BRATTLEBORO-118 Elliot presents "Elisions," an exhibit of new works by painter Tina Olsen, opening Friday, Nov. 1, with a public reception from 5 to 9 p.m. with refreshments. The Vermont Jazz Center will provide an exciting musical backdrop to the work with young emerging musicians from 5 to 8 pm.
According to the gallery, Elisions "refers to Olsen's increasingly bold abstract expressionism defined as much by what is left out as the explosive color and form that results as she pushes the limits of what is possible on canvas."
Over her 50-year painting career, Olsen said she keeps discovering. "Painting allows me to get into my body, to physically be with the paint and materials and let my body find the faces in the landscape, the landscape in faces," she said in a news release. "The process is a primal embrace of nature and feelings and the mystery of how they emerge on a static plane as forms and colors with a dynamism and life all their own."
Olsen says she's lately been heavily inspired by the writing and work of German expressionists pre-World War II, and quotes from them will appear throughout the gallery, giving context to the work over space and time.
She has been a defining presence at 118 Elliot Gallery as a mentor and instigator-curator of the well-received "Creative Relations" shows in 2022 and 2023, where she led a community-wide effort to chart the current of creativity through families and significant others.
Olsen grew up in Springfield, Massachusetts, in a Mennonite family and moved to New York City to teach art at the progressive Walden School in 1965, where she married and had two daughters. Tina stayed in the city for 40 years, where she was immersed in the creative energy of the 60s cultural revolution. She worked as an art therapist at Staten Island Psychiatric Institute for 20 years before moving to Brattleboro in 2007, where she has deepened her dedication to her painting, meditation, and making music. She also teaches a class on Art as Meditation at the River Gallery School.
She will host an interactive artist talk with live participatory painting for the public, exploring expressionism and abstraction on Sunday, Nov. 24, from 4 to 6 p.m. at 118 Elliot.
From Dec. 6 through 31, she will be joined by her partner, Schuyler Gould, who will merge his light sculptures made with unusual found objects with her work to form a whole new show.
"Tina Olsen's larger landscapes have a ruggedness in keeping with the New England environment much of her work represents," Lauren Poster, an area artist, said. "The building of shape and line, restricted perception of depth brings to mind Cézanne's mountainsides. But we are not transported to Provence, rather we are invited inside her very unique Northern American landscape. We are allowed to accompany her struggle, pushing the horizontal plane of rock against the stark vertical line of a tree, working her surface until she gets it right."
"Elisions" can be seen at all events at 118 Elliot or by appointment. Call 917-860-5749.
This Arts item was submitted to The Commons.