Hello, Guest! [Login] [Register]
Rural Intelligence: The Online Magazine for Eastern New York, Western Connecticut and the Southern Berkshires
Search Archives:

Roe Jan Library

Gallery on the Green

Darren Winston, Bookseller

Close Encounters With Music

Benchmark Realty

The RE Institute

Barrington Stage Company

Johnnycake Books

Gilded Moon Framing

Berkshire Museum

Art Plucked from the Leftover Pile

[review full article]

Posted by: Marilyn Bethany
Posted on: Friday, February 25, 2011

Comments

IMPORTANT: You must be a member of Rural Intelligence and logged into the site to post comments.

If you are already a member please login below. If you want to become a member click here to register.



Auto-login on future visits

Show my name in the online users list

Forgot your password?

Bold, italics, strong, emphasis, and block quote tags are allowed in comments.

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Comment Guidelines

As we believe it promotes responsibility, civility and neighborliness, we encourage Commenters to use their real names unless there is compelling reason not to. In any case, profanity, personal attacks and unsubstantiated or excessive criticism of people or places will not be tolerated and will be deleted. By completing this form you are agreeing to abide by these rules and all terms laid out in the Rural Intelligence User Agreement.

For questions concerning the use of personally identifiable information, please refer to our Privacy Policy.

Please enter the word you see in the image below:


Full Article

Rural Intelligence Arts Section Image

Mona Mark, Untitled diptych #2, oil paint on floorboard

Passed through the right hands, one man’s trash can be transformed into another’s treasure. That’s the premise.  Some weeks ago, thirty artists with ties to the region were each given a $50 voucher to spend at the Columbia County Habitat for Humanity ReStore just outside of Hudson.  The materials they purchased there, all leftovers donated by builders and renovators, were to be used to make or inspire a work of art in each artist’s medium of choice—collage, sculpture, photography, painting. 

The resulting works that comprise ReCycle, ReCreate, ReImagine, an exhibition and auction, are as disparate as the participants— Michel Arnaud, Arthur Baker, Rica Bando, Keith Batten, Isabel Bigelow, Dina Bursztyn and Julie Chase, Daniel Carello, Luis Castro, Renee Iacone Clearman, Jed Cleary, Dan Devine, Chip Fasciana, Mimi Graminski, Rodney Alan Greenblat, Hilary Harris, Matthew Hart, Linda Horn, Holly Hughes, Lonny Kalfus, Maj Kalfus, Nancy Kohler, Mona Mark, Monica Miller, Peter Moore, Frank and Carolyn Mouris, Cynthia Mulvaney, Melissa Sarris, Carol Shadford, Diego Sharon, Michael Tong, William Wester and Jacqueline Wilder.

“This project has inspired a new direction for me,” says the painter Mona Mark, whose work for the auction appears above.  “The change in materials from canvas to floor board actually gives the viewer a very different experience.  The fact that they are recycled materials is visible and becomes a part of the meaning of the work.” 

The auction will be conducted by Colin Stair, president and founder of Stair Gallery and Antique Auctioneers and Appraisers of Hudson, all proceeds to help support CCHfH’s 2011 building projects.  In addition to the work of established artists, the show will include 25 one-of-a-kind, high-fired tiles designed by Columbia County children. Each tile depicts one child’s vision of “home” and is available for a $10 donation.

Art Show and Auction Benefit for Columbia County Habitat for Humanity
Omi International Art Center
Co. Route 21 near Letter S Road, Ghent
Saturday, March 5; 5 - 8 p.m. Donation/$15 includes drinks and hors d’oeuvres