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Friday, December 22, 2006
ATLANTIC CITY INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
The Atlantic City International Airport cordially invites you to the January 2007 ArtPort show featuring the works of:
Betty Bembry
Judith Saylor
Phyllis London
Please join us on the second Tuesday of the month, January 9, 2007, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in the airport terminal as we celebrate the talents of these fine South Jersey artists.
Open the public
Refreshments provided
Cash Bar
P.S. Bring a friend!
For More Information on ArtPort, go to http://www.sjta.com/
Monday, December 18, 2006
Friday, December 15, 2006
Color the focus of new exhibit at the Noyes
By STEVEN V. CRONIN At The Shore, (609) 272-7242
The Atlantic City Press
Published: Thursday, December 14, 2006The Noyes Museum decks the halls with color with a new exhibit that opens Saturday and highlights works from the museum's permanent collection.
“Fields of Color: Works from the Permanent Collection” features the works of 14 artists with pieces ranging from blown glass to ceramics to abstract expressionist paintings. The show runs through Feb. 25.
Ongoing shows at the Noyes, located on Lily Lake Road in Galloway Township, include: “Form and Function: Mathematics and Beyond Contemporary Art” on display through Jan. 7 and “Working It: A Collaboration with The Cumberland County Clay College,” through Jan. 14. Admission is $4 for adults, $3 for seniors and students.Call (609) 652-8848.
The Noyes also continues its partnership with Dante Hall in Atlantic City this month with an exhibit of works by Linwood artist Chuck Law. The exhibit opens Friday, Dec. 15, with a 6 p.m. reception and features several pieces by Law, whose paintings include elements of both still life and trompe l'oeil paintings.
The exhibition runs through Feb. 1 at Dante Hall, located at 10 N. Mississippi Ave. and is open for viewing between noon and 4 p.m. Wednesdays through Saturdays. Admission is free.
By STEVEN V. CRONIN At The Shore, (609) 272-7242
The Atlantic City Press
Published: Thursday, December 14, 2006The Noyes Museum decks the halls with color with a new exhibit that opens Saturday and highlights works from the museum's permanent collection.
“Fields of Color: Works from the Permanent Collection” features the works of 14 artists with pieces ranging from blown glass to ceramics to abstract expressionist paintings. The show runs through Feb. 25.
Ongoing shows at the Noyes, located on Lily Lake Road in Galloway Township, include: “Form and Function: Mathematics and Beyond Contemporary Art” on display through Jan. 7 and “Working It: A Collaboration with The Cumberland County Clay College,” through Jan. 14. Admission is $4 for adults, $3 for seniors and students.Call (609) 652-8848.
The Noyes also continues its partnership with Dante Hall in Atlantic City this month with an exhibit of works by Linwood artist Chuck Law. The exhibit opens Friday, Dec. 15, with a 6 p.m. reception and features several pieces by Law, whose paintings include elements of both still life and trompe l'oeil paintings.
The exhibition runs through Feb. 1 at Dante Hall, located at 10 N. Mississippi Ave. and is open for viewing between noon and 4 p.m. Wednesdays through Saturdays. Admission is free.
New Jersey Life Style Magazine: Holiday 2006 Edition
By Felicia Lowenstein Niven
http://www.njlifestyleonline.com
Alan Willoughby Executive Director, Perkins Center for the Arts
“Trial by fire” is how AlanWilloughby describes the process of creating with ceramics. “It is a process engaging full thought and sense, a collaborative effort between man and fire,” he writes in his artist statement.Willoughby is poetic about his craft, and for good reason. Each time he works in ceramics, he enters a creative dialogue in a quest to understand the deeper meanings
of life and the connections to all things. For Willoughby, it was a connection that began at a boarding school in Iowa. The school didn’t have a large budget for art, so the art teacher took the students to the riverbank where they dug their own clay. They also helped build the kiln. It was an experience Willoughby would never forget. “I continued as an undergrad, majoring in
ceramics, and started selling my pots to earn money,” he said. “I realized if I was going to be
doing this as my career, I should go back to get my Master of Fine Arts.” He earned that distinction atClemson and went on to teach and create, finally landing the job at Perkins Center for the Arts. “I don’t make as many pots as I used to but ceramics is still a vital part of my life,” he acknowledged. Willoughby’s pieces are both sculptural and functional. “I always play back and forth between the two,” he said. “Sculpture is beautiful butso is the decorative oval platter that serves a smoked salmon. Sometimes in our culture, we
take the art out of living, and a medium like ceramics is very much about bringing it back
into our lifestyle.” Willoughby fires his work in a wood kiln because he likes the kind of surfaces that come from the combination of flame and ash. “If I were to fire it in an electric or gas kiln, the surfaces wouldn’t be the same,” he explained. He gets his inspiration from travel, such as
when he ventured down to the Yucatan and Mayan ruins. He’s also inspired by his wife and
fellow exhibiting artist, Linda Shusterman. The pair sometimes collaborates but always
influences each other. “Ideas develop over time,” said Willoughby. “They may start from one source and then you take them in a new direction.”
Jacqueline Sandro Assistant Director, Clay College
Jacqueline Sandro has always loved ceramics. And no other art career would do, not even graphic design which she studied as an accommodation to her parents who wanted something a bit more practical. “I was a graphic design major taking ceramic courses at the Tyler School of Art,” she said. “When my father passed away, I recognized that life is really short and I wanted to be doing something that I loved. So, with the encouragement of a teacher, I enrolled full time in ceramics and pottery at Glassboro State.” Sandro did return to Tyler for her MFA. And
along the way, she found her place in ceramics. “I interned at the Wheaton Arts and Cultural
Center (formerly Wheaton Village),” she said. “I studied with Terry Plasket, one of the other artists in the Noyes show. At Wheaton, I learned a great deal about production pottery and the
business end of ceramics.” Sandro went on to do some adjunct teaching until the opportunity of a lifetime occurred. Millville was revitalizing its downtown into an arts district, and to support that, Cumberland County College was considering opening a ceramics department. Sandro was brought in on the ground floor, first to consult, then to teach and finally as assistant director of Clay College. Today, she’s able to explore her own art when she’s not overseeing her students. “A lot of times when I start out, I don’t know what I’m going to do,” she confessed. “I usually draw the piece first but that’s in two dimensions. In order to understand it, I have to build it in
three dimensions. And then it always changes and evolves.” “Most of my ideas and concepts are autobiographical,” she said. “They’re pretty emotional, too. The piece I call Blood from a Stone is a humanoid form. The middle of the torso is really skinny; it cinches in. That symbolizes tension,
squeezing, pressure. Then it expands to be more volumetric. The piece is about overcoming really stressful, hard times.” “I love working with clay,” she added. “There are so many things you can do with it. You have to invest a lot of time in learning the medium but I love that part of it.”
David Gamber Adjunct Professor Clay College
David Gamber was drawn into ceramics by the tactile experience. “I love that I can touch
it,” he explained. “Working in three dimensions, you’re working with real objects and that was
part of the appeal.” Gamber knew he would be an artist from a very young age. “When I made choices between other things and art, I would always choose art,” he acknowledged. His path led him to get an undergraduate degree in art and a master’s in fine art and ceramics. Now at the Clay College, he works with students sharing the same passion. He started out making vessels and now has progressed to vessels that are not at all functional. “One of the things you do as you’re teaching,” he said, “is that you’re constantly referring to parts of the vessel as human body parts. The sculpture takes on a metaphorical reference to people and bodies. In fact, I have
one piece in the Noyes that is a long line of vessel forms that I call Following the Leader. It’s
about how we tend to follow and not question.” Gamber’s inspiration comes from several
sources, but mostly the things that fascinate him most in life. “There is an African tradition where a shaman has a divining basket,” said Gamber. “It’s a basket with all of these objects, some made, some found. And it’s like reading tea leaves or fortunes—a form of counseling people in what possibilities lie ahead. So I did a piece, divining boats, based on what I learned about
the shaman.” Gamber himself loves to experiment. “I’malways open to what the pieces need to be ‘right,’” he explained. “Sometimes that means trying something new.” “I always encourage my students to ask the question ‘what if...’ about their work,” he said. “And then, if they don’t know the answer, try it and see.”
By Felicia Lowenstein Niven
http://www.njlifestyleonline.com
The Art of Clay: A L L F I R E D U P
It began about 10,000 years ago. Man’s desire to form clay into pottery was virtually unstoppable,first with usable vessels that carried water and the like. But ancient pots provide evidence that man had a desire to decorate even that which was utilitarian, opening up a world of possibility for this native substance clay. Eventually that passion turned from practical to ethereal, with clay becoming another medium for art. Sculpture was one thing, but to sculpt with a process that would then fire and make it permanent took this art form to the next level. Today, it’s a rare household that doesn’t own at least one ceramic piece, be it artistic or practical.
This season, the Noyes Museum of Art celebrates the medium of clay with an exhibit of eight area clay artists in “Working It: A Collaboration with the Clay College of Cumberland County College,” now through January 14, 2007. We chatted with three of the artists to provide a more personal glimpse into this exhibit. ——
It began about 10,000 years ago. Man’s desire to form clay into pottery was virtually unstoppable,first with usable vessels that carried water and the like. But ancient pots provide evidence that man had a desire to decorate even that which was utilitarian, opening up a world of possibility for this native substance clay. Eventually that passion turned from practical to ethereal, with clay becoming another medium for art. Sculpture was one thing, but to sculpt with a process that would then fire and make it permanent took this art form to the next level. Today, it’s a rare household that doesn’t own at least one ceramic piece, be it artistic or practical.
This season, the Noyes Museum of Art celebrates the medium of clay with an exhibit of eight area clay artists in “Working It: A Collaboration with the Clay College of Cumberland County College,” now through January 14, 2007. We chatted with three of the artists to provide a more personal glimpse into this exhibit. ——
Alan Willoughby Executive Director, Perkins Center for the Arts
“Trial by fire” is how AlanWilloughby describes the process of creating with ceramics. “It is a process engaging full thought and sense, a collaborative effort between man and fire,” he writes in his artist statement.Willoughby is poetic about his craft, and for good reason. Each time he works in ceramics, he enters a creative dialogue in a quest to understand the deeper meanings
of life and the connections to all things. For Willoughby, it was a connection that began at a boarding school in Iowa. The school didn’t have a large budget for art, so the art teacher took the students to the riverbank where they dug their own clay. They also helped build the kiln. It was an experience Willoughby would never forget. “I continued as an undergrad, majoring in
ceramics, and started selling my pots to earn money,” he said. “I realized if I was going to be
doing this as my career, I should go back to get my Master of Fine Arts.” He earned that distinction atClemson and went on to teach and create, finally landing the job at Perkins Center for the Arts. “I don’t make as many pots as I used to but ceramics is still a vital part of my life,” he acknowledged. Willoughby’s pieces are both sculptural and functional. “I always play back and forth between the two,” he said. “Sculpture is beautiful butso is the decorative oval platter that serves a smoked salmon. Sometimes in our culture, we
take the art out of living, and a medium like ceramics is very much about bringing it back
into our lifestyle.” Willoughby fires his work in a wood kiln because he likes the kind of surfaces that come from the combination of flame and ash. “If I were to fire it in an electric or gas kiln, the surfaces wouldn’t be the same,” he explained. He gets his inspiration from travel, such as
when he ventured down to the Yucatan and Mayan ruins. He’s also inspired by his wife and
fellow exhibiting artist, Linda Shusterman. The pair sometimes collaborates but always
influences each other. “Ideas develop over time,” said Willoughby. “They may start from one source and then you take them in a new direction.”
Jacqueline Sandro Assistant Director, Clay College
Jacqueline Sandro has always loved ceramics. And no other art career would do, not even graphic design which she studied as an accommodation to her parents who wanted something a bit more practical. “I was a graphic design major taking ceramic courses at the Tyler School of Art,” she said. “When my father passed away, I recognized that life is really short and I wanted to be doing something that I loved. So, with the encouragement of a teacher, I enrolled full time in ceramics and pottery at Glassboro State.” Sandro did return to Tyler for her MFA. And
along the way, she found her place in ceramics. “I interned at the Wheaton Arts and Cultural
Center (formerly Wheaton Village),” she said. “I studied with Terry Plasket, one of the other artists in the Noyes show. At Wheaton, I learned a great deal about production pottery and the
business end of ceramics.” Sandro went on to do some adjunct teaching until the opportunity of a lifetime occurred. Millville was revitalizing its downtown into an arts district, and to support that, Cumberland County College was considering opening a ceramics department. Sandro was brought in on the ground floor, first to consult, then to teach and finally as assistant director of Clay College. Today, she’s able to explore her own art when she’s not overseeing her students. “A lot of times when I start out, I don’t know what I’m going to do,” she confessed. “I usually draw the piece first but that’s in two dimensions. In order to understand it, I have to build it in
three dimensions. And then it always changes and evolves.” “Most of my ideas and concepts are autobiographical,” she said. “They’re pretty emotional, too. The piece I call Blood from a Stone is a humanoid form. The middle of the torso is really skinny; it cinches in. That symbolizes tension,
squeezing, pressure. Then it expands to be more volumetric. The piece is about overcoming really stressful, hard times.” “I love working with clay,” she added. “There are so many things you can do with it. You have to invest a lot of time in learning the medium but I love that part of it.”
David Gamber Adjunct Professor Clay College
David Gamber was drawn into ceramics by the tactile experience. “I love that I can touch
it,” he explained. “Working in three dimensions, you’re working with real objects and that was
part of the appeal.” Gamber knew he would be an artist from a very young age. “When I made choices between other things and art, I would always choose art,” he acknowledged. His path led him to get an undergraduate degree in art and a master’s in fine art and ceramics. Now at the Clay College, he works with students sharing the same passion. He started out making vessels and now has progressed to vessels that are not at all functional. “One of the things you do as you’re teaching,” he said, “is that you’re constantly referring to parts of the vessel as human body parts. The sculpture takes on a metaphorical reference to people and bodies. In fact, I have
one piece in the Noyes that is a long line of vessel forms that I call Following the Leader. It’s
about how we tend to follow and not question.” Gamber’s inspiration comes from several
sources, but mostly the things that fascinate him most in life. “There is an African tradition where a shaman has a divining basket,” said Gamber. “It’s a basket with all of these objects, some made, some found. And it’s like reading tea leaves or fortunes—a form of counseling people in what possibilities lie ahead. So I did a piece, divining boats, based on what I learned about
the shaman.” Gamber himself loves to experiment. “I’malways open to what the pieces need to be ‘right,’” he explained. “Sometimes that means trying something new.” “I always encourage my students to ask the question ‘what if...’ about their work,” he said. “And then, if they don’t know the answer, try it and see.”
Monday, December 11, 2006
New Exhibition features linwood artist chuck law
Noyes Museum Continues Satellite Exhibitions at Dante Hall
OCEANVILLE, N.J. – The Noyes Museum of Art and Dante Hall continue their partnership with a new exhibition featuring Linwood, N.J. artist Chuck Law. The exhibition, which opens December 15 with a reception from 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., features Law’s unique personal still life technique that the artist refers to as “scatter paintings.” The exhibition is free and open to the public from Wednesday through Saturday between noon and 4 p.m. December 15 through February 1, 2007.
Law creates detailed paintings from groupings of small objects randomly or carefully placed on a flat surface, much like a still life but with a contemporary twist. Law incorporates elements of classic trompe l'oeil painting with an overhead view of the subjects. He has developed several series, including his marine life series that includes seashells, seaweed and other objects found on the beach. Law was born in Nice, France and grew up in southern New Jersey where the ocean and the bay continue to influence his artwork. He is a member of The Ocean City Art Center, the Cape May County Art League, The Society of New Jersey Artists and The Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts in Millville, N.J. Law has participated in various juried group shows where he has won numerous awards, including First Place at both the Cygnus 12th Annual Juried Art Exhibit and the Juried Exhibit at the Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts. More information about Law, including samples of his work can be found at www.chucklaw.artspan.com.
Noyes Museum Continues Satellite Exhibitions at Dante Hall
OCEANVILLE, N.J. – The Noyes Museum of Art and Dante Hall continue their partnership with a new exhibition featuring Linwood, N.J. artist Chuck Law. The exhibition, which opens December 15 with a reception from 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., features Law’s unique personal still life technique that the artist refers to as “scatter paintings.” The exhibition is free and open to the public from Wednesday through Saturday between noon and 4 p.m. December 15 through February 1, 2007.
Law creates detailed paintings from groupings of small objects randomly or carefully placed on a flat surface, much like a still life but with a contemporary twist. Law incorporates elements of classic trompe l'oeil painting with an overhead view of the subjects. He has developed several series, including his marine life series that includes seashells, seaweed and other objects found on the beach. Law was born in Nice, France and grew up in southern New Jersey where the ocean and the bay continue to influence his artwork. He is a member of The Ocean City Art Center, the Cape May County Art League, The Society of New Jersey Artists and The Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts in Millville, N.J. Law has participated in various juried group shows where he has won numerous awards, including First Place at both the Cygnus 12th Annual Juried Art Exhibit and the Juried Exhibit at the Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts. More information about Law, including samples of his work can be found at www.chucklaw.artspan.com.
Thursday, December 07, 2006
Wednesday, December 06, 2006
Monday, November 27, 2006
Friday, November 17, 2006
Wednesday, November 15, 2006
Tuesday, November 07, 2006
Monday, November 06, 2006
Wednesday, November 01, 2006
Sat.-Sun., Nov. 4-5 Crafts Marketplace
10:00 am – 5:00 pm, regular museum admission
The Museum comes alive with Delaware Valley artisans, creating the perfect week-end for Holiday gift buying. This is a great way to start your holiday shopping!
Sat., Nov. 11 Creative Sparks “Telling the Story through ScrapBooking”
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm, 6-10 years old, $3 children/$4 adults
Creative scrapbooking techniques will be utilized for this activity. Preserve pictures and memories with fun and colorful papers, stickers and markers. Children will also write stories and poems to accompany their creations.
Fri., Nov. 10 “Artists’ Books” Silent Auction and Wine Sip
6:00 pm– 8:00 pm, $20 members, $30 non-members
Wondering how to begin your own unique collection of art? Start by considering purchasing a treasured artist book.
Tuesday, Nov. 28 Bus Trip to New York ONLY TEN SPOTS LEFT!
8:00 am – 7:00 pm, $70 members, $75 non-members or $40 for transportation only
Visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art: American in Paris, 1860-1900 and Cezanne to Picasso: Ambroise Vollard, Patron of the Avant-Garde.Travel and The Frick Collection or just enjoy holiday shopping - Big Apple style. Lunch on your own.
Sunday, Dec. 3 Holiday Open House, 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm
$5 members, $8 non-members
Set this afternoon aside before the holiday rush to enjoy music by the Oakcrest High School chorus, seasonal refreshments, children’s craft activity and shopping in the Museum shop at a relaxing pace. Most items in the shop will be offered at a 25% discount.
Saturday, Dec. 9 Creative Sparks “Working it out with clay”
1:00 pm– 2:00 pm, 6-10 years old, $3 children/$4 adults
Inspired by the collaboration of clay artists exhibition, children will be“working it” with clay materials. Sculptural and functional clay creations will be the focus of this activity.
10:00 am – 5:00 pm, regular museum admission
The Museum comes alive with Delaware Valley artisans, creating the perfect week-end for Holiday gift buying. This is a great way to start your holiday shopping!
Sat., Nov. 11 Creative Sparks “Telling the Story through ScrapBooking”
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm, 6-10 years old, $3 children/$4 adults
Creative scrapbooking techniques will be utilized for this activity. Preserve pictures and memories with fun and colorful papers, stickers and markers. Children will also write stories and poems to accompany their creations.
Fri., Nov. 10 “Artists’ Books” Silent Auction and Wine Sip
6:00 pm– 8:00 pm, $20 members, $30 non-members
Wondering how to begin your own unique collection of art? Start by considering purchasing a treasured artist book.
Tuesday, Nov. 28 Bus Trip to New York ONLY TEN SPOTS LEFT!
8:00 am – 7:00 pm, $70 members, $75 non-members or $40 for transportation only
Visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art: American in Paris, 1860-1900 and Cezanne to Picasso: Ambroise Vollard, Patron of the Avant-Garde.Travel and The Frick Collection or just enjoy holiday shopping - Big Apple style. Lunch on your own.
Sunday, Dec. 3 Holiday Open House, 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm
$5 members, $8 non-members
Set this afternoon aside before the holiday rush to enjoy music by the Oakcrest High School chorus, seasonal refreshments, children’s craft activity and shopping in the Museum shop at a relaxing pace. Most items in the shop will be offered at a 25% discount.
Saturday, Dec. 9 Creative Sparks “Working it out with clay”
1:00 pm– 2:00 pm, 6-10 years old, $3 children/$4 adults
Inspired by the collaboration of clay artists exhibition, children will be“working it” with clay materials. Sculptural and functional clay creations will be the focus of this activity.
Monday, October 30, 2006
Fred Noyes's " Fish Dinner" Oil
On October 26th, The Noyes Museum of Art has partnered with the Atlantic City Airport, "ArtPort." On display are four paintings by Fred Noyes and 12 watercolors by Salem County artist Alex Alampi. The exhibition is open till November 27th. Please visit http://www2.sjta.com/acairport/ for more details. The exhibits are free and open to the public.
Monday, October 23, 2006
Artist, Phyllis London, stands in front of her painting with guest from her opening at Dante Hall on October 22nd. The Noyes Museum of Art and Dante Hall have joined together in providing rotating exhibitions. Phyllis London is a regional watercolorist. Her palette and subject matter will dazzle your eyes. Feel free to visit Dante Hall to see 15 great works of art.
Friday, October 20, 2006
What is The Noyes Museum of Art?
Opened in 1983, the Noyes Museum of Art was the vision of entrepreneurs Fred and Ethel Noyes. An avid collector and an academically-trained artist, Fred Noyes expressed his love of South Jersey's natural features in his artwork. The Museum's permanent collection contains many of the Noyeses' personal collections including American fine and folk art, vintage bird decoys, paintings and sculptures.
Today, the Noyes Museum maintains our founders' dedication to preserving, interpreting and exhibiting the art and cultural heritage of southern New Jersey. As the only fine and contemporary art museum in southern New Jersey’s eight counties, the Noyes is devoted to research, education, documentation and presentation of artistic expressions. Activities include exhibitions, demonstrations, community events and educational workshops. The programs are designed to impart an appreciation for the vital relationship between the arts and the community.
Opened in 1983, the Noyes Museum of Art was the vision of entrepreneurs Fred and Ethel Noyes. An avid collector and an academically-trained artist, Fred Noyes expressed his love of South Jersey's natural features in his artwork. The Museum's permanent collection contains many of the Noyeses' personal collections including American fine and folk art, vintage bird decoys, paintings and sculptures.
Today, the Noyes Museum maintains our founders' dedication to preserving, interpreting and exhibiting the art and cultural heritage of southern New Jersey. As the only fine and contemporary art museum in southern New Jersey’s eight counties, the Noyes is devoted to research, education, documentation and presentation of artistic expressions. Activities include exhibitions, demonstrations, community events and educational workshops. The programs are designed to impart an appreciation for the vital relationship between the arts and the community.
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