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carol_summerCarol Summer, The-Grave-of-Santa-Ana's-Leg, woodcut, monotype, 1992

karen_kuncKaren-Kunc, Urban Order

hugo_anayaHugo Anay, Untitled (Detail-cup), monotype

Retablos

Residency artists, Retablos Guanajuato, hand-made book, woodcut and monotype on Japanese paper, 2010

 

 


Guanajuato:
Boston Printmakers collaborative workshop in Mexico

February 4 - March 26, 2011

Laconia Gallery
433 Harrison Avenue, Boston MA

Gallery Open:
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, 12-4 pm

First Friday, February 4, 5:30-8pm

Artists Reception: First Friday, March 4, 5:30-8pm

Participating Artists:
Hugo Anaya, Guanajuato, Mexico, Carole Bencich, Pittsburg, PA, Mary Birkmeier, North Lothrop, MI, Loretta Blanchard, Greenback, TN, Christiane Corcelle Lippeveld, Belmont, MA, Renee Covalucci, Concord, MA, Michael Crouse, Paducah, KY, Jim Hibbard, Guanajuato, Mexico, Karen Kunc, Avoca, NE, Joyce Macrorie, Las Cruces, NM, Liz Mapelli, Guanajuato, Mexico, Candy Nartonis, Boston, MA, Ky Ober, Arlington, MA, Debra Olin, Somerville, MA, Anna Marie Katherine Rado, Burton, MI, Carol Summers, Santa Cruz, CA, Kristen Struebing Beazley, Boston, MA, Lauren van Wyke, Lincoln, NE, April Vollmer, New York, NY.

Printmakers Residency leads to Mexican/American Exhibition

Laconia Gallery and the Boston Printmakers present Guanajuato 2010, an exhibition of woodblock prints and monoprints whose explosive color and exuberant life leap off the walls of the gallery. Along with a spectacular body of work by internationally known artists Carol Summers, Karen Kunc and Hugo Anaya, the show features books and individual prints by participants who joined them in an artists’ residency, Forum on Creativity, offered by The Boston Printmakers and organized by Renee Covalucci. This dynamic, collaborative residency took place in Guanajuato, Mexico in the highlands of the Sierra Madre Oriental in August of 2010.

Retablos, found in area churches and local art collections are the powerful central theme of all the work created during the workshop. Called "laminas" in Mexico, retablos are small oil paintings on tin, zinc, wood or copper that venerate Catholic saints and events or miracles. This folk art - colorful, spiritual, symbolic, and allegorical - is echoed in the work of Summers, Anaya and Kunc and in the retablos created during the residency. Here the work is a personal, celebratory visual record of our reactions to the music, art, history, people, and vibrancy of Guanajuato.

Carol Summers is widely known as one of America’s foremost printmakers. He is renowned for his vivid colors and his revolutionary woodblock techniques. Summers’ work is in the collections of The Art Institute of Chicago, Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Museum of Modern Art, and countless other museums worldwide. Hugo Anaya was born and raised in Guanajuato, GTO, Mexico. He studied in the US at the Portland Art Museum School and Portland State University. His work has been exhibited in Oregon art galleries, and in and at the Gene Byron Museum in Guanajuato. Hugo’s work is in public collections including the Gilkey Print Center in the Portland Art Museum, and in countless private collections. Karen Kunc is the Willa Cather Professor of Art at the University of Nebraska – Lincoln. The Museum of Modern Art, NY and The Machida City Museum of Graphic Arts, Tokyo, own her prints and artist books, as do countless other museums worldwide, while exhibitions of her work occur regularly around the globe.

See Forum on Creativity, Guanajuato, Mexico

CONTACT:
Candy Nartonis, Curator 617-851-8151 cd.nartonis@verizon.net
Ky Ober, Curator 781-316-2356 kyrober@earthlink.net

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