Floriography: The Language of Flowers
June 1 - August 1, 2020
About The Show
Originally conceived as an early April show, as both an antidote to the cruelest month’s lingering gloom, and a reminder that spring, with its florid proliferation of life, was on the horizon, Floriography feels even more timely in its new slot as our first post-lockdown exhibition. Its message more immediate, urgent, and life-affirming… This exhibition presents a conversation between the work of four talented and stylistically diverse female artists, each in dialogue with her subject matter, with her media and the act of mark-making, and with floral painting as historical genre.
“Using a visceral painting language to describe the natural world in structural terms,” and “aim[ing] to capture a moment in time,” Eileen Gillespie’s vibrantly expressionistic oil paintings are joyful and energetic takes on the tradition of floral still life. “Through observation, the floral subject becomes a means to further explore the medium of painting itself. When the marks become alive on the canvas they become their own individual subject and object. The painting takes over and what is left is an abstract representation of the spark that the painting is intended to portray.”
The exhibition also includes a selection of works on paper from the estate of Maine Master and nationally known pioneering postwar female artist, Beverly Hallam. These works span from 1961 to 2007, and media include pastel, acrylic, ink, oil monotype and charcoal. They beautifully display the artist’s verve and virtuosity as well as her enduring fascination for floral still lifes.
Maret Hensick’s poignant and poetic mixed media on paper series, Flowers Past and Present, honoring her mother’s love of flowers and travel, was begun in July of 2019, four months after her death. Dissatisfied with her first attempt at portraying a single white phlox from the artist’s garden as “a big white flower of impressive delicacy to express all the grief and love [she] was harboring,” Hensick began picking and painting in additional flowers as they bloomed. She then constructed graceful and intricate vases for the flowers, using materials from a box of her mother’s mementos (old letters, stamps, wine bottle labels, Chinese cutouts, cards from the 20’s and 30’s, postcards, and maps). The work in this series is deeply personal, richly symbolic, and eloquently spoken in the language of flowers.
Marjorie Moskowitz is interested in the tension between man-made order imposed on the landscape and nature’s “insistence to re-assert itself.” This exhibition features striking large-scale realist oil paintings of Maine flowers taken from her Observations and Amplifications series. For Marjorie, “activated surface, abstract surface, patterns and color are a lifelong dialogue.” These paintings capture plants “at the peak of their reproductive cycle, when they are fully asserting their seductive beauty/perfection/splendor/brilliance… The scale is an invitation for the viewer to experience the blooms and the importance of their smallest elements.”
Featured Artists
“My paintings aim to capture a moment in time. It is through painting that I discover, experiment and enjoy leaps of faith that land onto the canvas and become unique objects of their own.”
A photographer, painter, printmaker and lifelong educator, Beverly Hallam was a key member of Ogunquit’s art community in addition to being internationally known as a pioneering postwar female artist. Her career was distinguished from that of her peers in several important ways. In the early 50's she pioneered and researched the use of Polyvinyl Acetate as a painting medium, now used extensively internationally and known simply as "Acrylic.” She exhibited and demonstrated its use throughout the East. Known for her distinctive, extraordinarily detailed, larger-than-life airbrushed flowered canvases, her work was featured in 45 solo exhibitions in museums and galleries, and in 280 group shows. Her work is in the permanent collections of many museums and corporations as well as in private collections in the U.S.A., Canada, France, Belgium and Switzerland — including those of the Harvard Art Museums, Farnsworth Art Museum, Ogunquit Museum of American Art and National Museum of Women in the Arts.
“The first piece I created in the Flowers Past and Present series was The Past Will Always Be There. The initial painting was a white phlox in the center of the paper. I started the painting in July of 2019. four months after my mother had died.”
Mark making and the nuances of color and light in nature are highlighted in this body of work involving the close observation of aspects of landscape and the amplification of these images.