about your job, relationship, insert-your-life-struggle-here?

Liz Rodda is a mixed-media artist who sharpens viewers’ abilities to reframe what they see by partnering two totally unrelated works in a mash-up of videos, sound and sculpture.

Unlike a traditional collage artist who combines varied media to build a single, unified work, Austin-based Rodda strives to maintain the integrity of each freestanding concept. That juxtaposition triggers a dialogue between the works as well as in the minds of its viewers.

Consider “The Vow,” a work in Rodda’s current exhibit, “Two Kinds of Luck,” on display at Second Street Gallery through the end of the month. In it, a neon-green yoga mat drapes casually across the floor, one end anchored by a silver-gray stone. Read the description and you discover the plaster rock has a bottle of Elizabeth Taylor’s perfume, Forever, embedded in it.

It’s a puzzle, all right. What’s the connection? Are we reflecting on what it means to find permanence on the social and spiritual planes? Our craving for immortality and the futility of fame? Or does it simply suggest that women who make it through yoga classes without a single drop of sweat disturbing their perfect hairdos also have perfume in their veins?

Beats me. But asking the questions to make new connections is the point of the exercise.

“I like contradictions and unexpected pairings,” Rodda writes in an e-mail to C-VILLE. “Context is significant in my work as a result. For example, placing one video beside another changes the way we see both. My goal isn’t to make something greater than the individual elements that are combined, but to see them differently through association.”

Influenced by psychology, philosophy and pop culture, Rodda’s work has been featured in solo exhibitions all over the country.

“I tend to borrow from a lot of different genres and styles—I draw from minimalism, pop culture, music and movies,” she writes. “My goal is to effectively blend genres and styles together when possible. This kind of mixing mimics my process—I spend a lot of time collecting video clips, images and objects and then pairing different elements to create some kind of tension.”

She spends the majority of her time collecting material she can work with and shuffling it around. “Sometimes I shoot video, but more often I use pre-existing video and audio I find online,” she writes. “The same goes with sculpture—sometimes I make objects, but much more frequently I find myself repurposing.”

As an example, she cites a video in her current show at Blue Star Contemporary Art Museum in San Antonio. “‘Turn Your Face Toward The Sun’ consists of scanned images from modern furniture magazines that pan and zoom slowly over time. The audio is made up of a girl chewing gum and whispering positive affirmations,” she writes. “The audio and video content are really different but somehow work together to give one another a new sense of direction and purpose.”

Rodda’s interest in teasing out relationships between ideas seemingly at odds with each other—really, making work that succeeds in spite of itself—is a product of her self-led exploration of her psyche as an artist.

“I studied English in college and then started making art in grad school directly after,” she writes. “It was a steep learning curve since I knew very little about contemporary art and had minimal art-making experience.”

After school was over, Rodda says, she met an artist named Frank Wick and began to zero in on the type of artist she wanted to become.

“Meeting Frank was pivotal for me not only because I later married him, but also because he showed me it was possible to take your work seriously without being too serious. He introduced me to John Waters and Slavoj Žižek, both of whom have influenced me at times.”

Her sources of creative input run the artistic gamut because Rodda is an assistant professor at Texas State University, School of Art and Design. As a result, she is exposed to and inspired by a wide range of works that she “might not make time for otherwise.”

But, of course, the real goal is that shift in perspective—a gift she gives her students whether they enjoy it or not.

“What I like best about teaching is getting to know individual students and exposing them to works and ideas that I know they will love,” Rodda writes. “At the same time, it is rewarding to show work that is challenging and harder to like.”

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Arts

Jill Kerttula reflects on the Great Smoky Mountains through fiber art

Last year for the month of October, fiber artist Jill Kerttula lived in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, lodging for free in a furnished apartment alongside three neighbors, among whom was a man who used paintball guns to track bears. Kerttula came to be there after being selected for the artist-in-residence program at the park, and spent her days walking in nature and taking thousands of photographs. “I use photography like my journal or sketchbook,” she says.

With eight to 10 million visitors every year, GSMNP is the busiest of the national parks—and Kerttula happened to be there during the busiest month of the year, because the changing fall foliage attracts more visitors. In addition to lodging, she was given a studio at Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts in Gatlinburg, Tennessee, though she preferred to be outdoors and taking inspiration from the sights and sensations of the Smoky Mountains.

Kerttula’s fiber art collection, entitled “A Walk in the Park,” is currently on exhibit at McGuffey Art Center until February 28.
Her objective in creating this series is to “reflect the beauty and details of the park.” She laughs when she considers that she lived for a month in a national park with some of the biggest vistas in the United States and yet was most interested in capturing acute details such as moss, fungus, rocks and a spider.

During the first week of her stay in the Smoky Mountains, it rained. The ensuing fog created a mystical environment that looked and felt like the forest primeval, she says, which became the title of her favorite piece in the series. Another piece captures raindrops as they fall into a creek and ripple out, with smooth stones sewn on to create the effect of looking down through water to the creek bottom.

Kerttula’s process of creating fiber art begins by editing the photograph online, then, once satisfied with the image, she has it printed onto cotton. From there, her art is based on traditional quilting, beginning with backing and batting layers, sometimes adding other layers or fabrics, like burlap or netting, and found objects.

Next, Kerttula moves the fabric through her sewing machine, what is known as free-motion stitching, like drawing with a needle. She then may also add some hand-stitching. The stitching, she explains, creates compression of the materials so that the unstitched sections puff out and add to the 3-D effect.

“It gives it texture and allows me to work with it in my hands,” she says, “almost like a sculpture.” Sometimes she also builds up layers and then cuts through them to create texture. “Quilting is still perceived as women’s art and folk art, and I want to work it into—and I do mean into, not up to—the world of fine art.”

Kerttula has spent a lifetime quilting and making clothes for herself and for her children. But before she became a fiber artist full-time she had a career in graphic design. After being laid off  (in her original home of Madison, Wisconsin) she supported herself creating upcycled and reconstructed sweaters that she cut and sewed, selling them at arts and craft fairs and on Etsy.

The National Park System has separate artist residency applications for each park, with varying requirements. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park seeks artists whose work “is engaged in issues that are relevant to the park’s interpretive themes,” which are diversity and abundance, continuum of human activity and refuge of scenic beauty.

Part of the requirement for the residency is for the artist to interact with the public and to share his or her artwork. Kerttula demonstrated how to create a quilted collage, and set up an en plein air leaf-printing workshop in the autumnal landscape, where children rolled ink onto leaves and printed them on paper.

Kerttula summarizes her experience of the residency as “a wonderful opportunity to immerse yourself in the beauty of the park.” Next, she plans to apply for the artist-in-residence program at Badlands National Park in South Dakota and apply her artistic curiosity to a more barren landscape.

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Arts

Invitation to play: Art as an interactive experimentation in ‘LOOPLAB’

Playing with the art in a gallery is not always the viewer’s first instinct. “I always worry that video [art] is intimidating, but then you put on a lab coat and it changes things,” says multimedia artist Fenella Belle. In an exhibition this month with photographer Stacey Evans, Belle’s lab coat is both symbolically and physically present. It points to the creative experimentation that the two artists seek to inculcate in gallerygoers, but it’s also an interactive element in one of the works. Titled “LOOPLAB,” the full exhibition includes video and fabric installations as well as small cyanotype prints and an interactive collage at the McGuffey Art Center.

Belle and Evans originally met through their day jobs as art instructors at Piedmont Virginia Community College and both became McGuffey members approximately two years ago. While teaching a summer camp together, “We noticed that we have some similar styles in terms of teaching, approach and trying to get people to be playful and not intimidated by art,” says Belle. Based on this, the idea for this exhibition was formalized in the summer of 2015, motivated in part by the McGuffey Art Center’s annual call for member exhibitions.

Since then, the two artists have shared many hours in each other’s studios, meeting once a week to swap ideas and play with various materials. The collaboration has largely focused on interaction and experimentation from day one. “We just took out a piece of paper and we really didn’t have any plans. It was just, ‘Let’s throw some stuff on here and see what happens,’” recalls Belle.

Though both artists share a tactical approach, their aesthetics diverge drastically. Belle is bright colors and organic shapes; Evans is more subdued, with a tendency toward the technological. “Fenella’s really good with a hammer and I’m really good with a computer,” says Evans. Where Belle might use a flower or the looping silhouette of a leafy vine to accent a piece, Evans is more likely to incorporate an outdated credit card machine or flip phone. “In our practices, we each have discarded materials that are hard to throw into the trash can,” says Evans. “So, we have a lot of material that we want to recycle and reuse, transforming that into something new.”

The McGuffey exhibition also includes the display of two prior individual works that are featured in “LOOPLAB.” The first was created for the 2015 PVCC faculty show and featured magnetic shapes on steel wall panels. “[It’s] the most free-form since it gets completed by the viewer,” says Belle. Indeed, it invites the viewer to touch and play, rearranging the shapes and colors while also acknowledging the impermanence of any one configuration.

The second display from their partnership took the form of an interactive video during PVCC’s annual Let There Be Light event. Belle and Evans engaged viewers as co-experimenters. Clothed in lab coats, they encouraged visitors to project their shadows onto the video in an improvisational performance.

While both of these previous works are engaging, the highlight of this exhibition is a new series of oversized cyanotypes. Making use of this process to create silhouette prints on light-sensitive surfaces, Belle and Evans created an immersive and playful installation that plays off their skills. “I’m really committed to interactive stuff,” Belle says. “I like to make spaces that people can walk into. I know how to do big fabric, and [Stacey] knows how to do cyanotypes.”

Collecting found materials from other projects, the two artists assembled boxes of objects to use as the negative space in the cyanotype exposures. Belle and Evans coated 7′ silk panels with photosensitive chemicals and allowed them to dry before being stored in light-blocking black garbage bags to await the perfect, sunny day.

“We got the coldest day of January, but the sun was out,” says Evans. They constructed a temporary tent on McGuffey’s front lawn, allowing space for one fabric panel in its shade, then composed each panel, placing objects directly on the fabric to create patterns and shapes. When Belle and Evans were happy with the arrangement, they pulled back the tent to expose the large sheet of photosensitive fabric to the sun. The exposure time for each panel was 15 minutes, after which they would take it inside to rinse and then start the process again on the next panel. Once rinsed, the images on the fabric are permanent. Seven of these printed panels hang from the gallery ceiling and the result is a gauzy maze, submerging viewers in the blue waves of floating fabric punctuated by lighter swirls and blocks that are abstract and free-form.

As with the other two pieces, the cyanotypes are, in a sense, completed by the viewer. Until someone interacts with the magnets, the video or the immersive space created by the cyanotypes, the pieces themselves are incomplete. The act of play is the final component of the collaboration, and one in which we all are invited to take part.

What are your favorite artistic collaborations?

Tell us in the comments below.

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Arts

February First Fridays Guide

Artist Sharon Zarambo founded Bellozar Studio in 1987. Though she has explored a range of mediums, she has worked in mixed media for the past eight years. Inspired by the work of surrounding artists, Zarambo has created a number of striking totemic works, along with sculptures and wall art, which reflect a blend of influences. “I want to challenge myself to experiment with materials, take chances and produce something I am proud to share,” she says. See her diverse works on exhibit at the First Fridays Finish event at Ix Art Park.

First Fridays is a monthly art event featuring exhibit openings at many Downtown art galleries and additional exhibition venues. Several spaces offer receptions. Listings are compiled in collaboration with Piedmont Council for the Arts. To list an exhibit, please send information two weeks before opening to arts@c-ville.com.

 First Fridays: February 5

C’ville Arts Cooperative Gallery 118 E. Main St. “What’s New,” featuring works in varied media by artists who joined C’ville Arts in 2015. 6-8pm.

Graves International Art 306 E. Jefferson St. “Roy Lichtenstein & Company,” featuring paintings, drawings, watercolors, silkscreens, lithographs, and etchings by Roy Liechtenstein, Sam Francis, Erte, Jacques Villon, Jim Dine, John Chamberlain, Paul Cesar Helleu, Pierre Marie Brisson, John James Audubon, Mark King, Pierre Bonnard, and Edgar Degas. 5-8pm.

The Loft at Freeman-Victorius 507 W. Main St. “Landscapes and Still Lifes,” featuring oil paintings by Randy Baskerville. 5-8pm.

McGuffey Art Center 201 Second St. NW. “LOOPLAB,” featuring mixed media by Stacey Evans and Fenella Belle in the Sarah B. Smith Gallery; “Literary Allusions,” featuring mixed media and textiles by Jill Jenson in the Lower Hall North; “A Walk in the Woods,” featuring fiber art by Jill Kerttula in the Lower Hall South; “Still Life Paintings” by Hina Naeem in the Upper Hall South; and “Women,” featuring contemporary nude drawings by Russell U. Richards in the Upper Hall North. 5:30-7:30pm.

The Paramount Theater 215 E. Main St. “Art Helps Charlottesville Police Help You,” an art auction to benefit the Charlottesville Police Department, presented by Barboursville Fine Arts. 5-7:30pm.

Second Street Gallery 115 Second St. SE. “Maps, Planes, and Water Marks,” featuring drawing and painting on paper by Amie Oliver, and “Two Kinds of Luck,” featuring sculpture and video by Liz Rodda. 5:30-7:30pm, with an artist talk at 6:30pm.

Spring Street Boutique 107 W. Main St. “Hollywood,” featuring acrylics and pen works on paper by Phoebe Bugay. 6-8pm.

Top Knot Studio 103 5th St. SE. “The Recovery Series,” featuring works by Wolfgang Hermann. 5-7pm.

Welcome Gallery @ New City Arts 114 Third St. NE. “New City Artist Exchange,” featuring prints, photography, works on paper, painting, and sculpture by Alyssa Pheobus Muntaz, Cate West Zahl, Kristen Finn, Ken Horne, Laura Dillon Rogers, Lily Erb, Roger Williams, Ryan Trott, Sarah Boyts Yoder, and Tobiah Mundt. 5-7:30pm.

WriterHouse Gallery 508 Dale Ave. Oil paintings by Hailey Kim. 5:30pm-7:30pm.

WVTF & Radio IQ Studio Gallery 216 W. Water St. “At Home and Away,” featuring prints by Anne Chestnut, presented by New City Arts. 5-7pm.

Other Exhibits

CitySpace Gallery 100 Fifth St. NE. “Vortex,” featuring sculpture by UVA School of Architecture students, with reception date TBD.

The Fralin Museum of Art at UVA 155 Rugby Rd. “Struggle…From the History of the American People,” featuring paintings by Jacob Lawrence; “Richard Serra: Prints,” from the collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer and his Family Foundation; “Fish and Fowl,” featuring sculptures, paintings, and prints; “Navajo Weaving: Geometry of the Warp and Weft,” featuring textiles; and “Two Extraordinary Women: The Lives and Art of Maria Cosway and Mary Darby Robinson.”

Ix Art Park 522 Second St. SE. Mixed media works by Sharon Zarambo and Bolanie Adeboye.

Jefferson School African-American Heritage Center 233 Fourth St. NW. “The 1963 Danville Civil Rights Movement: The Protests, The People, The Stories,” featuring documentary portraits by Tom Cogill and text panels by Emma Edmunds, with an opening reception on Saturday, January 23 at 6pm.

Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection 400 Worrell Dr. “Being Human,” featuring photography by Bianca Beetson, with a reception on Friday, February 12 at 5:30pm.

Les Yeux du Monde 841 Wolf Trap Rd. “Visions for 2016,” featuring works by Janet Bruce, Jim Henry, Deborah Kahn, and Martha Saunders.

McIntire School of Commerce at UVA 125 Ruppel Dr. “Encounters,” a retrospective by Tim Michel.

PVCC Gallery 501 College Dr. “Saints & Angels,” featuring watercolors by Trish Crowe, with a reception on Friday, February 12 at 5pm.

Thomas Jefferson Memorial Church 717 Rugby Rd. An exhibit of melted crayon paintings by Sara Gondwe, with a reception on Sunday, February 7 at 12:30pm.