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April on Art
In South Florida and Beyond

​

a deep dive into emotion...

4/1/2021

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Abstract Expressionism Is Back!

In the Art of Charlotte Maloney

PictureArtist Charlotte Maloney
Abstract expressionism is back. But for painter Charlotte Maloney, this truly American art movement  has  never faded. Maloney, who also teaches studio art and art appreciation at Palm Beach State College, Florida, has continued to work in this style, along with other mediums, from the time she studied at the School of Visual Arts in New York City in the 1960s.  She has used abstract expressionism, so famous for its ability to convey inner feelings, to produce a variety of emotions through vivid color and powerful design. 


PictureImpressionism, acrylic on canvas, 2014
Maloney's canvas Impressionism is a case in point. The background of the canvas, which is composed of dark green color mixed with turquoise, teal and yellow, creates a forest-like feeling of mystery and suspense. But the viewer's eye is distracted from this forest by the hypnotic white and brown lines which swirl around the painting as if searching for resolution over this dark and threatening landscape. Maloney has created a mood that suggests a struggle for answers over chaos and conflict, a mood that would be hard to convey so quickly any other way.  .


" The strength of my work lies in color
​which reflects the different mood states in my life."
Charlotte Maloney 
"I paint mostly brushless," explains Maloney. "I pour on the paint and experience the accident. The strength of my work lies in color which reflects the different mood states in my life." Maloney's technique is reflective of Jackson Pollack's  "action painting.". During a certain period of his life Pollack preferred to place his canvasses on the floor and drip paint on them.   

"Richard Pousette-Dart...taught me how to paint
from the inside out on a blank canvas."

​Charlotte Maloney
But Maloney demurs from such a label.  She says she was most inspired by Richard Pousette-Dart, one of her New York teachers, who is considered the founder of the New York school of art. "He taught me how to paint from the inside out on a blank canvas, and  how to get in touch with what you feel from the inner depth." she says. She also points out that part of his technique, unlike that of Pollack, was to use piles of thick paint. 
PicturePink and Blue, acrylic on wood board, 2014
Pousette-Dart's influence comes through clearly in Maloney's powerful painting PInk and Blue. Here she combines heavy layers of paint with the use of mixed media collage. The colors, contours and shapes she selects produce a joyous explosion of pinks and blues. Happiness permeates the painting almost  like a flash of lightening and immediately elicits viewer smiles. But at the same time, the very spontaneity of the painting plants a seed of doubt, that makes the viewer wonder if this joy is fleeting rather than lasting. 


More of Maloney's abstract expressionist art, as well as her work in other mediums such as watercolor landscapes, may be found on her website at charlottemaloneyartist.com. 

Abstract expressionism,
which flourished in New York City after World War II,
was the first American art movement to achieve
 international recognition. 


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He Put FAU Galleries on the Map

1/4/2021

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For the Love of Art --
Rob Faulds--Artist and FAU Galleries Director 
PictureArtist and FAU Galleries Director Rod Faulds
Rob Faulds wears two hats. An abstract artist of growing renown, for 20 years Faulds has also been the visionary director of "The Galleries" at Florida Atlantic University (FAU). This is the man who catapulted the Schmidt and Ritter galleries onto the Palm Beach cultural landscape with timely programming and exhibitions. At the same time, Faulds was forging ahead with his own artwork in a style reminiscent of the early 20th century Russian Constructivists. Read more about him in my December profile in the Boca Raton Observer.
bocaratonobserver.com/community/la-vida-boca/for-the-love-of-art/



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The pain of the Dying Gaul

10/23/2019

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Picture
The Roman original of the Dying Gaul, a copy of the Hellenistic original, is in the Capitoline Museum, Rome.
It started with an argument. My friend of mine insisted that Hellenic art was far superior to Hellenistic art. A teacher in the humanities, she was talking about classical Greek art produced when city states like Athens flourished. Of course, I had to admit the  Acropolis is beautifully proportioned...But overall, I had to say, "No," to her infatuation with classical Greek sculpture.  "Maybe the drawings on Greek vases are lovely," I added. "But nothing can compare to certain Hellenistic statues. At least not until the Renaissance produced Bernini. Just take a look at the Dying Gaul created in Hellenistic Greece, Alexander the Great's time."


Read More
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"Opera is the Olympics of Singing"

6/4/2019

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That's what I learned that Jessica E. Jones believes when I interviewed her for a profile in the Boca Observer (June/July 2019). And I agree, as an enthusiastic opera lover. This young lyric coloratura is very sought after for roles in both traditional and new American operas. She was in south Florida last spring to sing in the American opera "Frida," with Florida Grand Opera when I interviewed her.

Picture
Audiences are transfixed by her singing. When Jones sang Lucia in "Donizetti's "Lucia di Lammermoor," the Houston Review called her voice "full of dazzling radiance." Last year her career took a big step forward when she won a Grammy in the Best Opera Recording category for her soloist role as Christine Brennan in "The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs" with the Santa Fe Opera. Check out my article in the  June/July issue of the Boca Observer to read more about this fascinating young opera singer.  bocaratonobserver.com/observed/la-vida-boca/on-a-high-note/
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Early Music Rocks with Charpentier!

4/5/2019

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.Triumphal trumpets surprised us; kettle drums stirred us. It was the Te Deum  by 17th c. French composer Marc-Antoine Charpentier--a glorious piece of music. I heard it Saturday March 29th at Palm Beach  Atlantic University in West Palm Beach. It was the centerpiece of an Early Music Concert beautifully conducted by John Weatherspoon (conductor/artistic director of the expressivosingers.com).
Picture
Early Music Concert in the DeSantis Family Chapel featuring Chapentier's Te Deum (March 29, 2019)
There were echoes of Handel in this glorious piece of music. But rather than religious overtones, Charpentier's famous polyphonic motet sounded secular, at least to my ears. That may have reflected the fact that many believe it was composed to celebrate a French military victory--the Battle of Steenkirk in August, 1692. Three hundred years later this composition still stirs minds and souls!
Palm Beach Atlantic University

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Artist Grants and Opportunities

1/22/2019

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These grants can provide YOU as an artist with
more time and freedom to be creative.

Picture

Take a look at this list--a great resource

"Applying for artist grants is a great way for artists to supplement their income to ease the financial burden that often comes as part of being a working artist. These grants listed help artists pay for materials, studio space, or even their rent, allowing artists the time to make work without the day-to-day pressure of paying bills—giving them the freedom to make work in an unrestricted manner and dedicate their time to being fully creative. "--artworkarchive.com (Jan. 22, 2019)​

 FULL LIST HERE:   
 www.artworkarchive.com



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Edward Steichen's Glamour Photography  at the Flagler Museum

1/5/2019

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PictureActress Marlene Dietrich
Edward Steichen was an amazing artistic talent! He was the man  who transformed portrait photography into a dramatic art. He did this through his black and white celebrity photos for Vanity Fair and Vogue in the 1920s and 1930s. In the hands of conventional photographers of the day, these portraits would have resulted in stiff conventional poses. 

L to R. Actress Gloria Swanson; dancer and choreographer Martha Graham; dancer Fred Astaire

PictureAmelia Earhart
But not through the eyes of Edward Steichen. He had a different vision. At these Conde Nast publications he broke from his "soft focus" style of the past and captured the essence of his subjects with dramatic black and white hard edge images. He had an uncanny knack of posing his subjects in ways that captured their total personalities--or even, one might say, their souls.

PictureWinston Churchill
​We were fortunate to have over 80 of his portraits on exhibit at the Flagler Museum this winter that included Steichen's iconic photographs of Gloria Swanson, Fred Astaire, Churchill and many others.  The exhibition ran from October 16, 2018  through January 6, 2019.

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The Cornell’s Intriguing Flora Exhibit

8/21/2018

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(l.) "Mandela Grid" by Miya Ando; (c) Cornell Museum;  (r) "Windbown" by Hayley Sheldon 

Flora presents a garden of sensory delights  

Picture"Windblown" by Hayley Sheldon
As you enter the atrium of the Cornell Art Museum, you will be greeted by huge golden paper dandelions hanging from the atrium ceiling. Called “Windblown” by Hayley Sheldon, this artwork is the exhilarating opening act of Flora--the museum's summer-long exhibition. The exhibit has provided viewers with a surprisingly fresh look at a traditional subject—flowers—put together by the museum’s very creative curator,  Melanie Johanson. She challenged artists to present their own conception of flowers in any medium they chose.  The results are both varied and fascinating.

Walk through a  "Floating Garden"....... 

Picture"Floating Garden" by Amanda McCavour

The exhibition contains two very impressive large installations: "Enchanted" on the second floor and  Amanda McCavour's “Floating Garden” on the ground floor in a corner room. This floating garden is composed of delicately embroidered flowers like buttercups held up by lines of string hanging from the ceiling. The flowers bend  and bow their heads graciously like real plants as you walk down the path in the middle of the room.

Andy Warhol here!

Picture"Untitled" by Andy Warhol
On the first floor you'll also find an pen and ink flower drawing
by the most famous artist in the show--Andy Warhol.
 It's a  delicate, almost  whimsical 
 sketch--completely unlike his later
​ silkscreened flower prints. 
 

 A jolt to Buddhist tranquility

Picture"Forget Me Not Featuring Warhol" by Metis Atash
On the second floor, however, you'll get a feeling for those silk creened prints by Warhol. Just take a look at the small  bejeweled statue of Buddha by Metis Atash. It's entitled “Forget Me Not Featuring Warhol.” The statue glitters with colorful Swarovski crystals set in patterns from Warhol’s silk screened flower prints; but the spikes covering Buddha's head almost look like a warning. The statue seems to ask: Is glittering beauty better than Buddhist tranquility? It’s up to us to decide.

A forest both "Enchanted" and threatened 

In a corner room on the second floor you'll find the installation entitled:"Enchanted." It's a room of mystery-- an indoor  forest with a pond in the middle co-created by Diane Arrieta and photographer/video artist Cheryl Maeder. The center of the room takes on the appearance of a pond which Arrieta  has filled with colorful animals huddled atop columns. 

(l.)Cheryl Maeder (C.); Wall videos and animals from "Enchanted" 
(R) ​Diane Arrieta and April Klimley outside the "Enchanted" installation

On the far wall, Maeder’s largest video transports viewers deep into a forest. Additional videos on the side walls show show people in inner tubes riding down a river. At first, the scene conveys a feeling a paradise. But there is an undercurrent of menace. The animals seem scared  by the rising waters below them, and the inner tubes of the swimmers appear stuck in murky, swampy water. Something seems to be  encroaching on the harmonious world of nature and threatening it. It's easy to conclude that the "something" lurking behind this scene and threatening it is the work of humans and civilization.     

IF YOU GO: “Flora” remains open through September 9 at the Cornell Art Museum at 51 North Swinton Ave., in Delray Beach, Fl. Summer Hours: Thursday through Saturday 10 am to 5 pm Sundays 1 to 5 pm. For more information go to www.oldschoolsquare.org/about/cornell-museum/
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A Striking Cellist and Piano Duo

4/21/2018

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PictureCellist Andrei Ionita and Pianist Naoko Sonoda April 17 in Holy Trinity Churchh, West Palm Beach
Twenty-four year old Andrei Ionita proved that the cello is the most romantic of all instruments last Thursday April 17th at Trinity Church in West Palm Beach. From the first moment of the concert, Ionita hypnotized the audience. The cello he was playing sang, soared, moaned, and flirted.  The sound he elicited appeared to depend not just on what was written by the composers, but even more on the emotions he generated playing each piece.
 
​The concert was part of the Young Artists Series sponsored by the Chamber Music Society of Palm Beach. Ionita was accompanied by Naoko Sonoda on the piano in her first performance in the United States.

 ​
​Right from the joyful opening of the first selection—18th century composer Pietro Locatelli’s  Sonata in D Major—Romanian-born Ionita showed complete of his instrument and the ability to vary moods as if the cello were alive in his hands.  It is no wonder he won a Gold Medal at the 2015 XV International Tchaikovsky Competition and was on his way to perform April 19 at Carnegie Hall. 
PicturePianist Naoko Sonoda and cellist Andrei Ionita with artistic and executive director Michael Finn.
​
​The Locatelli was in some ways the showcase piece of the evening. It was followed by two 20th century pieces followed—Stravinsky’s Suite Italienne and Shostakovich’s Cello Sonata in D minor, Op. 40. Of the two, the Shostakovich was the most satisfying, perhaps because of its plaintive and brooding first movement—or the way in which the piano melodies intertwined so completely with the cello at certain points.  No matter, all three pieces captured the hearts of the audience. 

​As the evening drew to a close, it was clear the audience wanted more.  Fortunately, there was only two weeks to wait until the next performance in the 2017-2018 season of the Young Artists Series. It will take place Wednesday, April 25 at 6 pm at the Breakers in Palm Beach, and feature  a new trio composed of violinist Arnaud Sussman and pianist Orian Weiss, both winners of the prestigious Avery Fisher Career Grant. They will be joined by cellist Colin Carr. 

For further information on this event call 561-379-6773 or
​ email the CMSPB at [email protected].
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Viennese music captures the heart of a delray audience

3/28/2018

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Symphonia brings music of Mozart and Beethoven to Delray!

The Symphonia--South Florida's world class chamber orchestra--presented an enticing selection of classical music pieces--with Viennese origins and connections--on Tuesday March 27 at Delray's Crest Theatre. Dramatic conductor Alastair Willis tied the music selections together throught a fictionalized and engaging narration which transported the audience to 18th and 19th c. Viennese concert halls where composers such as Mozart premiered their own work.  


Picture
Alastair Willis conducted the Symphonia's Viennese concert Tuesday March 27.
The engaging Mr. Willis began the evening in 18th century Vienna. He assumed the role of a nephew of Signmund Haffner der Elder, once mayor of Salzburg and head of a family close to the Mozarts. In this role, from a podium in Vienna, Mr. Willis described some of the great music events of the time, while two digital screens projected pictures of that delightful baroque city on either side of the stage.  The first event was the  moment when Mozart conducted the first performance of his famous Symphony No. 35, "The Haffner" (named after the mayor's family), while Emperor Franz Joseph sat in the royal box above.   
 Naturally, Mr. Willis brought the evening to a close with a composition of  Vienna's most famous 19th century musical family--the Strausses-- 
"The Blue Danube" waltz, which still delights and hypnotizes us today.
PictureAlastair Willis and Charles Wetherbee
It was an evening of joy for both newcomers to the classical music scene, and  afficionados who knew the music by heart. The conductor gave the audience the feeling they were sitting in gilded concert halls of over two centuries ago listening to music that remains as powerful and enjoyable today as it did when it was first performed.  


This was the first time The Symphonia has performed in the Crest Theatre. The performance was part of a new series entitled "Symphonia Squared" being sponsored in partnership with Old SchoolSquare. For more information on The Symphonia, go to www.thesymphonia.org/
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    "Art washes away
    from the soul the dust
    of everyday life."
    -Pablo Picasso
     

    Picture

    Dear  Art Lover: 
       Welcome back!
       The pandemic shocked and slowed down the art world for many months. But now, artists, museums and galleries have adapted. They are providing new ways for you to enjoy the work of your favorite classic or new artists...and keep on top of cultural trends and developments.
        Here in Palm Beach County art venues from the Norton and Boca Raton Museums to the Art Warehouse in Delray Beach have reopened--with new exhibitions and socially distanced, masked viewing opportunities
         For those of your still reluctant to venture out (until you have your COVID-19 "shots")--the digital world will enable you to enjoy elements of the collections and exhibitions of prestigious institutions such as the Fricke, as well as opportunities to join docents on art tours from France to China. 
         So, I'm back again! To let you know what I consider "the best" of all these opportunities. Keep an eye on my blog to enhance your art-viewing pleasure!


    April Klimley
    February 12, 2021



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April W. Klimley - Klimley Communications
​1301 SW 10th Ave. # E-107, Delray Beach, FL 33444 

  [email protected] or 917.626.4838
  • Welcome
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