Showing posts with label steven zevitas gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steven zevitas gallery. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY presents ALEX JACKSON: Earthgrazer On view through October 21, 2023

STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY

Preview PDF

STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY


ALEX JACKSON: Earthgrazer

On view through October 21, 2023

Please email liz@stevensevitasgallery.com with questions or inquiries.



STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY

450 Harrison Ave., Suite #47

Boston, MA 02118

617 778 5265 x22


@stevenzevitasgallery

Steven Zevitas Gallery | 450 Harrison Ave #47Boston, MA 02118
#stevenzevetasgallery#fienartmagazine#fineartfun

Sunday, January 15, 2023

Catch RANEE HENDERSON: Palms up for the peanut gallery, January 13 - February 25, 2023 opening reception: Friday, February 3, 5:30 - 8 pm, at the STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY

STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY


Go to Exhibition Site
Exhibition PDF


Now on view:


RANEE HENDERSON: Palms up for the peanut gallery



January 13 - February 25, 2023

opening reception: Friday, February 3, 5:30 - 8 pm

Boston, MA — Steven Zevitas Gallery is pleased to present Palms up for the peanut gallery, an exhibition of new paintings by Ranee Henderson. The exhibition will be on view from January 13 – February 25, 2023, with an artist’s reception on Friday, February 3rd from 5:30 – 8:00 PM.

 

How do we confront trauma? How do we reclaim our humanity? For Henderson, these questions are at the forefront of her artistic practice. In 2019, Henderson overheard her uncle say to her mother, “Face it Kim, we’re just peanuts to them.” This sentiment suggests an exasperated acceptance of being cast aside as an afterthought. The peanut is, after all, a ubiquitous food substance that is generic in form, inexpensive and, ultimately, disposable. It is also a multi-layered object, one whose anthropomorphic form conceals valuable nourishment within.

 

Henderson reclaims this image; in an act of resistance and resilience, she chooses to be a peanut. Three portraits are grouped together, each one featuring a tenderly rendered nut teetering on top of their respective bodies. They stand together as a family: the artist, her sister and her mother.

 

In Puppeteers poke and prod but we eat good every damn day, we see another image often referenced in Henderson’s work. The Booger Mask, a nod to the artist’s Cherokee roots, acts as a reminder to stay vigilant against eminent threats. Marionette-string arms extend from the mask and build to jabbing fingers, disrupting a barrel full of peanuts. A ghostly sprinkling of onlookers crowd around the scene. Is this the peanut gallery? As the title of the exhibition suggests, our palms are up, unsure if we are begging for their approval or praising them for their comments.

 

Amongst this duality A few things are certain: Henderson’s satirical wit, her biting, but affectionate ache for truth-telling and, above all else, the power of the peanut.


Please email liz@stevensevitasgallery.com with questions or inquiries.


STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY

450 Harrison Ave., Suite #47

Boston, MA 02118

617 778 5265 x22


@stevenzevitasgallery

#stevenzevintasgallery#fineartmagazine#frineartfun

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

JORDAN SEABERRY, Through Saturday, October 29th. at the STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY

STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY


EXTENDED:


JORDAN SEABERRY:

But Mostly We Waited for Spring, When There Could Be Gardens


The exhibition will now be on view through Saturday, October 29th.  


Steven Zevitas Gallery is pleased to present But Mostly We Waited for Spring, When There Could Be Gardens, an exhibition of new paintings by Jordan Seaberry. The exhibition will run from September 9 – October 29, 2022.

 

The paintings on view represent a departure for Seaberry, both in terms of their subject and materiality. Using Works Progress Administration (WPA) photographs as source material and watercolor as his primary medium, Seaberry has created a complex body of work that simultaneously draws from history and collapses it.

 

“For two brief moments in the twentieth century, the federal government demonstrated that it can, when it chooses, directly support artists not as mere commercial engines or tourism supporters, but as cultural practitioners. The WPA of the New Deal Era and the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA) of the 70’s, showed what we all should know: artists are smart people, able to solve big problems, and build social cohesion through cultural practice.

 

Artists constantly build politics of cooperation in the face of extractive industries, insisting on the importance of cultural tapestries for building new relationships to each other and to the natural world. Each painting in this group is compositionally built on one of the photos created by a WPA photographer, some of the most remarkable photos of our history. The resulting paintings exist in conversation with and compression of that history.

 

The figures represent a departure from much of my previous work which often involved anonymized, fictional or historical figures. Here, each painting depicts and recontextualizes a person who has built, supported, loved me: an act of labor also often ignored.

 

Watercolor is deployed here laboriously and gently, on small traditional scales, and unusually large canvases. The surfaces are built through several perfected layers of modeling paste and gesso, power sanded to operate like paper. Harkening to architectural and construction materials, its absorbent surface holds the delicate paint within the history of its labor.

 

At odds here are not just the materials: watercolor at a large scale, canvas labored into smoothness, but time as well. History is compressed through layer and linearity. The politics are not interpersonal: no figures make eye contact with anyone but the viewer, instead these works investigate a relationship beyond extraction, an anti-progression, a remembrance of the trees and water that predate and outlast the telephone pole and the factory. The rightful inheritance of these figures isn't wealth or land, it's relationship.”

Please email liz@stevensevitasgallery.com with questions or inquiries.

Jordan Seaberry is a painter, organizer, legislative advocate and educator. Born and raised on the Southside of Chicago, Jordan first came to Providence to attend Rhode Island School of Design. Alongside his studio practice, he built a career as a grassroots organizer, helping to fight and pass multiple criminal justice reform milestones, including Probation Reform, the Unshackling Pregnant Prisoners Bill, and laying the groundwork for the “Ban the Box” movement in Rhode Island.


Seaberry serves as Co-Director of the U.S. Department of Arts and Culture, a people-powered nonprofit agency, and most recently worked as the Director of Public Policy at the Nonviolence Institute. He serves as Chairman of the Providence Board of Canvassers, overseeing the city’s elections; as a Board Member at New Urban Arts in Providence; and as a Board Member for Protect Families First, working on community-oriented drug policy reform. He has received fellowships from the Art Matters Foundation, the Rhode Island Foundation, and recently served as Community Leader Fellow at Roger Williams University School of Law.


Seaberry has exhibited work with several institution, including the RISD Museum, the deCordova Museum, the Crystal Bridges Museum, and the Boston Center for the Arts. His work has been featured in exhibitions throughout New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Philadelphia and elsewhere. This is Seaberry’s second solo exhibition with Steven Zevitas Gallery.


STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY

450 Harrison Ave., Suite #47

Boston, MA 02118

617 778 5265 x22


@stevenzevitasgallery

#stevensevitasgallery#fineartmagazine#artfunfall

Thursday, August 25, 2022

Steven Zevitas Gallery GERALD EUHON SHEFFIELD II: melancholy satire closing reception Saturday, August 27th from 5-7 pm. The artist will be present.

STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY


Go to Exhibition Site
Exhibition PDF

YOU'RE INVITED:


GERALD EUHON SHEFFIELD II:

melancholy satire


Please join us for a closing reception Saturday, August 27th from 5-7 pm. The artist will be present. 


Steven Zevitas Gallery is pleased to present melancholy satire, an exhibition of new paintings by Gerald Euhon Sheffield II. The exhibition will run from July 15 – August 27, 2022 with a closing reception on Saturday, August 27 from 5:00 – 8 pm.

 

Each work presented in melancholy satire belongs to a larger ongoing series entitled fable for introverts in which Sheffield reflects on a 2019 Fulbright trip to the Uzbekistan-Afghanistan border and his subsequent return to the United States. An avid researcher and Army veteran, Sheffield extends his experiences and findings into a visual language where research, personal anecdotes, book titles, the effects and structures of racial epithets, American folklore, domesticated animals, and playful figures of speech intermingle. Amongst this cultural chaos, Sheffield provides intentional, intimate moments of rest and introspection.

 

The smallest painting in the exhibition, a yellow bird, a yellow bill, sat upon my window sill!, depicts a brightly colored bird hopping through an open window on a sunny day. The bird looks directly at the viewer, ready to eat a piece of bread at the bottom of the frame. What first appears as an innocuous domestic scene starts to become more insidious as we notice a string tied around the morsel. What once appeared as a gift has turned into a trap as these playful markers build to a darker dialogue. The title of this painting sounds like an upbeat song, but comes from a US Army cadence sung by soldiers marching in basic training and speaks to a loss of innocence in boredom during war: A yellow bird, / With a yellow bill, / Sat upon / My window sill! / I lured him in, / With a piece of bread, / And then I smashed, / his fucking head! / I scooped him up, / In a dixie cup, / And then I drank, / That fucker up! / The moral of, / This story goes, / To get some head, / You need some bread!

 

While melancholy satire points to sadness submerged beneath the guise of humor, we find respite in Sheffield’s open strokes and his willingness to address weighted themes through the lens of his domestic life. A flower blooms in darkness, a woman appears triumphant atop her horse, and hands brush in an intimate moment.

Please email liz@stevensevitasgallery.com with questions or inquiries.

Gerald Euhon Sheffield II is an artist and educator living and working in Massachusetts and New York. His studio practice is based in critical and site-specific research, painting and sculpture, and fluid dialogues between art, design, and public discourse. Sheffield’s professional background consists of a diversity of institutions and collaborations across borders. He served in the United States Army for eight years as a Visual Communications and Military Intelligence Public Affairs specialist in Paraguay, Guatemala, Brazil, and Kuwait. He deployed to Iraq from 2007-2008, working alongside Iraqi civilians and community leaders during the Iraqi Reconstruction campaign. He received a BFA in Fine Arts from the School of Visual Arts, and an MFA in Painting/Printmaking from Yale University. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including the United States Armed Forces Meritorious Service Medal, the Alice Kimball English Traveling Fellowship, and JUNCTURE Human Rights Research and Travel Fellowship in South Africa. He recently completed a Fulbright Research Grant in Samarkand and Tashkent, Uzbekistan - researching the Islamic architecture of the Silk Road and its influence on the tolerance and diversity of Central Asian Muslim society. He is a 2022-2023 National Endowment of the Humanities Fellow. He currently teaches Foundation Drawing at The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in New York City, and Structural Drawing at The University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth. Sheffield is working on a long-term book collaboration with Afghan-American poet and scholar, Zahra Saed, regarding the travels of Harlem Renaissance poet - Langston Hughes and his travels to Soviet Central Asia.

STEVEN ZEVITAS GALLERY

450 Harrison Ave., Suite #47

Boston, MA 02118

617 778 5265 x22


@stevenzevitasgallery

#stevenzevitasgallery#fineartmagazine#artexhibitionfun