A Pattern Language by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Ellen Weider, Play Ball!

Curated by Shaunda Holloway & Debbie Hesse

Featured Artists:
Nan Adams
Cynthia Y. Cooper
Will Holub
Aileen Ishmael
Ellen Pankey
Jessica Smolinski
Ellen Weider

Curator’s Statement
This exhibition takes its title from the 1977 book by architect Christopher Alexander. The author popularized the term A Pattern Language- an organized and coherent set of patterns, each describing a problem and the foundation for a solution.  Intersecting patterns can express deeper wisdom and energy-- a sense of wholeness, elegance, spirit.

The seven artists in this exhibition explore how patterns can form a personal alphabet, communicating ideas about human behavior and highlighting ways that communities and environments interact.  Working both figuratively and abstractly, in diverse media, these six artists each incorporate a unique pattern language into their work. Drawing inspiration from personal, historical, and cultural iconography such as quilts and folk art traditions, travelogues, structural diagrams -- these artworks presented together generate a visual vibration and sense of unity.

Recent Works by Leigh Busby by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

"I was born in Trinidad & Tobago, a land located in the West Indies near Venezuela where almost everyone looked like myself — racism was not something I had to deal with, unlike my fellow black Americans. I came to America in 1972 and quickly had a rude awakening to racism as me and my brother went to a local grocery chain SUPER SAVERS. We were grabbed on the way out by the manager and the police were called because he claimed he saw us put several pieces of steak up under our raincoats. He claimed to have actually eye-witnessed this, but when cops came, we had absolutely nothing on us (nor did we ever have anything on us.)

There was our first introduction to what black Americans were speaking and protesting about, being mistreated and profiled while being constantly lied to by racist white Americans who hated them just because of their skin color. Man, this was painful. I began to experience this sort of racial attack on a regular basis - being stopped in stores, followed around malls, falsely detained by police saying I fit the description of an African American they are looking for — and of course, they are checking me out because I am black.

Pushing forward to now, as I am an artist/photographer with a voice to express my pain, a pain most African Americans feel deep inside but thank God, I have this creative outlet to express my feelings to show the world. Politics is secondary to me, as I want to give voice to the inner person to be heard. I hope my work here inspires you to pick up a camera or some form of creative expression and share it with those around you."

ABOUT

Leigh Busby is a photographer and artist from Trinidad & Tobago, now a resident of New Haven for the last five years. Busby has been a prolific photographer throughout his time in New Haven, largely zeroing in on documentation of sociopolitical issues and protests in the name of the Black Lives Matter movement.

@busbyleigh

Shaunda Holloway by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Shaunda Holloway, Keep Your Eyes Open

I am here, here I am, and I have been here….

Shaunda Holloway’s own words best summarize the essence of both her work and life; the New Haven artist’s mixed-media prints and collages depict the artist’s passion for and use of material process as a vehicle for exploration of emotional states alongside personal and cultural identity.  Block and screen prints on wood, linen, and found objects are combined with paint resulting in rich, immediate, and raw imagery that reflect on concepts of presence and representation -- as the artist herself states, “I am here, here I am, and I have been here.” Words are integral to Holloway’s overall creative practice, whether combined in her visual artwork or as part of her poetry or spoken word -- all providing fertile poetic ground for the artist to tell her own story.

ABOUT

Shaunda Holloway is painter/printmaker and writer born in New Haven, CT. Her writing has been published in ESSENCE magazine, CT Post, Inner City, Stand Our Ground Poems for Trayvon Martin and Marissa Alexander and other publications. Her paintings and prints have been exhibited throughout the east coast, and as far as New Delhi, India.

STATEMENT

“It’s a privilege to be an artist and a great responsibility.  The materials dictate the outcome for me. Working with tactile items like wood, bogolanfini (mudcloth), linen, and other fabrics gives a unique texture and character to my prints.

As a painter wood is much more satisfying to paint on. Sometimes the grain comes through in the piece which provides excitement.   With printmaker, textiles offer tremendous possibilities—every fabric has its own story to tell.

Using both acrylic and oil paints and printing ink, it is my effort to express the things many wish to say: I am here, here I am, and I have been here.”

www.shaundaholloway.com

@brighteyesholloway

Ordinary Life in Unusual Times by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Matilda Forsberg, Feeding rite

Featured Artists:
Robin V. Adsit
Peggy Bloomer
Jessica Cuni
Matilda Forsberg
Dana Kotler
Kathleen Melian
Mary Tooley Parker
Lisa DeLoria Weinblatt

Curator’s Statement

In these trying times, one of the kindest gestures we can do for one another is to be there in spirit for our neighbors. It seems small, but its implications are ginormous. Humans need social interaction and need to know other people are there. We have seen a spike of mental health concerns and issues sweep across the globe due to feelings of anxiety, loneliness, and hopelessness. People are unable to get the kinesthetic interactions they need so, overcompensating virtual for tangible ones is one way to help. Any interactions we are given have so much more gravity to them, and being able to be close to a person is much deeper than just being a foot next to them. These pieces remind us of family, of being around others, and what those interactions mean. These representations of day-to-day “normal” life remind us of our connectedness in a time of social isolation, confusion and uncertainty.

About the curator:  Amina Khokhar is an Albertus Magnus student majoring in Art Management.  She organized this thematic exhibition for an assignment as part of her Art Space Management class this semester. Artists included were selected from Ely Center of Contemporary Art Open Call 2020.

Margaret Roleke: Fired by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

No NRA, 2018, silkscreen edition of 20, 15” x 22”

Curated by Maxim Schmidt with Nicole Hooks

Curator’s Statement

Fired highlights the work of Margaret Roleke, whose art voice challenges the relationships that develop between pop culture and policy in reference to gun control. Roleke confronts the political institutions and administrations that play crucial roles in ongoing gun discourse while expertly incorporating instantly-recognizable characters into her multimedia prints; Mickey Mouse gives his classic grin next to a plethora of handguns, and Rajah — a tiger also of Disney fame — smiles sheepishly alongside shooting targets. Donald Trump and the NRA are consistent motifs throughout the works, additionally encouraging critique about sources of gun control failure.

10 limited edition silkscreen prints titled No NRA signed by the artist. Edition printed by the artist at Center for Contemporary Printmaking

The proceeds of the prints will benefit ECOCA and Connecticut Against Gun Violence (CAGV) whose mission is to reduce gun violence in CT.

About

Margaret Roleke is a prolific Connecticut artist, largely centering around themes of gun control across her last few years of work. Roleke was recently awarded the Connecticut Artist Fellowship Award for 2020, and her work has been exhibited across several states nationally as internationally in Venice, Italy.

Statement

Roleke’s work explores sensationalism, consumerism, and the wild contradictions and relationships that develop when popular culture mixes with war and religion.
Numerous small toys are utilized in the conversation, which allows these serious issues of consumption, consumerism, war, violence, and extremism to be presented in perhaps a more playful manner. Actual bullet casings and brass transform to form jewel-like abstractions. Multitudes of toys are painted in a monochromatic palette, which in turn allows them to be visually read like a minimalist painting.
For the last several years Margaret Roleke has been dedicated to gun control, donating a percentage of her sales to this cause while creating works that bring this issue to greater attention. The current political climate and Trump presidency has further expanded her role as an activist artist.

margaretroleke.com

instagram.com/margaretroleke/

Lines of Site by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Christina Graham
Diamond Door (Waves)

Curator’s Statement by Jeanne Ciravolo & Valerie Garlick

With artists culled from our 2020 Open Call, Lines of Site coheres around individual experiences of perception grounded in the everyday. The selected artists offer a whimsical vision that speaks of domestic life through abstraction and representation. In these works questions are posed regarding scale, solidity, flatness and the central role of color in expressing visibility. The answers are delightful in their inventiveness and charm.

Featured Artists:

Yura Adams
Peggy Bekeny
James Erikson
Grace Hager
Christina Graham
Melissa Haviland
Nina Jorda
Peter Joslin
Deborah Morris
Melissa Murray
Ellie Spangler
Claire Stankus

to (be)scare by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Curator’s Statement by Maxim Schmidt

To “bescare” or to fill with fright — a theme that definitively governs monster lore. Across time, monsters have been conjured to convey fear and terror; from these traditions, such characters have become motifs for otherness and the demonization of those who stray from prevailing norms of white heteronormativity. to (be)scare features the works of Amira Brown, Julian Miholics, and Yovska - three artists that use the monster motif through varying perspectives to reflect on their own sense of otherness or being. Each offer insights into a deeper connection to the misunderstanding of monsters, modern and antiquated, and asks the larger question: what is the connection between difference and constructed terror?

Amira Brown reconceptualizes harpies from their historical depictions - monsters often displayed as vicious birds of prey with a woman’s facade - into characters of boisterous, child-like play. Her harpies are no longer monsters of perceived threat, but children of difference who both tuck this difference into secrecy while celebrating it in spaces of comfort or safety. The two characters emergent in this work - Kiki and Lala - serve as stand-ins for greater exploration of stereotypes of black youth and the evolution of such stereotyping through growth into adulthood. 

Julian Miholics explores many fantastic creatures within his multidisciplinary approach to art-making, but werewolves serve as a hallmark motif to his explorations of LGBTQ identity, namely transgender experience and gender non-conformity. The transformative quality of werewolf shapeshifting aligns with the inherent transformative conventions of queerness - the concept of transitioning, gender affirmation, and the overall phenomenon shedding one social “skin” for another. Miholics’ werewolves are creatures of joy, love, and queer celebration - perhaps a testament to the thriving of LGBTQ individuals in spite of an unforgiving, cisheteronormative society. 

Yovska’s drag, at first glance, clearly turns conventional understandings of what drag artists can or “should” look like; Yovska explores drag through a lens of costumery and character development that amplifies the significance of monsters and aliens. Yovska’s reverence of these creatures in their work parallels their exploration of their own queerness and immigrant identity, undoubtedly creating a celebratory outlet for such investigations. With use of bright palettes and stellar silhouettes, Yovska is able to cull from their fascination with the paranormal and strange to create entities that relay larger themes of identity and sense of self.

As a curator and artist who has been largely touched by the monster metaphor in reference to my own queerness, these three artists resonate on the front of breaking down our conceptualization of “monsters” and the perceived “deviance” of difference alike. We — individuals that have been othered in any capacity — feel touched by creatures that have been outcast and dismantled through history in the way we have, in whatever oppressive forces and stereotyping we may personally and collectively face. We are drawn to the themes of transformation, oddness, and power that prevail through goblins and ghouls, harpies and werewolves. We share the same sense of endless, controlled history that these mythologies hold, and thus learn how to hold closer our differences in hope of being able to author our stories ourselves. We understand monsters, and feel that in turn they perhaps understand us.


Amira Brown: Artist Statement

Kiki and Lala originally started off as a project for somebody else but morphed into something larger as I began to delve deeper into the project. I wanted to focus on contemporizing harpies but over time I started creating a more in depth, nuanced look at them through my blackness. By using the stereotypes of Harpies which also coincide with stereotypes about black women and girls, I can unravel them through the complexity of my life experience. Kiki and Lala was based upon my view of my twin and I as children. They’re all the things you hear about all kids, but are still portrayed as children instead of nuisances and trouble-makers. 

About

Amira Brown is an interdisciplinary artist, who creates work about the nuances and subtleties of reality and life through the black, intersectional femme lens. Through working on an subconscious and instinctual level, they allow imagery, history and memory to bubble to the surface through various executions.


Julian Miholics: Artist Statement

I choose to explore creating figures of those human, creature, and animal, all an lgbt+ being.
I feel a closeness to beasts, as they are so often depicted as monsters, the way we trans, non binary, and other lgbt+ people are seen in the eyes of some. They are also an expression of a transition into a happier, divine being.
My relation to werewolves is strong, they are often shunned by community like those of us with an lgbt+ identity, seen as bad or sinful. Like us they come together in a pack, a group of those feared, but always cared for and deeply loved by one another.
The parallels of identity have struck a cord with me before I came out as transmasc and gay to become only amplified after so.
These creatures of change and family will always hold a close place in my heart.

About

Julian Francis Miholics is an illustrator and ceramicist born, raised, and working in London, Ontario.

His work presents biology and naturalism melding and interacting with lgbt+ identities, creating a sense of longstanding community, continuing to illustrate our relation to lycanthropy. 
His work encompasses ceramics, illustration, painting, and bone carving.

Bright and earthy colors give off a warm and comfort juxtaposed by alive, rollicking linework.

Raw, animalistic, and human identities merge in his work to create an depiction of an intimate, tender human experience.  .


Yovska: Artist Statement

As a drag creature, my work is focused on expressing my queerness, and gender through the process of transforming myself into various non-human entities. This transformation or characterization however is not all that different from what might be deemed traditional drag. Through the process of self-made costumes, the application of makeup, performance, and various accessories I become a monstrous entity in contrast to my usual human appearance. The monsters and creatures I simulate represent my identity through the journey of growing up as queer and as an immigrant. They reflect the various levels of prejudice and demonization of the queer and immigrant identity by taking the literal form of words use to describe them such as “alien” or “demonic”. The creation of my work serves as a way for me to seek empowerment through the negative experiences I encountered growing up, and an affirmation of perseverance. I hope that through my work, others too can find empowerment in their own experiences.

About

Yovska is a Toronto based designer and drag performance artist. Originally from Mexico, he immigrated to Canada at the age of seven. He categorizes himself as a “drag creature” dressing up as different paranormal entities in original costumes with a dash of fashion. Yovska relates the themes of the paranormal and fantasy to his experiences growing up as queer and immigrant in Canada, queer identities are often demonized and immigrants called “aliens.” By reclaiming the form of monsters and aliens, Yovska is able to turn negative prejudices into empowering alter egos. Yovska’s design process is informed from his experiences participating in Toronto’s Kiki Ballroom alliance where he was recently granted Legend status. Yovska was most recently featured on Boulet Brother’s Dragula — an internationally known drag competition television show.

Ashley Pelletier: Dissembling the Self by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Curator’s Statement by Maxim Schmidt

Ashley Pelletier’s self-portaiture is rich in both emotion and texture, linking her thematic intentions to her process. Thick application of oil gives way to gestural strokes that construct her figurative form, avoiding representation that is rooted in realism. Pelletier’s representation of the self evokes a visceral sense of vulnerability, with concrete facial features replaced by expressionistic implications of perhaps a greater restlessness. Pelletier externalizes her internal being onto the external body, thus rendering the physical form in reference to this internal self. Though Pelletier is working in self-portraiture, her work thematically speaks to a greater humanity and its internalized complications - phenomenons of discontentment we all experience.

Artist Statement

"Our ability to perceive ourselves does not come as naturally as our ability to perceive the outside world. And this dissonance often leads to inner turmoil. In order to bridge this gap, I work in self-portraiture.

Working with my self-portrait allows me to practice introspection and examine my mental and emotional state. I work intuitively and allow my energy, mood, and emotions to unleash themselves onto the canvas. These paintings reveal feelings about myself and my body—allowing the viewer to connect with my innermost vulnerabilities. Although these works are self-portraits, I believe they speak profoundly to the human condition.

Working from a mirror, I make small oil paintings using myself as the subject. Although my practice is rooted in observation, my self-portraits are expressive and abstract. I build a rich surface through several layers of scraping and manipulating. These expressive marks represent a genuine and immediate reaction to my subject matter. I also hang varied colored fabrics behind me. I choose fabric colors that are found in the natural world. I use this as the basis, but accentuate the colors to create a somber mood.

By creating a somber atmosphere, it is my hope that the viewer connects with my personal belief that life is a struggle. And it is in this state of perpetual struggle that we come to truly know ourselves. “

About

 Ashley Pelletier is a Providence based oil painter whose abstracted self-portraits represent the pursuit of self-discovery. In each portrait she embeds layers of meaning that consider her feelings about herself and about her place as a woman in a larger social context. Through self-portraiture, she exposes herself literally and figuratively, and allows the viewer to feel her innermost vulnerabilities.

 Recently Ashley has moved away from representational methods of working to a more expressive approach. While working from direct observation, the bold marks in her recent paintings represent a genuine, immediate reaction to her subject matter. She is able to more effectively translate her emotions into paint. From a psychological perspective, one may say that the expressive marks embody her search for identity and a desire to grasp at something that is unknown.

 Ashley holds a BFA in painting from Rhode Island College and is a current employee of the Rhode Island School of Design. 

ashleypelletier.com

saatchiart.com/ashleypelletier

@anpelletier21 on Instagram

Brooks Dierdorff: Ballistics & Blind Sight by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Mirror Blind, Acrylic mirror, plywood, 48” x 48” x 48”, 2013

Curator’s Statement by Maxim Schmidt

Brooks Dierdorff’s work highlights the complex, contradictory, and sometimes haunting facets of hunting and the wide variety of cultural practices from which it is constructed. Dierdorff does not shy away from examining both the distances between man and nature and the way the two fold into one another. Images of hoisted leopards and coyotes, lifelessly still objects, are juxtaposed against the performative deflating of a deer bust balloon, both lending attention the objectification of animal bodies, namely in trophy culture. Animal bodies become props, and thus metaphors for both the extinguishing of life as well as highlighting a sense of superiority and dominance put forth by hunters - as well as mankind collectiely. Dierdorff further expands on conflicts of perspective and reality in incorporating images of animal furs and bodies in installations loosely reconstructing the visual spectrum of the species hunted, or wedging such prints alongside the weaponry of arrows or bullets. Brooks Dierdorff expertly explores the shifting, intricate relationship between man and nature, while brilliantly incorporating the slippage between these two seemingly-opposed worlds.

About

Brooks Dierdorff is an artist exploring the ways that photography shapes our ideas of nature, climate disasters, and environmental collapse. His work includes a range of methodologies like photo-based sculptures and installations, video, appropriating images from commercial and archival sources, and environmental grief therapy among others. This expanded photographic practice often explores new ways of seeing - staging encounters with photographs that push against the interpretation of a photograph as an objective document to be passively received, offering instead a sensorial and emotive relationship with photographs. 

He has exhibited his work both nationally and internationally at galleries that include Amos Eno in Brooklyn, New York; The Los Angeles Center for Digital Art; The Photographic Center Northwest in Seattle; High Desert Test Sites in Joshua Tree, California; The Orlando Museum of Art; The Midwest Center for Photography in Wichita, Kansas; Johalla Projects in Chicago; the Ulrike Hamm Gallery in Bissendorf, Germany; the Czong Institute for Contemporary Art in South Korea; and The New Gallery in Calgary, Canada. 

Dierdorff received his BA from the University of California, San Diego in 2007 and his MFA from the University of Oregon in 2012. Currently he is an Assistant Professor of Photography at the University of Central Florida in Orlando, Florida. 

Statement 

Hunting can be seen as both the epitome of our oppositional relationship with nature, as well as our communion with it. As a set of cultural practices, it is diverse and often contradictory; some hunters only kill animals that they eat and see it as preferable to industrial farming; others imitating its sounds, smells, or optical processes. In the series Line of Sight, I examine these contradictory encounters between man and the natural world through photography, sculpture, video, and installation. The specific practices through which hunters engage with nature serves as points of departure for considering how humans mediate and construct the natural world. For example, the piece Blind mediate the photographic image through florescent lights - a futile attempt to replicate the visual spectrum of deer. In other works including Remnant, Organizational Principles and Late Season Tactics, photographs of animal furs - fixed to the wall by arrows, suspended between blocks of ballistics gel, or positioned on the floor behind glass - evoke fragments of animal bodies while the viewer’s own body is activated as they examine the image from multiple physical positions. In forging a link between hunting, embodiment, and vision, I seek to foreground the conventions through while nature is framed as well as the slips that exist between perception and reality.

The series Trophy deconstructs the prevailing visual codes within hunting culture by manipulating trophy photographs found online. Erasing the hunter from the image reveals the conventions through which animals are objectified, and heightens the visual rhetoric through which humans attempt to dominate the natural world.

brooksdierdorff.com

Tony Saunders: Elucidating by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Tony Saunders
Legend
Acrylic and collage on board
2018

Curator’s Statement by Maxim Schmidt


Tony Saunder’s work speaks to the art of perception; how do we attach meaning to what is abstracted? With Saunders work, we have to ask, “What will this be? What will I make it be?” He explores a realm in which "meaning is suggested but never explicit,” offering the viewer loose yet suggestive forms to construct into figures, landscapes, even entire realities of their own.

About

Tony Saunders has his painting and music studio in Brooklyn, NY. He is a graduate of Princeton University and the Silberman School of Social Work at Hunter College. Collage has long been the focus and method in his work, both visual and musical, which explores the ways in which we construct meaning and narrative in our daily lives. In 2005, he began to do creative arts engagement with elders living with memory loss, which led to his present career as a care manager and arts advocate. In both his own work, and that which he does with elders, the importance of “play” and living in the present moment are paramount.

Statement

Painting presents a visual stimulus from which the viewer tries to “make sense,” looking for significance in patterns and trying to find a story even in the most abstract, or seemingly random, elements. My work is in the tradition of landscape painting, Japanese woodblock prints, 20-century abstraction, and street art, and aims to elicit the viewer’s tendency to derive narrative from painterly elements. Meaning is suggested but never explicit: the story takes place inside the viewer’s imagination, constructed when the materials at hand trigger the creative act of memory.

tonysaundersart.net

Mandy Beatrice: Brio by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Curator’s Statement by Maxim Schmidt

Mandy Beatrice’s work encompasses a specific type of mania forged from the mundane; her explosive palette and dedication to abstraction turn everyday shapes and objects into a fantastic whirlwind of color and pattern. “brio” is defined by Merriam-Webster as “enthusiastic vigor” - an energy Beatrice unapologetically adopts into her work.

About Mandy Beatrice

Mandy Beatrice was born and raised in Naugatuck, CT, but relocated to Chicago, IL in the spring of 2018. A self-taught artist, Beatrice has immersed herself in both oil and acrylic painting over the last three years.

instagram.com/indiedreamboat

Emotional Environments by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

An exhibition of works by Sonia Bombart & Heide Follin

Curated by Maxim Schmidt

The works of Heide Follin and Sonia Bombart seem to seamlessly communicate with one another; both carry deeper vitality and vigor within their abstractions. Showcasing the skilled experimentation with varied mark-making and brilliant-saturated palettes, Emotional Environments displays Follin and Bombart’s work as exemplary examples of the synthesis of energy, mood, and atmosphere.


Artist’s Statement: Sonia Bombart

My canvases reflect an enlightened upbringing. I was raised in a culturally rich, sophisticated family in Mexico City. I bring an inventive flair based on a blend of an extensive participation in dance, voice, theater, multi-media production, and music. I studied computer animation at the Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale combined with numerous formal classes in visual arts at the Center of Contemporary Printmaking in Norwalk, CT and the Silvermine Art Guild in New Canaan.

I begin by applying a thin base of spray paint followed by a variety of strokes and gestures, with thin and thick brushes, various palette knives, sticks, and even her fingers to make a spontaneous mark. I use various mediums and tools such as acrylics, acrylic fluids, inks, gouaches, sprays, gels, water, and most recently exploring with stone clay to make what she calls sculptural paintings. Music is a heavy influence for my work, as it is used to set the mood. Palette choice is essential as it works in unison with the music that I listen to. My work process is never the same, varying as I create different moods and outcomes. I continuously push myself to edit and re-edit the pieces, creating organized and playful chaos.

A dance of color and motion.

Website: soniabombart.com
Instagram: @soniabombart


Artist’s Statement: Heide Follin

Inspired by nature, I weave together my work with lyricism and abstraction. Color and actions describing natural phenomenon are put down as just paint and somehow something magical happens among the mark making and layering. As I embrace the unexpected — lines, x forms, curves and triangles found in the environment coalesce as a life force in my work.

Close ups of botanical specimens as well as expansive landscape engage me, including subject matter as diverse as Himalayan prayer flags and Connecticut gardens. Playing with viscosity, flat areas contrasting shiny, vibrant color singing against adjacent hues, textures and meandering lines, I uncover patterns and detail, transforming it into something else.

Among the artists that make me look and look again are Dana Schutz, Carrie Moyer, Neal Welliver and Lois Dodd.

I listen to my emotions where color is concerned.

There is joy in vibrant clean colors put down in an inventive way.

A variety of mark making is essential.


Website: heidefollin.com
Instagram: @heidefollin

Matt Seremet by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

About the artist

Matthew Seremet has been interested in the arts since his childhood. His first efforts were focused on drawing the Disney character Pluto. He evolved to Garfield and then finally Dragonball Z. At the same time, Seremet was becoming in-tune with the basic usage of computers. Browsing the internet at a speedy 56K, he created a personal archive of his favorite Dragon Ball Z GIFs.

Early next year in middle school Seremet began focusing on creating his own animated gifs, and cursors. Having found a patron to his animated Buddy Icons for the then-popular AIM, Seremet became one of the first people in his peer group to become an entrepreneur. His work was outsourced from a company in India, and not vica-versa.

During the time that Seremet was creating these animated GIFs, he was also learning the basics of HTML, CSS, and PHP. He created his first Content Management System at age 13 and proceeded to garner tens of thousands of visitors to his Photoshop tutorials.

In the years since, Seremet has taken a strong focus on Fine Art and Graphic (Communication) Design. He graduated with an Associates of Science in Graphic Design as well as an Associates of Arts in Visual Fine Arts from Manchester Community College, in Connecticut.

Seremet enjoys both flavors of skateboarding-from long to short boards, making time lapse videos, participating in non-profit or civic works, and frying up chicken he batters by hand.

See more of Matt's work here:
Website: matthewseremet.com/portfolio
Instagram: @eatpoopart

Matt is the founder of ArtSho.ws :
This is a project with ambition. We ultimately want to connect artists with audiences and everything in between. There is a plethora of artists and art lovers in this world — something for everyone.

Past shows at ECOCA have been documented for free through ArtSho.ws  such as In Grace We Trust, March of 2016.

Loren Britton by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Loren Britton is an artist and curator based in between New York, NY, USA and Berlin, Germany. Britton’s studio work explores the transformation of form via linguistic devices. Britton’s work is in relationship to the non-binary body and seeks to reimagine the utopian possibilities of language. 

Britton is an active member of the curatorial collective Queering Space. And was the cofounder of Improvised Showboat with Zachary Keeting which ran from 2014-2015, and lcqueryprojects with Christie DeNizio that shape shifts from project to project. 

Britton has exhibited in solo and group exhibitions at Boston University, Boston, MA, USA; Scott Charmin Gallery, Houston, TX, USA; LTD Gallery, Los Angeles, CA, USA; Vanity Projects, Miami, FL, USA; Field Projects, New York, NY, USA; Knockdown Center, Queens, NY, USA; Pelham Arts Center, Pelham, NY, USA; Schwules Museum, Berlin, Germany; and Siena Arts Institute, Siena, Italy and numerous other arts institutions and projects. Britton has participated in residency programs at Eastside International, Los Angeles, USA and Studio Kura, Fukuoka, Japan and at Das Spectrum, Utrecht, the Netherlands. Britton holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Painting & Bachelor of Arts in Art History from State University of New York at Purchase College, USA and an MFA in Painting & Printmaking from the Yale School of Art at Yale University, USA. 

http://lorenbritton.com/

Loren Frank by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Loren Frank is an artist exploring nature, the landscape and connection to environment. Her paintings represent the physical world in its ephemeral, messy and magical existence. She works in mixed media with organic materials such as sand, leaves and flower pigments, these collections of organic sediment and material become meditations for connecting to the mysteries and mutability of nature. By working through layers and in cycles they become ritual. She is inspired by ancient myths, natural systems, land art and the essential connection of all living things. She is connected and inspired by the flow of time, ancient memories, natural elements and humans connection to all living beings. 

Everything comes from Earth, from birth unto death..

From death and decay grows new life, and on and on,

Sacred Circles have no end and no beginning

Existing always.

Loren Frank received her Post- Baccalaureate Certificate at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago for Painting and Drawing in 2015 and her BFA from Southern Connecticut State University in 2013. Loren volunteered for ECOCA from March - April 2018. She is now interning at a spiritual farm in Vermont. 

http://lorenfrank.wixsite.com/lorenfrank

Strand by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Kate Kretz, Sauvage, 2013

Curated by Megan Shaughnessy

Featured Artists
Kevin Van Aelst
D. Douglas
Kaitlin Fung
Shorty Greene
Paul Holmes
Kate Kretz
Rosemary Meza-DesPlas
Jody MacDonald
Caitlin Miller
Liz Miller
Jean Scott
Yvonne Shortt
Amarilis Singh
Jay Sullivan
Sam Sundius
Jody Wood

Curator’s Statement
STRAND is a celebration of the power and significance of all hair including facial, crown, and body hair. The artists showcased in this exhibition highlight the connection hair has to personal, gender, culture, social, and racial identities. Through painting, photographs, sewn images, sculpture, mixed media, video, and spoken word you will see how hair not only has the ability to inspire, empowering self-expression, but it can also create heartache and pain, force unnecessary gender stereotypes, and symbolize the passing of time, illness, and even death.

HOME. by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

A Selection of Works from Four Members of House of Interpretation

Featured Artists: Mandy Beatrice, James Cofrancesco, Tyler Cofrancesco, Kevin Elevin

About House of Interpretation: House of Interpretation (HOI) is a place that reverberates with the raw power of do-it-yourself spaces — a collective forged from the need to recognize the strength of collaboration among emerging artists. Founded out of a warehouse in West Haven, CT by brothers James and Tyler Cofrancesco, the space currently known as HOI serves a number of functions — a performance venue, a maker-space, and a gallery, to name a few — all in pursuit of encouragement for all art forms. The collective consists of over a dozen artists, as well as a host of transient creators who are invited into the space to work. HOI promotes recognition of art as a multidisciplinary concept, deeply interwoven with process, daily living, and community. The collective goes above and beyond in providing access to materials, critique, and collaboration while remaining an informal and relaxed atmosphere; it consistently feels like creation among friends — not a house, but a home. House of Interpretation has transformed into a collective venue that invites the overlooked and the emerging to work with like-minded individuals, reaching the goal of collaborative spirit that HOI was founded upon.

@houseofinterpretation@indiedreamboat@james_cofrancesco @tylercofrancesco@11zer0s

Magical Thinking by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Jon Duff, Verneshot (The Great Equalizer), 2019

Featured Artists:
Jon Duff
JuYeon Kim
Mara Trachtenberg
Catherine Vanaria
Richard Whitten

With featured artists selected from our 2020 Open Call, Magical Thinking spotlights artworks that skew the lines between reality and fantasy, raising questions about subjectivity and creation through images that display the limitlessness of imagination.

Cindy Tower: Covid-19 Hallucination Garden by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Cindy Tower’s Covid-19 Hallucination Garden pays homage to the role of signage in contemporary political critique, particularly honing in on criticism towards the current Trump administration and like-minded government officials. Tower’s Garden blooms with mixed-media sculptures that fearlessly condemn the actions of Trump and his assembly in response to the pandemic. The yard itself is a testament to the role of activism in every day life; the presence of Tower’s dogs and the lush San Antonio greenery alongside her current residence seamlessly coexist with the artworks, honing in on Tower’s understanding of activism and critique as a facet of ongoing, “normal” life.

Of the project, Tower states, “The main inspiration behind the Covid-19 Hallucination Garden was Chris Cuomo’s Covid hallucination of his brother — NY Governor Andrew Cuomo — dancing as a ballerina…so, of course, I had to make that! I consider the garden one piece of art, meant to be explored. Since the pandemic hit, as an artist, I now read more news, paint for my community with “oops paint” on recycled political signs anything they would like, build my yard out out of refuse, and continue to work on this victory garden.

Jeanne Ciravolo: New Work by Ely Center of Contemporary Art

Curator’s Statement by Nicole Hooks

Ciravolo’s mixed media paintings and collages focus on the human experience through various lenses, ranging widely from trauma to hope. The works shown in this exhibition explore narrative through a sense of movement and emotion.The figures move and twist, connecting and disconnecting each to the other.