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News: JRB Art at The Elms Presents: “THIS PLACE WE HAVE BECOME” with  Barry Snidow and Shane and Sara Scribner, October 15, 2015

JRB Art at The Elms Presents: “THIS PLACE WE HAVE BECOME” with Barry Snidow and Shane and Sara Scribner

October 15, 2015

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

                                                                                    October 16, 2015

                                                                                        Contact: Joy Reed Belt

                                                                                    405-528-6336

                                                                                  jreedbelt@jrbartgallery.com

 

                                                                                    Opening Reception

                                                                                   Friday, November 6, 2015

                                                                                     6:00 - 10:00 PM

 

JRB ART AT THE ELMS PRESENTS

“This Place We Have Become”

Barry Snidow and Shane and Sara Scribner

 

OKLAHOMA CITY, Oklahoma---JRB Art at The Elms presents a solo exhibition of photography by Barry Snidow alongside a thematic exhibition with work by both Sara and Shane Scribner.  These exhibitions open with a reception from 6:00 to 10:00 pm on Friday, November 6, 2015, during the Paseo’s First Friday Gallery Walk and continue through Sunday, November 29th

November’s program provides three painterly depictions of time, with three very different modes of portrayal.  Barry Snidow’s photographic prints, Shane Scribner’s paintings of brief ordinary moments, and Sara Scribner’s eternal women all combine the timeless with the distinctly dated.  Snidow’s printing of earlier images using antique photographic processes creates a limbo for the viewer, while likewise Sara Scribner’s women hark seemingly simultaneously from today and the past.  Shane Scribner’s paintings place each woman in a specific moment of her own, which becomes timeless for the viewer as we contemplate her thoughts.  Together, these artists fill the gallery with varied artworks, all asking the viewer how we know where we are in time.

Barry Snidow’s current body of work explores the boundaries of time and medium by returning to one of the original photographic processes to create distinctively painterly photographs.  For this show (his first at JRB Art at The Elms) he used two antique photographic methods, cyanotype and gum bichromate, to fashion unique handmade works.  Sifting through his images from the last ten years, Snidow kept in mind the goals of the photo secessionists and the abstract expressionists, picking the most painterly images from his oeuvre.  Of the resulting body of photographic prints, all made within the last few months, he says he is “hoping to bring more attention to how things look rather than what they are.”  In one work, the viewer peers into what seems like one of Edward Hopper’s paintings.  Another’s palette and geometry is reminiscent of Native American textile weavings, but in fact shows an architectural building face.  By returning to photography’s beginning, Snidow finds a color palette and a depth of contrast that allows him to bring our realities at once forward and backward in history, blending time and process to show us the painterly layer in between a photograph and its print.

Husband and wife Shane and Sara Scribner present “This Place We Have Become,” a joint exhibition based on mutual inspiration from the title’s theme.  The couple met while studying at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco, and have since made Oklahoma their home (Shane is a Tulsa native), where they work side by side at easels only 5 feet apart.  Although they might share models and inspiration (and many things besides) their works stand apart as from two distinct individuals, and this is their first show as a duo.  In this body of work, Sara’s women find themselves in the midst of solitary moments, often in interaction with a profound animal.  As the viewer comprehends each moment, they might realize that further basis in time is incalculable, as elements of their wardrobe or setting feel simultaneously contemporary and antique.  Inspired by the beauty and strength of both women and wardrobe, Sara’s work shows such reverence for her subject that in beholding the paintings viewers are struck by each woman’s confidence.  Not unlike Botticelli’s Primavera, 1477-1482 or his Birth of Venus, 1482-1485, her grand paintings can be seen as timeless allegories.  Shane’s figures, also women, approach the female body from constantly shifting viewpoints, although the focus remains similar: typically nude, and brightly lit. His process with one painting pushes him towards a new outlook in the next, and so while ruminating on similar themes, each painting sits at a different depth from the subject, finds her in a different pose, a different mood. Like Sara, he paints each woman in a particular moment, but where Sara’s are about display, Shane’s are highly introverted. Many of his works for the show include water, drawing parallels to figures such as Ophelia, whose inner feelings, so ignored in her time, have provided inspiration for countless artists since.  Although each moment might seem minute, Shane’s comfort with the feminine form allows his paintings to transmit an incredible depth of feeling and of movement, both physical and emotional – a fluid balance between reflection and what is to come.  In their first joint exhibition, Sara and Shane explore feminine timelessness: Sara with various ephemera, and Shane in the absence of any. 

JRB Art at The Elms presents a diverse roster of emerging, established, and internationally exhibited artists who create in a wide range of media including: paintings, drawings, sculpture, ceramics, glass, fine crafts, functional objects, fiber art and photographs. This 8,000 square foot award-winning gallery in Oklahoma City’s Paseo Arts District changes its exhibits monthly in a gracious environment that fosters a dialogue between the arts and the larger community while providing quality art for first time buyers as well as individual, corporate and museum collections.  

JRB Art at The Elms, the former studio residence of Nan Sheets which was built in 1920, is located at 2810 North Walker and is open Monday through Saturday, 10-6, and Sunday, 1-5.
Phone: (405) 528-6336  

Website: www.jrbartgallery.com  Email: info@jrbartgallery.com


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