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Viridian Artists

548 West 28th Street
New York, NY, 10001
212-414-4040
A Contemporary Art Gallery

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Viridian Artists

  • Home
  • Artists
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    • Artist Representation
    • Affiliates
    • Young Artist's Program
    • Juried & Invitational Shows
    • Alumni & Artists Estates
  • Exhibitions
    • Virtual Gallery
    • Current Show
    • Upcoming Show
    • Past Exhibitions
  • Store
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    • From the Director
    • About
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Contemporary Dancer, Geo Koryu , will be performing at Kazuo Ishikawa's Closing Reception on Saturday, April 13th at 4pm.

April 3, 2024 Viridian Artists

Kazuo Ishikawa
”Imaginary Landscapes”
Closing Reception: Saturday, April 13, 4–6pm

With a 4pm Butoh-inspired Contemporary Dance Performance by Geo Koryu

Geo Koryu is native of Japan, Butoh-inspired contemporary dancer, and a Certified Evans Method Modern Dance Instructor.  He studied Japanese Butoh dance with Yoshito Ohno, Yukio Waguri, Ko Muroboshi, Toru Iwashita, Moe Yamamoto, and Seisaku; Japanese sword dance with Kensei Namiki; Mime and Break Dance at Harajuku Dance Academy, Laban-Bartenieff-based-modern-dance with Bill Evans, Limon-Technique with Angela Dennis, Release-Technique with Gretchen Hurd, Middle-Eastern Dance with Narah Bint Durr, and West-African Dance with Jonathan Burbank.  Recently, Geo was an Artist in Residence at Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance, at Center for Remembering and Sharing in Manhattan, and at Leimay at Cave in Brooklyn NY. 

Kazuo Ishikawa's "Imaginary Landscapes" is featured in Meer Magazine

March 20, 2024 Viridian Artists

Kazuo Ishikawa
Imaginary landscapes
19 Mar — 13 Apr 2024 at the Viridian Artists in New York, United States

Kazuo Ishikawa, “Winter Forest”, H30 x W19 x D7 inches; Mixed Media. Courtesy of the artist and Viridian Artists

Viridian Artists is pleased to present Kazuo Ishikawa’s "Imaginary Landscapes", his first solo exhibition with the gallery. The exhibit will feature a mixture of old and new wall sculptures with the older works possessing more vivid colors while the newer works have more natural coloration.

It’s always interesting to see how an artist’s work evolves and Ishikawa’s works allow us to see this one small aspect of his creative evolution. Though the artworks are somewhat different over time, the artist’s method of composing remains the same and his intention continues to be one of looking for hidden landscapes as he begins to gather the variety of materials he uses to create each work. In the new works, one finds more natural materials like bark & branches that add an aspect of realism to these otherwise abstract and imaginary representations of landscape. It has been said that:

Kazuo Ishikawa finds himself always looking for hidden landscapes as he gathers together a variety of materials to create an artwork. To bring these elements to life, he makes the invisible visible to the viewer through juxtaposing the inconsistencies and complexities. Approaching his constructions from multi-dimensional perspectives, the works he creates possess complex spatial considerations that defy easy interpretations.

Ishikawa’s imaginary landscapes begin with hidden landscapes akin to blueprints – a basic landscape drawing of sorts, of spaces “seen” that don’t exist in three-dimensional space, for they are “hidden” in his imagination. The artist creates the works intuitively, using the drawing as a beginning and then fitting together the found elements like a jigsaw puzzle, but with many layers of meaning.

In his more recent works, the artist works more closely with the theme of Mother Nature, using more natural elements and materials, as he conjures more real places, like forests. Though he uses the same methods with both series of works, the artist finds the conclusion to be more specific and literal. As he states:

In this way, I draw, find, and mine the pieces. My way is still not perfect and completed, still in progress. I will try to improve it and strive for perfection.

Washington Square News Review : "Herstory": An exhibition for all genders.

March 12, 2024 Viridian Artists

The “Herstory” gallery inside of Viridian Artists Inc. on 548 W. 28 St. (Courtesy photo by Vernita Nemec)

Viridian’s Herstory exhibition has received a wonderful review in The Washington Square Review

Throughout history, a woman’s place in society has often been tethered to men. With the prerogative of redirecting this pattern, the “Herstory” exhibition at the Viridian Artists Inc. gallery in Chelsea alters the spelling of history, creating a new feminist narrative. 

“Herstory” is an annual exhibition put on by Viridian Artists Inc. to celebrate Women’s History Month. Open until March 16, this year’s exhibition features artists including Jenny Belin, Renée Borkow, Matt Cohen and Sai Morikawa. With acrylic, oil, multimedia and photographic works, “Herstory” examines the triumphs, tribulations and perseverance of the female experience.

Click Here to Read Full Article

Press Release: Kazuo Ishikawa: "Imaginary Landscapes"

February 28, 2024 Viridian Artists

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                   Please List

 

Kazuo Ishikawa
 "Imaginary Landscapes"
March 19- April 13, 2024

Opening Reception: Thursday, March 21, 6–8pm
Closing Reception: Saturday, April 13, 4–6pm

With a 4pm Butoh-inspired Contemporary Dance Performance by Geo Koryu

Chelsea NY: Viridian Artists is pleased to present Kazuo Ishikawa’s "Imaginary Landscapes", his first solo exhibition with the gallery. On view from March 19 through April 13, the exhibit will feature a mixture of old and new wall sculptures with the older works possessing more vivid colors while the newer works have more natural coloration. The opening reception will take place on Thursday, March 21, from 6–8pm and the artist will be present that evening.

It’s always interesting to see how an artist’s work evolves and Ishikawa’s works allow us to see this one small aspect of his creative evolution. Though the artworks are somewhat different over time, the artist’s method of composing remains the same and his intention continues to be one of looking for hidden landscapes as he begins to gather the variety of materials, he uses to create each work. In the new works, one finds more natural materials like bark & branches that add an aspect of realism to these otherwise abstract and imaginary representations of landscape.

 It has been said that "Kazuo Ishikawa finds himself always looking for hidden landscapes as he gathers together a variety of materials to create an artwork. To bring these elements to life, he makes the invisible visible to the viewer through juxtaposing the inconsistencies and complexities. Approaching his constructions from multi-dimensional perspectives, the works he creates possess complex spatial considerations that defy easy interpretations.”

Ishikawa’s imaginary landscapes begin with hidden landscapes akin to blueprints – a basic landscape drawing of sorts, of spaces “seen” that don’t exist in three-dimensional space, for they are “hidden” in his imagination. The artist creates the works intuitively, using the drawing as a beginning and then fitting together the found elements like a jigsaw puzzle, but with many layers of meaning.

In his more recent works, the artist works more closely with the theme of Mother Nature, using more natural elements and materials, as he conjures more real places, like forests. Though he uses the same methods with both series of works, the artist finds the conclusion to be more specific and literal. As he states, “In this way, I draw, find, and mine the pieces. My way is still not perfect and completed, still in progress. I will try to improve it and strive for perfection.”

 We look forward to sharing these exciting and evocative works with you. You can see more of his art on the gallery website at www.viridianartists.com/Kazuo Ishikawa and on his website: https://kazuoishikawa.com/ and blog: https://kazuoishikawa.seesaa.net/


Gallery hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 12–6pm

For further information please contact: Vernita Nemec, Gallery Director

or Jenny Belin, Assistant Director at viridianartistsinc@gmail.com

visit us on Instagram @viridianartistsinc and see us on Facebook & YouTube at Viridian Artists Gallery

Press Release: HERSTORY: The Battle Continues

January 31, 2024 Viridian Artists

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                           Please List

HISTORY
HERSTORY
The Battle Continues
An exhibition for all genders

February 20 – March 16, 2024
Opening reception: Thursday February 29, 6–8pm

 

Marie-Ange Hoda Ackad * Ayako Bando * Saba Besier * Jenny Belin * Reneé Borkow
Zoe Brown-Weissmann * Ellen Burnett * Sabine Carlson * Irene Christensen * Matt Cohen
Tonia Cowan * Rebecca Dearden * May DeViney * Vicki Engonopoulos
Elizabeth Fidoten * David Fitzgerald * Deb Flagel * Elizabeth Ginsberg * Joshua Greenberg Miho Hiranouchi * Lori Horowitz * Kat King * Beatriz Ledesma * Angela M. LaMonte Stephanie Lempres * Rui Mercia * Sai Morikawa 
Rick Mullin * Vernita Nemec * Anna Novakov * Petronia Paley * Alla Podolsky
Laura Rutherford Renner  Melissa Schainker * Kathleen Shanahan * Susan Sills
Vicky Tesmer * Meredeth Turshen * Ellen Waldorf * Ku Watanabe *
Maiko Watanabe * Victoria Webb* K. Junko* Rosemary Lyons

 Chelsea NY: Viridian Artists is pleased to present “HERSTORY,” an exhibition of outstanding art by all genders celebrating women. The show extends from February 20 – March 16, 2024, with an opening on the eve of the first day of International Women’s Month, Thursday, February 29, 6–8pm. 

Because women are still 2nd class citizens in so many ways, we have listed some of the startling facts of HERSTORY, both positive and negative. The source for these facts is: https://yourdream.liveyourdream.org

1769 — The early American colonies base their laws on the English common law, which said, “By marriage, the husband and wife are one person in the law. The very being and legal existence of the woman is suspended during the marriage, or at least is incorporated into that of her husband under whose wing and protection she performs everything.”

1777 — All states pass laws taking away women’s right to vote.

1833 — Oberlin College is founded as the first co-educational institution that accepts women and African Americans.

1848 — At Seneca Falls, 300 women and men sign the Declaration of Sentiments, a plea for the end of discrimination against women.

1848 — New York passes the Married Woman’s Property Act. For the first time, a woman isn’t automatically liable for her husband’s debts; she could enter contracts on her own; she could collect rents or receive an inheritance in her own right; she could file a lawsuit on her own behalf. She became for economic purposes, an individual.

1870 — The 15th Amendment is ratified, saying, “The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.” African Americans may vote now, but women may not.

1872 — Victoria Woodhull becomes the first woman to run for U.S. President. She receives few votes.

1890 — Wyoming becomes the first state to grant women the right to vote in its state elections.

1900 — By now, every state has passed legislation modeled after New York’s Married Women’s Property Act (1848), granting married women some control over their property and earnings.

1918 — Margaret Sanger wins her suit in New York to allow doctors to advise their married patients about birth control for health purposes.

1920 — The 19th Amendment is ratified and grants women the right to vote. It declares: “The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.”

1922 — Suffragette and activist Rebecca Felton is appointed the first woman U.S. Senator. At 87-years-old, she serves for only two days.

1923 — The National Woman’s Party proposes a Constitutional amendment: “Men and women shall have equal rights throughout the United States and in every place subject to its jurisdiction. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.” It does not pass.

1932 — Hattie Wyatt Caraway, of Arkansas, becomes the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate.

1933 — Labor Secretary Frances Perkins is the first woman to serve on a Presidential Cabinet under Franklin D. Roosevelt.

1934 — Lettie Pate Whitehead becomes the first American woman to serve as a director of a major corporation, the Coca-Cola Company.

1936 — Judicial approval of medicinal use of birth control is established.

1937 — The U.S. Supreme Court upholds Washington state’s minimum wage laws for women.

1963 — The Equal Pay Act is passed, promising equitable wages for the same work, regardless of the race, color, religion, national origin or sex of the worker.

1964 — The Civil Rights Act passes, prohibiting discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, or sex.

1965 — In Griswold v Connecticut, the Supreme Court overturns one of the last state laws prohibiting the prescription or use of contraceptives by married couples.

1969 — In Bowe v. Colgate-Palmolive Company, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals rules that women meeting the physical requirements can work jobs that had been for men only.

1969 — Shirley Chisholm, of New York, becomes the first African American woman in Congress. Her motto is, “Unbought and unbossed.” She serves in the U.S. House of Representatives for 14 years.

1971 — In Phillips v. Martin Marietta Corporation, the U.S. Supreme Court outlaws the practice of private employers refusing to hire women with pre-school children.

1972 — Title IX of the Education Amendments prohibits sex discrimination in all aspects of education programs that receive federal support.

1972 — In Eisenstadt v. Baird, the Supreme Court rules that the right to privacy encompasses an unmarried person’s right to use contraceptives.

1972 — Katharine Graham becomes the first woman to become CEO of a Fortune 500 company (The Washington Post).

1973 — With its Roe v. Wade decision, the U.S. Supreme Court declares that the Constitution protects women’s right to terminate an early pregnancy, thus making abortion legal in the U.S.

1974 — Housing discrimination on the basis of sex and credit discrimination against women are outlawed by Congress.

1974 — Cleveland Board of Education v. LaFleur determines it is illegal to force pregnant women to take maternity leave on the assumption they are incapable of working in their physical condition.

1974 — The Women’s Educational Equity Act funds the development of nonsexist teaching materials and model programs that encourage full educational opportunities for girls and women.

1974 — The Equal Credit Opportunity Act passes. It does away with the practice of banks requiring single, widowed or divorced women to bring a man along to cosign any credit application.

1975 — In Taylor v. Louisiana, the court denies states the right to exclude women from juries.

1978 — The Pregnancy Discrimination Act bans discrimination against women based on pregnancy, childbirth or related medical issues.

1981 — Sandra Day O’Connor is appointed as the first female U.S. Supreme Court Justice.

1984 — In Roberts v. U.S. Jaycees, sex discrimination in organizational membership policies is forbidden, opening many previously all-male organizations (Jaycees, Kiwanis, Rotary, Lions) to women.

1987 — After being petitioned by the National Women’s History Project, Congress designates March as Women’s History Month.

1994 — Congress adopts the Gender Equity in Education Act to train teachers in gender equity, promote math and science learning by girls, counsel pregnant teens, and prevent sexual harassment.

1994 — The Violence Against Women Act funds services for victims of rape and domestic violence, allows women to seek civil rights remedies for gender-related crimes, provides training to increase police and court officials’ sensitivity and a national 24-hour hotline for battered women.

1996 — Supreme Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg writes the landmark decision in United States v. Virginia, which held that the state-supported Virginia Military Institute could not refuse to admit women.

1997 — Madeleine Albright is sworn in as U.S. Secretary of State. She is the first woman in this position.

2005
 — Condoleezza Rice becomes the first black female Secretary of State.

2007 — Nancy Pelosi becomes the first female Speaker of the House.

2009 — Sonia Sotomayor becomes the first Hispanic American and the third woman to serve as a U.S. Supreme Court Justice.

2013 — The ban against women in military combat positions is removed; this overturned 1994 Pentagon decision restricting women from combat roles.

2013 — Reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act. The new bill extends coverage to women of Native American tribal lands who are attacked by non-tribal residents, as well as lesbians and immigrants.

2016 — Hillary Rodham Clinton makes history when she secures the presidential nomination for the Democrat Party, becoming the first U.S. woman to lead the ticket of a major party. She loses the election.

2017 — A worldwide protest called The Women’s March happens the day following Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration. It was the largest single-day protest in U.S. history with an estimated 4 million participating in local marches across the nation. The organizers’ goal for the march was “send a bold message to our new administration on their first day in office, and to the world that women’s rights are human rights.”

2020 — Kamala Harris is sworn in as the first woman and first woman of color vice president of the United States. She said, “While I may be the first woman in this office, I will not be the last.”

2022 — The Supreme Court rules that the constitution does not confer any right to abortion, thus overruling both 
Roe v. Wade (1973) and Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992) and setting off waves of protests across the U.S. 

The Road Ahead

Women are still at a higher risk for poverty:

· Unequal 20 cent wage gap between men and women

· Bear the burden of low-wage jobs and unpaid caregiving work

·  1/3 of single mothers live in poverty

 Women are still victimized by sexual violence:

· 33% of women are likely to be abused

· 4.7 million American women experience physical violence by an intimate partner

· Women in the U.S. military are more likely to be raped by fellow soldiers than killed in combat

Women are still underrepresented in leadership:

· 19% of all members of Congress are women

·  Of 50 state governors, 4 are women (8%)

· Of the Fortune 500 companies, 25 are led by women CEOs (5%)*

 

*The source for these facts is: https://yourdream.liveyourdream.org

  

 

Gallery hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 12–6pm

For further information please contact: Vernita Nemec, Gallery Director

or Jenny Belin, Assistant Director at viridianartistsinc@gmail.com

view the gallery website: www.viridianartists.com or visit Instagram @viridianartistsinc

and see us on Facebook & YouTube at Viridian Artists Gallery

Two photographs by Alan Gaynor will be included in an exhibition at the Colors of Humanity Art Gallery

January 30, 2024 Viridian Artists

Congratulations to Alan Gaynor!
Two of Gaynor’s Photographs will be included in the Colors of Humanity Art Gallery’s February 2024 show, entitled “Red”.

Click here on February 1, 2024 to find out which works were chosen and to see which works were selected as winners

Artists Talk on Art Presents: ATOA’s “Presidents' Panel”: January 22nd, 2024 7:00 PM - 8:30 PM EST

January 16, 2024 Viridian Artists

Artists Talk on Art Presents:

ATOA’s “Presidents' Panel”

Panelists

Lori Antonacci, co-founder and founding president of Artists Talk on Art

Albert Dépas, artist, poet and educator, founder of Fessings Coaching Service

Vernita Nemec, director of Viridian Artists Gallery, former director of Artists Talk on Art

Moderator

Doug Sheer, co-founder and president of Artists Talk on Art


January 22nd, 2024

7:00 PM - 8:30 PM EST


Virtual Event | Hosted via Zoom


PASSWORD and ZOOM LINK”

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86314194491

Password 737066



Press Release: “UN-TRASHED”an “Art from Detritus” exhibit

January 10, 2024 Viridian Artists

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE  Please List                                            
                                             
“UN-TRASHED”
an “Art from Detritus” exhibit
Curated by Vernita Nemec
January 23 – February 17, 2024
Reception: Thursday, January 25, 6-8pm
Art Talk, Saturday February 17, 4pm

Denise Adler * Jennifer Bain * Brandin Barón * John Bassett * Annaliese Bischoff
Zoe Brown-Weissmann * Ellen Burnett * Lindsay-Ann Chilcott * James Ciosek
Irene Christensen * May DeViney * Harry DeLorme * Kiffi Diamond * Jean Foos
Debra Friedkin * Michael Angelo Gagliardi * Rachel Green * Halona Hilbertz
Bernice Sokol Kramer * Kathy Levine * Mia Loia * Gail Meyers * Nancy Nicol
Felicia Olch * Melinda Rasch Elizabeth Downer Riker
Courtney Lee Weida * Larry Zdeb

Chelsea NY: Viridian Artists is pleased to present the exhibit “UN-TRASHED” featuring fine art made primarily from trash. The heart of this exhibit is the message of the three R's: Reduce/Reuse/Recycle and most importantly, Upcycle, as the artists in this exhibit have done. The exhibit will open January 23 and continues through February 17 with a reception January 25, 6-8pm and an Art Talk Saturday, February 17, 4pm. 10% of sales of the artworks in this exhibit will be given to an environmental organization fighting the evils of trash.

“UN-TRASHED” attempts to say it straight as artists have long used trash as a medium, sometimes because of the beauty they see in such objects or other times because of limited funds. But the message in this exhibit is clear: we must realize that our environment is at stake if we continue to merely discard packaging and broken or un-desired objects in our possession. We must begin to un-trash, reuse and upcycle all that we possibly can. The artists in this exhibit are showing us only one solution – to make art created primarily from debris. Some of the works present themselves through the mere use of these materials, others are more decisive in their message of the evils of trash if it is left untethered.

“Art from Detritus”, or art from waste, was conceived by artist/curator Vernita Nemec in 1994 in Portland, Oregon during the annual conference of the National Recycling Coalition (NRC). The first “Art from Detritus” exhibit was presented in the lobby of a recycled Sears Roebuck building, the corporate headquarters for municipal waste & recycling in Portland. Since then, the exhibit has re-occurred with funding from the Kauffman Foundation, the Puffin Foundation and sponsorship by the NRC. Past Detritus exhibitions have occurred in Pittsburgh, Kansas City MO, Phoenix AZ, Turners Falls MA and NYC. You can see more information and images of past Detritus shows at www.ncognita.com. Since that time, the changing groups of artists in these environmentally conscious exhibits have opened an ongoing dialogue about the importance of protecting the environment through their art-making.

We hope that you will be able to see this art in person and we hope that you can come on the last day of the exhibit Saturday, February 17 to hear these artists talk about their art and environmental concerns.

 Gallery hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 12–6pm

For further information please contact: Vernita Nemec, Gallery Director 
or Jenny Belin, Assistant Director at viridianartistsinc@gmail.com

Visit Instagram @viridianartistsinc, see us on Facebook & YouTube at Viridian Artists Gallery, or viridianartists.com


Press Release: "Just a Moment"

December 27, 2023 Viridian Artists

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                        PLEASE LIST


“JUST A MOMENT”
Viridian Affiliates
December 26 – January 20, 2024
Opening Reception: Thursday, December 28, 6-8pm
Closing reception: Saturday, January 20, 4-6pm


Laura Rutherford Renner, Joshua Greenberg, Arlene Finger, Ed Ferszt,
Steffani Bailey, Sabine Carlson, Michael Reck, Jenny Belin, Brett Poza


Chelsea NY
: Viridian Artists is pleased to present an exhibition of outstanding art by artists who are part of Viridian Artists’ Affiliate program. The show opens December 26 and continues through January 20, 2024 with an opening reception Thursday December 28, 6-8pm and a closing reception Saturday January 20, 4-6pm. Featured are the artists Laura Rutherford Renner, Joshua Greenberg, Arlene Finger, Ed Ferszt, Steffani Bailey, Sabine Carlson, Michael Reck, Jenny Belin, Brett Poza. In addition to seeing this exhibit in person, one can see this fascinating exhibit digitally at www.viridianartists.com.

Sometimes it takes “Just a Moment” to create a powerful artwork, other times it can take years. Usually an artist can tell when a piece “works” or if they have gone too far and must begin again. These artists in this exhibit are each inspired in their own unique ways, concerned with different goals and implementing a wide variety of materials and methods. 

Trained as an occupational therapist, Laura Rutherford Renner enjoys painting figures engaged in the experience of their environments, often portraying her feline muse stalking or at play. She finds that the process of painting and the quiet engagement of brush to board provides daily calm and purpose.

Joshua Greenberg calls this series of his photographic imagery “The Colorful Whimsies II”, dominated by large color fields showing abstract scenes in reds, yellows and blues. He sees his images as “light, humorous, surprising… and whimsical”. In this series, he is combining photo-based imagery with digital processing to create abstract art.

Arlene Finger is inspired by the view outside her window. She tells us that “the artwork encompasses the architectural facade that I see through my window. The sky and the trees, the shape of the building, and color are the source of inspiration for my work.”

Ed Ferszt, inspired by classical writing, has created four prints from a series of watercolors, available as a suite or individually, based on Homer’s “Iliad”. Ovid, in his commentary about Homer’s Iliad notes, "Nothing is more useful … than those arts which have no utility."

Steffani Bailey’s art in "Just A Moment" evolved from an on-going process of "finding", of arranging, painting, and composing. Each piece has its own sensibility and creates a conversation involving contrasts of balance and quiet, soft texture and motion, muted shape and color.

In this grouping, Sabine Carlson shares six small paintings in which figures of humans and water birds reach out and look for moments of balance. She goes on to say that “I imagine the protagonists as if they might be engaging in a wobbly conversation during chance encounters before continuing their journeys along unpredictable currents.”

Michael Reck, for the past two years, continues investigating texture and the interaction of layers in his paintings. He begins each work by using heavy bodied gesso as the initial layer that he manipulates with various tools and his fingers. 

Jenny Belin is showing digital prints of her original cat portrait paintings, which come from the pages of a book that she is writing and illustrating. With a working title: “Sonnets for Sweet Potatoes: A Cat’s Guide to the ups and downs of NYC”, she began creating this project late last year as a compilation of painted and written portraits of the cats that she has known during her years in New York City.

Brett Poza almost always works from photographs she takes or diagnostic images from people she knows. Her drawings are created with wood burning tools. She says that “drawing by burning allows me to create a textured and colored surface that gives more to me than a flat drawing. Through working this way I try to direct the viewer toward ideas of resilience and transformation, taking things hat are broken or in need of healing and making them into something beautiful.

The creative process is often beyond explanation, even by the artists as they engage in creating, but here are a few thoughts from artists we all know to remind us how important the creative moment is:

“Art is a guarantee of sanity.” – Louise Bourgeois 

“Creativity takes courage.” – Henri Matisse 

“Don’t think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it’s good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art.” – Andy Warhol

“We don’t make mistakes, just happy little accidents.” – Bob Ross

“Painting is poetry that is seen rather than felt, and poetry is painting that is felt rather than seen.” – Leonardo da Vinci

“Art washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.” – Pablo Picasso

“Color is my day-long obsession, joy and torment.” – Claude Monet

“I found I could say things with color and shapes that I couldn’t say any other way – things I had no words for.”
– Georgia O’Keeffe

“Life is art. Art is life. I never separate it.” – Ai Weiwei

“Have no fear of perfection, you’ll never reach it.” – Salvador Dali

We look forward to seeing you soon at Viridian and sharing “Just a Moment” together.


Gallery hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 12–6pm

For further information please contact: Vernita Nemec, Gallery Director
or Jenny Belin, Assistant Director at viridianartistsinc@gmail.com

Visit Instagram @viridianartistsinc, see us on Facebook & YouTube at Viridian Artists Gallery, or viridianartists.com

 


"Just a Moment" is featured on Meer Magazine's Website

December 27, 2023 Viridian Artists

Joshua Greenberg, The Colorful Whimsies II, No.17, The Window Family Looks Across the Street (detail). Courtesy of Viridian Artists

Click Here to View Meer Magazine’s article!

Chelsea NY: Viridian Artists is pleased to present an exhibition of outstanding art by artists who are part of Viridian Artists’ Affiliate program. The show opens December 26 and continues through January 23, 2024 with an opening reception Thursday December 28, 6-8pm and a closing reception Saturday January 23, 4-6pm. Featured are the artists Laura Rutherford Renner, Joshua Greenberg, Arlene Finger, Ed Ferszt, Steffani Bailey, Sabine Carlson, Michael Reck, Jenny Belin, Brett Poza. In addition to seeing this exhibit in person, one can see this fascinating exhibit digitally at www.viridianartists.com.

Sometimes it takes “Just a Moment” to create a powerful artwork, other times it can take years. Usually an artist can tell when a piece “works” or if they have gone too far and must begin again. These artists in this exhibit are each inspired in their own unique ways, concerned with different goals and implementing a wide variety of materials and methods. 

Trained as an occupational therapist, Laura Rutherford Renner enjoys painting figures engaged in the experience of their environments, often portraying her feline muse stalking or at play. She finds that the process of painting and the quiet engagement of brush to board provides daily calm and purpose.

Joshua Greenberg calls this series of his photographic imagery “The Colorful Whimsies II”, dominated by large color fields showing abstract scenes in reds, yellows and blues. He sees his images as “light, humorous, surprising… and whimsical”. In this series, he is combining photo-based imagery with digital processing to create abstract art.

Arlene Finger is inspired by the view outside her window. She tells us that “the artwork encompasses the architectural facade that I see through my window. The sky and the trees, the shape of the building, and color are the source of inspiration for my work.”

Ed Ferszt, inspired by classical writing, has created four prints from a series of watercolors, available as a suite or individually, based on Homer’s “Iliad”. Ovid, in his commentary about Homer’s Iliad notes, "Nothing is more useful … than those arts which have no utility."

Steffani Bailey’s art in "Just A Moment" evolved from an on-going process of "finding", of arranging, painting, and composing. Each piece has its own sensibility and creates a conversation involving contrasts of balance and quiet, soft texture and motion, muted shape and color.

In this grouping, Sabine Carlson shares six small paintings in which figures of humans and water birds reach out and look for moments of balance. She goes on to say that “I imagine the protagonists as if they might be engaging in a wobbly conversation during chance encounters before continuing their journeys along unpredictable currents.”

Michael Reck, for the past two years, continues investigating texture and the interaction of layers in his paintings. He begins each work by using heavy bodied gesso as the initial layer that he manipulates with various tools and his fingers. 

Jenny Belin is showing digital prints of her original cat portrait paintings, which come from the pages of a book that she is writing and illustrating. With a working title: “Sonnets for Sweet Potatoes: A Cat’s Guide to the ups and downs of NYC”, she began creating this project late last year as a compilation of painted and written portraits of the cats that she has known during her years in New York City.

Brett Poza almost always works from photographs she takes or diagnostic images from people she knows. Her drawings are created with wood burning tools. She says that “drawing by burning allows me to create a textured and colored surface that gives more to me than a flat drawing. Through working this way I try to direct the viewer toward ideas of resilience and transformation, taking things hat are broken or in need of healing and making them into something beautiful.

The creative process is often beyond explanation, even by the artists as they engage in creating, but here are a few thoughts from artists we all know to remind us how important the creative moment is:

“Art is a guarantee of sanity.” – Louise Bourgeois 

“Creativity takes courage.” – Henri Matisse 

“Don’t think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it’s good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art.” – Andy Warhol

“We don’t make mistakes, just happy little accidents.” – Bob Ross

“Painting is poetry that is seen rather than felt, and poetry is painting that is felt rather than seen.” – Leonardo da Vinci

“Art washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.” – Pablo Picasso

“Color is my day-long obsession, joy and torment.” – Claude Monet

“I found I could say things with color and shapes that I couldn’t say any other way – things I had no words for.”
– Georgia O’Keeffe

“Life is art. Art is life. I never separate it.” – Ai Weiwei

“Have no fear of perfection, you’ll never reach it.” – Salvador Dali

We look forward to seeing you soon at Viridian and sharing “Just a Moment” together.


Gallery hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 12–6pm

For further information please contact: Vernita Nemec, Gallery Director
or Jenny Belin, Assistant Director at viridianartistsinc@gmail.com

Visit Instagram @viridianartistsinc, see us on Facebook & YouTube at Viridian Artists Gallery, or viridianartists.com

 

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Viridian's Holiday Show is featured on Meer Magazine's Website

December 13, 2023 Viridian Artists

"GIFTFULLNESS” : Viridian's 53rd Holiday Invitational Show
is Featured on Meer Magazine’s website.

Click Here to View Article

Viridian's "Giftfullness" Exhibition is featured in Design Arts Daily

November 30, 2023 Viridian Artists

Thursday, November 30, 6-8pm: Giftfullness at Viridian 

Just in time for the holiday season, Viridian Artists is pleased to present Giftfullness, Viridian's 53rd Holiday Invitational Show, a group show of small artworks by over 30 artists, all priced at $250 or less. There will be 3 receptions to celebrate the holidays: Thursday November 30, 6–8pm, Saturday, December 16 & Saturday, December 23, 4–6pm

Viridian Artists, 548 West 28th Street, #632, New York, NY Info

Thank you so much for the great press, DART!

Irene Christensen is exhibiting paintings at the Ground floor galleries of the Interchurch Center

November 29, 2023 Viridian Artists

Congratulations, Irene Christensen!

Check out PEACEABLE KINGDOM

at the Ground floor galleries of the Interchurch Center, 

61 Claremont Avenue at 120th Street.

Take the 1 train to 116th and walk 7 minutes west.

Open Monday - Friday, 9 - 5.

Press Release: "GIFTFULLNESS” : Viridian's 53rd Holiday Invitational Show

November 15, 2023 Viridian Artists

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                           Please List

"GIFTFULLNESS”

Viridian's 53rd Holiday Invitational Show

November 28 – December 23, 2023

three receptions:

Thursday November 30, 6–8pm

Saturday, December 16 & Saturday, December 23, 4–6pm

 

Chelsea NY: Just in time for the holiday season, Viridian Artists is pleased to present "GIFTFULLNESS”, Viridian's 53rd Holiday Invitational Show, an invitational group exhibit of small artworks, all priced at $250 or less.  There will be 3 receptions to celebrate the holidays: Thursday November 30, 6–8pm & Thursday December 21, 6–8pm for last-minute holiday shopping. Over 30 artists will be sharing their art with you in our special holiday exhibition priced for gift-giving.

How often do we think of sending an artwork as a gift to someone? The winter holiday is a time to realize the honor that our creative gifts have bestowed upon us, and rather than purchasing impersonal objects, we can instead give a piece of art that has much more personal meaning. Consequently, all the art in this exhibit has been priced at $250 or less. Artist-made objects of jewelry and accessories, will also be available for all.

There are so many things in our lives that we take for granted, sometimes not realizing how fortunate we are to have them. Our special abilities are not always recognized by others or even by ourselves, but they are gifts that only we possess. Sharing such gifts often brings not only the pleasure in the doing, but also brings gratitude acknowledged from others. The artists in this exhibition look forward to sharing their artistic and creative gifts with you with the hope that you will think to share the joy of giving them as gifts to yourself or those close to you.

 

Participating Artists include:

Marie-Ange Hoda Ackad * Steffani Bailey * Ayako Bando * Daisy Belin * Jenny Belin
Annaliese Bischoff * Ellen Burnett * Zoe Brown-Weissmann * Sabine Carlson
Lauren Cassidy Irene Christensen * Matt Cohen * Chasity Colón * May DeViney
Rhonda Donovan * Stefanie Eins  Arlene Finger * David Fitzgerald * Alan Gaynor Wally Gilbert * Joshua Greenberg * Shingo Hayamizu * Miho Hiranouchi* Janet Hoffman Miwako K. * Kat King * Manah Kishiya * Kozy *Bernice Sokol Kramer
Angela M. LaMonte * Marco Lando * Beatriz Ledesma * Stephanie Lempres
John Lloyd * Rosemary Lyons * Shawn Marshall * Vernita Nemec * Jeffrey Nowlin Anna Novakov * Brett Poza * Mariko Okabayashi *Alla Podolsky
Laura Rutherford Renner * Peggy Roalf * Kaori Sakaki * Melissa Schainker
Dorothy Shaw *Frank Sheehan * Susan Sills * Katherine Elinger Smith * Sheila Smith 
J. Yvonne Skaggs * Jane Talcott * Christopher T. Terry * SAORI TRIBE
Meredeth Turshen * Verg  *Ellen Waldorf * Ku Watanabe * and others

 

 

For further information please contact

Vernita Nemec, Director or Jenny Belin, Assistant Director

visit Instagram @viridianartistsinc, see us on Facebook & YouTube at Viridian Artists Gallery
or visit our website at viridianartists.com

Wally Gilbert: Open Studios at Brickbottom: November 18th and 19th, 2023

November 9, 2023 Viridian Artists

Wally Gilbert : Open Studios

Wally Gilber
"Crossed"
36" x 24" panel on a Flush Frame.; Digital print on Aluminum

Wally Gilbert is opening his studio!
 

As Part of Open Studios at Brickbottom

 November 18th and 19th, 2023
12 to 5 pm
1 Fitchburg Street
Somerville, MA 02143
Wally Gilbert’s Studio is in C319

Steffani Bailey is showing work at Five Points Art in Torrington, Connecticut

October 26, 2023 Viridian Artists

Congratulations to Steffani Bailey, who is showing work at the Five Points Gallery in Torrington, Connecticut!

Click here to read more about the Five Points
SMALL WORKS JURIED EXHIBITION

“Desert Flora” by Steffani Bailey

Arlene Finger will be showing work at Van Der Plas Gallery in NYC

October 25, 2023 Viridian Artists

Congratulations, Arlene Finger!

Press Release: Marco Lando: "The Trip"

October 25, 2023 Viridian Artists

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE         Please List




Marco Lando

The Trip
October 31–November 26, 2023
Opening Reception: Thursday, November 2nd: 6–8pm
Interview with the Artist: Thursday, November 16th: 6–8pm


Chelsea NY: Viridian Artists is pleased to present The Trip, Marco Lando’s second solo exhibition with the gallery. On view from October 31 through November 25, it will feature an installation of recent video work and photographs that continue the artist’s interest in creating celestial mise-en-scenes that, portentous and dreamy, evoke the loss of symbolic order. The Opening Reception will take place on November 2, from 6–8pm.
An interview and talk with the artist will take place on Thursday, November 16 from 6–8pm. 

The Trip comprises a series of four eponymous black-and-white videos (all created in 2023), wherein stark and solemn skyscrapers float through cosmic space. These architectural paeans to a lost civilization slowly rise, tilt, and move with no apparent purpose. Unmoored by gravity and function, they are sci-fi ruins from a defunct planet set adrift in a cold, godless universe. Though the movements in each video represent the four cardinal directions (north, south, east, west), the paths they trace ultimately lead nowhere. So too, the lights that inexplicably blaze on and off in their windows punctuating the darkened skies like a grid of stars, illuminate nothing beyond their contours.

 Lando treats his buildings like living entities – almost human, but not quite – and they gain their eery, forlorn affect accordingly. The soundtrack accompanying these videos reflects this ghostly quality with its merging of the mechanical and organic. Combining the sounds of creaking metal with whale cry recordings, it distorts and manipulates any distinction between the two. Rather than convey ideas of a harmonious, efficient technology, Lando’s celestial music is marked by imperfection and uncertainty.

Accompanying the video installation will be a suite of photographs from Lando’s ongoing series, Alchemy (2016-present). These black-and-white images depicting still versions of the imagery in the videos are also manipulated digitally, and function as freeze frames or stills.  More romantic in tone, they offer a softness that counters the ominous sensibility of the videos, injecting an atmospheric quality to the overall installation that invites viewers to imagine themselves drifting along with the buildings in a somnolent bliss. 

 

Gallery hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 12–6pm
For further information please contact: Vernita Nemec, Gallery Director or Jenny Belin, Assistant Director at viridianartistsinc@gmail.com or view the gallery website: www.viridianartists.com.


Shawn Marshall's work was selected to be in a Juried Show at the Visionary Art Collective in Brooklyn , New York

October 12, 2023 Viridian Artists

Shawn Marshall, Mr. Blue Sky, Mixed Media, 16” x 16”

Congratulations to Shawn Marshall! Shawn’s work was selected to be in What Remains,

a Juried Show at the Visionary Art Collective in Brooklyn, NY.

What Remains is a virtual group exhibition providing an in-depth look at our personal and creative growth since the onset of the pandemic.

Click here to read more about this exhibition.

Press Release: Wally Gilbert: “Patterns of Reality”

September 13, 2023 Viridian Artists
 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Please List


Celebrated Biochemist and Fine Arts Photographer Wally Gilbert Unveils a Captivating Exhibition at Viridian Artists

WALLY GILBERT “Patterns of Reality”

October 3 - 28, 2023
Opening Reception, Thursday, October 5, 6–8 pm
Saturday Reception, October 14, 4-6 pm

Chelsea, NYC – Viridian Artists is honored to present the remarkable works of Wally Gilbert, a Nobel Prize-winning biochemist and accomplished fine arts photographer, in his seventh solo exhibition at the gallery. The exhibition will begin October 3rd and will continue through October 28th with an opening reception Thursday, October 5th, 6–8pm and a weekend reception Saturday, October 14th, 4-6 pm. Wally Gilbert's exploration of digital imagery, blending his scientific acumen with creative expression, takes center stage in an exhibition that promises to captivate and inspire.

Wally Gilbert's unique journey spans both the realms of science and art. Having been awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1980 for the discovery of ways of sequencing genes, his career has significantly shaped the scientific landscape around us today. However, his pursuit of creativity brought him to the art world as well. For decades, Wally Gilbert has been at the forefront of digital imagery experimentation, pushing the boundaries of perception and reality. In this latest exhibition, he delves into a body of work that resonates with patterns, forms, and colors inspired by the natural world. Through a meticulous process of transformation, he converts images of nature into multi-chromed geometric and crystalline compositions, each a mesmerizing exploration of the intersection between the tangible and the abstract.

Having presented more than 50 solo exhibitions across the globe, this body of work continues his artistic evolution. Wally Gilbert's compositions, vividly printed on aluminum, invite viewers into a realm where the familiar morphs into the mysterious. A solitary recognizable object emerges amidst a sea of abstract forms, inviting contemplation while the interplay of colors leads the eye along paths that traverse the boundaries of the real and the imagined.

One might discover themselves in the midst of a gold-laced network of blue branches or gazing upon a curving black and green tiled floor in "Difference." The evocative piece titled "Wings" captures the essence of a flower's core or an insect's countenance, blurring the lines between reality and the surreal. This exhibition presents a unique opportunity for art and science enthusiasts to experience the fusion of two seemingly disparate worlds. The artist will be present, offering viewers a chance to engage with the creator and gain insight into the intricate process behind these visionary works.

We hope that you can see these works in person and meet their creator. Catalogs from past exhibitions by the artist are available at the gallery and on Viridian’s website at www.virdianartists.com and also on Amazon.

Gallery hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 12–6pm
For further information please contact: Vernita Nemec, Gallery Director or Jenny Belin, Assistant Director at viridianartistsinc@gmail.com or view the gallery website: www.viridianartists.com.

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