Word and Image: Works of Change and Exchange


The exhibit can be viewed online (below) or in-person:

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EXHIBITION

March 4th, 2023 – April 15th, 2023


WORD AND IMAGE 

Works of Change and Exchange

Jazz Gallery Center for the Arts presents the work of a group of artists who work and collaborate with writing and visual art in a show entitled "Word and Image".

"Language is a powerful tool. And no one understands that better than artists who thoughtfully utilize text to make a statement and draw out emotion."

– Jessica Stewart.

By using letters and words in their visual expression, these 10 artists present works that invite a deeper exchange between artist and viewer.

Works by

  • Jack Alves

  • Bill Barrette

  • N. Adam Beadel

  • Renee Luna Bebeau

  • Jeff Cartier

  • Bob Danner

  • Thomas Gaudynski

  • Nina Ghanbarzadeh

  • Chrystal Gillon

  • Josie Osborne

 

 

WORD & IMAGE

Spoken word - Image - Written word

Speculation about the progression of language from sounds to the creation of images to the written word is well documented. Lithic age bone flutes found in western France attest to the creation of music, which indicates a flowering branch of speech. As art began, on the rocks of caves or calderas, the idea of capturing visions crystalized into symbols that evolved into written codexes.

Inherent in the attempt to capture experience in image or word is transformation - something is exchanged and something changes.

All of the pieces presented here reflect this challenge. Channels of association are exchanged and change in translation. Meanings are transformed as they mix with another’s perspective and experience to create a new idea or viewpoint. This is the power of words and images.

 

 

Jack Alves

Untitled

Oil pastel on paper

9 x 12 inches

$200

J Cartier

Moving Trees in Their Youth

Ekphrastic poem

NFS

 

 

Bill Barrette

Anonymous Child #28

Two perspective photograph:

Photographs, lenses, plexiglass, metal, wood.

17 x 11 inches

NFS

J Cartier

Cast South

Ekphrastic poem

NFS

 

 

Joseph Légaré

The Fire in St. Jean Quarter, Seen Looking Westward

Oil on canvas

59-1/2 x 86-3/4 inches

1848

J Cartier

Fire Blood Cast South

Ekphrasis: Anonymous Child #28

NFS

 

 

N. Adam Beadel

Panel 14 Organ Console

Letterpress print / edition of 6

20 x 22 inches

$200

N. Adam Beadel

Panel 15 Organ Console

Letterpress print / edition of 6

20 x 22 inches

$200

 

 

Renee Luna Bebeau

Intergalactic

Watercolor on paper

12 x 9 inches

$300

J Cartier

Crossing Over at Atlantic Station

Ekphrastic poem

NFS

 

 

William Blake

Albion Rose

1793

Public Domain

J Cartier

Albion Quartered

Ekphrasis

NFS

 

 

Bob Danner

A Warped Slice of Dirt

Oil ink serigraph / edition of 50

32 x 28 inches

$1,200

J Cartier

Edo Beauties of the Floating World

Ekphrastic poem

NFS

 

 

Thomas Gaudynski

After Michael Palmer’s,

“On the Sustaining of Culture in Dark Times”

Ink and watercolor

NFS

 

 

Nina Ghanbarzadeh

Wherever I am let me be the sky is mine

Acrylic ink, pastel, thread on paper

A tribute to Sohrab Sepehri

31 x 21-1/2 inches

$300

 

 

Chrystal Gillon

Mama Said

Mixed media / series of 20

6 x 4 x 1-1/2 inches each

Chrystal Gillon

Detail: Pick Up Your Feet

1/20 from Mama Said series

Originals NFS

3D Facsimiles: $250 / piece

 

 

Chrystal Gillon

The Old Woman and the Shoe

Mixed media

36 x 15 inches

NFS

Chrystal Gillon

Detail: The Old Woman and the Shoe

Mixed media

36 x 15 inches

NFS

 

 

Josie Osborne

Small World

Mixed media

14 x 10 x 3 inches

NFS

Detail:

Small World

 

 

A Slice of Mica

An attempt to understand ekphrastic writing

Some of the pieces presented in this exhibit are linked to one another. Some of these linked responses are referred to as ekphrasis. Ekphrasis is considered generally to be a rhetorical form of writing in which one medium of art tries to relate to another medium by defining, describing or depicting its essence and form, and in doing so, relate more directly to the audience. The process and product of ekphrastic response is inherently polemic and presumptuous. Rarely is it impartial. More often than not it is inaccurate and single minded. It is a visceral and deeply personal expression that on occasion has little to do with the art or the artist and everything to do with the one creating the ekphrasis. Yet it confirms the almost alchemical process of art and its strange effect on the human psyche. Art yearns to connect, even on its own as an object.

Ekphrastics are also expressions of love. One who creates such responses must risk vulnerability - risk exposing human frailty for the benefit of connecting to another. Embedded in the imagery of visual art and poetry are layers of meaning and association. In most cases, these foundational ideas are known only to the artist - lurking there perhaps to be revealed to the attentive viewer - or, in lucky cases, to one who is able to know the artist and see the ideas as direct manifestations of experience and thus bond to form some new, more durable, sensibility. This process borders on the miraculous. In a way, creating an ekphrasis as a response to a stirring piece of art is akin to peeling a small slice of mica off its parent body - it is made of the same material but is more transparent and arguably diminishes the original.

Walt Whitman encouraged the affirming self and in the ekphrastic process a viewer of art is able to take a small slice of a larger personal expression and keep it as a tangible souvenir - a reminder of how a particular piece of art fundamentally changed something inside of them - to affirm their humanity. Yet, if done without consent or sensitivity, it is theft.

 
 
 

ArtTyler RobertsArt, Exhibit