Showing posts with label Tripoli Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tripoli Gallery. Show all posts

Thursday, May 4, 2023

TRIPOLI GALLERY: Laith MCGregor, May6-June-5, 2023!

OPENING RECEPTION: SATURDAY, MAY 6, 5 – 7 PM 

TRIPOLI GALLERY 26 Ardsley Road, Wainscott, NY 11975
Fix your little problem and light this candle.”
~Astronaut Alan Shepard
 
Wainscott, NY – Tripoli Gallery presents Pace and Space, a solo exhibition by artist Laith McGregor. A series of new paintings were transported from the artist’s studio in Byron Bay Australia to Long Island’s East End. That said, the work has a transitory aesthetic —in a mystical and planetary way. His palette mainly consists of hues of blue, with expansive shapes and celestial resonance.  McGregor’s physical, painted gestures move through each of the works, connecting them with an invisible thread, not unlike a constellation. Using words such as Séance, Twilight, and Wanderer (all 2023) as titles, we end up on an unexpected journey through the world he’s made on each canvas. It’s impossible to look at these paintings and not think of the sky, or an intrinsic interest in the ocean. The latter approaches and recedes from the shore, and similarly, McGregor uses his body approaching and receding from the surface.

While utilizing oil paint as a way to confront each surface, several paintings have been assembled with fabric overlay—oil paint rags, off-cuts from discarded works— painted, unfolded, and molded. Tie-dyed hammocks will also be included in the exhibition as an installation. The fabric feels personal and each composition, specifically in the Séance series, is minimal and purposeful, folded edges allowing the raw linen to play a starring role as the ground. McGregor has stated in his accompanying essay that Pace and Spacereference the “action of pushing a basketball up the court at a fast pace while spacing the floor to create an offensive advantage for the team to move more efficiently.” He also inquires and references this very action as it may relate to humankind, “Could we move forward at a momentum while maintaining a nurturing distance?” 

McGregor’s paintings seem to live out this statement. They are both close and somehow far away. His empty (unpainted) segments of canvas, almost function as sand, seen from above. The fabric is paint, or sky, or an expansive sea. Upon closer inspection, the triptych Dawn, Twilight, and Night transports us into a monochromatic jungle where two, thinly sliced white moons or a severed sphere have been drawn on top. It’s as if McGregor has conjured Rousseau and removed the lushness of color in favor of delicately rendered lines. One painting I’ve yet to mention is Patience, whose focus is coffee and coffee pots, in various stages of brewing. The pots are divorced from a heat source and float above washy drippy, swaths of paint and the occasional cigarette. 

If the journey is as cryptic as it is direct, perhaps coffee and cigarettes are the closest we will get to a self-portrait —a crop, a habit, and a lifestyle.  

~ Katy Hamer
 
TRIPOLI GALLERY, founded in 2009 as The Tripoli Gallery of Contemporary Art, was located in Southampton for 10 years and moved to an expansive permanent, 2,400-square-foot space in Wainscott, New York in November 2019. Since 2005, founder Tripoli Patterson has organized, produced, and curated contemporary art shows in various locations around the East End of Long Island, New York City, and Byron Bay, Australia. They have hosted an annual Thanksgiving Collective show for 18 years. Press mentions include Galerie Magazine, Hamptons Magazine, New York Times, Artforum, and others. 
Image

Laith McGregor, Twilight,  2023 oil on canvas, 66.15 x 60.04 inches (168.0 x 152.5 cm)


For press inquiries or further information, please contact info@tripoligallery.com or call 631.377.3715
26 Ardsley Road, Wainscott, NY 11975
(Enter via East Gate Rd.)

Hours: 10am – 6pm
Sunday 12 – 5pm
Closed Tuesday
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Saturday, April 15, 2023

TRIPOLI GALLERY, features Brooklyn based artist Lauren West for spring 2023


During gallery hours, Lauren West’s studio will be open for viewing by appointment only. RSVP by responding to this email to schedule a time to meet with her.

TRIPOLI GALLERY 26 Ardsley Rd. Wainscott. NY

Wainscott, NY – In its fourth iteration, Tripoli Gallery’s Artist-in-Residency is delighted to feature Brooklyn based artist Lauren West for spring 2023. West is a painter who creates worlds that are familiar and crave to be entered. There is an energetic pull that is psychologically approachable but physically implausible. A graduate of the New York Academy of Art, West honed an incredible skill for representational rendering.

For Down Here, her upcoming exhibition at the gallery post-Residency, the artist is making and will exhibit a series of paintings, many of which posits the viewer from the perspective of laying on the ground. In these paintings, we confront vast landscapes that stretch conceptually beyond the surface. One such work is Brief Moon (2023), where a mass of doves witnessed from below, fly amongst spears thrust towards the sky. The symbol of the dove is as weighted as it is light and airy. Here, there is a central dove, who looks down towards us, in between the spears. The artist shared that the work is a call for peace and focuses on the moments after a war —literal and figurative— has ended. Through the challenging wars that so many are experiencing globally, hope, life, and love are on the horizon. She strives to find beauty in challenges. Another painting with a similar composition is Blue Sighting (2023). Set in a forest or leafy field, a dove wing peeks or flutters across the upper right side of the canvas. There is a silent connectivity to West’s work. One can image that the dove in Blue Sightingmay have been part of the feathered group from Brief Moon. The leafy green atmosphere is lush, and compared to the cluster of spears, feels safe.  

West has delved into places that seem to be comfortable, but uncertain. For the upcoming exhibition, she is making oil paintings on canvas while also exploring mixed media on plywood, for some unexpected new work. Her attention to detail nearly delves into magic realism, because in some instances the life she portrays is very different from the one we live. Moving through simultaneous narratives that extend through this new body of work, she starts with sketches and then works intuitively. Taking us through the depths of hell (war) to expansive and infinities skies, Down Here promises to be grounding, and a space where all of her wars have ended and the good news is, she triumphed. 
 

 ~Katy Diamond Hamer 

THE ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE PROGRAM at Tripoli Gallery started in 2015 with artist Jonathan Beer’s exhibition Memory Palace at the gallery’s Southampton location. Since their move to Wainscott, NY, the Artist-In-Residence program has become a permanent part of the gallery’s annual programming. Additional artists who have participated and shown the work that they made during the residency include Félix Bonilla Gerena (2022), Angelbert Metoyer (2021), and Alice Hope (2020). Lauren West is participating in the residency until April 30, 2023.

Lauren West
Brief Moon, 2023
oil on canvas
48 x 48 inches (121.92 x 121.92 cm)
Lauren West
Babel Tower, 2023
oil on canvas
50 x 35 inches (127 x 88.9 cm)
VIRTUAL TOUR
Image Above: Residency studio view with detail of Brief Moon, 2023
For press inquiries or further information, please contact info@tripoligallery.com or call 631.377.3715
26 Ardsley Road, Wainscott, NY 11975
(Enter via East Gate Rd.)

Hours: 10am – 6pm
Sunday 12 – 5pm
Closed Tuesday
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Wednesday, August 3, 2022

The Tripoli Gallery exhibits artists Robert Dash and Connie Fox in "Connie & Bob" August 6-September 5, 2022

The flower image has returned throughout, partly for its ‘abstract voice’. 
~ Connie Fox


CONNIE & BOB
August 6 – September 5, 2022
Paintings by 
Robert Dash and Connie Fox


 

Then, something, not a jungle, begins beguilement in the garden. (from Poem) 
Robert Dash

Tripoli Gallery is excited to announce Connie & Bob, an exhibition that looks at the artwork and friendship between artists Robert Dash and Connie Fox, specifically how they painted flowers. On view at 26 Ardsley Rd., Wainscott, NY, the exhibition will open with a reception on Saturday, August 6, from 6-8pm, and remain on view until September 5, 2022. 
 

Connie Fox and Robert Dash met while at the University of New Mexico in the 1950s, among a vibrant group of artists and writers. They parted ways and later reconvened on the East End of Long Island. Bob bought a home in Sagaponack in 1967 where he painted, wrote and gardened. It was there that he founded the New York State recognized Madoo Conservancy and had esteemed visitors such as John Ashbery, Fairfield Porter, Willem de Kooning, and Jimmy Schuyler to name a few. Connie bought a house in East Hampton 12 years later, after the prompting of Elaine de Kooning, another longtime friend she met in New Mexico. It was Elaine who assured her that she, “…could turn the whole house into her studio.”
 

Bob and Connie share an affinity in their approach to the canvas, each returning to nature as a recurring, even if disparate, focal point. In the selected work on view at Tripoli Gallery, Connie Fox utilized the form of the flower —petals, stem, and pistil—as a literal stand-in or metaphor for the human body, often painting or collaging a face at the center. Before delving deeply into the non-objective force behind abstraction, Fox found abstract elements in natural, organic shapes, while Dash was fascinated with painting flowers and growing them in his gardens. In his paintings of flowers, he stays away from creating any kind of immediately recognizable portraiture, rather creates space for discovery of the self. In contrast, Fox’s The Flower as Sarah Bernhardt, 1965, the artist interweaves the famed actress’ face into the center of a flower, almost giving the subject super “natural” powers. The large black petals, expansive within the frame of the canvas, stretch from edge to edge. The face of her subject, rotund, moon-like even, fills the center of the flower glowing—a focal point of the composition. Similarly, in this instance, Dash’s Untitled 2002-2003, oil on paper, resonates with Fox’s work and plays with scale and schema. Placing a black flower in the center of the surface, its petals are outstretched as if asking for a hug. Rather than use a fully monochromatic palette, his painting features bright orange line work to define the petals. 

 

Connie & Bob is a meaningful glance between two old friends. The paintings on view range from 1955 to 2003 and trace their relationship with art-making through the years. This also rings true when comparing the vertical composition of Connie Fox’s Self Portrait as a Flower, 1955 and Robert Dash’s Untitled, 1996. Fox playfully depicts herself in a dress composed of the body of an Iris, while in Dash’s piece, a flower emerges from the tip of a phallus, a visual translation of masculine virility. Fox’s floral portrait exudes femininity. In both, we see a familiar, very human, geometry, as these artists responded to the simplicity of blossoms through a language of form and color. While they approached flowers at different life stages, the roots, their roots, had already been planted. Connie, now 97 years old, still lives and works in East Hampton and will have a solo exhibition at Tripoli Gallery in 2024. 

 

Robert Dash (b. 1931, Manhattan, NY, d. 2013, Sagaponack, NY) attended the University of New Mexico. A longtime Hamptons resident, Dash’s works have been exhibited in one-man exhibitions in Holland, England, and Germany as well as numerous major American art galleries. He also participated in many group exhibitions including the Museum of Modern Art, Yale University and the Fine Arts Gallery University of Missouri. His works are also featured in museum collections including the Modern Art Museum, Munich; Guggenheim Museum; Boston Museum of Fine Arts; Philadelphia Museum of Fine Arts; and the Corcoran Gallery.

 

Connie Fox (b. 1925, in Fowler, CO) received her BFA in 1947 from the University of Colorado, and then attended Art Center School in Los Angeles for a rigorous program of drawing, perspective, rendering, and composition. She received her MA at the University of New Mexico in 1952. Fox has taught at Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh, The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Long Island University in Southampton, and the Vermont Studio Center, Johnson. She has exhibited her work in museums and galleries across the country, including the Parrish Art Museum, Water Mill, NY; the American Academy of Arts and Letters, NY; Weatherspoon Gallery at the University of North Carolina in Greensboro; the University of Florida, Gainesville, and others including solo exhibitions with Danese/Corey Gallery in New York, the Daura Gallery at the University of Lynchburg, and the Heckscher Museum of Art. Connie and Bob will mark the second exhibition Fox’s work has been included in at Tripoli Gallery.

For press inquiries or further information, please contact info@tripoligallery.com or call 631.377.3715

Images above

Connie Fox, Chinese Bitters, 1967, oil on linen, 49 x 59 inches (124.46 x 149.86 cm) 

Robert Dash, Untitled(4), Florilegium Series, 2000, mixed media on paper, 70 x 70 inches (177.8 x 177.8 cm)
© Madoo Conservancy, 2022
26 Ardsley Road, Wainscott, NY 11975
(Enter via East Gate Rd.)

Hours: 10am – 6pm
Sunday 12 – 5pm
Closed Tuesday
Copyright © Tripoli Gallery Inc. 2022, All rights reserved.
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Wednesday, May 25, 2022

Tripoli Gallery exhibits a presentation of new paintings by Miles Partington. On view from May 28th through June 27th.


Miles Partington
Tam Lin: May 28 – June 27, 2022

Opening Reception:
Sunday, May 29, 5 – 7pm

 

Wainscott, NY – Tripoli Gallery is pleased to invite you to Tam Lin, a solo presentation of new paintings by Miles Partington. On view from May 28th through June 27th, 2022, Join us for the opening reception on Sunday, May 29th from 5 – 7pm at Tripoli Gallery in Wainscott, NY.
 
To experience Miles Partington’s work, is to enter a world that is as timeless as it is rooted in the present. Animals, his ever present subjects, are ubiquitous and anthropomorphic. His imagination emerges through his fingertips, whether sculpting or painting. Medieval knights are bisected by an unknown horizon line, melting away into the background of the canvas. There is a joust between two paintings, only evident by the lances their subjects yield, that break the edge of one canvas, only to be continued on another. In Tam Lin, it’s impossible to question the world present. It is so thoughtful and well executed, that it is believable. Why can’t an owl ride on the back of a horse? The horse’s body glistens as if after a long run, and an owl sits atop its back, solemn, unyielding, the moon behind its head, a halo.
 
The animal kingdom is much different from our own —outside of the urban city centers, unruly, not manicured. But Partington’s animal kingdom is somehow welcoming even if fantastical. The work in Tam Lin almost exudes a childlike wonder, if only it weren’t so well crafted. There is a strangeness and a precision to the paintings and sculptural forms that come with a skilled hand, repetition, practice, and even trial and error. In Seaford, Long Island, Seamans Neck Park not far from the Atlantic Ocean, is home to hundreds of beautiful emerald green Monk parakeets. The birds are native to South America, and it isn’t officially known how they ended up on the South Shore of Long Island, surviving and thriving. Seeing the birds fly from branch to park lights, perching high above the reach of children below, is surreal, but akin to Partington’s vision, that which is as likely as it is impossible.
 
Paint is applied to the surface with the utmost care and intention, Partington relies on representation mixed with the fantastical. His proportions, in one case a figure hiding behind an elephant on a farm, are incongruous but in the best way. The figure identified wearing a hat, has his arm around the neck of the elephant which appears quite small in comparison. The gesture is loving if not concealing, as parrots with red and blue wings outstretched, fly above in an early morning sky. A nearby building in this particular painting (After Unknown Artist, 2022), has dark brown paneling, and a pointed green roof, not unlike the barn where Partington has his Southampton studio. In the same place where peacocks, elephants, toucans, and knights roam, there is an artist waiting to bring his visions to life.

Looking at historical paintings by Delacroix, George Stubbs, Théodore Géricault, and Pieter Boel, Partington took liberties loosely referencing Lady Godiva and Joan of Arc, introducing them to a timeline all his own (including one of the heroines donning a shirt that features musician Patti Smith!). The title, Tam Lin, was derived from Scottish folklore about a mythical man, part fae, who wooed young maidens after they’d picked roses he declared to be his. Early versions of the story often in song, stem from 1549, and tell a tale similar to that of the Pied Piper. The story is said to have a moralistic component, warning humans of what could happen should they lay eyes on a fairy. It is a warning as much as it is a dream, an excuse to explore the unknown…never knowing what lurks between fantasy and reality.

For press inquiries or further information, please contact info@tripoligallery.com or call 631.377.3715

26 Ardsley Road, Wainscott, NY 11975
(Enter via East Gate Rd.)

Hours: 10am – 6pm
Sunday 12 – 5pm
Closed Tuesday
Copyright © Tripoli Gallery Inc. 2022, All rights reserved.
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Image above:
Miles Partington
Cave Painter, 2022
oil on linen, 24 x 48 inches (60.96 x 121.92 cm)
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Friday, April 16, 2021

Out this weekend in the Hamptons catch Angelbert Metoyer Magnificent Change: April 3 - May 3, 2021 Tripoli Gallery

Angelbert Metoyer
Magnificent Change: April 3 - May 3, 2021


Tripoli Gallery 
26 Ardsley Rd. 
Wainscott, NY 11975
 

Wainscott, NY – Tripoli Gallery is pleased to present this year’s Artist-In-Resident, Angelbert Metoyer and his solo Exhibition Magnificent Change. As he uses the Gallery as his temporary studio, the performance of Magnificent Change will be a living symbolic garden and installation from April 3rd to May 24th, leading to the Artists reception on April 24th from 6 – 9pm. The completed exhibition will remain on view until May 3rd, 2021. The residency and exhibition will lead up to the release of two new works for a Contemporary Auction in June at Sotheby’s.
 
With his main studio based in Houston, the American painter and Afrofuturistwill draw on recent sojourns in light to inform this new body of work. Works as early as 2008, transformed during this residency, create a strong connection to the cosmos and nature. Using past works in his process, Metoyer constructs in concert with the elements to create artworks that exhibit life force and vitality, permeated texturally with historical references and thematic layers. Metoyer explores memory, mythology and metamorphosis through the channels of history, philosophy and theology. Boundless by materiality, these various medias combining conventional artistic mediums with nontraditional materials such as coal, oil, tar and gold dust (“excrements of industry” as he calls them) exhibit an otherworldly quality. His practice is reminiscent of horticultural pruning and through his ongoing collaboration in nature, Metoyer utilizes the light and the performative history of painting on the East End. An ongoing element of his work, his shadow drawing techniques have found a way to be uncovered here in Wainscott and connected to the history of action painting through this residency.
 
Metoyer’s paintings, rooted in abstraction, sometimes reference surrealism and figuration, often times taking more than a decade to complete. The resulting canvases essentially contain a multitude of paintings and layers of composited images and musings. Metoyer’s paintings and drawings evoke a conceptual duality, straddling a blurry line between literal representation of lived experiences and abstract expressions of memories and dreams. In breaking down and reconstructing new narratives, Metoyer explores the lifespan of chronicles that live within his work.
 
Angelbert Metoyer studied drawing and painting at the Atlanta College of Art. His work can be found in the permanent collections of the US Department of State, Houston Museum of Fine Art, The Charles, H. Wright Museum, African American Museum of Contemporary Art, the ACE Collection, and the Museum of Fine Arts in Leipzig, Germany. He has shown at the Venice Biennale, Art Basel Miami, and Art Basel Switzerland. His work has been featured on many album and book covers, including Mike Ladd’s Negrophilia, Saul Williams’ Niggy Tardust, Bilal’s In Another Life (2015) and VOYAGE-19 (2020), and Marcus Guillery’s Red Now and Laters (2014). Angelbert Metoyer has exhibited with Tripoli Patterson since 2005; 1st Annual Thanksgiving Collective, 2005; Butter Lane Barn Show, 2006; and in group shows at Tripoli Gallery since the year of its inception; Before We Let Go, 2009; Modern Salon, 2012; What Have We Done?, 2019; and Are We There Yet?, 2021. Magnificent Change marks his second solo show at Tripoli Gallery following After Life in 2017.

For press inquiries or further information, please contact info@tripoligallery.comor call 631.377.3715

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Artwork Image:  
Angelbert Metoyer 
Hourglass, 2017-2021
artist made materials and watercolor on paper
72 x 84 inches
(182.8 x 213.4 cm)

 Photo Credit: Zev Starr-Tambor 
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