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Johnnycake Books

Gilded Moon Framing

Berkshire Museum

Roe Jan Library

Close Encounters With Music

Gallery on the Green

Darren Winston, Bookseller

Close Encounters With Music

Benchmark Realty

The RE Institute

Barrington Stage Company

Galleries & Museums

Annandale-on-Hudson, NY

Hessel Museum of Art at Bard College

Austerlitz, NY

Millay Colony for the Arts

Beacon, NY

Dia: Beacon

Chatham, NY

Joyce Goldstein Gallery

The Park Row Gallery

Ghent, NY

Omi International Arts Center

Great Barrington, MA

Childs Studio Arts

Daniel Bellow Gallery

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Iris Gallery

Sanford Smith Fine Art

Sherry Steiner Studio

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Hillsdale, NY

Architecture for Art

Housatonic, MA

Front Street Galley and Studio

Lauren Clark Fine Art

Hudson, NY

BCB Gallery

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Carrie Haddad Photographs

Columbia County Council on the Arts

David Dew Bruner Design

Davis Orton Gallery

Gallery 135

Nicole Fiacco Gallery

Hudson Opera House

J. Damiani

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Limner Gallery

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Tishu Gallery

Kent, CT

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Lakeville, CT

Argazzi Art

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Lenox, MA

The Barn Gallery at Stonover Farm

Church Street Art Gallery

DeVries Fine Art, Inc.

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Millbroook, NY

Art in the Loft

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Millerton, NY

Eckert Fine Art

New Milford, CT

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North Adams, MA

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Gallery 51

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Mass MOCA

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studio21south

Pawling, NY

Gallery on the Green

Pittsfield, MA

The Berkshire Museum

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The Storefront Artist Project

Poughkeepsie, NY

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Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center at Vassar College

Mill Street Loft

Rhinebeck, NY

Gazen Gallery

Albert Shahinian Fine Art

Salisbury, CT

Joie de Livres

Spencertown, NY

Spencertown Academy

Stockbridge, MA

Norman Rockwell Museum

Tivoli, NY

Tivoli Artists Co-op and Gallery

Torrington, CT
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Tyringham, MA
Rural Intelligence Arts
Naoussa Gallery

Washington Depot, CT

Behnke Doherty Gallery

KMR Arts

Williamstown, MA

Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute

The Harrison Gallery

Williams College Museum of Art

Art Intelligence

In the Galleries At the Museums

[See more Art articles]

Bart Gulley: The Making of a Painter

Rural Intelligence Arts Section Image

Photographs taken at the home and studio of Bart Gulley and Sally Helgesen.

 
“Artists can’t help but be influenced by where they work,” says the abstract painter Bart Gulley.  “Particularly if they feel wedded to the place.”  Gulley is wedded to both Chatham, NY, where he has lived full-time with his wife, the writer Sally Helgesen, since 2002, and to the beautiful 19th-century barn on their property that he converted into a spacious studio.

Rural Intelligence Arts
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Untitled Red I, 2001, oil on canvas
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The third of four boys born to a sometime painter mother and an architect father, Gulley’s childhood was divided between a New York City apartment and a modern, weekend-and-summer house in Garrison, NY.  He loved both and, to this day, one sees evidence of a struggle between the rural and the urban in his work—suggestions of landscape painting, graphic design, and architectural drawing within the collages and the abstract brushwork.  Gulley calls his style “rational expressionism,” because “it’s cooler, slower, more analytical—less about sensation more about intention.”


Rural Intelligence Arts
Equivalent, 2010, collage on board
 
“I think most artists are artists from the age of about 3 or 4,”  he says.  “Somebody throws you a box of crayons, and your fate is sealed.” 

Fortunately, Gulley’s efforts were taken seriously at home.  “My father would bring me magic markers by the fistful from his office at Skidmore, Owings and Merrill,” he says.  In public elementary school, he fell in with a couple of talented classmates.  They competed every day in “draw-offs—wars drawings, battle scenes, boy stuff. We worked like demons.”  Each appeared to be sincerely convinced that the other two were much better artists—and said so often—a mutual encouragement society that broke up only when Gulley transferred to Collegiate, a private boys day school that, in those days, groomed its students for the Ivys followed by clean-hands careers in law or on Wall Street.  “There was no art education to speak of,” Gulley says.  Nor were there fellow student artists to compete with.  Gulley’s father once took him to the office of Ivan Chermayeff, the eminent graphic designer, who “looked at my juvenalia and talked very seriously to me about it.”  Still, momentum might have been lost had an English teacher, sensing an awkward fit, not encouraged Gulley to make posters for the film club (“elaborate psychedelic things”) and had a classmate’s mother who painted not taken an interest in the boy. 

Rural Intelligence Arts
Shot Red, 2001, oil on canvas
 
“That was Felicia Bernstein,” Gulley says.  The wife of the composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein was “quite a painter.” Gulley remained close to her for the remainder of her life.  “She had learned all her tricks from Jane Wilson, then a Columbia professor, who is a terrific artist and a wonderful person who really encouraged me.” 

Rural Intelligence Arts
2011, XIV, collage on board
 
On Thursday, February 17, a solo show of Gulley’s recent paintings and collages debuts at Hartwick College in Oneonta, NY.  “It was not my intention to do 35 collages,” he says.  “But I was cleaning my barn last fall to begin anew, and I had these piles of cast-off materials.”  Gulley, intrigued by the possibilities, began cutting shapes, which found their way onto board, almost as if pulled there and arranged by magnetic force. “Collage is done just as landscapes are, from back to front.  I wanted to continue the process so I could see what would happen next.”
 
Rural Intelligence Arts
Screen, 2001, oil on canvas
 
Bart Gulley From Image to Object: Painting to Collage
Hartwick College
Anderson Center for the Arts
Oneonta, NY
February 17 - March 19; opening reception February 17, 4:30 - 6:30 p.m.

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Posted by Marilyn Bethany on 02/15/11 at 07:36 PM • Permalink