Tag Archives: Philadelphia Art

RiTUAL Reading Room

RiTUAL Reading Room, 110 Church Gallery

My Winter Coat, Barbara Henry, NJ and A Summer Morning’s Ritual, Pia De Girolamo

RiTUAL, Reading Room110 Church Gallery, 110 Church Street, Philadelphia PA 19106, 267 871 9375, HOURS: Thursday 1:30 – 6:30 pm, Friday 1:30 – 6:30 pm (except First Fridays, 5 – 8 pm) Saturday Noon – 4:00 pm, other times by appointment. 

ARTIST RECEPTION: 
Saturday, December 14, 2013, 
3:00 – 6:00 pm

110 Church Gallery invites you to retreat from the cold into our gallery, transformed into a reading room. Be surrounded by stories, engulfed by pages, dazzled by over two hundred books. Books on shelves. Books on tables. Books hanging. Walls covered with books on display. Take books down, curl up and read. Fall in love with a book, buy it, and take it home.

Each of these books has been constructed from a single-sheet surface that is no larger than 11 x 17 inches. Over one hundred artists submitted books, addressing the theme: ritual.

RiTUAL Reading Room, 110 Church Gallery

RiTUAL, Reading Room110 Church Gallery

RiTUAL Reading Room is a meme based in Social Practice. To get the idea out into the Philadelphia art scene and have participation, the message had to be simple, easy to explain and memorably fun. By adding terms and conditions the curators established a concept that artists could share with each other, all you had to do was follow simple instructions. Making books in the Age of Digital Reproduction is a challenge to artists desiring to express themselves on paper. RiTUALS let’s the artist write whatever kind of book they like and then share the wall space with other artists, their work pixelated into the matrix of the meme, each book like a nerve connecting to the central nervous system of the art show. It really makes you think.

The design is simple and elegant with each book, loaded with information, waits to be unpacked by a viewer. Action is required to view the books displayed artfully in clear bags, concise tagging and information design creates a clever design experience. At the First Friday opening people ‘reading’ the books in random order mostly said, ‘Cool!’ There’s no better word.

RiTUAL Reading Room, 110 Church Gallery

110 Church GalleryRiTUAL, Reading Room

RiTUAL as a social practice experience is intellectually satisfying from the ad campaign with the sample instruction books to the on-line campaign to the virtual display, the idea is to express a concept within constraints. The books nearest the door are hung from display pins so the wind won’t blow them over, object-like books such as the tea-bag book are on pedestals and tables and the rest are displayed on slim racks with taut string keeping them in place.

The origami-like fold of the paper creates a four page book, with 8 sides and the opposite side of the paper can be a poster. There are books of prints, poems, recipes, photos, patterns, drawings, paintings, embroidery and sculpture. And there are stories told in eight pages that will make you laugh or cry. The tactility of handing the books and sharing the discoveries with others opened up communications so that people interacted instead of the anonymity of the library.

RiTUAL Reading Room, 110 Church Gallery

110 Church GalleryRiTUAL, Reading Room

RiTUAL Reading Room, 110 Church Gallery

110 Church GalleryRiTUAL, Reading Room

RiTUAL creates an environment saturated with information, ideas and design. The cable knit sweater book by Kate Flake is an expression of the information technology of sewing  communicated as memetic code. A meme of cozy comfort is translated into the book in a language different from words; a thread of thought creates a story in an un-named tongue that is easily understood and re-interpretted into words.

RiTUAL Reading Room, 110 Church Gallery

110 Church GalleryRiTUAL, Reading Room

Pia DeGirolamo’s books are delightfully informative and rich with style and taste. And by taste I mean food. Tomato Sauce Ritual teaches how to be resourceful and make yourself some decent Italian food; you live in Philly you should know how to make sauce. The illustrations, text and paper all add to the narrative in ways that are visually tasty.

RiTUAL Reading Room, 110 Church Gallery

110 Church GalleryRiTUAL, Reading Room

Thank you to Stella and Margaret from 110 Church Gallery for taking up this idea that involves depending on a lot of artists to create something new and making the exhibition a reality. The show has hundreds of books, there is an on-line catalog with pages about the artists and their books. RiTUAL is a lot of information that required deep thought and attention to detail to make happen.

110 Church Gallery consistently presents art that is thought provoking and unique, with RiTUAL the curators have communicated with the arts community in a way that they responded to with exciting and beautiful concepts of their own. Creating a spirit of community is the essence of the art show and if you spend time reading the books in the gallery you will learn about the people of our community and their rituals.

RiTUAL online catalog

Written and photographed by DoN Brewer except where noted.

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Trinity Memorial Church

Trinity Memorial Church, Ed SnyderTrinity Memorial Church Wreath Sale, 22nd and Spruce Streets, Philadelphia, Saturday, December 7th, 10:00am – 3:00pm

Ed Snyder will have his photography (including jewelry and greeting cards) for sale at this Saturday’s Trinity Memorial Church Annual Holiday Bazaar and Cafe Noel. Trinity Memorial Church‘s Great Hall is located at 22nd and Spruce Streets, Philadelphia. Dec. 7, 2013 from 10 am – 3 pm. Join us for holiday gifts, decorations and delicious food. This year Trinity Center for Urban Life sponsors a project to knit afghans for the guests of Wintershelter (http://communityoutreachpartnership.org/wintershelter). Come to the Bazaar to get instructions and free supplies.”

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Bonded Forever

Bonded Forever at Headhouse Cafe

Bonded Forever at Headhouse Cafe, December 6th, 8:00pm. The Headhouse Cafe, 122 Lombard Street, Philadelphia, PA, 19147

Live music, local art and craft show featuring jewelry by Bonded Forever.

Bonded Forever is a jewelry line for cancer warriors and their loved ones. A portion of Bonded Forever‘s proceeds will be donated to cancer research and patient care.

Bonded Forever is a philanthropic company that designs and produces conceptual handmade jewelry for cancer patients/survivors and their loved ones. A portion of the proceeds from every sale will be donated to cancer research and patient care.

The driving force behind the company’s unique and powerful design scheme is the desire to create a positive supportive network for all of those who are affected by cancer. Bonded Forever supports all types of cancer and does not intentionally use any cancer mascot colors or ribbon symbols in its designs. The jewelry designs also don’t openly advertise its affiliation with any cancer awareness support group, organization, or movement. The jewelry is simply meant to serve as a clandestine personal prayer that can help strengthen the bond in a cancer patient/survivors’s supportive network.

Bonded Forever also raises additional funds through organized charity events. If you are interested in sponsoring an event or partnering with Bonded Forever, please email info@bondedforeverjewelry.com – Bonded Forever website

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RiTUAL

RiTUAL, Reading Room, 110 Church GalleryRiTUAL, Reading Room, 110 Church Gallery, 110 Church Street, Philadelphia PA 19106, 267 871 9375, 

HOURS: Thursday 1:30 – 6:30 pm, Friday 1:30 – 6:30 pm (except First Fridays, 5 – 8 pm)
Saturday Noon – 4:00 pm, other times by appointment.

ARTIST RECEPTION: 
Saturday, December 14, 2013
3 – 6 pm

EXHIBITION: 
Friday, December 6, 2013 through
 Saturday, January 25, 2014

FIRST FRIDAYS
: Friday, December 6, 2013
, Friday, January 3, 2014 
5:00 – 8:00 pm

110 CHURCH gallery invites you to retreat from the cold into our gallery, transformed into a reading room. Be surrounded by stories, engulfed by pages, dazzled by over two hundred books. Books on shelves. Books on tables. Books hanging. Walls covered with books on display. Take books down, curl up and read. Fall in love with a book, buy it, and take it home.

Each of these books has been constructed from a single-sheet surface that is no larger than 11 x 17 inches. Over one hundred artists submitted books, addressing the theme: ritual.

RiTUAL. A ceremonial act ~ Rites used in the course of worship ~ The performance of ceremonial acts ~ The prescribed form of conducting the ceremony ~ A method of procedure that is followed without variation ~ performance with gestures, words, and objects, often in a sequestered place.

Pricing: $20, $75, $250 or free.

RiTUAL On-line catalog

CODE, DoN Brewer, RiTUALCODE, one sheet book, DoN BrewerRiTUAL, Reading Room110 Church Gallery

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Dora Ficher

Dora Ficher, EncausticsDora Ficher, Encaustics, Bluestone Fine Art Gallery

 “Every painting starts with a grid. The vertical and horizontal lines calm my active brain and provide a structure on which to work.

I often paint within the cells of the grid before tying everything together. Because I use encaustic, I work slowly and deliberately. Building up sticky, fragrant layers of wax forces me to be present. This meditative process is as important as the end result.

Autobiographical stories on paper are encased inside the waxy pigment. The layers of narrative and paint parallel the layers of energy from daily life. Abstract shapes, patterns, and vivid color recall cherished memories of my native Argentina.” – Dora Ficher artist statement

Dora Ficher, EncausticsDora Ficher, Encaustics, Bluestone Fine Art Gallery

Bluestone Fine Art Gallery is located at 142 N. 2nd St. Philadelphia, PA 19106 on Gallery Row with a lovely storefront and a gallery for group shows on the lower level. The current show in the main gallery is a one-person show of encaustics by artist Dora Ficher.

Encaustics is an ancient form of painting dating back from around 100 – 300 AD using bees wax and pigment to create layers of color that literally endures for centuries. Encaustic art has seen a resurgence in popularity since the 1990s with people using electric irons, hotplates and heated stylus on different surfaces including card, paper and even pottery. The iron makes producing a variety of artistic patterns easier. The medium is not limited to just simple designs; it can be used to create complex paintings, just as in other media such as oil and acrylic. – Wikipedia

Dora Ficher, EncausticsDora Ficher, Encaustics, Bluestone Fine Art Gallery

Dora Ficher and DoN chatted about her art during November’s First Friday art crawl in Old City. I asked her about using encaustics and where she works? I wondered if it was dangerous.

“It depends if you use if safely. I have my whole studio set up with a window fan and I have ventilation. You have to be safe with it. I use bees wax and pigment, I warm them up and I even use a torch to fuse it. My studio is at 915 Spring Garden Street.”

I know that place! There are so many great artists there, it must be inspiring?

“Oh, yeah!. We had a bunch of the artists come by today, they’re very supportive.”

Dora Ficher, EncausticsDora Ficher, Encaustics, Bluestone Fine Art Gallery

I asked Dora Ficher to explain her inspiration for the colorful artworks.

“My inspiration is mostly from growing up in Argentina. The colors, the people there. of Buenos Aires, are so inspiring. I love color, I get inspired by color, by houses, by doors…and when I travel I love looking at what goes on behind those doors. Some of my paintings have doors and there are things collaged into the background.”

Dora’s father was a musician and if you look closely you can see bits of his music scores embedded in the layers of wax. The poetry of the line, color and context is very invigorating and is a bold blast of brightness to lighten our shortened wintery days.

Dora Ficher, EncausticsDora Ficher, Encaustics, Bluestone Fine Art Gallery

I told Dora that a bunch of Philadelphians, including Charles Cushing, are visiting Buenos Aires ostensibly to paint but were mostly partying every night at the Tango Malongas.

“Of course! When you’re there you don’t have dinner until 11:00 at night and go dancing at midnight, if you go at nine or ten o’clock there’s no one. It is a wonderful place. It’s a lot of fun and the city is very colorful. And I think that’s where I get all my color. I tried to do things that were a little lighter but I always go back and use the same colors.”

Dora Ficher, EncausticsDora Ficher, Encaustics, Bluestone Fine Art Gallery

Dora Ficher showed me her iPhone case with one of her designs on it, bright and colorful like her paintings.

“I have a company that licenses my work now, Dianoche Designs, and they are licensing my images and making them into pillows and other products. It’s fun! I do all the encaustics in my studio, at home I do a lot of watercolor and pen and ink. They’re small and that’s what they’re using, mostly. I can go more into detail with that.”

How did you meet Pam Regan of Bluestone Fine Art Gallery?

“I met Pam through Alyson Stanfield, author of I’d Rather Be in the Studio: The Artist’s No-Excuse Guide to Self-Promotion. She’s unbelievable, I just got back from Colorado for a conference with her. I taught for about thirty years, I taught art in an elementary school and about four or five years ago I decided to leave teaching and I started doing this full time.And I didn’t know where to start. I found the book, I went to a lot of her live workshops and on-line classes and I met Pam when Alyson came here to Philadelphia. She was here exactly two years ago. She’s unbelievable!”

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Written and photographed by DoN Brewer except where noted.

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