Nancy Dimiceli

Open for Milwaukee Gallery Night: Friday, April 15, 2021, from 5-9 PM and Saturday, April 16, from 12-4 PM.

From the Artist:

     When I started out painting years ago, in college I loved watercolor.  I found out years later there was not a major for it.  So I tried acrylic and oil painting. It was all over after I tried oil painting!  I was hooked, the vibrant colors; the smell of a true pigment and gazing.  Turns out, one of the best decisions I have ever made; it truly saved me.  Finishing a painting makes me proud and I love to put finishing touches on them to make it more personal.

     When Covid hit no one in the entire world could travel.  I had a trip planned to go to Greece, that never happened but it made me think of how very blessed I truly really was. To be free and travel, with no mask or social distancing and most of all being with friends and family.

     My goal in this solo show, is to “Bring the outside inside.”  I wanted people who have been cooped up, just take a breath and just look at the glorious beauty of what outside has to offer into your home or office.

     My journey over the years, thrust me into realism in college, as an older student and during this time I was in not one, but two horrible car accidents.  I could no longer paint like what I was trained to do. My arms would fall asleep and thats enough to drive anyone crazy. 

    Thats when my best friend Jamie Jorndt introduced me to the amazing artist, Terrance Coffman. He changed my life, showing me ways of abstraction, using tools and painting ways I wasn't familiar with. What I did not know then (what I see now) is that working in abstraction without designing, just painting, pushed me forward in my work today. I thank Jamie, Terry, Brett friends and family for the love, support that we all need.

     I met a guy named Timmy Britt, He owns Timmy Britt Studios in Frisco, Texas. He’s a former Walt Disney World Animation Artist, Imagineer and Universal Studios Art Director, and he leads a world class team of artists who are dedicated to using their gifts to train young artists. He said to me, “And your life carried through the years share passion and gifts is set sail”  Thank you!

The Chrysalis, a Soma Show by Jennifer Espenscheid

A Chrysalis is the silk casing a caterpillar is compelled to spin around their body when they are no longer hungry for food but something else. Inside the Chrysalis, the caterpillar liquifies, transforms and emerges a butterfly.  That time between is magical, dangerous  & ripe with possibility.   2020 was (2021 still is) one such space for change. With the Covid experience, we were put into a cohesive but volatile state as Humans. We were given something in common. The decision to quarantine and limit external activity gave us the opportunity to shine our attention, not on the outside environment as a caterpillar does, but enter an inward curiosity of becoming. 

Here we will consider with curiosity & awe The Chrysalis on every scale- the skull, our imagination, The Body, Relationships, a room, our Collective Mind, our Galaxy & the ultimate creative space- the Womb.

The Chrysalis is a Holy Container. A space created and entered with purpose and intention. By letting go of what you no longer agree with, we are free to morph into our highest potential.  I invite you to enjoy an exhibit of these visions throughout the month of Love at Grove Gallery as a safe & self guided experience - a Chrysalis itself! Come In Love - alone, as a couple, with Friends or Family. The show is accompanied with a soundtrack by Ryan Larsh.

The show is viewable as a virtual exhibition. I will offer live presentations on social media for further insight into the highly meaningful designs.  

Open for February, 2021, available for questions and conversation.
Wednesdays: 3, 10, 17th; Saturday: 6, 13, 27th.
Contact Jennifer Espenscheid for special arrangements: 414-324-5329
thesomashow@gmail.com / thesomashow.com

Chutes and Ladders - Jesse Bell

Exhibition

Tunnels leading to here, pathways leading to there, start in one spot, find yourself in another. Hanging plants, drooping sunsets, pools of warm hues, stacks of yellow hay.

This group of work is an exploration of imagined places, philosophical thought, and undiscovered poetry. Each can be viewed as cartography, contemplation, discovery, and memory. 

These paintings attempt to create an entry point to explore places and scenarios of the viewer’s own making. They are suggestions of scenes yet realized.

Artist Statement

As an artist and a painter, it is crucial to continually re-examine and re-evaluate one’s practice, and to always be asking the questions: what am I doing through this work? What is it saying? What does it say about me? 

In a certain sense, I’m continually reclaiming my humanity through painting. At a formal level, I’m introducing myself to the world with my brush strokes, my line, and my choice of materials. It represents something deeper and more comprehensive than language, or even action, and opens up a type of communication that cannot be had in any other manner. At a time of seemingly infinite images and stimulation—so much of it digital and fleeting—to introduce something as humble as a painting to the world is a grounding experience for me. 

My paintings are abstract compositions that incorporate strong narrative elements. I juxtapose visual references of the mundane with the absurd to create open-ended conceptual opportunities for viewers to explore. I also strive to infuse my work with musicality and a continually-developing visual language. Through this, I'm working to create paintings that suggest stories, events, or convey to the audience a memory, situation, or scenario.

The direction of my latest work has led me to more unconventional framework shapes and supports, larger formats, and stronger narrative elements through shape and line relationships. I want to investigate issues of scale and associations between multiple paintings within a single piece. It is here that I feel I can make substantial breakthroughs in my practice—exploring and contributing to what a painting
can be.

Exhibition Runs from December 21, 2020 through January 30th, 2021. Open by appointment only.

3D Photography Courtesy of Josh Hintz

Cool Lava - Barbara Rae Schaefer

COOL LAVA is a painting series capturing the real-time drama and aftermath of exploding volcanoes: broken rocks, ash, steam and gases swirling in the atmosphere; magma spewing out of the earth’s core, turning to hot molten lava flowing in rhythmic patterns down the mountainside, cooling to black or white or a myriad of brilliant colors. This volcanic theme can be interpreted as a metaphor for the human condition we experience today on planet earth, both individually and collectively: powerful stresses and forces building up within the soul and finally erupting in constructive and destructive ways. My work can be viewed as a combination of the geophysical and geopolitical.

“I began to explore volcanoes in my paintings after returning from a trip to the Big Island of Hawaii, having foolishly picnicked near the top of Mount Kilauea and then chased down the mountain by a sudden lava flow. It was both terrifying and exhilarating and made an enduring impression. My creative process is a simple one: igniting the spark (through visual imagery, music and dance); going with the flow (preparing and pouring pigment, oil, varnish); allowing the paintings to self-create. My style is uniquely my own but echoes the major movements of abstract and non-objective art arising and flourishing over the past 75 years: action and color field painting, minimal art, lyrical and abstract expressionism.” 

Barbara Rae Schaefer has called Milwaukee home since 2019 and is happily ensconced in the Clocktower Building of the Historic Water Tower District. Originally from Duluth, MN (b.1950), she left for New York City on a Whitney Museum Program Fellowship after graduating from the University of Minnesota (BFA-1972) and went on to receive a degree from Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, NY (MFA-1974). Barbara actively participated in the cultural renaissance of Brooklyn for the next several decades and exhibited her paintings extensively in the burgeoning Manhattan art enclaves of Soho, Chelsea and the East Village. From her Union Square painting studio, she overlooked the Art Factory of Andy Warhol and occasionally rubbed shoulders with his entourage at the legendary watering hole, Max’s Kansas City. Barbara’s career has spanned many continents, her work well-received at home and abroad and residing in numerous private and public collections.

Exhibition Runs through November 7, 2020. Open by appointment only.

It’s About Color: Works by Meg Ciccantelli

Statement from the Artist

My work explores the painterly process, with a focus on color. I am fascinated by the ways color informs a space and touches the viewer on a deep, pre-verbal level. Lately, I have been captivated by the twilight beauty found in declining urban spaces—the city’s alleyways, eroding building facades, ghosted billboards and mismatched freight trains—offer an endless array of textures, patterns and colors.

I bring a long history of the written word to my art practice. My background is in journalism. After graduation from Marquette University, I worked as a newspaper reporter, advertising copywriter and in public relations in New York, Minneapolis and Chicago. When I moved back to Milwaukee in 2016, I was ready for a change of expression. That’s when I put down the pen and picked up the paintbrush. Color took over.

My keenly felt experience of color is rendered through textures, marks and patches of pigment. The process itself involves the addition and subtraction of paint, scratching off layers to make way for new shapes and color. I am never quite certain of the outcome when I start a painting, but I trust the process of showing up day-to-day to work until a piece reveals its own DNA.

My work is held in private collections and has been displayed in shows at Scout Gallery, The Art Bar, Walker’s Point Center for the Arts, Crafting Art on the Near West Side, The Arts Mill in Grafton, and solo shows at Gallery 2622 and The Grove Gallery.

To see more of my work, visit https://megfineart.com/
Follow me on Instagram @megciccantelli

Exhibition Runs through September 30, 2020. Open by appointment only.