CONTACT:
Courtney Rile
Gallery Coordinator, Delavan Art Gallery
501 West Fayette Street, Syracuse, NY 13204
315.425.7500 or crile@delavancenter.com
Th3.
THE THIRD THURSDAY, SYRACUSE'S VISUAL ARTS OPEN
Runs June 21 with a Special Guided Tour and Artist Presentation
Exhibition: "Glass and Abstracts"
Featuring glass works by Jerome R. Durr and R
Jason Howard along with
abstract paintings by Thomas Barnes, Linda Bigness and Jeff
Schuessler.
Dates: June 14 – July 28, 2007
Location: Delavan Art Gallery, 501 W. Fayette Street, Syracuse, NY 13204
Hours: Thursdays and Fridays 12-6 p.m., Saturdays 10-4 p.m. and also by
appointment
Opening Reception: Thursday, June 14, 5-8 PM
Artists in Attendance: Saturdays from noon – 3 p.m.
Saturday June 16- R Jason Howard
Saturday June 23- Thomas Barnes
Saturday June 30- Jeff Schuessler
Saturday July 7- Jerome R. Durr
Saturday July 14- Thomas Barnes
Saturday July 21- Jerome R. Durr
Saturday July 28- Linda Bigness
Artists also in Attendance for Th3, The Third Thursday, on Thursday, June
21 from 5 - 8 PM (more information available at www.th3syracuse.com)
SYRACUSE, New York -- May 24, 2007 -- Delavan Art Gallery is pleased
to present the exhibit "Glass and Abstracts" featuring
glass works by Jerome R. Durr and R Jason
Howard along with abstract
paintings
by Thomas Barnes, Linda Bigness and Jeff
Schuessler. The exhibit
opens on Thursday, June 14 and continues through Saturday, July
28, 2007.
With a geometric vision, Thomas Barnes began his career as a student
of math and sciences during the Cold War. He was always interested
in studying
art, but it was not until he met Professor Frank Goodnow at Syracuse
University in a night class that he finally found a direction for
his art studies. Thirty-five years later Barnes has developed into
a prolific
artist with a solid style of hard-edged geometric shapes and colors
used to create acrylic paintings of abstracts and landscapes. "The
long awaited chance to study art on my own terms is becoming more rewarding
and enjoyable as time goes on," he writes in his artist statement.
Barnes has returned as an artist to "those geometric shapes
that the childhood battery of tests said were one of my strengths."
Linda Bigness creates works on paper and canvas. Her largely abstract
works have been exhibited internationally, won numerous awards and can
be found in both public and private collections. She has exhibited at
the Everson Museum of Art, the Cultural Center: The Netherlands, Westmoreland,
Cooperstown and in Korea. Public commissions include the Temple B'Rith
Kodesh in Rochester, NY and the Governor's Mansion in Florida. Bigness
was head of the Visual Arts Department and Director of Gallery 320 at
the Metropolitan School for the Arts in Syracuse, NY before it closed
and has continued to curate, teach and write on a regular basis.
Jerome R. Durr began designing and fabricating glass artwork in 1973 for
private residential collectors, commercial projects, ecclesiastical
commissions and public surroundings. Today Jerome R. Durr Studio specializes
in architectural art glass for an impressive list of international clientele.
His work can be found throughout the United States, in France, Italy,
Germany, Kuwait and Sri Lanka. Durr is on the board of directors of
the Stained Glass Association of America and is Director of the Stained
Glass School. His expertise includes casting, carving, etching and slumping
glass. Durr looks forward to the innovative large or small architectural
setting project where he can meld human problem solving with quality
of design and fabrication.
R Jason Howard calls his current work "an exploration of change,
time, and process." In his artist statement, he explains "I've
always thought of glass as a matrix of the space-time-heat continuum." Howard
first became enthralled with glass as a senior studying ceramics at Hamilton
College. After he graduated he received a scholarship to the Studio of
the Corning Museum of Glass and began studying with several renowned glass
artists. Howard acted as a consultant for North Star Glassworks developing
colored borosilicate glasses including one of their more popular colors, "Onyx." Howard's
current work through his studio, Cicada Glassworks, can be seen in
galleries around the country. Inspired by nature, he draws on the
unique combination
of traditional Italian techniques and self-invented processes to create
large organic colorful forms that push the boundaries of what flameworked
glass can do.
Through various drawings and paintings of circles, seemingly both
in motion and dynamically frozen, Jeff Schuessler presents ideas
concerning space
and time. In Schuessler's Inertia Series I, circles dominate as
the subject. Through various sized charcoal drawings, he explores
both the
potential for and the continuation of movement across space and
time. "Inherently
kinetic, the circle provides a sense of motion yet can also offer a
quiet stillness," he writes in his artist statement. He creates
tension by providing both, often simultaneously. Schuessler holds
a B.S. in Advertising and an M.S. in Art Education from Syracuse
University.
Currently, he is an art teacher at Fayetteville-Manlius High School.
Delavan Art Gallery is a 3,800 square foot showcase and sales venue
for fine art created by area artists. Conveniently located downtown
at 501
West Fayette Street in Syracuse, the gallery is free and open to
the public. Off-street parking is available and the gallery is handicapped
accessible. Delavan Art Gallery opens “Glass and Abstracts” from
5 - 8 p.m. on Thursday, June 14. The show is on exhibit through
Saturday, July 28 on Thursday and Friday afternoons from 12-6 p.m.,
Saturdays
from 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. and at other times by appointment.