Monday, October 22, 2012

18/100 Southern Artists The if ART Contingency, October 28- November 17, 2012



18/100 Southern Artists
The if ART Contingency

October 28 - November 17, 2012

@ if ART Gallery
1223 Lincoln St. 
Columbia, SC

1 new book about Southern artists
100 artists in the book
18 of 100 artists from if ART Gallery

ARTISTS' RECEPTION & BOOK SIGNING
Sunday, October 28, 2 - 4 pm

To view works of art available at if ART Gallery featured in 100 Southern Artists CLICK HERE

For more information, contact Wim Roefs at if ART Gallery
(803) 238-2351/ wroefs@sc.rr.com

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Dorothy Netherland in "Fantastic Reality" @ Gallery 80808/Vista Studios

FANTASTIC REALITY

Introducing:
 Diane Kilgore-Condon & Bob Trotman

Featuring: Jeff Donovan, Janet Orselli, Peter Lenzo, Philip Morsberger, Dorothy Netherland, David Yaghjian, Kees Salentijn & Marcelo Novo.


August 24 – September 4, 2012, 
@Gallery 80808/Vista Studios, 808 Lady St., Columbia, SC
Artists' Reception: Friday, Aug. 24, 5 – 9 pm
Gallery Talk Diane Kilgore-Condon: Sat. Aug. 25, 2 pm.
Artist Salon Series Talk Bob Trotman @ Columbia Museum of Art: Friday, August 31, noon.

For installation images CLICK HERE
Violent Femme V, 2012, acrylic ink, watercolor
ink, watercolor, acrylic, oil, and photo transfer
on glass and dura-lar, 16 x 12 in., $550
Violent Femme IV, 2012, acrylic ink, watercolor
ink, watercolor, acrylic, oil and photo transfer
on glass and dura-lar, 16 x 12 in., $550

Violent Femme III, 2012, acrylic ink, watercolor
ink, watercolor, acrylic, oil and photo transfer on
glass and dura-lar, 16 x 12 in., $550

Violent Femme II, 2012, acrylic ink, watercolor
ink, watercolor, acrylic, oil and photo transfer 
on glass and dura-lar, 16 x 12 in., $550

Violent Femme I, 2012, acrylic ink, watercolor
ink, watercolor, acrylic, oil and photo transfer on 
glass and dura-lar, 16 x 12 in., $550


They Did 1, 2012, ink, acrylic, screenprint, ink transfer
glass etching, on three panes of glass, 17 x 21 in., $850

They Did 2, 2012, ink, acrylic, screenprint, ink transfer
glass etching, on three panes of glass, 17 x 21 in., $850


Bad  Behavior, 2012, ink, acrylic, screenprint, ink transfer
sharpie, paint pens on three panes of glass, 22 x 22 in.
$1,100

Cry Baby, 2012, ink, acrylic, screenprint, ink transfer, sharpie
paint pen on three panes of glass, 22 x 22 in., $1,100

Goes Without Saying, 2012, ink, acrylic, screenprint,
ink transfer, sharpie, paint pen on three panes of glass
22 x 22 in., $1,100

Good Imitation, 2012, ink, acrylic, screenprint
 ink transfer, sharpie, paint pen, glass etching
 on three panes of glass, 22 x 22 in., $1,100

It Wouldn't Kill You, 2012, ink, acrylic, screenprint
ink transfer, sharpie, paint pen on three panes of glass
22 x 22 in., $1,100

Musical Chairs, 2012, ink, acrylic, screenprint, ink transfer
 sharpie, paint pen on three panes of glass, 22 x 22 in., $1,100

Devotion, 2012, ink, acrylic, screenprint, ink transfer, glass etching
 on three panes of glass, 17 x 21 in., $850

In the Moment, 2012, ink, acrylic, screenprint, ink transfer, glass etching
 on three panes of glass, 17 x 21 in., $850

Look at Me, 2012, ink, acrylic, screenprint, ink transfer, glass etching
 on three panes of glass, 17 x 21 in., $850

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

DOROTHY NETHERLAND: D DAYS, Sept. 24 – Sept. 5, 2010

if ART Gallery presents at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios, Columbia, SC:
DOROTHY NETHERLAND: D DAYS
Sept. 24 – Oct. 5, 2010
Artists' Reception: Fri., Sept. 24, 5 – 9 pm.

For a PREVIEW of works by Dorothy NetherlandCLICK HERE.


Dorothy Netherland, D Days
@ Gallery 80808/Vista Studios, Columbia, SC
Sept. 24 – Oct. 5, 2010


Opening on September 24, if ART Gallery presents at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios in Columbia, SC, two simultaneous solo exhibitions by Deanna Leamon and Dorothy Netherland, respectively called Heads and D Days. The exhibition will run through October 5. The artists’ reception is September 24, 2010, 5 – 9 pm.
            Dorothy Netherland (b. 1962) will present a new body of work using her unique technique of painting, silk screening and transferring ink onto the back of glass. From memory and personal history, Netherland creates narrative, often symbolic tableaus using imagery mainly drawn from 1950s women’s magazines. Most of Netherland’s paintings consist of two or three panes of glass on top of each other, each layer “carrying” part of  the image. The approach provides literal and conceptual depth.
            Netherland, a native of Alexandria, Va., began studying art in her thirties. In 2000 she received a BFA from the College of Charleston in Charleston, SC, where she lives. Netherland’s work was included in the 2004 S.C. Triennial at the S.C. State Museum in Columbia. She also was included in the 2004 Piccolo Spoleto Festival Contemporary Charleston exhibition at the City Gallery at Waterfront Park.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Velveteen: Artist's Statement by Dorothy Netherland


Dorothy Netherland: Statement for Velveteen, Oct. 2012

For the last ten years I've been making paintings on layered panes of glass, using images from  vintage and contemporary women's magazines as source material. While my work has always expressed my anxieties, the earlier work focused on themes of transience and the unreliability of memory, and the idea that our current sense of self is informed by our often inaccurate interpretations of our personal histories.
My current work explores these ideas from the context of being the mother of a 10-year-old daughter. It often feels as though her childhood is rapidly flying by, and eventually she will come to her own conclusions about whether or not she was provided with a strong enough foundation to negotiate the confusing world around her, a world where increasing emphasis is placed on the surface.  What she has learned about herself so far will influence how she responds to the big choices ahead.  My past is being imposed on her, just as the strengths, shortcomings and limitations of my own parents profoundly affected my life.
I am exploring the constructed nature of self, and wondering where the need for outer perfection originates . I am intrigued by the juxtaposition of the real and the fake. Young women today often give the impression of possessing almost boundless power. I'm fascinated by the idea of Girl Power, and how that relates to artifice and sexuality. Are young women really more empowered now? Is it possible to embrace youth, beauty and sexuality in a healthy, meaningful way which goes beyond the superficial? Is there room for real individuality? Is our obsession with idealized beauty expanding into the realm of the absurd, and are we becoming more and more narcissistic in general?  Whose notions of femininity  and sexuality will my daughter be using as guidelines for her own constructions?

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Dorothy Netherland: Turning The Tables – essay by Wim Roefs


Dorothy Netherland: Turning The Tables                                
By Wim Roefs

In her previous paintings on glass featuring imagery drawn from 1950s and ’60s women’s magazines, Charleston, S.C., artist Dorothy Netherland (b. 1962) was addressing “domesticity and family drama and the expectations we have of motherhood.” The Virginia native created images of domestic bliss to suggest the opposite, inevitably but, she claimed, unintentionally making ironic statements that were more personal observation than social criticism.
            In her most recent work, Netherland is taking a similar approach but turning the tables. On herself. While early 2012 paintings such as It Wouldn’t Kill You still explore her own upbringing, in the Femme Fatal and Velveteen series she frets about what she might be doing to her 10-year-old daughter. “Things about ourselves that are internalized but not acknowledged stay with us,” she said in 2009. How does that apply to her daughter?
            “While my work has always expressed my anxieties,” Netherland wrote recently, “the earlier work focused on themes of transience and the unreliability of memory, and the idea that our current sense of self is informed by our often inaccurate interpretations of our personal histories.”
            “My daughter eventually will come to her own conclusions about whether or not she was provided with a strong enough foundation to negotiate the confusing world around her, a world where increasing emphasis is placed on the surface.  What she has learned about herself so far will influence how she responds to the big choices ahead. My past is being imposed on her, just as the strengths, shortcomings and limitations of my own parents profoundly affected my life.”
            “I am exploring the constructed nature of self, and wondering where the need for outer perfection originates. I am intrigued by the juxtaposition of the real and the fake. Young women today often give the impression of possessing almost boundless power. I'm fascinated by the idea of Girl Power and how that relates to artifice and sexuality.”
            And so her new paintings feature a young girl, for which Netherland uses her daughter’s eyes and mouth. As a femme fatal, the girl is lively, self confident, fashion conscious, even alluring. Young but adult, ’50s-era women pester the girl, fussing over her and combing her hair. The Velveteen paintings suggest the young girl is perhaps not hell on wheels but certainly a handful. She’s observed and possibly frowned upon by older ’50s-era women.
            “Are young women really more empowered now?” Netherland wonders. “Is it possible to embrace youth, beauty and sexuality in a healthy, meaningful way that goes beyond the superficial? Is there room for real individuality? Is our obsession with idealized beauty expanding into the realm of the absurd, and are we becoming more and more narcissistic in general? Whose notions of femininity and sexuality will my daughter be using as guidelines for her own constructions?”

Thursday, August 27, 2009

DOROTHY NETHERLANDS – New Paintings on Glass



To see new paintings by Dorothy Netherland now available at if ART Gallery, CLICK HERE

To WATCH a documentary of Dorothy Netherland painting on glass, CLICK HERE.

Dorothy Netherland's paintings are painted and silkscreened on the back of glass. The new paintings consist of three layered sheets of glass.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Salon III: January 15- February 4, 2009

For exhibition preview, click here.
For installation images, click here.
For printmaking demonstration schedule, click here.


if ART Gallery
presents
SALON III: The Print Exhibition
January 15 – February 4, 2009

if ART Gallery
1223 Lincoln St., Columbia, S.C. 29205

Reception: Thursday, Jan. 15, 5 – 10 p.m.
Opening Hours:
Weekdays, 11 a.m. – 7 p.m.
Saturday, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m.
& by appointment

Printmaking Demonstrations:
Sunday, Jan. 18, 3 – 5 p.m., Marcelo Novo, Print Gocco
Sunday, Jan. 25, 3 – 5 p.m., Phil Garrett, Monotype
Saturday, Jan. 31, 3 – 5 p.m., H. Brown Thornton, Photo Transfer
Sunday, Feb. 1, 3 – 5 p.m., Steven Chapp, Linocut & Photopolymer Prints

For more information, contact Wim Roefs at if ART:
(803) 255-0068/ (803) 238-2351 – if-art-gallery@sc.twcbc.com

For its January 2009 exhibition, if ART Gallery presents Salon III, an exhibition of prints by gallery artists at if ART Gallery, 1223 Lincoln St., Columbia, S.C. The opening reception will be Thursday, January 15, 2009, 5 – 10 p.m. The exhibition will be installed salon-style at the gallery’s first floor and continues if ART’s salon-style exhibitions; in December 2008, Salon I & II took place simultaneously at the gallery and Gallery 80808/Vista Studios in Columbia.

Among the printmaking techniques represented in the exhibition are etchings, dry points, lithographs, woodcuts, linocuts, photopolymer prints, embossings, monotypes, silkscreens and photo transfers.

During the exhibition, gallery artists Steven Chapp of Easley, S.C., Phil Garrett of Greenville, S.C., Brown Thornton of Aiken, S.C., and Marcelo Novo of Columbia will give demonstrations of various printmaking techniques. For times and demonstrated techniques, see above.

Artists in the exhibition include Karel Appel, Jeri Burdick, Carl Blair, Lynn Chadwick, Steven Chapp, Corneille, Jeff Donovan, Jacques Doucet, Phil Garrett, Herbert Gentry, Tonya Gregg, John Hultberg, Richard Hunt, Sjaak Korsten, Lucebert, Reiner Mährlein, Sam Middleton, Eric Miller, Joan Mitchell, Dorothy Netherland, Marcelo Novo, Hannes Postma, Edward Rice, Anton Rooskens, Kees Salentijn, Laura Spong, Brown Thornton, Bram van Velde, Katie Walker, David Yaghjian and Paul Yanko.