Showing posts with label Slater Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Slater Museum. Show all posts

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Four of My Prize-winning Paintings Are Featured in Today's VALLEY COURIER!

"The Quiet Place" (Messerschmidt's, Westbrook, CT) is a 10 x 20" acrylic on canvas by Joan Cole.

"Moraine" is a 24 x 12" acrylic on gallerywrap canvas
 by Joan Cole.

The Quiet Place and Moraine were accepted into the Connecticut Women Artists Exhibit at the Slater Memorial Museum in Norwich during Sept.  The former is a scene familiar to many area residents:  the upper pond at Messerschmidt's on the Westbrook-Deep River line.   The latter may also be familiar to folks who enjoy swimming, fishing, or hiking at Chatfield Hollow State Park in Killingworth.

"Day's End" is a 24 x 12" acrylic on canvas by Joan Cole.






Day's End received an award from the Essex Art Association in their June exhibition Fluidity.







 
Crescent Lake Sunrise will be  on display in the New Britain Museum of American Art's 43rd Annual Juried Member's exhibit , Oct. 13- Oct. 28.
"Crescent Lake Sunrise" is an 8 x 16" acrylic on canvas by Joan Cole.



From October 18 - 21, my paintings of down east Maine, Acadia and the Schoodic Peninsula will be included in The Maine Attraction Art Exhibit   at the Essex Art Association Gallery, 10 North Main Street in Essex, CT, along with works by artists Jan Blencowe and Claudia Post and photographs by Lou Zucchi.   

I invite you to come for all of the activities that are planned.

Friday, March 9, 2012

"Day's End" was juried into the 68th Annual Connecticut Artists' Exhibition....

.... at the Slater Museum in Norwich, Connecticut.  I am so honored to be included in this amazing exhibition of drawings, mixed media, sculpture, graphics, and photography--which continues until March 30.
"Day's End," 24x12" acrylic on canvas, copyright Joan Cole



Of the exhibition, Jeff Andersen, the Director of the Florence Griswold Museum, Old Lyme, CT, wrote:
"From the 18th century onward, Connecticut has a long and illustrious history as a place for artists to live and work.  Artists of the past found inspiration in the state's natural beauty, its towns and cities, and its people from many backgrounds.  This is abundantly evident in the permanent collection galleries of the Slater Museum.  The Connecticut Artists Exhibition ,,, demonstrates how artists of today share some of these same interests, and move in exciting new directions.



My assignment as Juror was to select approximately 120 works out of the nearly 400 submitted.  I was pleased to see such diversity of approaches across all media.  In the end, I tried to reflect that diversity with a representative selection of works marked by creative expression and proficiencies of execution.  I also found works with a "spark" of originality that I hope you will enjoy as much as I did.  I was struck by how many works showed a profound concern for the future of our planet, our natural environment, and our wildlife.  This was a reminder that artists can serve as a kind of collective conscience for our society, tapping into and expressing visually what is on our minds today."


If you haven't yet seen this exciting exhibition, I invite you to make the trip to Norwich to do so.  The Slater Museum is on the grounds of Norwich Free Academy.  Additional information can be found at www.slatermuseum.org.