
Opening Reception: Karen Dow
Please join us for the opening of new works on paper by CT based artist Karen Dow. “The Other Side of May” opens Saturday, September 9 from 3pm-5pm.
From the artist: “Printmaking has always been a balance between responding to the materials I am working with and the intuitive knowledge of how to build or compose inside a square or rectangle. I generally work back to front, building a surface until all the shapes and colors convey a sense of purpose and place. I add and edit, recognize relationships, build support for a shape that appears too heavy, while continually hoping to keep the work open and breathing. If the work appears too choked up or densely packed, I’ll apply another layer of ink to open things up again.
In the beginning, shapes and lines are stacked from the bottom edge of a plexiglass plate or relief print and are piled up and out to reach the other sides. I am intrigued by how a shape will appear attached to an edge and the rest of the world inside the space will feel hinged or balanced upon this one decision. The narrative in my head as I am working is about precariousness and strength, the tension building as I add more. I also think about community and the relative dependence of one thing on another. There is tenderness in a gesture from one shape to the next; they lean, support, bear weight, and combine to create a path through the field of color.
This way of working is rooted in a strong desire to relay my feelings as well as allowing space for an emotional response to color relationships and form. In my efforts to communicate without using words or images, I find enormous freedom within the strict parameters I have set for myself. These parameters are directly inspired from my experiences in the Albright-Knox Art Gallery as a child. I spent many hours alone in the contemporary art wing exploring the Color Field Paintings of Agnes Martin, Morris Louis, and Frank Stella. To my young eyes this was a spiritual awakening and I felt very much at home with these works. Every Sunday, I walked around in the mirror room, by Lucas Samaras, and stared into that deep repetitive space. I found it both beautifully organized and chaotic at the same time. I know as a visual thinker; my aesthetic choices are directly related to these experiences. I seek clarity in chaos and am driven by organizing principles and constructing relationships. It is within these parameters that I know I will continue to develop my intuitive response to the printmaking process and find deep satisfaction as an artist.
When choosing work for this show I became very excited about making connections between the different processes I have experimented with in printmaking. Woodcut, linocut, dry point etching and monoprints all in conversation together. I find great satisfaction in combining and layering these very different approaches to line and shape. I like to keep the work open and allow for a potential success when an image can be seen through another layer or when combined with another process. Seeing them all together in this space is truly gratifying.
Karen Dow was born in Buffalo, New York in 1966. She received a BA in Sculpture and Anthropology at Marlboro College in Vermont and later attended Brandies University in Massachusetts to study painting. In 1998, she graduated from the Yale School of Art with an MFA in painting and printmaking. While at Yale, Karen became very interested in Josef and Anni Albers and immediately began teaching Color and Design at Southern CT State University. This experience solidified her interest in this area and has remained a major influence in her painting and prints. Karen has exhibited her work in New England and Germany, most notably at Alpha Gallery in Boston, Bellwether gallery, the Armory Show, DC Moore in NY, and Giampietro Gallery in CT. She was the recipient of a Fine Arts Work Fellowship in Provincetown MA and a Joan Mitchell Career Enhancement Grant. She enjoys traveling and teaching and exhibits her work locally and internationally. Currently, she teaches Printmaking and 2D design and Color at The Educational Center for the Arts in New Haven and screen printing at Southern CT State University. Currently, she lives and has a studio in Hamden, Ct.
Jennifer Terzian Gallery
3BB South Street
Litchfield