Showing posts with label Don Dougan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Don Dougan. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Double Treat: Kathy Meliopoulos and Margee Bright Ragland

Don Dougan and Kathy Meloipoulos standing
next to Melipoulos's sculpture "Pinhead."

Double Treat: Two WCAGA member solo shows at Georgia State University’s Perimeter College at the Clarkston Campus




By Flora Rosefsky

Kathy Melipoulos’s artist talk was held at GPC- Clarkson Campus art gallery on February 15th. I enjoyed hearing about this talented member’s body of work now on exhibit through March 11th. The show’s title, “Under My Skin”, had new meaning after hearing what Kathy had to say. Many of Kathy’s mixed media works use chamois, which she says, “smells good, is soft, pliable, can be stretched, molded when wet then dried, stitched, drawn on, stapled, stained, painted. Very versatile.” 

In her talk, Kathy mentioned she “had never seen any work done on chamois leather. I had seen Native American art done on skin and have since found some contemporary artists who use it.”  To Kathy, skin became a “vehicle for autobiographical subject matter and other things that “get under my skin.

To someone who appreciates personal story telling in one’s art, Kathy’s work revealed her own journeys, some which were health challenges she has overcome, and her positive philosophy to live life fully each and every day. Articulating her thoughts about subject matter, Kathy said, “Family stories, narrative, impart information . . . Although I do believe all artists are a filter and all art is a reflection of how each one processes life, we all use different language and materials to communicate.”

Besides the chamois skin, Kathy uses aprons, which “are iconic symbols of women’s work, traditionally worn to protect the clothes from dirt. I have saved my aunts’ aprons because they are loaded with nostalgia, memories of family meals and gathering.  They also cover the part of the body that I have had trouble with – heart, lungs, sternum and neck. What’s underneath the “apron armor” can be fragile.”  

Text and/or figures are manifest through embroidery stitching – drawing with threads instead of more familiar pens, pencils or paint.  Some powerfully arresting pieces incorporate steel pins. Kathy says, “…the sculpture ‘PinHead’ feels like an extension of drawing. I could have drawn a glass head full of pin cushions but I had a lot of fun searching for the components, painting the pin cushions white, using antique hat pins as skewers, struggling with the many pin pricks. 

Kathy’s show is on view at the Jim Cherry Learning Center, Fourth Floor, through March 11, 2017.


Margee Bright Ragland—“Magical Narratives: A Retrospective. – Forty-Four Works from 1983-2016”.  

Night Bed by Bright Ragland
As I was leaving Kathy’s exhibit, GPC Gallery Director Don Dougan suggested I visit the solo show of another WCAGA member, Margee Bright Ragland. Margee is a full time professor of art at GSU Perimeter College and plans to retire next year. This marvelous retrospective was in the Perimeter Main Fine Arts Gallery of the Fine Arts Building on the Clarkston campus.

I gravitated toward Margee’s collage works, small in size compared to her paintings. Her shadow boxes were exquisitely crafted with strong use of composition, color, and texture using carefully selected found objects. I could see where each work, even without specific statements from Margee, is meant to begin a dialogue or conversation.  This is the kind of exhibition where you may “surf” the show quickly, and then return later to spend time appreciating the intimate details. 

Personal favorites included “Night Bed,” a collage that takes you to another century or world features mystical elements of floating female head and white owl staring at the viewer. Many of Margee’s works incorporate birds, which have their own symbolic meanings relating to both past and present. The collage “Night Vigil,” perhaps a companion work to “Night Bed,” uses different found materials with botanical motifs and patterns. “Suspension,” an assemblage of found and painted objects, symmetrically balances two red ladders and two gold leafed trees flanking what resembles a miniature theatrical stage set. “The Annunciation” is another work where I stood by it for a long time, thinking of the power of a story that probably went with the art – with images of angels, and a large staring eye. As Paul Gauguin said, fifty percent of the interpretation of a work of art belongs to the artist. The rest of the interpretations belonged to anyone who was looking at the work, even if they came up with a totally different idea. I find that is true today; I appreciate that our own life experiences offer up our own personal interpretations, even if different from what the artist intended. 

The Closing Reception was held on February 22nd, 2017.  Margee’s new book, “Bright Illuminations – The Art of Margee Bright Ragland and the Words of Others”, is now available on Amazon. The book pairs Margee’s collages with quotes from various authors.  If you missed her exhibition, this is a good way to enjoy Margee’s work.



A sincere thank you to member Don Dougan for the outstanding exhibition opportunities he coordinates as the curator and gallery director of the GSU Georgia Perimeter College and Clarkson Campus Art Galleries, and again, thanks to Don Dougan for his support of WCAGA member artists, for various group member exhibitions, and for solo invitational shows.
In August-September 2016, GPC-Clarkson had a memorable solo show, “Graffitti,” of large scale drawings by member Barb Rehg in the Fine Arts Building’s art gallery. “What is Seen,” a still life photography show for WCAGA artists Vicki Bethel, Lucy Hale, and Loretta Paraguassu was held at the JCLC 4th floor art gallery during Atlanta Celebrates Photography in October 2016.  

As WCAGA vice-president Maggie Davis said at the annual meeting, it is important for our members to support each other during the year by attending each others’ shows.  I look forward to getting to see more of our members’ work. 

GPC- Clarkson Campus:  Jim Cherry Learning Center (JCLC)–Art Gallery on 4th floor
555 No. Indian Creek Drive, Clarkson, GA 30021
(678) 891-3647
Hours (when library is open):  Mon.—Thurs. 7:45am—10pm, Fridays to 5:15pm, Saturdays 10am—4pm. Closed on Sundays. 








Sunday, February 1, 2015

Interview with Don Dougan

Verdigris Dream: Don Dougan

VERDIGRIS DREAM: TWO NATURES (detail view) showing canvas, plaster, copper leaf, verdigris patina, crab claw, glass,     paint,     30"x 12½"x 4" overall,     2014

1. Who are you and what do you do, and what is your background?
I am a sculptor and I make things that I can touch.
Ever since I was young I have made things -- whether it was modeling dinosaurs in clay or taking scraps of wood from my father's workshop and assembling them to make toy boats to float in the creek. I collected rocks and fossils, sea shells, bits of broken glass and pebbles, always looking at the forms and materials and imagining how they came to be.
Both of my grandfathers were architects and painters, and encouraged my artistic efforts, as did my parents. Everyone in the family was a reader and I was surrounded by books of many types, and I found many treasures in them. I learned to use woodworking tools with purpose from my father (an engineer) and to experiment in different approaches from my mother (always sewing, making mosaics, or painting).
High school was a trial; the only saving grace was my art teacher who gave me a chunk of soapstone to carve. It was my first step to become a carver. In college (Atlanta School of Art) I learned to teach myself the basics of stonecarving (none of the school’s faculty at the time knew how to work stone), and I first met my life's companion and love, Mary Anne Channell (a printmaker with a piercing intellect and giant heart). 
I became conversant with many techniques of making art in school, and though I majored in sculpture it was the carving process and stone as the material which drew me the most.
The immediacy of seeing the form take shape as the flakes fly was -- and still is -- a never-ending sense of marvel and discovery.

2. What's integral to your art and or art career?
The ability to use tools: the feel of the tools in my hands, the feel of the surfaces and

VERDIGRIS DREAM: TWO NATURES
     stretched primed canvas, plaster, ceramic, copper leaf, verdigris patina,
     crab claw, hardware-cloth, glass, paint
     30"x 12½"x 4"
     2014

textures of the materials, and the interplay of all the materials' characteristics with each other to provide a sense of narrative and history. Also integral is the process of discovery of how to evoke meaning through those juxtapositions, and tell a story without words.

3. What themes do you pursue and what medium do you use?
I pursue the exploration of meaning and perception, what it means to be human. I seek social and cultural universals through the filter of an inward-looking individual. This means following wherever my nose leads me. I use my intuition to both put things together and to take things away until what material forms remain serve to reveal some aspect of truth which I had not realized before.
I consider my medium to be sculpture (and material in general). Though I am a carver by nature I will use whatever material process seems to be called-for in a particular work. For me stone is both plentiful and the essence of matter, so it usually figures in my work. However, I find that by mixing other media with stone it allows me a greater clarity of expression through the contrasts of the materials’ respective natures and their forms. Found objects and ‘mixed media’ are almost as pervasive as stone in my work.

4. What makes you angry, what makes you happy?
What makes me angry are people who deny the joy of life out of petty greed or intolerance. What makes me happy is to be enjoying life with meaning.

5. Who and what inspire you in your work and or in your life in general?
I am inspired by the sublime introspective essence of Constantin Brancusi and Joseph Cornell, by the sophistication of Isamu Noguchi and Fred Astaire, by the image-play of René Magritte and the Fleischer Brothers, by the down-to-earth stories of Kurt Vonnegut and Loren Eiseley, by the mythic poses of Igor Mitoraj, by the tragedy of Bix Beiderbecke and Orson Welles, by the voices of Billie Holiday and Imelda May, by the scope of Larry Niven and Freeman Dyson, by the gritty future of William Gibson and the gritty past of Giovanni Piranesi, by the madness of Richard Dadd and Franz Xaver Messerschmidt, by the dancing music of Erik Satie and the sideways humor of Gary Larsen, by the ingenuity of toolmakers past and present, by the spit on the sidewalk picked-up by Harpo Marx, by the Miss Marple of Joan Hickson and the sad dexterity of Buster Keaton, by the wild transformations of Richard Penniman, by the telling lyrics of Chuck Berry, Hank Williams, and Johnny Mercer, by the opening of the mouth and twinkling of an eye, by the mysterious glory of ancient Egypt and the mischievous humor of the Etruscans, by the haiku of netsuke, by the chipmunks in my rock-pile and the hawk which sometimes catches them, by all the fresh eyes (and fresh ideas) of my students . . . perhaps the question would be easier to answer if it were what I was not inspired by.    

6. What superpower would you want?
What superpower don't I already have -- an artist has 'em all, don't they?  It is just about deciding which power to use when . . . <grin>

MARCH: RESUMPTIONS ANNOUNCED AGAIN
     green slate, glass, Georgia foliated talc, North Carolina jade, jade,
     Vermont radio black marble, bloodstone, copper, aluminum, brass, silver leaf
     36¼"x 11¾"x 2½"
     2013

PURE LUCK (SOMEWHERE)
     Alaskan rock, Italian travertine & serpentine, Rosso Levanto, Giallo di
     Siena, Rosso Orobico Arabescato, Colorado Yule, Tennessee Imperial
     black marbles, steel found object, deerhide, burnt wood
     40"x 40"x 17"
     2014


7. What is your favorite artist and/or other person?
It changes every day depending upon who I happen to meet or what I happen to see. Today I would have to say Seana Reilly, Françoise Pompon, Dan Henderson, and Glenn Dasher.

8. What advice would you give to other artists?
Three (or four) things:

"Process saves us from the poverty of our ideas."
                   ~ Anonymous quote, shared by Glenn Dasher in 2010

"It’s our process that saves us from the poverty of our intent."       
                   ~ Elizabeth King

"Art is a lie that makes us realize truth -- at least the truth that is given us to understand."       
                   ~ Picasso

"To practice any art, no matter how well or badly, is a way to make your soul grow. So do it."
                   ~ Kurt Vonnegut

MÉNAGE À TROIS
     Brazilian rosewood, Indiana limestone, acrylic
     20"x 23"x 3½"
     2014


9. Contact details:
www.dondougan.com



Tuesday, March 19, 2013

WCAGA is a part of The Georgia Women's Conference 2013


This year the WCAGA Members Art Show "Crossing into Abstractions" plays an important role in the Georgia Women's Conference 2013. The Conference theme is: The Female Perspective in Art, Scholarship, and Politics. Topics include, but are not limited to: academic papers and dissertations, political issues and themes, literature and poetry, women's health, fine arts, career advancement, international topics, financial advisement, LGBTQ, transgender issues, and more! 

At the opening of "Crossing into Abstraction"
Barb Rehg and Don Dougan curated this show. Don Dougan is an Instructor at the Georgia Perimeter College and the Gallery Director of Clarkston Fine Arts. Barb Rehg is an accomplished Local Artist and the Exhibition chair for WCAGA.  Included in this show are Loretta Paraguassu, Kathy Meliopoulos, Dory Ingram , Helen DeRamus, Jane Jaskevich, Linda Hudgins, Corlia Kock, Ann Rowles, Ann Rhodes, Sally Eppstein, Patricia Bohannon, Eileis Crean, Norma Hendrix,Edna Shipp, Angie Dachs,Teresa Libbey, Kate Lehman Landishaw, Karen Phillips, Laura Monk,Vicki Bethel, Kate Colpitts, Cecelia Kane,Ellen Fennel Blythe, Barb Rehg and Claudia Wilburn. 

This year's Members Show examines what it means to work with abstraction, reach out to abstraction and to immerse in abstraction. A wide range of themes are visible in the art work selected for this show. This show answers questions on how far you can take form, color, and shape and still be considered abstract.

A scheduled event of the Georgia Women's Conference is the Continental Breakfast with the artists of
the Women's Caucus for Arts of Georgia,Saturday, March 23, 9 a.m. - 9:45 a.m. in the Jim Cherry Learning Resource Center Gallery. 

Looking forward to see you there.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

"I'm in Love with this Idea" 2011 WCAGA Members show

We were all gathered in the Jim Cherry LRC Gallery, an art show curated by Don Dougan and organized by Barbara Regh. We are the woman of the WCA of Georgia and we like to share our art with everybody. We have thousands of years of life experience collected. 
From doors that close and lead to more doors opening to walking down hallways and covering up that which is chosen not to be shown. Childhood memories that trigger the imagination to millions of roads traveled and traveled again, choices to be made at cross roads. Bodies and minds that mutate and evolve through adventures and experiences. Seascapes, Feathers, and Fantasy Characters to playfully tease your creativity. All this you find in this Art Show and more. 
“I’m in Love with this idea” We all are and you will be too. You can find the artists' names in our previous post Members Show Listing Written
(written by Corlia)
Place: Jim Cherry LRC Gallery
555 North Indian Creek Drive
Clarkston, GA 30021
Duration: March 2 - April 22, 2011
Gallery Hours: Monday - Thursday 8am - 9pm
Friday 8am - 4:30pm
Saturday 10am - 2pm