Contact: Andrea Ebeling, Public Relations Assistant, 920-832-6585 or andrea.ebeling@lawrence.edu
For Immediate Release
October 27, 2006
Prints, Paintings, and Patch Boxes on Display at Lawrence University's Wriston Art Center Galleries
APPLETON, WIS. — Prints, paintings, and patch boxes
will be exhibited November 10 through December 17 in the Wriston Art Center
galleries on the Lawrence University campus. An opening lecture by sculptor
and printmaker Mark Iwinski will be held at 6:00 p.m. November 10 at the Wriston
Art Center. A reception will follow. Both the lecture and reception are free
and open to the public.
Iwinski, from Ithaca, N.Y., will exhibit Ghost Trees and Crosscuts: Interactions
Between Forest and History in the Kohler Gallery. Using nature as both
his inspiration and his source material Iwinski creates prints and sculptures
intimately connected to his locale. Employing relief-printing techniques, he
carves into the flat surface of stumps from cleared timber. Inking the surface,
he creates relief prints that reflect both the natural growth rings of the trees
and often star charts from the night skies above. Additionally, he often makes
casts of the stumps and installs these ghostly shells in the gallery. The process
is solitary and contemplative and the resulting pieces encourage viewers to
find connections to both time and their impact on the earth.
Painter Gina Litherland of Cedarburg will exhibit Gina Litherland: Paintings
in the Hoffmaster Gallery during the show. The precise and magical realism of
Litherland's works results in paintings that reflect dreams, the unconscious,
and the implausible and haunting reveries of an imagination unfettered by logic.
In an almost obsessive style reminiscent of early renaissance Netherlandish
paintings, Litherland suggests poetic metaphors for the pleasures and perils
of modern life. The painting techniques that Litherland employs in her work
are traditional indirect oil painting techniques similar to those used by 15th
century Sienese painters, combined with textural effects created by using various
tools other than the paintbrush. These techniques allow Litherland to create
a detailed, layered, and complex surface of images.
In the Leech Gallery will be Trifles from England, 18th Century Patch Boxes
in the Permanent Collection. Often sold as souvenirs of famous places these
small ceramic and metal containers originally held artificial "beauty spots"
that middle and upper class women applied to cover small pox scars. The covers
are decorated with delicate glaze drawings and paintings of familiar sights
and buildings. These recently acquired 18th and 19th century patch boxes were
donated by Mrs. Barbara Wriston.
The Wriston Art Center galleries are open Tuesday-Friday, 10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m., Saturday-Sunday, noon-4:00 p.m. The galleries are closed on Mondays. For more information on this exhibition and other upcoming exhibitions at the Wriston Art Center, visit www.lawrence.edu/news/wriston or call 920-832-6621.