FROM GUEST JUROR, ERIC SHINER
President, Powerhouse Arts
The world around us is changing in unprecedented ways: the climate is warming at an alarming rate; geopolitics pushes and pulls at borders and national identities; shorelines erode and garbage heaps grow. The transformation of our lived environment is jarring, just as the devastation wrought on nature is troubling.
For this exhibition, I selected works that address the tenuous relationship between human and animal, culture and nature. For many of these artists, the concept of transformation appears in the form of rotting fruit, blackened oyster shells or a haunted camping tent, seemingly depicting the collapse of nature. Whereas in other works, beautiful blooms, colorful recyclables and fibers, or heraldic images of flora and fauna point to a hope that the future is bright and that nature might emerge victorious.
I hope that all of the work in the exhibition makes the viewer think about their own place in the world and what they are each doing to save us from further annihilation and negative change. I wish that viewers find beauty in decay and inspiration in darkness, just as they might smile and imagine a better tomorrow when faced with the more optimistic work in the show. For me, transformation and change are always good things: they make us grow, force us to adapt, and hopefully make us stronger as a result.
ABOUT TRANSFORMATIONS
Artists were invited to create original artworks exploring the theme of metamorphosis.
See the full collection at the Art Museum.
FIRST PLACE WINNER
Kumi Yamashita
"Unfolding Cosmos I recreated the folding patterns of 25 classic origami shapes - animals, flowers, objects, etc, and then integrate them into a seamless whole. The result is a terrain of lines where boundaries blur and one existence connects with another."
Unfolding Cosmos, 2024
30" x 30" x .25"
SECOND PLACE WINNER
Helen Cantrell
"I work in woodcut and other printmaking forms, as well as paint. For the past several years, animals and their permutations have been a major focus. They are their own mysterious creatures, but we humans inevitably use them as stand-ins for ourselves, so first transformation. Then the lines in "Wolf Family" weave into each other to blend and re-use back, legs, tails, other parts in a dance of changing forms. The "Fisher Wolf" pieces are about the ospreys and wolves and fish in my forest/ocean home on Long Island Sound and how they may change into one another, like a fairy tale only without humans."
Fisher Wolf Black, 2023
38" x 38"
Michael Velliquette
Michael Velliquette
Hypnotic Serpent 1, 2020
24" x 24" x 2.5"
Alexandra Chiou
Alexandra Chiou
The Path of Gold You Laid for Me, 2021
40.5" x 40.5" x 1"
Ali Osborn
Ali Osborn
Wedge, 2020
13.5" x 22"
Andrew Brehm
Andrew Brehm
Red Roe, 2023
2' x 3' x 3'
Janine Seelen
Janine Seelen
28.11.2022, 11:18:46, 2023
44cm x 61cm x 1cm
Lyu Kroll
Lyu Kroll
Iris, 2022
12" x 8.5"
Matthew Lambert
Matthew Lambert
Birth Parents, 2023
9" x 10"
Lisa Maione
Lisa Maione
Figures (Homage to Leo), 2023
30" x 22" x 1"
Kristin Meyers
Kristin Meyers
Metamorphosis, 2023
114" x 42"
Irwin Freeman
Irwin Freeman
Paper Pair, 2023
12" x 12" x 9"