Monday, November 25, 2024

19 ON PAPER

Formed in 1986, 19 on Paper is a group of New England artists who create works of art on or with paper, which we exhibit as a group.  

 

 

Upcoming and Continuing Events

 

Keep your eye out for newsletter information on our upcoming shows 

 

Upcoming Fall exhibit at the DeBlois Gallery 

 

Saturday, October 1– Sunday, October 30, 2022

35th Anniversary exhibit at the Bristol Art Museum 

 

Featured Members:

David DeMelim

 

 

Pursuing parallel explorations in Photography and Printmakingmy interest lies in trying to capture and record how we see and  record memory. 

 

There are no Kodak moments, but rather a syncopated   succession of moments that combine to recall or define an event. Much   of my work explores an image’s ability to fix a memory through the use   of multiple layers, paired images and overprinting multiple photos. 

 

Images, whole moments in time are combined to create a representation of an event that documents and expresses that event in a more complete and expressive manner than can be captured in a single instant.

 

 

Currently David splits his time between personal projects, private clients and his responsibilities as Managing Director of the Rhode Island Center for Photographic Arts. @RIPhotoArts or riphotocenter.org.      Read More…

 

 

Cindy Horovitz Wilson

 

 

Timelessness and curiosity are ongoing themes in my work. I explore visually the stories of what came before me, colored with nostalgia of an intriguing time past. I am moved by a sense of something greater than myself, spirituality, and a beauty in imperfection. My images speak of entropy, the reclaiming of spaces and structures by the forces of time and nature.

 

I fall under the spell of faded paintings on buildings, billboards, as well as period innovations like gas pumps and clocks. Discovering the unique, finding the extraordinary in the mundane, honoring the forgotten and recording the soon to change are the fuel of my journey.

 

I am fascinated with the emotional qualities of light and find myself drawn to the intensity, shape, direction, and color of light in addition to the subject it reveals. The metaphor is of the light within me. It has been lingering, waiting for the right moment to emerge. This emergence is spiritual, seeing light in the darkness and coming out of the darkness.

 

 

Photography is my vehicle for self-expression, for delving deeper into my ‘why’. As I listen more to my intuitive self while understanding more about the medium’s expressive qualities my vision becomes more uniquely my own.  Read More…