Sculptor

Beth Cavener – Sculptor

Made by co-founder and filmmaker

The sculptures Beth Cavener creates focus on human psychology, stripped of context and rationalization, and articulated through animal and human forms.

Cavener wants to pry at those uncomfortable, awkward edges between animal and human. Entangled in their own internal and external struggles, the figures express frustration for the human tendency towards cruelty and lack of understanding. Something conscious and knowing is captured in their gestures and expressions.

Beth Caveners work:

SPECIAL THANKS
Alessandro Gallo

SOUND DESIGN
Peter Stoel

MUSIC
Matthew Davies

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Adrian Arleo | Dog Days at Radius Gallery

Adrian Arleo | Dog Days

16 July – 4 September 2021

Radius Gallery is honored to present new works by masterful ceramics artist Adrian Arleo. Fusing and juxtaposing human, animal and natural imagery, Arleo explores the vital interconnections between the human and non-human realms. Her sculptures are alluring and enigmatic, thoughtfully conceived and brilliantly realized.

Artist Statement:

For 40 years, my sculpture has combined human, animal and natural imagery to create a kind of emotional and poetic power. Often there's suggestion of a vital interconnection between the human and non-human realms; the imagery arises from associations, concerns and obsessions that are at once intimate and universal. The work frequently references mythology and archetypes in addressing our vulnerability amid changing personal, environmental, and political realities. By focusing on older, more mysterious ways of seeing the world, edges of consciousness and deeper levels of awareness suggest themselves.

The majority of the pieces in this exhibition were created within the past two years. And while the new work is not about the pandemic per se, it clearly had an influence over my mindset. The small “Outcropping Figures,” for example, were created during the time we were all under stay-at-home orders. I wanted to suggest the precariousness and isolation of that period, and the experience of trying to patiently wait it out.

Another sculpture that touches on the isolation of that period is the onetitled “Internal.” The long bands of the figure’s hair encapsulate another human being. Because of the fetal position of the inner figure, one might initially assume it’s an infant, but it is instead another adult female. That figure is meant to suggest an interior world, its star-speckled surface alluding to a kind of vastness that can be found inside ourselves.

The title for this exhibition, “Dog Days,” has multiple references. July and August are commonly known as the dog days of summer. Historically the term came from the period following the heliacal rising (relating to or near the sun) of the star system Sirius, also known as the Dog Star, which Hellenistic astrology connected with heat, drought, sudden thunderstorms, lethargy, fever, mad dogs, and bad luck. Looking back, the past eighteen months really have been a kind of extended period of dog days. The pandemic certainly brought on lethargy, fever and terrible luck for some. It’s also been a time when we’ve relied deeply on the company of our animals, particularly dogs. This is a theme that’s touched on in a number of the sculptures in the exhibition. In “Apparition II,” for example, the figure seems to be conjuring a leaf-covered dog. That leafy surface extends from a series I did a few years ago based on Kuan Yin (Guanyin), the Buddhist bodhisattva of compassion. Adding that reference to the dog accentuates the comforting nature of its presence. The devotion and companionship of dogs can be one of most meaningful non-human relationships that a person might experience. These kinds of relationships nurture our appreciation of the value and importance of life beyond the human realm.

Artist Biography:

Adrian Arleo has spent the last 29 years living and working as a full time sculptor in Lolo, Montana, with her family and a menagerie of animals. She was born in NY and spent many years on both coasts before making Montana home. Adrian studied Art and Anthropology at Pitzer College and received her M.F.A. in ceramics from Rhode Island School of Design. She was an Artist in Residence at Oregon College of Art and Craft in 1986-87, at Sitka Center For Art and Ecology in 1987-88, and in 2012 was an invited artist for the Jordan Schnitzer Printmaking Residency, also at Sitka Center for Art and Ecology.

Adrian’s work is exhibited nationally and internationally, and is in numerous public, private and museum collections. She received awards from the Virginia A. Groot Foundation in 1991 and 1992, and in 1995 was awarded a Montana Arts Council Individual Fellowship. Her work has been widely published in books, magazines, and on the internet. Adrian is a frequent workshop instructor across the US and abroad, and enjoys teaching courses on figurative ceramic sculpture.

About the gallery:

Radius Gallery is a contemporary art gallery in downtown Missoula, Montana dedicated to showcasing the skills of contemporary artists as well as fostering an energetic forum for discussing art and its vitality in the world today.

Contact: Lisa Simon, owner
Hours: Tues-Fri 11-6;Sat 11-3
Gallery closed Sundays & Mondays

120 North Higgins
Missoula, MT 59801
Phone (406) 541-7070
Email info@radiusgallery.com
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Robert Winokur, Sculptor

From September 8, 2012 through December 30 2012, the James A. Michener Art Museum in Doylestown has an exhibition featuring 10 artists. It is called "Creative Hand, Discerning Heart: Story, Symbol, Self" and this film profiles the sculptor Robert Winokur.

Robert Winokur is an innovative sculptor whose medium is clay. For over 50 years he has been producing imaginative, thought provoking, and technically superb pieces of ceramic art.

SCULPTOR Clayton Bailey with a series of CERAMIC exploding bottles.

SCULPTOR Clayton Bailey with a series of CERAMIC exploding bottles.

Clayton, respected for his pioneering ceramic works, and beloved for his eccentric robots and metal figures, creates a World of Wonders that inspires generations of Bay Area artists.

A major influence on the Bay Area art scene since the 1960's, Bailey defines the Bay Area Funk movement; which champions personality and conceptual humor– the visible hand and visual wit of the artist.

Public Collections:

Addison Gallery of American Art- Andover, MA
American Craft Museum, New York City
Arizona State University Art Museum, Tempe, AZ
Asahi Shimbun, Tokyo, Japan
Bakken Museum and Library, Minneapolis, MN
Berry College, Mt. Berry, GA
Bank of America, Chicago, IL
Brooks Memorial Gallery, Memphis, TN
Burpee Museum, Rockford, IL
Carborundum Museum of American Ceramics, NY
Crocker Museum, Sacramento, CA
Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, DL
DeYoung Museum, San Francisco, CA
di Rosa Art Preserve. Napa, CA
Elvehjem Museum of Art ,University of Wisconsin,
Fresno Art Museum, Fresno, CA
Harrison Museum of Art, Logan, UT
Henry Art Gallery, University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Hokkoku Shinbun, Korinbo, Japan
Illinois State University, Normal, IL
Iowa State Art Association, Marshalltown, IA
Johnson Foundation, Racine, WI
Katzen Museum, American University, Washington, DC
Kohler Company, Kohler, WI
Karstadt, Munich, Germany
Metromedia Corp., Los Angeles, CA
Laguna Art Museum, Laguna Beach, CA
Leslie Ceramic Supply, Berkeley, CA
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA
MacKenzie Art Gallery, Regina, Saskatchewan
Microsoft Corp., Seattle, WN
Mills College, Oakland, CA
Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee, WI
Mint Museum of Craft and Design, Charlotte, NC
Museum of Contemporary Art, Honolulu, HI
Museum of Contemporary Crafts, New York, NY
Musee d' ethnographie, Neuchatel, Switzerland
Muskingum College, Muskingum, Ohio
Nickle Arts Museum, University of Calgary, Canada
Oakland Museum of California, Oakland, CA
Racine Museum of Fine Arts, Racine, WI
Redding Museum, Redding, CA
Renwick Gallery, Smithsonian Museum, Washington, DC
Rhinelander Chamber of Commerce, Rhinelander, WI
Richard Nelson Gallery, University of California, Davis, CA
Sacramento Light Rail, 16th Street Station (Pavement Tiles)
Sacramento State University, Sacramento, CA
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA
San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose, CA
Shasta College, Redding, CA
Stanford University, Green Library, Palo Alto, CA
Stanford University, Cantor Center for Visual Arts, CA
University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA
University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK
University of Utah Museum of Art
University of Washington, Seattle, WA
University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI