Susanne Bartz: email
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Susan Berstler: email
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Susan Del Conte: email
Susan Del Conte is a sculptor, painter and mixed media artist who lives and works in Somerville, Ma. She is currently working towards her MFA in Visual Arts at the Art Institute of Boston/Lesley University. Susan’s pieces contain materials which she rescues from obscurity and transforms into new incarnations. Through an obsessive process of searching and reconfiguring Susan alters the remnants of urban decay found in her immediate neighborhood into pieces which are sometimes humorous, sometimes ominous. Susan’s pieces beg the questions: How do we assign value to objects? When does an object become valueless? Can an object ever truly be without value?
Susan welcomes the impact that chance, uncertainty and experimentation can bring to her work. Her pieces serve as allegories for survival and bestow the message that all matter possesses the potential to transform into something else if given the opportunity.
Emily Greenwood: email
Since I first began printing black and white photographs I have been drawn to things forgotten, discarded, or neglected. In Paris I was drawn to old cemeteries, where gravesites were long forgotten and had broken windows and graffiti scrawled on the sides. Recently I have been shooting rusted cars, junkyards, anything were nature is slowly eating away at the manmade. These pieces also include traditional still lives, taken while wandering the halls of Montserrat College of Art, where I work. The dolls reminded me of old dirty Barbie’s left in the yard after play or stuffed animals landing in thrift shops, no longer loved by their owners. As an admired or anything with peeling paint, rusted metal, or stained cloth, I know that material objects are impermanent, and therein lies beauty.
Dora Hsiung: email
My work in this show are made with discarded materials which I have been collecting for many years. They are from Boston Children’s Museum Recycle Center, from my friends, and other places I can’t even remember. My art is a personal statement of my feeling, expressed through transforming materials, especially those which have been considered useless and trashed. I want to make people to look at the recycled material in new ways, and encourage children to be more creative--playing with recycled materials instead of spending most of their time on computer games and television.
Craig La Rotonda: email
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Kim Maria: email
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Lawrence Paolella: email
Lawrence re-used his political yard signs to creates signs of FEAR, HOPE and PEACE. He chose form twenty-six colors of old salvaged family house paints saved from the landfills. “I believe every effort to re-use, re-store and re-cycle helps to save the planet. You ought to try it. It feels good.”
Margaret Ann Ryan: email
I have always enjoyed taking found or saved objects and turning them into something new: Transforming them into a creation of my own making. In this current piece of recycle/renew art: SOMERVILLE KITCHEN STOVE, CIRCA 1981 there is much recycling. The white knobs and round metal burners are the ones that were on my first Somerville kitchen stove, as noted by the photos from the early 1980’s, the silver knob, a ‘street find’. Also in the piece is recycled plywood, paints that friends were ready to toss, a piece of flooring from a friend’s house reminiscent of the early 80’s. Most of all the assembling of this piece recalls many tasty meals made on that ancient looking beast, which also provided the heat source for the kitchen, a novelty for me when I first moved in. This stove was reliable and indestructible and only replaced two years ago! Things were made well in those days! Everyone who saw it loved it and had a stove story to tell!
Peter Thibeault: email
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V Van Sant: email
Most people would throw out used flash bulbs, broken toys, or candy
wrappers. Not me! If I liked something I would tuck it away to use
"in a box". I especially love multiples of things. There was a period
of time when my collage boxes seemed to reflect what I did for a
living. I would always seem to accumulate little odds and ends at
work and they would end up in my artwork. The years I worked in a
hobby store were great! When used, these objects become precious,
they have worth again, they are valued. It is art.
Wayne Viens: email
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The Nave Gallery
Clarendon Hill Presbyterian Church
155 Powderhouse Blvd., Somerville, MA
map of gallery site
MBTA: From Davis Square take Bus 88 - Clarendon Hill Highland. Exit at Broadway and Curtis St. and walk 3 blocks north on Curtis Street. Turn right onto Powderhouse Blvd. and find gallery on your left. Free and open to the public. No wheelchair access.
Parking: Available in the West Somerville Neighborhood School after 5:00 and on weekends. Lot is located on Raymond St. Turn right at intersection of Powderhouse & Curtis onto Curtis and take your first left onto Raymond. Lot is located about 1 block down.
If you do not have a Somerville resident sticker you will be ticketed on neighboring streets.
Thursday 4:00-8:00 & Saturday 1:00-5:00
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