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June 17, 2025

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6 Arts Notes

MassoniArt Gallery presents new exhibition: Joe Karlik, Kathryn O’Grady and Blake M. Conroy

February 7, 2025 by MassoniArt Leave a Comment

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MassoniArt Gallery is thrilled to present a dynamic new exhibition featuring the works of Joe Karlik, Kathryn O’Grady and Blake M. Conroy, three exceptional artists whose work explores the beauty of nature through distinct yet complementary artistic expressions.

This show will be on view at MassoniArt Gallery, 113 South Cross Street, Chestertown, MD, from February 1 – 28, 2025.

Joe Karlik brings emotional impact to the natural world through his bold designs and arrangements. His work captures the tension present in nature.

Kathryn O’Grady’s paintings are inspired by the organic forms of landscapes and botanical life found in her own backyard.

In a world that commodifies nature, Blake M. Conroy shows us the individuality of every living thing.

Together, this trio of artists create an exhibition that showcases their unique perspective on the natural world.

Hours during the exhibition are Thursday – Friday, 11am – 4pm, Saturday, 10am – 5 pm and Sunday 12-3. Private appointments may be scheduled at any time by contacting either Carla Massoni (410-708-4512) or Kate Ballantine (410-310-0796) in advance.

For additional information please visit www.massoniart.com.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

Marcy Dunn Ramsey small blessings holiday exhibition Nov 8 – Dec 15, 2024

November 11, 2024 by MassoniArt Leave a Comment

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Prickly Heat, Marcy Dunn Ramsey (2024)

Marcy Dunn Ramsey’s annual exhibition – small blessings – represents the work created over the spring and summer months and will be featured in the High Street gallery from November 8 – December 15.

For thirty years, Marcy Dunn Ramsey has blessed us with her small gouache studies. This year we will have over twenty “small blessings” in her November exhibition. These will be in addition to eight richly colored mid-size oil on canvas paintings celebrating the woods and waterways of the Chester River.

Champagne Reception
Friday, November 8, 5-7 pm
Artist Talk – Saturday, November 9, 12 noon

Also featured will be a collection of mixed media/gilded floral photographs by Laurie Peek – In Lieu of Flowers. This series was created in memory of her son, Jackson R. Turner, who was 37 years old when he tragically drowned in Tulum, Mexico, in July 2020, and in honor of friends who have endured similar losses.

In the rear gallery, we will feature the work of Grace Mitchell, Jacqui Crocetta, Joe Karlik, Michael Kahn, Janis Goodman, B Proud, Celia Pearson, Cristine Yurick, Rosemary Cooley, Claire McArdle, Blake Conroy and Vicco von Voss.

Small Blessings will be on exhibit in the 203 High Street gallery. Hours during the show are Thursday – Friday, 11am – 4pm, Saturday, 10am – 5 pm.

The Cross Street gallery is open Sunday 12-3 and private appointments may be scheduled at any time by contacting Carla Massoni. 410-708-4512

Current and Upcoming Exhibitions:
Marc Castelli – Merroir
October 25 – November 24, 2024
At the Cross Street Gallery

Holiday Exhibition
December 1 – 31, 2024
At the Cross Street Gallery

For additional information, please visit www.massoniart.com.

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Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

Marc Castelli “Chasing the Silver” Exhibit Opens At Massoni Gallery June 7

May 21, 2024 by MassoniArt

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Set sail with us on a visual voyage spanning 40 (or so)years, as we celebrate the passion, dedication, and camaraderie that define the world of sail racing as captured by renowned artist Marc Castelli. Sailing enthusiasts and Castelli collectors alike will be transported to the heart of the action through this stunning exhibition.

Massoni Art’s Castelli exhibition, opening in June, presents an opportunity to widen the lens on subjects that Marc has painted during his long career. Chasing the Silver is the first time such a collection has been gathered from Marc’s personal portfolio for exhibition. This retrospective features watercolors of major world yachting events from over the last 40 years.

Showcased will be paintings, pen and inks, posters, cartoons, and prints featuring the America’s Cup challenges and defenses from 1987 to the last traditional monohull America’s Cup in 2006, as well as the Whitbread races in 1997-98, the sea trials and starts for the Global Challenges 2004-05, the 2006 Soling World Championship, the Star Boat World Championship 2016, and the USNA’s Kennedy Cup Regatta and the J-Class Yachts Regatta 2015.

For Castelli, this exhibition represents not only four decades of races but four decades of friendships, travel and the unexpected joy found in their connections. Reminiscing on his trip to Auckland Castelli shares “Such events draw many disparate types of people. At times many syndicates would find spots for sponsors on the photoboats. I met a lady whose company made the yarns which were used as rot line to bundle spinnakers for Dennis Conner’s Stars and Stripes challenge. I shared a boat with James Spithill’s father and eventually gave him a painting of the Steak and Kidney 87 challenger which was skippered by his son in that regatta.”

Marc’s work is in the collections of yacht clubs around the world and of renowned sailors – including Dennis Conner, Jon Wright, Paul Cayard, Mick Atkins, Guy Gurney, John North, and Dan North.

Marc gives special thanks to Jon Wright for his help in curating this exhibition.

In addition to the work on loan and memorabilia, over 25 original watercolors will be available for purchase.

Castelli’s Annual One Man Exhibition – Merroir – is scheduled for October 24-November 24, 2024.

Chasing the Silver will be on exhibit in the 113 South Cross Street gallery.  Hours during the show are Wednesday – Friday, 11am – 4pm, Saturday, 10am – 5pm, and Sunday 12 – 3pm.

We are happy to open our galleries to you outside of our regular hours.

Private appointments may be scheduled at any time by contacting either Carla Massoni (410-708-4512) or Kate Ballantine (410-310-0796) in advance.

Opening Reception – June First Friday – June 7, 5-8 pm

Artist Talks –

Saturday, June 8, 12 noon

Sunday, June 9, 12 noon

July First Friday – July 5, 5-8 pm

Upcoming Exhibition:

June / High Street
Michael Kahn – Sailing Into Summer
June 15 – July 14

Also featuring Katherine Cox – Coupling/Uncoupling

For additional information please visit www.massoniart.com.

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Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes, Archives

MassoniArts: Art+Architecture.2 With Work by Elizabeth Casqueiro, Jon Mort, Mike Pugh, and Eve Stockton

February 5, 2024 by MassoniArt

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February 10 — March 18, 2024

FOREWORD:

How is it conceivable that a collective of thoughtful individuals would acquire famously-challenging degrees in Architecture, learn the practical trade of Architect, and then choose working careers as producers of Art that we can find at the Massoni Gallery? Does knowing about their shared technical and aesthetic training lead us to observe a common approach among the artists?  Can this knowledge help us better-appreciate these fine works in the Massoni Gallery? Read on.

“Like the spider with its web, so every subject weaves relationships between

itself and particular properties of objects; the many strands are then woven together and finally form the basis of the subject’s very existence.”

-Jakob von Uexküll

When Carla Massoni approached me to consider these reasonable questions around the diverse artists she selected for Art+Architecture.2, I thought she was on to something well-worth exploring as I too am among this crowd. The better architects are the connective web between all aesthetic pursuits and the science behind mathematics, engineering, and logical problem solving. As architecture students, we mastered a structured process of observation, analysis, model building, and visual communication that began with a blank page and a line (a perfectly-drawn technical-pen line at that). Line weight, edges, corners, and visual relationships were the stuff of design critiques. Over time, that line grew more complex and loaded-with-meaning to embrace contradiction and to describe our uncommon view of the world.

Space, Structure, Shadow and Form matter. For me on the West Coast, foundational pedagogy was steeped in Cubist and Bauhaus constructivism so that we could only-then begin to deconstruct what we thought we knew. Other architecture programs focused on analysis of ideal typologies and formal models that were turned-and-flipped to synthesize into something new. Yes, we all learned AutoCAD and other software.  Yet, we were immersed in a hands-on design process that used endless layers of yellow tracing paper and emphasized a rigorous refinement through an exciting process of iterations and experimental transformation of a first idea.

Attention was paid to the balance of shade and shadow in all work (chiaroscuro in Italian, notan in Japanese). When you look at the artist works in this exhibition, you can see that depth of process-driven rigor and layering. These are not impressionistic or spontaneous works!

One can’t help but observe that Nature and our own human journey of imagination are the primary subjects of the artworks on view. After engaging with the artists to find out why, I went back to the architectural theory books we studied decades ago to seek answers. I found a direct symmetry that emphasizes observation of our natural world. There’s a vibrant dialectic that emerges between illusive manmade notions of constructed order and the deeper wisdom of the cosmos and subatomic particles as Einstein and Nietzsche well-understood. In these creative works, you will see the individual’s pursuit of an existential awareness (pursued via artworks) over concrete pragmatism (a building). In short, the artworks are thrilling products of a life journey and process-driven exploration of all things. As Jon Mort exclaimed, “Architect-Artists chose the harder, more studied way”.

Jon Mort often constructs models of his conceptual work before realizing the final image with pencil on paper. His masterful delineation and ultra-

Jon Mort, Good Bones

precise rendering of ideal worlds and paradoxical assemblages is ankle-shaking. Mort is fascinated by the human desire to interpret Nature by constructing ideal worlds based on pure geometries (think Humanism of the Italian Renaissance). His work strives to achieve the ideal-yet-impossible total visual balance of light and color (scientific photonics called albedo).  Good Bones evokes the familiar circle-in-square model of human “perfection”. Yet, Nature’s perfect structures of skull, hummingbird, egg, and nest represent true perfection. Albedo is manifested with the balance between the white bone and red field. This work is not so much ironic as honest and raw in its optimism, and also defiance, of our assumptions of the built environment around us.

Elizabeth Casqueiro, Traces of Absence

Elizabeth Casqueiro layers polychromatic acrylic and ink forms at all scales to evoke the naturalistic, storied, and drafted elements that go into constructing a sense of place. These impactful places (“gateways”) are celebrated via carefully-rendered elements that give a time-traveling, dynamic brilliance to each work. Visual balance is adeptly achieved in the harmony of volumes and forms at various dimensions and perspectives. Traces of Absence is sensuous in the natural elements of rose-tinted hibiscus flowers (inspired by her mother’s garden) and memory-rich amethyst aerial-view forms. It is deeply meaningful with references of perhaps Casqueiro’s hometown in Portugal, an international airport gateway of life transitions, or a flow of fragments that evoke larger associations. We feel as part of this flow. The composition is carefully anchored into a one-point perspective that evokes the camera obscura with a single vanishing point into infinity. Or, is it?

Eve Stockton is inspired by the natural world both observed and imagined. Her imagery draws from the latest science of the cosmos and our primordial origins. Stockton’s large-scale woodcut prints are the result of intensive hand-carving followed by print-making with Susan Goldman at Lily Press, Rockville, MD. To date, Stockton has over fifty 36″x36″, carved wood blocks which she uses to build her imagery in endless color combinations. Her past architectural background has given Stockton a visual sense of geometry and balance in her nature-based prints. The consistent three-foot-square module in her system allows for engaging groupings or ensembles.

Eve Stockton
L to R: Inlet var.3, Inlet var.8, Inlet var.13
woodcut

Three Inlet prints each evoke a wooded cove caught between sky and the water. Notice how the individual prints have cloud forms that tessellate into the neighboring print in a pleasing and dynamic rhythm. The Inlet triptych of moss, cranberry, and robins egg blue presents colors that both sooth and challenge.

Ken Schiano (at the High Street Massoni Gallery in An Accumulation of Difficult Things)  uses powdered pigments and cold wax to build-up (and then scrape-away) in an action work that he associates with archeology of the cosmos. Symbolically, the pigments represent matter trapped in wax. This is the collected debris of creative making and also everything, really. Schiano’s artworks are the product of accumulation as-well-as arch reveal. Activated worlds of opaque and luminous polygons and orb-like “Cryptids” allow various interpretations while maintaining a sense of Schiano’s strength of concept. NP XVII is an iteration from a body of work that evolves from the previous work, Schiano’s “muse”. Powerful red charges toward the viewer, while the quiet hint of gentle lavender recedes. Diagonal features of earthy green and ochre direct the eye and anchor the dynamism into a pleasing composition. The actual subjects of the work are the negative spaces that simultaneously create animated movement and depth. Compositions and color chords build on the previous artwork in an accumulation of life works that tell his story and ours too.

Mike Pugh is a ceramic artist who believes it is important to tell our story through intentional forms and honest text. His work is architectural and regional and often site-specific. Each work is a vessel that contains multitudes at a distance and at close observation. His interest in honest folk art and also Brutalist architecture (as in “brutally honest”) inspire ruddy, hand-hewn works of craft. I Live With Purpose. is a functional work as an ikebana vessel. It conveys as a constructed architectural model of a larger concept and narrative of some scale. It’s black like ink on a white page. It hovers and reveals itself in moments for those who touch it.

Jon Mort:  Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art at Franklin & Marshall College (Lancaster, PA), MArch (Masters of Architecture) at Rhode Island School of Design, RISD (Providence, RI)

Elizabeth Casqueiro:  MArch at Catholic University (Washington, DC), Bachelor of Arts in Design at Instituto de Arte e Design, IADE (Lisbon, Portugal), Art Studies at Central Saint Martin’s College of Art (London, United Kingdom), the Corcoran College of Art & Design (Washington, DC) and the Washington Studio School (Washington, DC); and also Masters of International Business Management at University of Westminster (London, United Kingdom)

Eve Stockton: MArch, Yale School of Architercture (New Haven, CT), Bachelor of Arts in

Architecture & Urban Planning with a minor in Fine Arts, Princeton University (Princeton, NJ)

Ken Schiano:  BArch (Bachelors of Architecture) at Cooper Union (New York, NY)

Mike Pugh:  BArch and Bachelor of Arts in History, minors in Italian and Interdisciplinary General Education at California Polytechnic University (Pomona, CA), graduate studies in STEM Education at Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, MD)

Massoni Art @ Cross Street Gallery February 10 — March 18, 2024

Mike Pugh’s work in Historic Preservation led to adventures in documenting America’s first rocket test stand, a teaching career in urban schools, founding community gardens, and he even worked at a grain elevator. Pugh’s reference-rich ceramics have won various awards and can be found worldwide.

203 High Street & 113 South Cross Street 410.778.7330 • 410-708-4512 • Chestertown, Maryland

For more about the exhibit and MassoniArt, go here.

 

             

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Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes, Archives

Marcy Dunn Ramsey at Massoni

November 29, 2023 by MassoniArt

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Marcy Dunn Ramsey’s exhibition Distillations represents the work created over the summer and fall months and will be featured in the High Street gallery from December 1 – 30. Marcy’s cool blues and dancing reeds invite us to celebrate in the joys of winter. Join us for a glass of cheer at the High Street gallery during the Opening Reception on First Friday, December 1.

Also featured will be work by ceramic artist Julia Weber Yensho who is new to the gallery. 

MASSONI ART is pleased to announce the release of Marcy & Meredith Davies Hadaway’s new book project: Small Craft Warning. Marcy and Meredith share a love and appreciation for the eastern shore and its waterways. They work as advocates for our local rivers in the hopes that others will become good stewards of our waterways. In Small Craft Warning Marcy and Meredith use their gifts to capture the beauty of inner and outer landscapes of Maryland’s Eastern Shore. 

“…a collection of miniatures – paintings of just a few square inches in gouache, poems in small syllables and brief lines—that reflect on both the fragility and the magnitude of our world.” – Marcy

Distillations will be on exhibit in the 203 High Street gallery.  Our Annual Holiday Artists Exhibit will be featured in the Cross Street gallery. We are happy to open our galleries to you outside of our regular hours. Private appointments may be scheduled at any time by contacting either Carla Massoni (410-708-4512) or Kate Ballantine (410-310-0796) in advance. 

Gallery Hours:
Thursday, Friday – 11-4; Saturday 10-5, 
Sunday –12-3

For additional information please visit www.massoniart.com.

December 1 – 30, 2023

Opening Reception 

First Friday, December 1, 5-7 pm – High Street

Meredith & Marcy’s Book Party

Friday, December 15, 5-7 pm – High Street

 

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Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

Marc Castelli Lays Down the Sun at the Massoni

October 18, 2023 by MassoniArt

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Carla Massoni, the owner of MassoniArt Gallery, is pleased to announce the opening of Marc Castelli’s one-man exhibition – Laying Down the Sun.  For over thirty years, Castelli’s annual show has become a Chesapeake tradition. Expect to see unmatched renderings of watermen, workboats, and log canoes from a painter recognized as one of the finest marine artists in the country. Marc Castelli | Laying Down the Sun will be featured exclusively in our Cross Street gallery located at 113 S. Cross Street as it is fully handicapped accessible.

Once again, this year’s exhibition dates coincide with the Chestertown RiverArts Studio Tour OCTOBER 21-22 & 28-29 10am-5pm and the Sultana Education Foundation’s Downrigging Festival.

From the very beginning, Castelli’s annual show has been synonymous with the Downrigging.  Now in its 23rd year, the festival is one of the largest annual tall ship gatherings in North America. The festival features a long-weekend of Tall Ship sails, tours, incredible live bluegrass music, lectures, exhibits, family activities, regional food and more. www.downrigging.org

For the last few years, the exhibition has included essays by Castelli for each new work. In his own words he describes the day, activity or friendship that gives each painting it’s own story and meaning. Printed essays will be available at the gallery and also on the MassoniArt website.

“Biscuit Beck taught me a lot about culling river oysters. Especially oysters that grew in fresher waters of the upper Bay and tributaries. He is the father and uncle to some of the other watermen in this collection.” writes Castelli “I have known for many years that I stand just inside the outer edge of the watermen community. It allows them to have great fun at my expense, but it is and has always been good-natured.”

During Downrigging our Exhibition Hours at our Cross Street gallery will be extended and will include the following events:
Friday, October 27 / 5-7:30 pm – Reception
Saturday, October 28 / 10 am – 5 pm – Artist Talk at 10 am and 1 pm
Sunday, October 29 / 11 am – 3 pm

ARTIST TALK:  This year due to popular demand there will be two scheduled on Saturday, October 28, 10-11 am and 1-2 pm.

Visit www.massoniart.com for a listing of our High Street and Cross Street galleries public hours.  Private appointments may be arranged to suit your schedule, simply contact us prior to your visit to set-up a date and time. Call Carla Massoni at 410-778-7330 Gallery, 410-708-4512 Cell, or email [email protected].

 

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Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

Massoni Opens Grace Mitchell Exhibition September 21

September 21, 2023 by MassoniArt

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A powerful look from Grace’s perspective on stewardship and the protection of the watershed. New work and favorites from her previous collections will be on exhibit at the High Street gallery from September 21 – October 19.

Gallery artist Grace Mitchell lives and works in the Hudson River Valley. Using traditional oil painting techniques, she makes luminous, romantic paintings of natural places. She works to create a contemporary response to the accelerating deterioration in natural systems worldwide and the fundamental human need for connection to the natural world.

In her current exhibit, her paintings explore the marsh as a liminal space. “Marshes are fertile, full of life and potential, breeding grounds. There’s a beauty and a mysterious quality there which has inspired painters and poets over time but has often also inspired a vague sense of portent in humans who looked askance at these liminal spaces, calling them dank, dismal, unhealthy, haunted, wasteland.” she writes.

Former Washington Post art critic, Mary McCoy recently penned an essay on the exhibit. ““Watershed” is an inspired title for this show and carries a double meaning. Every mountain, forest, marsh and sea that Grace Mitchell paints is part of a watershed.” says McCoy. “There is no longer any doubt that climate change is happening and happening fast thanks to our continuing use of fossil fuels. Where we go from here is our collective choice.” 

In her interview with Mitchell, McCoy delves deeper into the message of her work. “Most of my work has an implied message, that of interdependence in the natural world and threats to that and to the future of life on earth. The future prospects of sustainability depend, in part at least, upon comprehending these relationships and adapting human behavior to them.” says Mitchell.

Visitors are encouraged to read the thoughtful essay and engaging interview when they visit the gallery. Copies will be available at the gallery to take with you as well as on the exhibit page of the MassoniArt website (www.massoniart.com/mccoyinterview)

 Watershed …a retrospective will be on exhibit in the 203 High Street gallery.  Hours at both the High Street and Cross Street galleries are Thursday, Friday – 11-4; Saturday 10-5. In addition, the Cross Street gallery is open Sunday 12-3. Private appointments may be scheduled at any time by contacting Carla Massoni. 410-708-4512 

For additional information please visit www.massoniart.com.

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Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

MassoniArt Gallery Featuring Marc Castelli

June 13, 2023 by MassoniArt

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MARC CASTELLI
Working Portraits / watermen.2

June 16 – July 8, 2023
113 South Cross Street
Chestertown, MD 21620

Open House – Saturday, June 17, 10-5 pm
Artist Talk – Saturday, June 17, 12 noon

Marc Castelli has been painting the workboats, watermen, and log canoes of the Chesapeake region for over thirty years.  He is considered by many to be a master of his watercolor medium and a renowned artist of the Chesapeake.  The MassoniArt gallery has represented Castelli for over twenty-five years with an annual one-man show.  Encompassing only three weeks, Castelli’s special exhibition, Working Portraits / watermen.2,  features the second in a series of Castelli’s portraits of watermen. These are not generic images or archetypes but portrayals of real people Castelli feels privileged to know.

This exhibition will be in addition to Castelli’s Annual One Man Exhibition – Laying Down the Sun – scheduled October 21-November 26, 2023.

When discussing the genesis of the project Castelli shared, “painting such personal images of them is unnerving. In some instances, the focus is solely on the face with the weathered lines of their lives streaming from the eyes. Some call those lines ‘crow’s feet’ I liken them to a map of every creek, river, gut, thurfer, cove, and bay these men have worked as they harvest crabs, fish, eels, oysters and turtles.”

Also included in the exhibit are focused images of the watermen on their workboats.  For Castelli these watermen are not just figures to populate a painting.  “There is no such thing as a generic waterman.  The men in the paintings are knowable to themselves, their families, and to their compatriots.”

Both the High Street Gallery and Cross Street Gallery are open Thursday, Friday – 11-4 and Saturday 10-5. The Cross Street Gallery is open Sunday 12-3 and the High Street Gallery by appointment. Private appointments may be scheduled at any time by contacting Carla Massoni. 410-708-4512.

For additional information please visit www.massoniart.com.

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Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Carla Massoni, local news

Marcy Dunn Ramsey: Inside/Outside Annual Exhibition

May 11, 2023 by MassoniArt

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Audience by Marcy Dunn Ramsey

MARCY DUNN RAMSEY / INSIDE/OUTSIDE
ANNUAL EXHIBITION
May 19 – June 18, 2023

Also featuring work by Deborah Weiss

Opening Reception
Friday, May 19, 5:30-7:30 pm

Marcy Dunn Ramsey/Artist Talk – Saturday, May 20th, 12 noon

Collector’s Preview – May 16-17 or by appointment.

June First Friday Reception
June 2rd, 5-7 pm

Marcy Dunn Ramsey’s annual exhibition Inside/Outside represents the work created over the late fall and winter months and will be featured in the High Street gallery from May 19 – June 18.

It’s not what you look at that matters, it’s what you see.  Henry David Thoreau

“I love that Marcy chose to quote Thoreau for this year’s exhibition, there are so many similarities in viewpoint,” said gallerist Carla Massoni.  “She is both a naturalist and an environmental justice activist.  Her work is inspired by a close observation of nature, personal experience, and an awareness of her place in time.”

Jacob’s Ladder by Marcy Dunn Ramsey

Thoreau wanted people to not only “look” at nature, but to truly “see” it. What does nature say to your mind, your soul, your body that goes beyond just the sensory input?

“I look for compositions in the natural world that strike a chord of recognition in me,” Ramsey explained. “Something on the outside that resonates with something on the inside.  Then I play with the image, exaggerating some aspects, minimizing others, reflecting my current mood with color and line.  I “try” to achieve the perfect bliss of a child lost in the creative act, mindful of nothing but the pleasure of play.”

The title she chose – Inside/Outside – alludes to the struggle encountered by the desire to achieve this “childlike” creative state while contending with the personal roadblocks one confronts in daily life and a glaring awareness of the damage being done to the Earth. The rivers of the Chesapeake have been her muse and her cause for over thirty years.  She remains a fierce advocate.

Strongly motivated and determined, artists are uniquely aware that there may be more than a single response or solution to a problem.  Their innate curiosity and flexibility enable them to meet roadblocks with surprising success.

Even a seasoned artist like Ramsey recognizes that outside influences can disrupt the sanctuary of the studio and the work exhibited in this year’s show reflects this challenge. Crisscrossing lines slash defiantly across multiple canvases, voids of space with no anchoring point reside next to vibrant leaf patterns playfully arranged across a neon yellow background. The bliss she seeks is conveyed most completely in the inner light and counterbalanced lines of one of her largest canvases – Jacob’s Ladder.  But it is Babel – a stunning cacophony of lines and energy moving upwards that gives voice to the conflicting energies Ramsey captures – inside/outside.

It’s not what you look at that matters, it’s what you see. 

Inside/Outside will be on exhibit in the 203 High Street gallery.  Hours during the show are Thursday – Friday, 11am – 4pm, Saturday, 10am – 5 pm. Additionally, the Cross Street gallery is open on Sunday 12-3 and private appointments may be scheduled at any time by contacting Carla Massoni. 410-708-4512

For additional information please visit www.massoniart.com.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, local news

Marc Castelli | Paralian October 22 – November 28, 2022

October 7, 2022 by MassoniArt

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Paralian – someone who lives by the sea.

Carla Massoni, the owner of MassoniArt Gallery, is pleased to announce the opening of Marc Castelli’s one-man exhibition – Paralian.  For over thirty years, Castelli’s annual show has become a Chesapeake tradition. Expect to see unmatched renderings of watermen, workboats, and log canoes from a painter recognized as one of the finest marine artists in the country.

This year’s exhibition dates coincide with the Chestertown RiverArts Studio Tour OCTOBER 22-23 & 29-30 10am-5pm and the Sultana Education Foundation’s Downrigging Festival.

From the very beginning, Castelli’s annual show has been synonymous with the Downrigging.  Now in its 22nd year, the festival is one of the largest annual tall ship gatherings in North America. The festival features a long-weekend of Tall Ship sails, tours, incredible live bluegrass music, lectures, exhibits, family activities, regional food and more. www.downrigging.org

During the Downrigging festival we are extending our Exhibition Hours at the High Street location:
Friday, October 28 | 5:00-7:30pm
Saturday, October 29 | 10:00am – 5:00pm
Sunday, October 30 | 11:00am -3:00pm

ARTIST TALK:  This year due to popular demand there will be two scheduled on Saturday, October 29,10-11 am and 1-2pm.

For those with Covid concerns, we are creating a series of “virtual” experiences to showcase Marc’s 2022 exhibition – Paralian. Once the exhibit is installed, a video tour will be posted online and Marc has prepared in-depth descriptions of each watercolor featured in the exhibition to enhance your experience. Paralian will be featured in the online shop, however, ALL sales must be handled directly through the gallery.

Visit www.massoniart.com for a listing of our High Street and Cross Street galleries public hours.  Private appointments may be arranged to suit your schedule, simply contact us prior to your visit to set-up a date and time. Call Carla Massoniat 410-778-7330 Gallery, 410-708-4512 Cell, or email [email protected].

All CDC guidelines will be followed.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Carla Massoni, local news

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