Tag Archives: Tucked-In: Resilience in Small Moments

Diving In

One of the things I’d like to work on this summer is getting to a point where I feel like I have at least some facility with landscape sketching. It’s kind of a logical thing to do in the warmer months when the temps are more amenable to being outside, but the truth is it’s a discipline I really struggle with and would like to improve.

Greens

View to the Greens ©2021 Elizabeth Fram, Ink, marker, colored pencil on paper, 5.5 x 5.5 inches

In general, I’m not that inspired to make landscapes in the traditional sense. I am much more drawn to work with an element of abstraction that flattens space, integrates geometric forms, and allows materials to take center stage.

Homer's Sleigh Ride

Winslow Homer, Sleigh Ride c. 1890-95, oil on canvas, The Clark Institute  This painting is a wonderful example of the attributes I’d like to emulate.

I want to be able to capture the sense of a location by translating a moment through the various color combinations and shapes that grabbed my attention in the first place. It’s the quick marking of a specific time and place I’m after, not a formal finished artwork.
Plus, I can’t help but think of the possibilities of incorporating stitch…

Lake Michigan

We recently visited our daughter in Chicago; her condo looks out to Lake Michigan. Having grown up on the coast of Maine, I’m very familiar with the fact that bodies of water change by the minute / hour, so it was a fun exercise to practice capturing a similar view at different times of day.

At the moment my results are hit or miss, but I trust the key for unlocking the code lies in practice. Time to take the plunge.

Field

Local Field   ©2022 Elizabeth Fram, Watercolor and graphite on paper, 6 x 7 inches

“Tucked In: Resilience in Small Moments” made a bit of a splash itself this weekend.

Our artists’ reception was well-attended and it was lovely to be able to share and talk about the work in person. Thank you to Dianne Shullenberger, Leslie Roth and to everyone who came to see our work. And if you haven’t been yet, the show will be up through June 19th at the Emile A. Gruppe Gallery, Jericho, VT.  Gallery hours are 10-3 Thursday – Sunday, or call for an appointment: 802.499.3211

And one final suggestion within this week’s watery theme:

I Have This Idea Hasso Ewing

I Have This Idea…!    ©2022 Hasso Ewing, Plaster, aluminum, paint, with shelf by Bob Hannon

If you’re anywhere near Montpelier before May 29th, make sure to stop in at the Front Gallery to see Hasso Ewing’s exhibit, “inside&out”. Her swimmer figures “explore concepts of inner and outer worlds and the relationship between self and other…”.  The show is thoughtful, humorous, and extremely uplifting.

Hasso Swing

©2022 Hasso Ewing  Shadows add an extra layer to these pieces as they turn while suspended.

For some context, Hasso was the creator/curator of “the Sheltering-in-Place project” at the Highland Center for the Arts in the summer of 2020. That exhibit was the impetus behind my very first Covid house, “Relative Distance”, and for the 17 houses that then followed as I continued making them to “personify” my observations and emotions during lockdown.

Hasso Ewing Cannon Ball

©2022 Hasso Ewing

Hasso proved then, as in this current exhibit at the Front, that she is a master at producing immersive, magical environments. In a section toward the back of the gallery, she invites us to enter “a watery inner world that brings the viewer inside to find peace and to escape from that which lies just above the surface”. It’s truly a balm in the midst of our chaotic, overly politicized world. Don’t miss it!

Last note: If you’re a fan of Wordle — check out Artle!