"En Theos: A God Within" Photographs by Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe at Five Points Gallery, Torrington

"Deer in Fog"
© Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe
"En Theos: A God Within" is an exhibition of black and white photographs by Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe at Five Points Gallery, 33 Main St., Torrington, CT. The exhibit will be on view in the West Gallery at Five Points from May 26 through June 25, 2016. There is an opening reception on June 3 from 6 pm - 8 pm.

Artist's statement from the gallery's website: "Whether in drawing, painting, or printmaking, the process for me is about layering and energizing space in such a way that objects are fluid, interconnected and full of energy and movement. I try to utilize a variety of lines, marks and media to suggest both stasis and openness to possibility and transformation as well as the passage of time.  As I attempt to describe the multiple realities which intermingle in memory, imagination and daily life, images emerge and diverge – reconfiguring in new relationships.

Everything is open and flows back and forth: empty and full, defined by its opposite – fleeting yet tangible – air and space dissecting form and formless in an effort to capture the unity and delight of life experienced, remembered, longed for."

Moutoussamy-Ashe's award-winning photography has been exhibited internationally and is the subject of five books.  In addition to being a photographer and author, she is a social activist, civic leader, a director of the Arthur Ashe Endowment for the Defeat of AIDS, and the founder of the Arthur Ashe Learning Center.

A portion of Moutoussamy-Ashe's exhibit was printed by Mark Savoia of Still River Editions.

The gallery is also featuring two other solo exhibits concurrently by Anne Gilman and John Frederick walker.

An article about the exhibits may be found in the Litchfield County Times here.

Jim Felice's "The Circus is in Town" at the Bethel Outdoor Sculpture Exhibit

"The Circus is in Town"
© 2016 Jim Felice
Jim Felice's sculpture "The Circus Is in Town" is featured at the Bethel Outdoor Sculpture Exhibit, which will be on view on the grounds of the Bethel Library, 189 Greenwood Ave., Bethel, CT from May 7, 2016 through May 5, 2017.

Felice's piece is part of a year-long installation of sculpture works throughout downtown Bethel curated by sculptor David Boyajian.

Other sculptors whose work is included: David Boyajian, Murray Bodin, Richard Pitts, B.A. D'Alessandro, Glenn Zweygardt, David Gerlach, Steven Brooks, John Ferguson, Sarah Bader & Matt Rink, and New Antiquity.




RIFF Rocks the Park, indie music festival in Ridgefield, May 20 - 21, 2016


The Ridgefield Independent Film Festival will present RIFF Rocks The Park with two events at Ridgefield's Ballard Park, on Friday evening, May 20th and all day Saturday, May 21st. The two-day event will celebrate the connection between music and film and will run concurrently with the film festival. Ballard Park is located at 485 Main St., Ridgefield (the corner of Gilbert and Main).

On Friday evening at 7:30 p.m., the Western Connecticut Youth Orchestra's Wind Ensemble, led by Albert Montecalvo, will officially open the film festival, playing a selection of themes from famous film scores. The concert will be immediately followed by a screening of The Beatles classic forerunner for indie film, A Hard Day's Night in the park. 

RIFF Rocks the Park resumes on Saturday 11a.m. - 6 pm with an all-day music festival in the park. Eight local indie bands will perform throughout the afternoon, playing original material and covers of songs that have appeared in films or on soundtracks over the years. Bands in the order in which they are playing:
Blank Slate
Tori and the Renegades
Quiet Giant
Telegram Scam
Spectral Fangs
Chica Non Grata
The Sawtelles
Lys Guillorn & Her Band (featuring Still River Editions' own Lys Guillorn.)

"Both Indie filmmakers and indie musicians are hungry, committed and know how to get things done," explains RIFF Music Director, Spencer Eldridge. "We wanted to bring them together for the festival so they can experience each others' work in a warm and friendly setting and hopefully make some connections to other artists they might not otherwise find the time to meet." 

The Ridgefield Independent Film Festival, created by local playwright and theatre director, Joanne Hudson, is a site-specific film festival that aims to make the world a more compassionate place through the sharing of stories from around the world through cinema. RIFF brings more than 70 films from 23 countries around the globe to Ridgefield, Connecticut for thoughtful screenings in curated venues such as the Ridgefield Playhouse, Ridgefield Library, Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Keeler Tavern Museum and the Prospector Theater. In addition, RIFF offers master classes in different aspects of film and filmmaking. The festival runs May 20-22.

"Before Your Elders You Must Stand": Nicaraguan Portraits by Robert Kalman

© Robert Kalman
Photographer Robert Kalman will be exhibiting his Nicaraguan portraits at Soho Photo Gallery, 15 White St., New York from June 8 through July 2, 2016. There will be a reception on Tuesday, June 7 from 6 pm - 8 pm.

The photographer says of this body of work (via sohophoto.com): “Larreynaga is a small Nicaraguan farming community located in a harsh, arid region that’s sparsely populated because it borders on being inhospitable. In this out of the way impoverished village with limited access to health resources, there are a considerable number of elders, people ranging in age from their 70′s to 100′s. This series of formal black and white portraits is a dignified tribute to these remarkably resilient individuals.”

In addition to the opening reception, the artist will be present during gallery hours on June 11, 16th, 26th and July 2nd. Regular gallery hours are Wednesday through Sunday, 1 pm - 6 pm and by appointment.

"Nature Unraveled" solo exhibition by Dayna Wenzel at Ridgefield Guild of Artists

"Nature Unraveled" is an exhibition of solo work by sculptor Dayna Wenzel at Ridgefield Guild of Artists' Upstairs Gallery from May 14 - June 19, 2016 with an opening reception on Saturday, May 14, from 4 pm - 6 pm.

Wenzel's work incorporates found human-made materials along with natural objects into three-dimensional works and sculpture.

Wenzel is also showing work in the Ridgefield Guild of Artists Main Gallery Group Exhibition, "By a Thread: The Fine Art of Fiber" also on view from May 14 through June 19, 2016.

Ridgefield Guild of Artists Upstairs Gallery 34 Halpin Lane, Ridgefield, CT.

Phyllis Crowley: "Strata" at City Gallery

"Golden Pier"
© Phyllis Crowley
The photography of Phyllis Crowley is featured in the solo exhibition "Strata" at City Gallery, 994 State St., New Haven from May 5 - 29, 2016. There is an opening reception on Saturday, May 7 from 4 pm - 6 pm.

Crowley says, "These large-scale panels refer to geological layers of earth, water, organic growth, and include manmade objects. The multiple image pieces replace the traditional split second slice of the world with a narrative without a story."

Crowley's work is also featured at the Gallery at Still River Editions through May 27, 2016 in a solo exhibition titled "Off Peak," which opened on April 2.

Reprint Sale April 25-29, 2016!

We are having a flash reprint sale from today, Monday, April 25 through Friday, April 29, 2016

Still River Editions is offering 15% off digital reprints of photos/artwork you've already had printed by us from Apr. 25th through 29th, 2016 (including additional prints made from new work when ordered during the sale period).

All you have to do is order reprints and the discount will be applied (excludes sales tax, shipping and all other services, cannot combine with other discounts.)

All work must be ordered during the sale period in order to receive the discount. You can email, call or come in. We have many files archived, so please call or email us.

If you want to upload a new file that you are ordering multiple prints from, use our handy online uploader

Basic Digital Photography course at WCSU in June 2016 as part of Summer Art Workshops

© Elyse Shapiro
The Visual and Performing Arts Center at Western Connecticut State University is offering a Basic Digital Photography non-credited course taught by noted photographer and educator Elyse Shapiro as part of their offerings in Summer Art Workshops (see bottom for list of others). The course runs Mondays and Wednesdays from June 6 - 29 from 10 am - 12:30 pm. The cost of the workshop is $350.

From their Eventbrite: "Learn how to use your digital camera starting with all the technical aspects of camera operation and continuing with how to use the camera more creatively. We will discuss how to navigate through menus, modes and options simplifying the process from beginning to end. Discussions include downloading and organizing images as well basic enhancement tools in Photoshop. Additionally we will go into the wet darkroom and make photograms, which can be scanned and digitalized.
 * A Digital camera capable of manual operation is required for this workshop. No cell phone cameras."

The Visual and Performing Arts Center at WCSU is located on the Westside Campus at 43 Lake Avenue Extension, Danbury.

Other summer art workshops offered during this time include Painting Workshop I - Painting the Light, Drawing from Nature, Etching without Acid: Monoprint & Drypoint, Bookmaking & Letterpress, Painting Workshop II - Anatomy of the Head & Portrait Painting from Life.

Musical Performance by Emma Soleil to benefit Danbury Arts in Action

© Emma Soleil
Singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Emma Soleil is the featured performer at a coffeehouse-style benefit for Danbury Arts In Action at A Common Ground Community Arts Center, 33 Crosby Street, Danbury on Saturday, April 23rd.

The evening starts with an open mic (7:30 sign-up) and snacks and beverages will be available purchase. Admission is by free-will donation. All proceeds benefit Danbury Arts in Action, an organization providing arts mentoring and training to at-risk people in the Danbury area.

Mary Jane Magoon at Burnham Library, Bridgewater, CT

© Mary Jane Magoon
Mary Jane Magoon, watercolorist, is the featured artist at Burnham Library, 62 Main St. South, Bridgewater, CT from April 10 - May 28, 2016.

Magoon says of her work on her website, "Living in rural Connecticut provides me with endless inspirational subjects. I am especially fascinated by the changing reflections of light and shadows on everyday objects. Reflected glass and windows are some of my favorite subjects to paint. The transparency of watercolor makes these reflections extraordinary and luscious."

She is a member of Northeast Watercolor Society, Kent Art Association, and the Society of Creative Arts of Newtown.

Trailer Box Project Presents "Three Artists"

"Fiscal Cliff"
© Rita Valley
Trailer Box Project will be exhibiting the work of "Three Artists" from April 9 - May 7, 2016--Bob Keating (sculpture), Megan Marden (paintings), and Rita Valley (fiber art). There is an opening reception on Saturday, April 9 from 5 pm - 7 pm. Regular gallery hours are Thursday through Saturday from 11 am - 5 pm.

The Trailer Box Project is located at 15 Great Pasture Rd. Unit 15, Danbury, CT.

Lotta Studio & West River Arts Present Second Saturday

"The Owl's Muse"
© Lys Guillorn
Lotta Studio and its sister project, West River Arts, will be hosting a Second Saturday event from 2pm - 6 pm on Saturday, April 8, 2016. All studios at 909 & 911 Whalley Ave. in New Haven will be open for viewings, conversations, and small exhibits from the following artists:

Shaun Holloway (Sekai), Katrina Goldburn, Lys Guillorn, Alex & Eric Epstein, Noe Jimenez, Luke Hansom, Susan McCaslin, Caryn Azoff, Don Wunderlee, Rob Roy, Howard El Yasin, Kate Stephen, Sarah Bratchell, Roy Hanscom, Mistina Hanscom, George Moore, Kieren Coleman, JoAnne Wilcox, Travis Carbonella, Johnathon Henninger, Violet Harlow, Chris Ferguson, Anthony DeCarlos.

Following the Open Studios, from 5-6pm, Lotta Studio will be hosting "Conversations in Blue" with exhibit curator Violet Harlow. The exhibit at Lotta Studio features works by Shaunda Holloway (Sekai), Katrina Goldburn, Lys Guillorn and Violet Harlow.

Other events of Second Saturdays:
10-4pm Live Chalk Art at Strange Ways
3-6pm Artist Reception at DaSilva Gallery for Gloria Laposka
10-4pm Exhibit at Kehler Liddell Gallery: Laura Barr & Penny Cook
4-8pm Happy Hour at West Side 2 Pint 0

Link to the Facebook event page


WCSU MFA Program Thesis Exhibition 2016

Western Connecticut State University's Master of Fine Arts program's Thesis Exhibition for 2016 will be on view at Gallery at the Visual & Performing Arts Center, 43 Lake Ave. Ext., 2nd Floor, Danbury, CT from March 31 through April 11, 2016. There is an opening reception on Thursday, March 31 from 5 pm - 7 pm. The events are free and open to the public.

Artists presenting their theses this year are: Meghan Gargano Ballet, Charles H. Hollinger, and Lauren Elise Reeves.

Gallery hours at the VPAC are Mon. - Thurs. noon - 4 pm and Sat. - Sun. 1 pm - 4 pm.

The exhibit will also run at Blue Mountain Gallery, 530 West 25th St., 4th Floor, NY, NY from June 21 - July 9, 2016. The opening reception for New York will be Thursday, June 23, from 5 pm - 8 pm. Gallery hours at Blue Mountain are Tues. - Sat. 11 am - 6 pm.

"Off Peak" Photographs by Phyllis Crowley at the Gallery at Still River Editions

"Conductor"
© Phyllis Crowley
"Off Peak" is an exhibition of photographs by Phyllis Crowley of New Haven that will be on view at the Gallery at Still River Editions from April 2 through May 27, 2016. There is an opening reception on Saturday, April 2, from 2 pm - 4 pm (free and open to the public.) The gallery is located at 128 East Liberty St, Danbury, CT. Regular gallery hours are 8:30 am - 5 pm Monday through Friday.

Full press release:

“Off Peak” is an exhibition of color photographs taken of train windows by New Haven artist Phyllis Crowley. She says, "This series began 10 years ago when I took a Metro North train to New York City. The windows were filthy—so encrusted you could hardly see out of them in places. After my initial annoyance (since window watching is my main occupation), I realized that if the window were the focus, the subject could be transformed into something much more interesting, more meditative, with references to memory, chance, time, painting.”

The result is abstraction, but the images inspire a feeling familiar to all riders of trains. Most people who live in Connecticut and the tri-state area have ridden the railroad, and let their thoughts drift while looking out the window. Associations shift almost as quickly as the constantly changing scenery. But what of the window that provides a little bit of distortion, a little bit of a buffer between a passenger and the “real” world?

Crowley explains in her artist’s statement, “From the moving train, fleeting images of the landscape are perceived and held for a fraction of a second and then dissolve into memory. The train window creates an interface between the rider and the landscape, which is normally seen as transparent, but by perceiving the window as an important part of the scene,rather than a barrier, the camera transforms the subject.

Clear outlines dissolve into abstract forms, sides of buildings become washes of color; grass and trees turn into brushstrokes, and the lens records the marks and stains on the window as impartially as what lies beyond. The camera creates an imperfect memory image.”

Crowley grew up in New York City. She learned how to use a camera from her father at about age 11, and how to print shortly after that. She says of that experience, "We worked in a tiny room in our apartment on an old table with water carried in from the kitchen. The magic of the process became clear when the image appeared in the developer, and because it was never as sparkling as desired, I also knew there were secrets to be learned.”

She is a self-taught photographer with additional instruction from Visual Studies Workshop and Maine Photographic Workshop. She graduated from Vassar College, and has many years of professional and teaching experience.

Crowley currently resides in New Haven, where she is a member of City Gallery and teaches photography at Creative Arts Workshop. Crowley is a two-time recipient of an Artist Fellowship from the Connecticut Commission on the Arts, and she exhibits nationally. Her work is in public, corporate, and private collections.

Washington Art Association presents a watercolor class by Grace McEnaney, Spring 2016

"Rhodie"
© Grace McEnaney
 
Grace McEnaney is teaching a class at Washington Art Association titled "Insights into the Myriad of Watercolor Techniques." The class runs on Thursdays from April 14 through June 2, 2016 (8 weeks), 6 pm - 9 pm.

Please see the Washington Art Association's website for details.

McEnaney is an accomplished watercolorist. She began her career as a technical illustrator later moving on to graphic design. Now her focus is fine art, paying particular attention to botanicals and architecture. She is a juried artist member of Art/Place Gallery, a signature member of The Connecticut Watercolor Society a juried member of Connecticut Women Artists. She lives in western Connecticut.

The Washington Art Association is located at 4 Bryan Memorial Plaza, Washington Depot, CT.

"Photoworks 2016" at the Barrett Art Center, Poughkeepsie, NY

© Shona Curtis
"Photoworks 2016" runs from March 19 through April 30th, 2016 at the Barrett Art Center Duchess County Art Association, 55 Noxon St., Poughkeepsie, NY.

Shona Curtis, who was among the artists featured in "LOCALworks" at the Gallery at Still River Editions in early 2016, has been chosen by the jury for the exhibition. Several of her photographs will be on display.

The opening reception is on Saturday, March 19 from 3 pm - 5 pm.

"Chimera" creates hybrid monsters at Trailer Box Project

© Honorah O'Neill
"Chimera" is an interactive solo exhibition by Honorah O'Neill of Bethel, CT taking place at the Trailer Box Project, and running from March 19 through March 26, 2016. The exhibit is hands-on, and features life-sized sculptural creatures with mix-and-match parts with which the viewers are invited to "create hybrid monsters."

From the press release: "Honorah O'Neill, a painter and sculptor, studied at Ohio Wesleyan University and earned her degree in anthropology.  The owner of the Bethel Rainy Day Paperback Exchange bookstore, O'Neill has exhibited her works throughout Connecticut and has amassed a following in the greater Danbury area.  Her installation for Trailer Box Project will include animals such as a Bernese Mountain Dog, giant anteater and a velociraptor dressed in a variety of costumes, from Girl Scout to doctor.  Each creature is made up of separate parts that can be switched with other animals to make all new, imaginative hybrids."

There is an opening reception on Saturday, March 19, 2016 from 5 pm - 7 pm. The Trailer Box Project is located at 15 Great Pasture Rd., Unit 15, Danbury, CT. The exhibition is open from Tues. - Sat. from 12 noon to 5 pm, or by appointment. 

"6 Days that Changed the World" Bill Eppridge's Beatles exhibition comes to WCSU

The late Bill Eppridge's remarkable exhibition of Beatles photographs, "6 Days that Changed The World" is on view at the Art Gallery at the Visual & Performing Arts Center at WCSU from January 19 through March 23d, 2016. Please note the opening has been postponed until Saturday, February 6 from 4 pm - 7 pm. There will also be a gallery talk with Adrienne Aurichio, Bill Eppridge's editor and wife, on Thursday, February 11 at 6:30 pm. The Art Gallery at the Visual & Performing Arts Center at WCSU's Westside Campus is located at 41 Lake Ave Extension, Danbury, CT.

Eppridge was a photojournalist's photojournalist at LIFE Magazine and Sports Illustrated, and his work is among the most iconic of his generation. He was given unfathomable access by today's standards, and conveyed a deep understanding of whatever subject he was covering. He was able to follow the Beatles on their first six days in the United States, generating a body of work that captures the energy of this young band as they were discovered by a nation already full of anticipation and heady adoration. His most famous photograph, some may recall, was of a busboy cradling a dying RFK, is just one outstanding image from a career made of many. 

The exhibit was first on view in 2014 at Bethel Center for the Arts on the site of the Woodstock Festival in upstate New York. A book of Eppridge's Beatles photographs, 6 Days that Changed the World was published by Rizzoli in 2014 to mark the 50th anniversary of the Beatles' arrival in the United States. Eppridge's work is represented by the Monroe Gallery of Photography in Santa Fe, New Mexico. 

The exhibit of 55 black-and-white gelatin silver prints was hand-darkroom-printed by Catherine Vanaria, who is an Assistant Professor of Art and Chair of the Art Department at Western Connecticut State University, as well as co-owner of Connecticut Photographics and Still River Editions. 


Facebook invitation for the opening.