Spring Hofeldt


Tough Love
2009
acrylic on masonite
11” x 17”


Rapunzel
2008
acrylic on masonite
18” x 24”


out of sorts
2010
acrylic & colored pencil on masonite
10.5” x 7.5”


affordable housing
2007
acrylic on masonite
18.5” x 12”


people watching
2008
acrylic & colored pencil on masonite
12” x 11 ¾”


Sneaky Pete
2009
acrylic & colored pencil on masonite
7.5” x 6”
.
ARTIST STATEMENT
The heart of my painting always starts with an animate or inanimate object that bears a spunky and alluring nature.  While my interpretations make light of situations we go through, and simply illustrate the quirks of life that we might otherwise pay little attention to, the natural expression and shape is never altered or exaggerated from how I found them to be.  More often than not I play/work with these objects until I pinpoint the perfect metaphorical setting to place them in. Capturing and translating every character role in the piece is important… such as a disposition of a creature, the morphed nature of a reflection in glass, and the overall sentiment that a marriage of two such elements create.

WEBSITE
www.springhofeldt.com

PRINTS OF MY WORK
http://www.etsy.com/shop/springhofeldt

Jimmy McBride


Ambush in Quadrant 4 on the far side of the Pleiades, Quilt, 75″ x 80″


The Pillars of Creation, Quilt, 81″ x 73″


R136 in 30 Doradus, Quilt, 77″ x 78″


M64, Child’s Quilt, 45″ x 60″

Artist Statement
they say in space, “no one can hear you scream.” well, they can’t hear the low drone of the internal power generators kick on again when you’re half way to nowhere. i can. i work for a shipping company called “intergalactic transport.” i travel back and forth from rock to rock carrying those two all important gems- salt and vinegar. there’s a lot of time to kill up here so i downloaded a grandma program and she’s been teaching me how to quilt. there’s no “log cabins” or “poinsettias” around so i just stare out the window until something catches my eye. it’s nice every once in a while to shoot the shit with a fellow traveler, or get caught up in the new dawn celebrations in the outer rim, but mostly it’s just me; with a lot of time on my hands.

Website
http://jimmymcbride.com

Upcoming Exhibit
Take Me To Your Leader, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Oslo, Norway, 11/10

Red Hook and Carroll Gardens Studio Tour this Weekend

This is the weekend for the Red Hook/Carroll Gardens Art Studio Tour. Information and maps can be found at http://brooklynstudiotours.com/

Made in Red Hook

Heather Phelps-Lipton – “Self Portrait”
Eric Taylor – “Wild Horses”
Elizabeth Tomasetti – “Flower Mouth”
Andy Vernon-Jones – “Construction Worker on Dikeman Street” from the series Here in Red Hook
.
“Made in Red Hook”
Opening Reception, May 22, 7-10 PM

After a brief hiatus – Lucky Gallery is back with the biggest group show to date. Help Lucky celebrate our one-year anniversary, and the Brooklyn Studio Tour with our opening of “Made in Red Hook” a traditional salon exhibition by Red Hook artists Todd von Ammon, Laura Arena, Maria Baraybar, Andy Vernon-Jones, Christina Kelly, Heather Phelps-Lipton, Nate Luce, Rachel Mosler, L. Nichols, Julia Oldham, Anna Ortiz, Joshua Ray Stephens, Eric Taylor, Elizabeth Tomasetti, Tonky and Beriah Wall.

The concept behind the exhibition is to introduce to the public the wide range of artistic capabilities of local artists and to provide an atmosphere to encourage the exchange of ideas between artists and the public. The artists’ production is presented through different mediums including photography, drawing, video, book making, collage, painting, contemporary crafts and sculpture.

“Made in Red Hook” is curated by gallery director and participating artist Laura Arena and Ana Bogdanovic, who plan to transform Lucky Gallery into the traditional setting reminiscent of Salon de Paris, the annual public exhibition of the French Royal Academy in the 18th and 19th century that displayed the actual artistic production and presented the cities most established artists at the time.

Artists’ works will be exhibited floor-to-ceiling and the artists and visitors are invited to spend time in our seating area where there will be literary materials and videos to view.

Website
http://luckygallery.com/

Amy Talluto

Artist Statement
I work exclusively with landscape in my oil on canvas paintings, using that theme as a platform to explore new ways of representing space and form. I am also interested in using psychological content and color to investigate the impact of nature, and natural space on the mind. Individual works describe scenes that are sometimes bright, lush and flowering, or sometimes dissonant, murky and foreboding. Tree branches twist and writhe, color turns acidic, and sky flattens to meet form and then deepens back into space again. A shifting psychological mood pervades the group as a whole, moving between realms of sparkling beauty, anxiety, and the sinister and mysterious.

Website
http://www.amytalluto.com

Sheena Hisiro

Artist Bio
Sheena Hisiro has been drawing since she could hold a pencil. She currently lives in Brooklyn, where she is still drawing and loving every minute of it. She earned a BFA in Communications Design from Pratt Institute.  She recently illustrated a children’s book that is being released this summer and is very excited about it!  She is currently working on a greeting/gift card line featuring limited color palettes, floral prints, patterns (lots of stripes), detailed line work, and little hand-made envelopes to match.

Website
http://oodlesofdoodles.tumblr.com/

Lisa Dillin


1. Award Plaque for H. Waldenford – 2009 – Laser-engraved brass, cherry laminate, MDF – 10″ x 8″ x .5″

2. I’d Rather be Fishing – 2009 – Custom-printed ceramic – 4″ x 5.5″ x 3″

3. Window A – 2010 – Aluminum, formica laminate, fluorescent lighting – 42″ x 62.5″ x 4″

4. Under the Desk Escape Unit – 2010 – Found objects, mixed media, and video (interactive)- 65″ x 108″ x 30″

5. Untitled Ad for Roar Design – 2009 – c-print, 20″ x 30″

Artist Statement
This work re-presents a mental landscape, an office-scape, used as a symbol or stand-in for contemporary culture at large. Stemming from an interest in the exploration of the psychology of the individual in contemporary culture as contrasted with the primitive psychology of man, this work offers a synthesis that highlights the latent tension between our former modus operandi and our current structured status. While this lifestyle transformation may be recognizable in the lives of the majority, I focus on a specific grouping of individuals, those living in a maximal built environment, the urban environment, cut off from the natural world. This new normal position removes the sights, sounds, scents and behaviors integral to life in the natural world and replaces it with a myriad of man-made objects and experiences centering around the idea of function or purpose in relation specifically to the human being. No longer residing in a subsistence-based communal setting where a reactionary attitude to our environment is part of our survival technique, we now plan for our survival in a construct based in politics and the economy.

The Arts provide a unique escape from this practicality, this need for function or popularization in a market-driven economy for both the fabricator (or art practitioner) and the viewer/collector. To recognize this fact is to provide evidence of the enduring appetite to witness an idea, a feeling, or an aesthetically driven combination of color or pattern that stretches beyond the rigidity common in other areas of our experience. To some extent, the strong economy of the art market itself is evidence of the desire for the unique or rare object, rare because it was not mass produced and is not readily available. On the other hand, it must also be recognized that art objects themselves are now bought and sold purely on the basis of commodity value.

Humor, absurdity, or dysphoria may be an element present in my work in it’s often-times futile attempt to provide a response to the predicament of life in contemporary culture in the form of simulated nature. It is through this lens that my work investigates the tension between our past and out present modes of conduct.

Website
http://www.lisadillin.com