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New Normal | Erica Entrop

June 11, 2023 Karinna Gomez

JUNE 2023
CENTER GALLERY
New Normal | Erica Entrop


Erica Entrop was born in Roswell, New Mexico and graduated Cum Laude from the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque with her BFA. After completing her studies, she began traveling across the United States exhibiting in different locations including Chicago, New York, and Los Angeles. She has had an extensive artistic career having participated in exhibitions across the country and the world. Her works have recently been included in the Premier edition of Blue Bee Magazine. In the past year she has participated in the 13th Havana Biannual and the 25th Romerias Festival showcasing her newest film works in collaboration with her partner, Cuban artist, Darwin Estacio Martinez.

New Normal
My work began capturing commuters on the trains and buses of Los Angeles. The genre that seemed to capture the historical narrate of the American experience is that of realism.

A year after I created the I, Voyeur series I moved to Havana, Cuba. As my time outside of the country extended, I began to grow nostalgic about the United States. Looking to Edward Hopper, Norman Rockwell and George Tooker for the attitude and environment that felt most true to my memories of living and working in Los Angeles.

This year I became a mother. During my pregnancy I was drawn to the subject of children and the modern experience. The conversation between the nostalgic view of a Rockwell but for a new generation. How are technology and societal norms have altered forever the experience of the individual. Our children will live in a world so removed from what we lived. For me, even more so given that my daughter is part Cuban, what she will go through is completely removed from the story of both of her parents. Capturing that modern storyline was my motivation in revisiting Rockwell’s pieces and branching out from what he captured in his Saturday Evening post pieces.

Another aspect that has impacted the genre of realism that has had a true revolution is the presence of photography in our everyday lives. How photography impacted the masters of the genre in America is for me an area of interest in that the cellphone has altered not only in the same manner that photography flattens the image, but also in how we have been modified by this technology that is ever present at our finger tips.

This all creates for me an interest in the artist as lens and how I can project that into what may be the modern equivalent to the nostalgia that pervades the historical realism of the genre. The ability to experience realism as a true reflection of reality is a collaboration between the artist and the audience. The perspective must be shared in order for the realism to be truly seen as truth.

www.ericaentrop.com


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Virtual Exhibition Tour

In Exhibitions Tags painting, acrylic, New Mexico artists, figurative, Center Gallery
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My Love is Winter: Gray Paintings | Paul Behnke

February 13, 2023 Karinna Gomez

Paul Behnke, Hazy Sky Few Stars, 2020, oil on canvas, 20 x 20 inches

FEBRUARY 2023
NORTH GALLERY
My Love is Winter: Gray Paintings |
Paul Behnke


These somber works completed in 2020, shortly after Behnke arrived in Taos, are a deliberate reaction to and against the fabled light, color and space of the high desert community. Threading form and color together with an uncharacteristically grayed down palette the paintings do not consciously reference landscape. But instead plumb the depths of memory and very loosely act as an abstract visual interpretation of writings that reference winters spent growing up in the South, and recently lived, on the East Coast.

Artist Bio
Paul Behnke was born in Memphis, TN, and received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in painting from the Memphis College of Art. Behnke’s paintings have been exhibited widely in the United States and internationally.

He has had solo exhibitions in New York, Heidelberg, Philadelphia, Saint Augustine, and Memphis, as well as group shows in San Francisco, Honolulu, London, Dublin, Paphos, Glasgow, The Netherlands, Cernay-lès-Reims and New York.

His work has been reviewed in Hyperallergic Weekend, The New Criterion and The New Republic.  Behnke’s writings have appeared online at AbCrit: A Forum for Debate on Abstract Art, at The Painters’ Table and in print in Gamut a Southern regional art magazine, and No. Magazine. He was the co-editor of Shad Runn a self-published art zine in Memphis, TN. 

He has edited Structure and Imagery: A Contemporary Art Blog since 2011 and was the co-director of Stout Projects exhibition space in Bushwick, Brooklyn from 2015 to 2017. Currently, Behnke lives and works in Taos, New Mexico.

Artist Statement
The paintings in this show were among the very first I made when I moved from New York City to Taos, NM in the summer of 2020. I believe they were an attempt to reject everything I thought I knew about New Mexico – the fabled light, the vast open spaces and the rich color that makes up everything from the artwork created by the Pueblo fine artists to the piercing color combinations of the ski jackets in the ski valley and the sky itself. And an attempt to hold onto the chill and grayness of my favorite season in the Northeast. In New York, I made color -seared, garish paintings with expanses of competing colors and bold, broad forms. If I had set out to make paintings in both locales that were the opposites of their environments, I couldn’t have done a better job.

These works are small and intimate. Understated with only accents of unmodulated color, the paintings remind me of what I appreciate about A.P. Ryder’s work, than the British Pop abstractionists that I previously felt akin to. This palette is grayed down, muted and seems to reference, of course, winter, loss, vacancy, twilight or early mornings in the fall. The palette still relies heavily on the interplay of opposites, but the paintings are keyed and rely on a subdued mood, a grittier feeling. The toned down greens, browns and grays are reminiscent of Freud, Auerbach, Minton and are similar in mood to the School of London.

While my forms still allude to previous content – Biblical and Pop Cultural references, alchemy, occult symbols and transformation – they have become less defined. The application of the paint became more slapdash and the edges blurred. The bombastic power of my earlier, larger paintings became subtle, subdued and subversive. Lines snaked along arbitrary paths or sometimes meandered or dashed through the meat of the looser forms linking adjacent elements – moving the viewer’s eye to better direct and connect a composition.

Oddly, in thinking about the line’s movement across the canvas, I am now reminded of a very early memory that I revisit often.

I am about seven years old, lying on my back in the middle of a baseball field next to my house. It’s cold and I can feel the hard ground through my dark blue corduroy coat and hood. The coat has a nutcracker type soldier sewn on the left breast. I am looking up at a dappled dark and light gray sky. In my field of vision, from my right a dotted line of black looking birds moves its way even further south. They are tiny and I feel sad they are going away.

paulbehnke.net

Listen to a conversation with Paul Behnke and Graham Dane on the KONR Out North Radio program Art Matters: open.spotify.com/episode/2ObBlakSQ5bFa7TrruYDhD


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Virtual Exhibition Tour

In Exhibitions Tags North Gallery, painting, abstract, acrylic
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Cubist Portraiture | Shiela Mahaney

June 11, 2022 Karinna Gomez

Shiela Mahaney, Family, acrylic on paper, 12 x 9 inches

JUNE 2022
SOUTH GALLERY
Cubist Portraiture | Shiela Mahaney

Carousel faces
Spinning around.
Multi perspectives;
Fractured, but bound!

Mardi Gras palette,
Ecstatically bright.
Facial celebration;
Collage of delight!

Cubist Portraiture chronicles a painter’s rite of passage along my journey of stylistic exploration. One day, while dabbling with a cubist framework for painting composition, something clicked. I found myself under the spell of true inspiration! Suddenly, my family, friends, and even our dog Maximus, were all transforming in my mind’s eye, through a cubist filter.

I could not wait to express their images onto canvas using the most vibrant colors possible. There are 31 paintings in the collection, and the work flowed from my brushes as though ‘Cubist Portraiture’ had been inside me all along waiting to be freed.

https://www.shielamahaney.com/


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Virtual Exhibition Tour

In Exhibitions Tags South Gallery, painting, acrylic, Anchorage artists
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