MADE HERE: SUMMER 2021 Group Exhibition with Krystle Lemonias and Kirk Maynard

(Guttenberg NJ) Guttenberg Arts Gallery is pleased to present MADE HERE: Summer 2021 a group show of our past Summer Artists in Residence; Krystle Lemonias and Kirk Maynard. On view by appoinment only September 4th - September 26th with an opening reception on Saturday September 4th at 7pm. The works included in MADE HERE: Winter 2021 were created during the artist’s 3 month Space & Time Artist Residency at Guttenberg Arts. To promote social distancing Guttenberg Arts Gallery is open by appointment only and virtually on their website.  Patrons can schedule their visit or view the virtual gallery by going to www.guttenbergarts.org/exhibitions.

Krystle Lemonias is captivated by the resilience of Caribbean people to reconstruct some sense of cultural identity. “To see yourself and for others to see you is a form of validation,”- Mickalene Thomas. With this in mind, the accumulated experiences that have shaped Lemonias’ identity heavily fuels her work. Her art is a reflection of who she is, a multidisciplinary hybrid; they interweave non-linear oral narratives and historical accounts that each piece unfolds when closely investigated. The work contemplates the social complexities that the intersection of gender, class, culture, immigration, and heredity presents. At Guttenberg Arts, Lemonias used her time to create more fabric/print works and continued exploring domestic labor through the experiences of immigrant Black women. Her subjects are nannies, senior caregivers, and cleaners. I am currently using the clothes of the child my current subject has nannied for, sewn together to create compositions of her caring and engaging with the child. Lemonias then used West African iconographic adinkra symbols to tell a coded pictorial story of the scene. 

Kirk Maynard expanded on his oil pastel series (entitled Periphery) into printmaking during his time at Guttenberg Arts. The series seeks to address the marginalization of black people in contemporary society. The constant suspicion of black bodies for existing in certain spaces has been an outsized theme for black people in America. The subjects in each work are personal copies and references, without the strong presence of facial features. The presentations are a commentary on the marginalization of black people in certain spaces that ignore their full humanity in the presence of stereotypes. The body language that is seen in the poses symbolizes an introspective look at existing in unwelcome spaces, where emotions can range from nervousness to resignation.

Exhibition: Sept. 4th, 2021 - Sept. 26th, 2021; Opening Saturday Sept. 4th with a reception at 7pm.  Schedule your visit by going to www.guttenbergarts.org/exhibitions  For more information please contact matt@guttenbergarts.org or 201-868-8585. Guttenberg Art Gallery is free and open to the public by appointment only.

Swallow by Wendell Jeffrey

Swallow

Exhibition by Wendell Jeffrey

On view Thursday, August 12th –  Sunday, August 29th

Opening Reception: Thursday August 12th 7pm - 9pm @ Guttenberg Arts

Guttenberg Arts Gallery is pleased to present Swallow, an exhibition of work by Wendell Jeffrey. On view from August 12th ­— August 29th, 2021 at the Guttenberg Arts Gallery with an opening reception on Thursday August 12th, 7pm -9pm.  A print release will be held on Sunday August 22nd in conjunction with the print fair “Print Riot 4”.  The print by Wendell Jeffrey is a chine-collé lithograph editioned to 10 and will be available to purchase on the 22nd.  Guttenberg Arts Gallery is open by appointment only Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 4pm and virtually on our website. Patrons can schedule their visit or view the virtual gallery by going to www.guttenbergarts.org/exhibitions.

The installation of work includes drawings, paintings, sculptures and prints which were all loosely  inspired by the wreck of the Swallow.  Artist Wendell Jeffrey explains: The “’Swallow” series traces the event of a shipwreck. I was taken by the idea of how an unscrupulous captain could possibly take a wager and recklessly race his ship in hopes of collecting the winnings, thinking nothing of risking the lives of his passengers and crew. Further exploring these dangers it lead me to the question of what is it that drives us to make these kind of judgements. When does chance cause actions beyond our control. What is it in that moment when the line is crossed regardless to others? It goes without saying that humans are good at causing problems and yet we also have wherewith into create a different story. 

In 1845 on April 7, The “Swallow” left Albany at 6 o’clock on Monday evening, with two or three other boats, to come directly through to New York. She had on board a large number of passengers, three hundred and fifty in all. Passing through the narrow channel at Athens, she ran upon a large rock. The bow ran up so high that it was impossible to stand upon the deck. In three minutes the cabins were full of water. The upper part of the boat soon took fire.

The “Swallow” wreck took place six years before the railroad was to reach Albany from New York.  In the absence of a railroad, virtually all passengers, freight and mail moving between New York and Albany did so by steamboat.  It was an era of fierce and unfettered competition.  Steamboat racing was a frequent occurrence, the idea being that the first steamer to reach a landing would be the one to get the waiting passengers. 

The wreck of the “Swallow” was one of the more spectacular disasters of the era and created a vivid impression all along the river.  Occurring as it did before the age of photography, several artists scurried to the scene and soon their impressions of the wreck were immortalized for posterity in lithographs that quickly appeared on the market for sale. 

Jeffrey has an MAT in Art Ed from the University of the Arts, Philadelphia and a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design. Currently a teacher at Ridge High, Basking Ridge, NJ and previously at the Teachers College, Columbia University, NYC, Wendell has completed numerous residencies, including Guttenberg Arts, Vermont Studio Center and Haystack Mountain School of Crafts.

Guttenberg Art Gallery is free and open to the public by appointment only. Guttenberg Arts programming is made possible by a grant from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, a division of the Department of State, and administered by the Hudson County Office of Cultural & Heritage Affairs, Thomas a. Degise, Hudson County Executive & the Hudson County Board of Chosen Freeholders.

Exhibition: August 12th, 2021 - August 29th, 2021; Opening Thursday August 12th.  

Schedule your visit by going to www.guttenbergarts.org/exhibitions

For more information please contact matt@guttenbergarts.org or 201-868-8585. 

Loss of the Steamboat Swallow, While on her trip from Albany to New York Painting by Currier and Ivesc.1845. 

Loss of the Steamboat Swallow, While on her trip from Albany to New York 

Painting by Currier and Ives

c.1845.