Category: Uncategorized

  • Romancing the Poem

    Romancing the Poem

     

    Romancing the Poem 
    by Teri Wing

    May 10th – June 3rd

    Decapitated heads, protruding eyeballs, dismembered corpses and boxes of teeth are perhaps not the first images the mind conjures up when recalling children’s bedtime stories. While many are lulled to sleep by the charming tales of Beatrix Potter, it was the evocative writings of Edgar Allan Poe read to her as a child by her father that stirred the mind and completely captured the imagination of artist Teri Wing. These strong visual memories from early childhood triggered by Poe’s poems of mystery and torment served as a catalyst in Wing’s creative journey, stimulated the ongoing cultivation of her craft and influenced the trajectory of her artistic development.

    With this brand new body of work, Teri Wing bring’s the master of macabre’s dark romantic prose to canvas in her second solo show with Studio22. As an artist that has always had a fascination with the inner workings of the human mind, Wing’s latest exhibit, takes the viewer into a world that goes beyond appearances and visually captures the dark side of imagination. The exhibit agitates and excites. It is no wonder Wing so fondly treasures the memories of terror that lurk beneath the deceptively beguiling book covers of Edgar Allan Poe.

    “Strange and unexpected things wake up your mind. The wilder and more extraordinary the image, the more pleasure we gain from it. We are attracted to things that interest our curiosity more than fanciful things, they open up and stir your mind with new images and a way of thinking.” –Teri Wing

    Preview and presale for this exhibit will take place Tuesday, May 10th and Wednesday, May 11th. Exhibit opens to the general public for purchasing on Thursday, May 12th. 

    Opening Reception, with live music, will take place on Thursday, May 12th from 7-9pm. The artist will be in attendance. Masks are required while inside the gallery

    The Exhibition

    Not currently available – If you are interested in this, please contact us.
    Not currently available – If you are interested in this, please contact us.
    Not currently available – If you are interested in this, please contact us.
    Not currently available – If you are interested in this, please contact us.
    Not currently available – If you are interested in this, please contact us.

    MORE

    Artist Statement
    Poem by Teri Wing

    When I was a child, and nighttime fell, I’d hurry to bed, I remember it well.
    Get in, cover up, Dad turned out the light, close your eyes now, keep them shut tight.
    He read with a voice that was deep and low, saying the words with smoothness and flow.
    No not the nursery rhymes of the usual kind, something more chilling to stir up your mind.
    All entranced, with eyes open wide and mouth agape, visions and images were taking their shape.
    Mysteries, torment, and frightening things too, the lines in the poems all came into view.
    Unbelievable things of nightmares and dreams, this was a constant in all of his themes.
    Ravens and castles and the mist of a ghost, these were the ones that I loved the most.
    At the days end was a favorite time, getting the book for a wonderful rhyme.
    I have the book still, one you never outgrow, the stories and poems of Edgar Allan Poe.

     

    Artist Biography

    Teri Wing is an artist living in Gananoque, Ontario. Prior to being represented by Studio22, Wing sold her art independently from her home studio.  Inspired and excited by dramatic lighting, the artist paints with oils using palette knife and flat brush as well as cold wax as a medium to add layers and textures.

    Wing first joined Studio22 as a represented artist in February of 2019 and had her first solo ‘Counterpart’ in February of that same year. Today she is one of the gallery’s best selling artists. Wing volunteers giving art classes at her local Center for Community Living for people with mental and physical challenges.

  • Date Night

    Date Night

    Get off the couch, call the babysitter, make that downtown dinner reservation and come immerse yourself in art!

    Studio22 will be hosting “Date Night” at the gallery, Friday nights* from 7:00-10:00pm.

    Studio22 will be opening their doors late night and welcoming you and your guest to your very own ‘date night’ gallery visit.

    Come enjoy beautiful art in a most delightful circumstance

    *The gallery will not be hosting date night Friday, December 24 or Friday, December 31.

  • New Night Hours

    New Night Hours

    This Thursday May 16th, the gallery begins our seasonal night hours.  We will be open late on both Thursdays and Fridays until 8 pm.

  • Building Up and Wearing Away

    by Kamille Parkinson

    There are some artworks that grab you immediately when you first encounter them.  There’s sometimes no rhyme or reason to it, and it might be something that is completely outside of what you think you normally like, but there it is – you’re smitten. By the same token, there is some artwork that you don’t think much of, at first glance anyway.  But your eyes keep sliding back to it, again and again, though you’re not sure why.  Intrigued, you return to the artwork to look at it more closely, to pay attention to it. These are the types of paintings (or other art objects) that you have to spend time with to fully appreciate, and they are often also the ones that are most worth the effort.

    It’s possible that you will have this type of experience at Studio 22 on Market Square just now, with one half of a double exhibition on the walls until 13thApril.  The gallery is featuring the work of the late artist Ingeborg Mohr, formerly of Howe Island, with a show titled “Signs of the Imperceptible.”  Not a retrospective, the exhibition features paintings and multi-media works from a single series in Mohr’s vast compendium of work.

    Mohr started out as a landscape painter but, on moving to Toronto in 1955 and discovering the work of the Painters Eleven, she turned to non-representational art that at its core is Expressive. While paint media is considered to be two-dimensional, it is also possible to build up layers of paint and/or utilize heavy applications to create depth and texture in a painting. In this way the physical media is manipulated to become expressive in its own right, with the artist choosing and blending colours to emphasize and enhance moods and emotions.  This is what you will find in this series of Mohr’s paintings.  In some of these works Mohr has also incorporated other media, such as coarse papers, to create additional depth and nuances.

    While Mohr’s paintings are expressive in character, they are not works that grab you by the lapels and announce their intent. Rather, these are works that, predominantly dark in tone and sombre in character, wait quietly for you to discover them and what they have to offer.  Through the deliberate application of colour and building up of layers, Mohr made an internal exploration of her own existence through the media of paint, with the resulting works inviting you to embark on a similar journey.

    Where “Signs of the Imperceptible” is about building up layers, the other half of the exhibition at Studio 22 is, in a symbiotic twist, much about wearing them away. The exhibition “Bones of the Earth”, featuring works by LW Foden, presents a singular vision of the sea and rocks of the Georgia Straight as seen from a small cottage on Galiano Island, B.C., where Foden lived, observed, and painted for some 20 years.  In works of various sizes and media we are given both monumental and intimate glimpses of time at work on seemingly eternal objects.

     

    While we tend to think of cliffs and rocks as immutable things, Foden shows us the inexorable effects of time, tide, wind and sand on these very elemental objects.  Imperceptibly, the rocks have been worn away layer by layer, endlessly scoured and sculpted to reveal not only suggestions of forms, but also (in Nature’s quirky way) the layers that went into their creation.  Foden’s paintings have a soft, hazy quality to them, which adds a mysterious, somewhat otherworldly feel to his representations. The rocks appear timeless and almost primeval, while the occasional inclusion of driftwood, softer and similarly twisted and sculpted, reminds us that stones, the bones of the earth, are also subject to the effects of time.

    Though the two exhibitions at Studio 22 are, on the surface, quite different, hanging them together actually works incredibly well. Both are concerned with layers – building them up in one case, and wearing them away in another – and both have a quiet, contemplative aspect to them that encourages the viewer to pause, consider, and delve into their respective calm, without any effort at all.

    Bi-Line:

    Kamille Parkinson holds a PhD in Art History from Queen’s University, and is the owner of Upper Canada Art Consulting (UCAC) in Kingston.  The UCAC website is www.uppercanadaartconsulting.com, and you can also find UCAC on Facebook.

     

    NOTE TO READER:  This article was originally written for the regular monthly Art About Town column in the Saturday Whig Standard.  For unknown reasons it has not been published yet.  Due to the fact that the exhibits close on the 13th and timely publishing seems unlikely, the writer has graciously given us permission to share this piece with our subscribers.

    PLEASE DO NOT COPY OR SHARE AT THIS TIME.

  • POP-UP Exhibit – CELEBRITY MUGSHOTS

    POP-UP Exhibit – CELEBRITY MUGSHOTS

    New works from Bernard Clark’s ongoing Notorious Series

     

    Bernard Clark likes working in series.  Known for his Tattoo Portrait series, he has also explored numerous other sets of work.  At Studio22, we have seen Musician and Artist Portraits, Hotel signs, Pop Art signs and Camera series. 

    His newest effort, Celebrity Mugshots, is part of Clark’s ongoing Notorious Series which began with tiny mugshots of gangsters he had been contemplating using for some time.  Working with copywrite-free images – such as mugshots, driver’s licenses and military ID’s, Clark uses his own photographs of keyboard keys, scrabble tiles, dice and other such small pieces to work with an algorithm to recompose his subjects.  He digitally blows the images up and reconstructs them using tiny pieces creating new portraits that are strikingly realistic from a distance and pixilated and less recognizable close up.

    This new Pop-Up exhibit is composed of 8 brand new portraits combined with 8 created and shown at the gallery over the past year.  An interesting new facet to the celebrity mugshots is that of the FAKE mugshot.  Several in the grouping were staged for entertainment purposes.  Can you tell the real from the fake?  And why do so many celebrities have real mugshots?

    All Clark’s images are Limited Edition Fine Art prints.  

    The Artwork

    Not currently available – If you are interested in this, please contact us.

That is wonderful that you like this artwork!

We have built a favourite system to enable you to keep track of artwork you like (and artwork you have bought). But in order to use it, you must be logged in.

 

We do maintain this information in the backend of our system and we have access to this information. We do this, so that we can help you find more work that you may like. If at any point, you wish to not be contacted by us, please let us know. You can also manage your favourites in your account.

Be the first to know!

Become a subscriber and receive 10% off your first online purchase.

You will also receive; exclusive preview and presale access to all exhiits, first look at all new artwork arrivals, invites to opening receptions, artist talks and special gallery events as well as notifications of special promotions.