Monday, June 30, 2025

Our Home Turf

 


Anderson Alley Artists at 
Rochester Institute of Technology
University Gallery
Thru July 26, 2025


Here we are, walking into the University Gallery on the campus of Rochester Institute of Technology, going to see the exhibition of art on view now thru July 26th, honoring participating artists from Anderson Alley.  While this  show does not feature all the artists from this well-known building it does present twenty talented folks mostly from the third floor of this establishment.  Anderson Alley is a loft style building which has the space and light that works for most visual artists, and this exhibition has painters, printmakers, sculptors and much more.  The R.I.T. University Gallery welcomes these artists and the opening had a good turnout for a summer evening.


"Flow" by Karen Sardisco
Acrylic on canvas

Here was an opportunity to reconnect with people I haven't seen in a while, especially since I retired from teaching art at R.I.T. more than four years ago.  The campus has changed a bit as new buildings have been going up since I left, but the University Gallery is the same with wonderful space and light for all the guests to mingle and see the artwork.  Crossing the threshold, I had a chance to speak with Karen Sardisco whose painting "Flow" is one the first things one sees as you walk into this gallery.  Her piece has swirls of light colors that remind me of Jackson Pollock for all its vitality and movement.


Anderson Alley Artists include Peter Gohringer

I had a chance to catch up with an R.I.T. art historian Heidi Nickisher, and I did enjoy chatting with her and there were many others who we knew at this opening.  Richard Harvey is one of the Anderson artists who has work on view.  He has a selection of sculptural  faces and prints on paper also representing people.  He is one of the participating artists, and they are not just starting out - they show considerable expertise and the creativity on view is engaging and sometimes challenging!


The prints by Richard Harvey

I looked at work by Pat Bacon which has interesting organic images based in photography but also worked in with wax which leave an impression more like a painting, this being a true hybrid! 
 Next to Pat Bacon are two paintings by my friend Carol Acquilano.  These are expressive colorful compositions with fallen leaves as a subject.
 

Pat Bacon


Carol Acquilano

Among the most delicate art in this show is a wall of sculptural creations by Colleen Buzzard.  The idea is to make works with a thin line sometimes of wire and this very fine form casts a shadow on the wall which gives the work another dimension - it is both drawing and sculpture that is both quiet and dynamic at the same time.


Colleen Buzzard


Colleen Buzzard

Now, you may have seen some of these artists before, if you like to go on the First Fridays open studios tours.  I used to do a lot more of that kind of visit but since the Covid pandemic I curtailed these visits and so this is one of the first openings I have been to in a while.  There are many reasons I enjoyed seeing this show and I do want to support the work they are doing for our community!


Lynne Feldman, one of twenty
Anderson Alley Artists
at
University Gallery
Rochester Institute of Technology















Monday, June 23, 2025

Stop Along The Way

At Pittsford Fine Art:  Oil painting by  Suzi Zefting-Kuhn

4 North Main Street, Pittsford, New York



Tag along with us as we take a look in the Pittsford Fine Art Gallery.  This is a cooperative effort to showcase some of our best local talent and a featured artist this month has been Kathleen Warren.  I don't remember seeing her artwork before and this presentation has a focus on her garden and particularly her paintings of flowers.  I would call her style painterly realism and images like the one on her show card have a casual composition that has structure and vitality.



Kathleen Warren at Pittsford Fine Art

I enjoyed seeing a whole wall of paintings by Mark Stash, especially his portrait of a Ruffed Grouse ( see below ) and also the colorful "Casting on Canadice".  I also was attracted to the paintings of Joni Monroe, and Suzi Zefting-Kuhn ( Oil painting of Penguins above ).



Mark Stash has painted this "Ruffed Grouse" 
Pittsford Fine Art, Pittsford, NY

Considering the field of nature, we drive down Route 89 enroute to Ithaca and stop in the park to see the falls at Taughannock State Park - and it was running at full tilt!


Stop to see the falls at Taughannock State Park

We drove toward the Museum of the Earth just outside of Ithaca.  It has been years since we were last there, and the exhibits have really been developed.  When we were last there I know we  took a long look at the wall of tiles that was mounted by my friend Barbara Page.  I know that we didn't see the enormous skeleton of the Right Whale that is now hanging up near the entrance.



Museum of the Earth
The "Right Whale"

I remember that the last time we visited this museum there was an exhibition of paintings by John Gurche that was spectacular.  His artwork featured dinosaurs and I was very impressed by his knowledge and his technique.  Today the museum has many exhibition rooms with engaging stories that we could share with our grandchildren.

Before we left the Ithaca area, we wanted to stop in to shop at the Market.  This is a wonderful experience to take in all the pleasing aromas of food being prepared, and then to sit outside and enjoy Lake Cayuga.



Ithaca Farmers Market on Saturday

A good day out in the country, and we got back home just in time for us to celebrate my 75th Birthday!




Happy Birthday for Alan Singer
( the author of this blog )










Sunday, June 8, 2025

Bird Call

 


John James Audubon


There are trees all around where we live now.  Today, it seems like we are also surrounded by birds... that is the story of my life!  I grew up looking at the Audubon print on the wall of my family's house.  My father, Arthur Singer was an artist and print collector, and he was always sitting at his work desk painting bird portraits - and this went on for most of my life!  If we went on a vacation, my dad would be out photographing the birds that flew into view.  


Arthur Singer paints an Osprey circa 1965

On this globe there are thousands of species of birds and my father painted many of them for his book "Birds of the World".


Writer Oliver Austin and artist Arthur Singer worked on this volume for Golden Press ( 1960 )

I guess for me - it is learn as you go, and I became interested in drawing birds when I was just a child watching my parents do their thing.  It was a family affair - this portrayal of all of our favorite feathered friends!  If you had the chance to see the exhibition "Our Nature" last year at the Rundel Library in Rochester, NY, you would have had a chance to look at artwork we did as a family - sharing our love of wildlife, especially the birds and flowers which we studied so intently!


Lumiere and The Bird House Present this show!

This story is a prelude to my professional approach to illustrations I made as an adult which I also would share with my students at Rochester Institute of Technology in my class that is referred to as "Zoo & Bot".  This week a new exhibition has landed at the Lumiere Gallery at 100 College Avenue, in Rochester, and I was happy to bring a couple of my pieces for the public to see.  I am certainly not alone!


"Put A Bird On It! Group show at Lumiere, 100 College Avenue, Rochester, NY

There are so many different approaches to putting a bird in a composition. "Put A Bird On It" is a big group show with many featured artists and you can say that there is a lot of talent in our community!  I found that there are many materials in this show, some which you wouldn't expect!  Of course there are photos of birds and there are paintings of birds, but would you expect to see a quilt with birds, or a ceramic plate?


Alan Singer's " Hummingbirds Love Flowers", Gouache on paper

The two paintings that I brought for this show were both published in my book brought out by Random House called: "Birds Do The Strangest Things".   When I came to Rochester to teach at R.I.T. this was the kind of art I did to make a living.

You can find in this show some outstanding artwork, and I loved the strength of the piece by Lydia Boddie-Rice in this show which runs to mid- July.  Her work has a three-dimensional aspect to it and it is quite detailed ( see below).


art by Lydia Boddie-Rice

There are some funny pieces in this exhibition and I was drawn to the design of the "Improbable Birds" book cover by William Holowka.  Having met Roger Tory Peterson when I was young, I wonder what he would have thought about this book!


"The Eastern Bricklayer"
Design by William Holowka - An Indispensable Guide!

Actually, the bird books that evolved since the mid-Twentieth century really contributed to our awareness of nature, and these books were also very popular..selling many millions of copies!  What it takes to put a good painting of a bird into publication is something I still find challenging..

My  hope is that you will come out to see this show and  take a look at  the  many approaches that artists take with this subject. There are big colorful works like the Flamingo by Mark Thone ( see below ).


An award winner by Mark Thone


And there are photos like the unexpected one from my friend Jill Gussow ( see below )


Photo by Jill Gussow


If you miss this exhibition at Lumiere, another version of it will appear later in the year at The Bird House .  I think you will enjoy the host of artworks  that make up this impressive feathered friend!



















Sunday, May 25, 2025

Goin Places, Doing Things

 


Big boat in the Welland Canal


Once in a while, I get up from my workspace in our cottage and put down my brushes to take a look at the progress I have made on my latest composition.  I have been working on these geometric paintings for a while and need to branch out.  While I give it some thought, we take a break to go on the road so that my wife, Anna,  can get her new Canadian passport ( she was born in Montreal ).  On the way to the passport office just over the border at Niagara Falls, we stop in to see the Welland Canal.  The Welland Canal has the capacity to lift really big boats like the one you see above.  Just a few of these behemoths come through each day and it takes a while to lift them up to the next lock ( there are eight locks on this canal ).



"Rise and Shine",by Alan Singer
Acrylic Gouache on board

Back in my studio I work out the grid for a new painting that is all about color and segments built out of carefully measured squares of color.  I am thinking about where this work could lead me...Someone looking at my new work could say: "What does this all mean?"  Then the idea is to strike out for new territory and get more experimental....

I look back almost ten years ago, and my primary artwork has a similar effect even when I was making prints on my etching press.  One of my favorites from that moment in history is a print that will be exhibited in a show called "Radiance" at the ADC Gallery in Ohio this coming month.  I hope to be able to go and see the show when it opens.



"Tropicalia", print on Fabriano paper, 2016 by Alan Singer

Now it is springtime and the trees are leafing out, and before I can go back to work on my art we are scheduled to take a flight south to visit Anna's brother in Georgia. We are going to Tybee Island off the coast of  Savannah.  Savannah is a historic city which is looking very productive.  From our flight in,  you could see the port and container ships lined up for miles.  We go out from the airport which is bustling and enter what seems like a tropical paradise.


Historic Savannah

Off the coastal road we take a walk one hot morning to go and see the lighthouse and  a sprawling Fort Pulaski.  It makes a big impression sitting in a moat, like a big boat afloat....

This a National Monument - a garrison  from the Civil War days, preserved for visitors like us!


Fort Pulaski offf the coast of Savannah, Georgia

I brought my watercolors with me and a little pad to make some sketches, and had the pleasure of making a couple of studies sitting on the balcony of the new house that Anna's brother has built on Tybee.  Later we went to visit  the Tybee Marine and Science Center which has many fine exhibits!  This  is really a great stay and the weather was wonderful!


Tybee Island view, May 20, 2025









Saturday, April 12, 2025

Buffalo Road

 


Jim Mott " Night Blizzard", oil on panel

Before we hit the road for Buffalo, I want to call your attention to the new online magazine called: "Explore Art" which is directed by Renee Rose.  Here is a link to look over what she is accomplishing:

This month she is featuring the painter Jim Mott ( see above ).  I admire this artist's work and once, years ago, I wrote about his "Itinerant Artist Project" for American Artist Magazine.  Now, Renee Rose is also an artist and she owned a gallery in Chicago.  She wants to promote the visual arts and she finds an interest in helping young artists find an audience.  Here is what Renee had to say in part about Jim and his work:

    "What's remarkable about Mott isn't just the beauty of his brushwork or the nuanced handling of light and form - though these things are certainly there.  What sets him apart is the integrity with which he has used painting as a form of public engagement and social dialogue.  he has made it his mission to dissolve the barriers between artist and audience, studio and street, art object and lived experience".

Renee is doing an awesome job with this Explore Art  online magazine and I am glad that she is introducing new folks like Jim Mott, especially at a time like this when coverage for the visual arts is hard to come by in our newspaper, and even the business of selling artwork is in a difficult spot.


"Laura". Marble head outside Albright Knox on a rainy afternoon

Yesterday, the forecast was for rainy snowy mix of weather and we head out west for an afternoon at the Albright Knox Art Museum in Buffalo.  We have not been back there since they renovated the place and now they even have underground pay parking!  The whole entrance is different with a gargantuan marble head out on the lawn to entertain passersby.  Over the years we have seen many shows here and we anticipate a whole new look this visit!


Entry now has a new court for Albright Knox


Bierstadt and Adolph Gottlieb

Once we are in the gallery we can see that there have been radical changes in store, and we start out being greeted by Adolph Gottlieb and a Bierstadt painting which represents a mountain range in a style of the distant past.  The core of the Albright Knox is dedicated to modern art and that presents a learning curve which begins to take hold in the late 1800s and continues to the present day.


Clyfford Still oil painting at AKG

Having studied painting in the 1960s to 1970s, I was familiar with many of the artists that we found in the galleries at AKG.  Some of these artists had been art teachers at The Cooper Union when I was a student there getting my BFA.  I remember Jack Tworkov and Larry Poons both of these painters are represented in the new galleries.  Most notable is a room devoted to paintings by Clyfford Still. ( 1904-1980 ), and the wall text informs us that many of the paintings we see  there were donated to the museum by Still while he was alive.

Not all of the art on view is abstract.. and  we can point to the painting by Charles Burchfield of the snowy town of East Liverpool that he painted in 1927.  


Painting by Charles Burchfield, 1927

Along with many paintings there is also sculpture in the  collection with a wonderful Brancusi bronze, and  a  recent work by Alison Saar called: "Barefoot"  from 2007.  Alison Saar was a neighbor of mine when I was working in a studio building in Brooklyn, New York, before we moved upstate.  She comes from an art-minded family, and this figurative work is certainly galvanizing!


Alison Saar and her sculpture: "Bareroot", 2007 made with wood, bronze, tin and tar

We march over the new bridge that takes one over to the Gundlach Building, a big new exhibition hall to see the show called " Hi Vis", and this show is all about regional artists and it is a large collection seen here for the first time.  I was really attracted to these  rising stars, and I urge you to get over to the AKG to witness this opportunity!  


Logan Hicks painting of Mercer Street in SoHo, NYC
Aerosol on canvas

The giant painting of Soho by Logan Hicks is a standout and you really have to wonder how he does this kind of work - is it an airbrush?  The work is really convincing!  I remember Mercer Street really well as I had an exhibition in the gallery 55 Mercer so many years ago....

There are so many talented folks in this show - you have to see it for yourself...even if it requires a trip in the rain!


Large scale wall piece by Felipe Pantone
at
The Albright Knox Art Gallery
Buffalo, New York















Saturday, March 29, 2025

Afternoon in Ithaca

 


Herbert Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell, Ithaca, New York

Today, we have a late afternoon appointment in Ithaca, New York, and luckily we have a terrific sunny day to drive in and onto the Cornell University campus.  I have some of my father's ( Arthur Singer 1917-1990 ) artwork to donate to The Laboratory of Ornithology and we can go and see the new additions to their building in Sapsucker Woods.

I did my graduate work ( MFA ) at Cornell and in 1973 watched out my window, as the Johnson Museum was being built. The museum was designed by I.M. Pei and it now houses an international collection - many of the pieces have been donated over the years and it is really outstanding.


Schools of Art & Architecture on Cornell's campus

Since we were early , we stop to see the Herbert Johnson Museum and look over exhibitions that are on view.  School is in session and parking is a bit difficult, but we manage.  Once inside we can see some interesting things in store for us.. On the lower level the curators were mounting a show with paintings still in their cradles and are yet to be hung.  we go downstairs to view the artwork by Suzi Ferrer, who was a student at Cornell ( BFA - 1962 ).  Suzi ( 1940-2006 ) was something of an avant-garde artist when she was living in Puerto Rico after she graduated.  A number of her pieces that we saw were ink drawings on plexiglass - they are free standing and set up like an altar-piece.



Suzi Ferrer's Altar-piece


Suzi Ferrer's "Self Portrait"

Suzi Ferrer will challenge you- she is an art activist, and her work will not go out of its way to ingratiate you.  The technique she employs to draw on plexiglass does not leave much room for  correcting or re-working an area - it is not a method that allows for adjustment.  Her pieces make a statement!


Suzi Ferrer and her "Fight of the Century"
Sigmund Vs. Wonder Woman
Ink on plexiglass

Looking over the art of Suzi Ferrer you see that she used her skills to question notions about what it is like to be a working woman during the second wave of feminism.  There is a bit of a struggle going on in each piece that reminds one of a cartoon in a very graphic sense.  Drawing is her thing!

We  continue our review of the Johnson Museum on the fifth floor and take in the arts of Asia.  I found a lovely screen painting of cranes on the upper level where you can also get a great view of Ithaca from the giant windows on the west side of the museum.


Ithaca and Lake Cayuga panorama 


"Landscape with cranes", from Japan, late 19th century

In the arts of Asia you can find many kinds of sculptural objects, some have a practical effect and others maybe more devotional.  I liked the ambition of the big screen painting above, and also found the ceramic objects quite beautiful.  The piece below also had a real peaceful effect  as did many of the objects in the Asian collections.


A wide variety of devotional pieces on view at The Johnson Museum

On the floors below one can find paintings from Europe, and a whole wall of landscapes mainly from19th century American artists.  I did find a  strong  figurative work by El Greco, and it looks like it might be a study for an even larger canvas ( see below )..


El Greco portrait of Saint James circa 1610-1614


American landscape artists mostly 19th Century

We really like Ithaca, but we don't want to be late for our appointment, so off we go to Sapsucker Woods and deliver the two paintings that we promised to The Laboratory of Ornithology.  If you care about birds, this is the place to see...not only for their interesting collections but also because they have a wonderful nature walk and we had the good  fortune of a beautiful day!

The LAB has new section of their visitor center devoted to all aspects of bird life.  Here is a section of their new attraction ( see below )...


Laboratory of Ornithology, Visitor Center engagement space

At The LAB there is a wonderful wall mural by Jane Kim, who was a guest speaker for my class when I was teaching at Rochester Institute of Technology.  Her wall work  features birds against a backdrop of the continents, and it gives you some ideas about how bird species are spread around the globe.


A segment of a Wall Mural by Jane Kim

So we had a great visit to The LAB and now it is time to go home.  We drive up the west side of Lake Cayuga, and stop to see the falls at Taughanock.  What a nice visit to the Ithaca, and a wonderful day for a drive!