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FEBRUARY 7 - APRIL 4, 2008

Gallery Talk March 27, 2008

Stephanie Haboush Plunkett, deputy director and chief curator at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Mass., will present an illustrated talk on the national influence and contributions of the “Golden Age Illustrators” at the Burt Chernow Gallery at the Housatonic Museum of Art on Thursday, March 27, 2008 at 12:30 p.m. The event is free and open to the public. More...

TV Show Highlights Exhibit

Illustrating CTwill be the focus of the television show Positively Connecticut with Diane Smith in April. The show, which airs on CPTV (CT's PBS station), will air April 10, 2008 at 8:00pm with repeats on April 12th at 6:30pm and April 13th at 10:30pm. Check you local listing for the correct channel for CPTV.

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ILLUSTRATING CONNECTICUT • PEOPLE, PLACES AND THINGS

Robbin Zella

Illustrating Connecticut: People, Places, and Things explores the history and culture of Connecticut, highlighting the art of illustrators, many of whom presently live and work in the state.

Connecticut has long been called "home" by artists drawn to its proximity to New York City. A strong contingent in Westport and Weston has allowed for the development of such collections as the Sanford B. D. Low Illustration Collection at the New Britain Museum of American Art, the Westport Historical Society, and the Westport Library, the latter two with illustration collections on continuous view.

Illustrating Connecticut: People, Places, and Things features works by Randall Enos, Murray Tinkelman, Kathy Jakobsen, Guy Billout, Nancy White Cassidy, Merle Nacht, Mark Hess, Wendell Minor, Bob Kessel, Blaine Kruger, Miggs Burroughs, Bernie Fuchs, Lonni Sue Johnson, Leslie Cober-Gentry, Hal Mayforth, Kinuko Craft, Robert Crawford, Brian Cronin, Thomas G. Fowler, Ross MacDonald, Walter O.R. Korder, Garrett Price, Etienne Delessert, Christopher Passehl, Jeff Seaver, Bill Thomson, John Dykes, and Barry Moser. These artists capture the many facets of Connecticut, spotlighting the history of its agricultural origins, the role that its inventions played in the Civil War and the winning of the American West, the significance of its military contributions in developing helicopters and submarines, and its leadership in forming a national identity through a shared language. The quintessential New England town green serves as an icon of civic pride while the First Constitution (Fundamental Orders) hidden in the Charter Oak stands as a symbol of the independence and resolve of its people. Also enduring is the image of the Yankee Peddler selling products produced here: buttons, pins, needles, clocks, and nutmeg.

These works are powerful narratives that offer an accounting of extraordinary sacrifice and outrageous fortune, of conspirators and heroes, and of objects brilliantly conceived and borne through perseverance and sheer determination. On the following pages you will be (re)acquainted with Native American Samson Occom, a founder of Dartmouth College, the infamous defector and spy Benedict Arnold who led the British attack on New London, and humorist Mark Twain and his gifts to the literary arts. Connecticut boasts many "firsts:" Jupiter Hammond who in 1760 was the first African-American writer to be published, the Old State House, Hartford, which was the first state house in America, and the first American cookbook that was published in Hartford in 1796. I hope that you will enjoy these beautiful, delightful, and more often than not, witty illustrations that make (re)learning about Connecticut's rich and varied history not just interesting, but fun!

Stephanie Haboush Plunkett, deputy director and chief curator at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Mass., will present an illustrated talk on the national influence and contributions of the “Golden Age Illustrators” at the Burt Chernow Gallery at the Housatonic Museum of Art on Thursday, March 27, 2008 at 12:30 p.m. The event is free and


Archived PRess Release from March 6, 2008


CURATOR TO SPEAK AT HOUSATONIC MUSEUM GALLERY
ILLUSTRATED TALK DISCUSSES ROLE OF MAJOR ILLUSTRATORS
CREATING AMERICA: ILLUSTRATION IN CONTEXT

Stephanie Haboush Plunkett, deputy director and chief curator at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Mass., will present an illustrated talk on the national influence and contributions of the “Golden Age Illustrators” at the Burt Chernow Gallery at the Housatonic Museum of Art on Thursday, March 27, at 12:30 p.m. The event is free and open to the public.

The talk will focus on the emergence of the publishing industry in the nineteenth century as the chief employer of artists. At this time, books and periodicals were the major sources of entertainment and information. During the "Golden Age," which ran from 1865 to 1920, the work of talented illustrators assumed unprecedented importance.

Currently, television, film, and the Internet have the major impact on public perception unlike the illustrators in the beginning of the 20th Century who reflected the aspirations of the nation and created visions of the American dream.

This illustrated talk will look at the extensive work that had national influence. It will examine the contributions of Golden Age illustrators J.C. Leyendecker, James Montgomery Flagg, Norman Rockwell, Charles Dana Gibson, John Held, Jr., N.C. Wyeth and others in the “great band of illustrators” who, said Norman Rockwell, “showed us to ourselves.”

A focus on Connecticut artists will highlight the art of important mid-twentieth century illustrators. Al Parker, Al Dorne, Harold von Schmidt and others influenced American’s values and aspirations during the post-war era and became founders of The Famous Artists School, an influential correspondence course based in Westport that had celebrated faculty including Norman Rockwell, Stevan Dohanos, Robert Fawcett, Ben Stahl, Austin Briggs, Jon Whitcomb, Peter Helk, Fred Ludekens, John Atherton and others.

The museum is located on the campus of Housatonic Community College, located at 900 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport, less than 150 yards of I-95 (Exit 27) and Rte. 8 (Exit 1).

Plunkett Biography

Stephanie Haboush Plunkett is the Deputy Director and Chief Curator at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Mass. The recipient of a Master of Fine Arts degree from the School of Visual Arts Illustration as Visual Essay program, she is the author of two American Library Association Notable children’s books and the curator of many exhibitions for the Norman Rockwell Museum, including Ephemeral Beauty: Al Parker and the American Women's Magazine: 1940-1960, Building Books: The Art of David Macaulay, The Art of The New Yorker: Eighty Years in the Vanguard, and Women in Illustration: Contemporary Visions and Voices, among others. She has also held positions at the Brooklyn Museum and the Brooklyn Children's Museum in Brooklyn, N.Y., and at the Heckscher Museum in Huntington, N.Y.

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Why Not?!

Gallery Installation

Exhibition sponsored by the Women's Caucus of Art- Connecticut Chapter with additional funding from the James A. Hulley Arts Foundation and the CT Commission on Culture and Tourism

Women Artists Pushing on the Boundaries

The question "Why Not?!" suggests freedom, boundary-stretching, new possibilities. To what established "No!" do women artists respond: "Why Not?!" The works in this show are the responses of women as they engage the question with personal, historical or universal issues.

The exhibit was open to applications from women artists from the following states:  New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine.

Exhibit Events:

"Lunch and Learn" guided tour

Thursday, 9/18/2008 
12 noon: Meet in lobby outside Burt Chernow Gallery for lunch (Bring own lunch.) and a short film presentation
12:30 – 1:30 p.m.:   Guided Tour of Housatonic collection with emphasis on women artists. 

Artists in the collection include the famous NY School artist Elaine de Kooning, Lee Bontecou, Alice Baber, Rene Schumacher, Sylvia Sleight, Doris Cesar, Jane Freilicher, Jane Peterson. Current or one-time WCA-CT members in the museum: Ann Chernow, Camille Eskell, Suzanne Benton, Alberta Cifolelli, and CT feminist activist artist June Ahrens, as well as Susan Sharp.
Free admission.

"Re-invent: WHY NOT?!"  panel discussion, moderator Janet Luongo

Thursday, 10/16/2008  
5:30 – 6:30 p.m.: reception with the speakers in the  Burt Chernow Gallery
6:45 – 8:00 p.m.: panel discussion in HCC's newly opened Beacon Hall
Free admission.

A panel of outstanding women will discuss how women re-invent their careers, themselves, their  ways of working and problem-solving, and how they break boundaries and re-energize.

Panelists: Exhibit Juror, Helen Klisser During, former curator of the Silvermine Gallery, currently a consultant to collectors; singer and photographer, Suzanne Sheridan; Prill Boyle, best-selling author of Defying Gravity about late-blooming women; and former art journalist Lisa Paul Streitfeld, now a full-time writer & artist in NYC.

WHY NOT?! Exhibiting Artists:
Corina Alvarezdelugo
Lisa Arnold
Judy Atlas
Nina Bentley
Suzanne Benton
Binnie Birstein
Edith Borax-Morrison
Karen Brussat Butler
Marilyn Clements
Sharon Coffin
Ann Conrad
Emily Corbato
Marie M. Curtis
Liz Dexheimer
Jean Proux Dibner
Anne Doris-Eisner
Katharine Draper
Laura Duggan
Renae Edge
Nancy Eisenfeld
Elizabeth Rose Eiten
Catherine Evans
Ellen Hackl Fagan
Ruth Feldman
Helga Butzer Felleisen
Tracy Walter Ferry
Joan Fitzsimmons
Oi Fortin
Kathryn Frederick
Karen Frostig
Michele Gage
Hagitte Gal-Ed
Michela Anne Griffo
Shiela Hale
Ginger Hanrahan
Sydney Phillips Hardin
Judy Henderson
Sheila Kaczmarek
Karen Kalkstein
Elisa Keogh
kHyal
Constance Kiermaier
Min Sin Kim
Ann Langdon
Linda Lancz
Gail Lee
Jane R.Lubin
harriet regina marion
Fruma Markowitz
Pat Martin
Karen Maru
Jennifer McCandless
Jan McLean
Nancy McTaque-Stock
Sandra K. Meagher
Irene K. Miller
Meredith Miller
Julie Fay Miller
Liana Moonie
Nancy Moore
Maria Morabito
Judith Morton
Trish Elwood O'Day
Constance Old
Lisa Oswald
Liz Pagano
Rebecca Parker
Carla Payson
Andrea Raynor
Amy Regan
Colleen Reilly-Rees
Alicia Renadette
Ginny B. Rogers
Tina Rohrer
Hannah Rossi
Sonia Roy
Roxanne Faber Savage
Debra Schaffer
Susan Sharp
Jody Silver
Debbie Smith
Melissa Smith
Anita Soos
Terry Spring
Judith Steinberg
Zsuzsanna Szegedi
Regina Thomas
Jeanne Williamson

Art/Place 25th Anniversary

Art/PLACE 25+ years

December 17 - January 30, 2009

Opening Reception Thursday, December 18, 5-7pm

Artist Talk with Arlé Sklar-Weinstein, Thursday, January 8, 5-7pm

The 25th Anniversary Art/Place Exhibition will encompass a wide range of 21st century artistic creativity, from representational to abstract and conceptual, in paintings, prints, photography and mixed media. A highlight will be a wall with a grid of artist portraits created by member Arlé Sklar-Weinstein. Inspired by studio visits to each artist, the individual portraits are mixed media compositions which capture the spirit of the artist as well as his or her image in photo montages.

The seeds of the project sprouted over a year ago when Sklar-Weinstein was participating in an Artist Residency at the Fundacion Valparaiso in Mojacar, Almeria, Spain. Her first Artists Portraits series of the eight international artists and writers there were shown in an Art/Place exhibition here in 2007 and her colleagues proposed a similar project for their 25th Anniversary Exhibition.

Sklar-Weinstein will discuss her work in an Artist Talk on Thursday, January 8 from 5 to 7 p.m at the museum.

A catalogue of the Artists Portrait Project includes a quote from The New York Times on the l982 opening of Art/Place in the Southport Railroad Station which described the gallery as “a blend of old architecture and new aesthetics, creating an exciting art environment.” The founders’ goals were to create a cooperative run by artists – not bound by the complex concerns of a museum, nor determined by the strong market concerns of a commercial gallery….a place where artists were free to explore and develop their own potential, and where artistic concepts and space combined to benefit both the artists and the community.

 

Sampling of Participating Artists (click image for larger view)
Fulll listing of artists follows thumbnails

Barbara Bernstein

Binnie Birstein

Barbara Harder

Susan Newbold

Diane Pollack

David Pressler

Arlé Sklar-Weinstein

Florence Zolan

 
All Participating Artists

Don Axelroad
Barbara Bernstein
Margot Bittenbender
Binnie Birstein
Richard Byrnes
Phyllis Clamage
Cecilia Fradet

Lori Glavin
Barbara Harder
Susanne  Keany
Elisa Khachian
Cate Leach
Mary Louise Long
Belle Manes
Mary Jo McGonagle
Sandra Meagher
Toby Michaels
Liana Moonie
Susan  Newbold
Diane Pollack
David Pressler


Archived Press Release From November 18, 2008

ART PLACE HAS 25TH ANNIVERSARY EXHIBITION AT HOUSATONIC MUSEUM OF ART

DEC 18-JAN 30

Art/Place, Fairfield County’s unique artists’ cooperative is culminating a year of exhibits throughout the county with a major celebratory 25th Anniversary exhibition at the Housatonic Museum of Art in Bridgeport.

Opening with a public reception on Thursday, December 18 from 5 to 7 p.m., the exhibition will run through January 30. The museum’s 2,000-square-foot gallery space, a part of Housatonic Community College, will allow Art/ Place’s 28 members the opportunity to exhibit multiple and large scale works.

The venue is especially welcome as Art/Place has been without a space to call their own since a fire destroyed its “home place” gallery in the Southport Railroad Station in January 2008. That gallery space is currently being reconstructed by the State Department of Transportation and Art/Place will move back into their new gallery sometime in 2009.

The 25th Anniversary Art/Place Exhibition will encompass a wide range of 21st century artistic creativity, from representational to abstract and conceptual, in paintings, prints, photography and mixed media. A highlight will be a wall with a grid of artist portraits created by member Arle Sklar-Weinstein. Inspired by studio visits to each artist, the individual portraits are mixed media compositions which capture the spirit of the artist as well as his or her image in photo montages.

The seeds of the project sprouted over a year ago when Sklar-Weinstein was participating in an Artist Residency at the Fundacion Valparaiso in Mojacar, Almeria, Spain. Her first Artists Portraits series of the eight international artists and writers there were shown in an Art/Place exhibition here in 2007 and her colleagues proposed a similar project for their 25th Anniversary Exhibition.

Sklar-Weinstein will discuss her work in an Artist Talk on Thursday, January 8 from 5 to 7 p.m at the museum.

A catalogue of the Artists Portrait Project includes a quote from The New York Times on the l982 opening of Art/Place in the Southport Railroad Station which described the gallery as “a blend of old architecture and new aesthetics, creating an exciting art environment.” The founders’ goals were to create a cooperative run by artists – not bound by the complex concerns of a museum, nor determined by the strong market concerns of a commercial gallery….a place where artists were free to explore and develop their own potential, and where artistic concepts and space combined to benefit both the artists and the community.

“When we heard that this talented group of artists needed a place to hold a 25th Anniversary milestone exhibit, we were delighted to offer our galleries,” said Housatonic Museum of Art director Robbin Zella.

Founded in l967 by the late Burt Chernow, author and professor, the Housatonic Museum of Art encompasses an extensive collection of over 4,000 artworks including masters such as Picasso, Renoir, Rodin and Dali. It is located at 900 Lafayette Blvd., off Exit 27 on I 95. The galleries are open Mon.- Fri. 8:30 a.m.- 5:30 p.m., Thurs. til 7 p.m. Closed on weekends December 20 through January 28.

For further information: (203) 332-5052

Ann Chernow- Picasso Project

Stars & Stripes

The opening reception for this exhibit is Thursday, February 19th from 12-3pm in the Burt Chernow Galleries. We apologize for any inconvenience that this may cause.

“Ann Chernow- Picasso Project,” an exhibit of prints by Westport artist Ann Chernow that focuses on the printing techniques of Pablo Picasso, will be on display at the Housatonic Museum of Art Thursday, February 12 through Sunday, March 22, 2009.

The exhibit represents the creative collaboration of artist Ann Chernow and Master Printer James Reed. Together they explored the techniques used by Picasso, discovering new ways to replace toxic media used in Picasso's printers' workshop during Picasso's time and incorporating them into Chernow's original works of art.

“Chernow and Reed have extended Picasso’s original methods,” said author Herbert Lust. “Going beyond Picasso’s images as a point of departure, they now have a compatibility with the drama of his printmaking. Not having detailed information about the methods and materials used by Picasso and his printers, and given today’s constraints due to the banning of many formerly used toxic printmaking materials, Chernow and Reed have created an astonishingly varied body of work which is both a homage to Picasso and an original and provocative oeuvre.”

In printmaking, the artist works on a surface of stone, metal, linoleum, wood, paper or other substance. The finished work of art reflects both the artist’s creation and the master printer’s skills in printing the work.

“It is important to understand that copying Picasso was not the intent of this project,” Chernow says. “All images are experiments that were attempts to render the appearance of certain surfaces and attain the drama of certain Picasso prints.”

The project began in 2002, when Chernow and Reed were admiring an original Picasso lithograph entitled “White Bust on Black.” “This dramatic black and white lithograph had an extraordinary visual energy,” Chernow says. “I wanted to produce a similar print using my own subject matter. It looked deceptively easy to do.” Reed, however, told her it was much more complicated than it looked. The pair then began to experiment to determine how Picasso arrived at the print. Their first attempts did not result in the ‘look’ of the Picasso work. They then turned to the book Picasso Lithographs by Fernand Mourlot, which noted some information about the technique used for each image. Chernow and Reed decided to delve further, producing prints using Chernow's images that emulate the ‘surface appearance of a varied group of lithographs and linoleum cuts.

Some of Mourlot’s information was so basic that it did not help them in how to proceed with a chosen image. Reed discovered through trial and error how to achieve the emulation of Picasso’s surfaces. The end result of their research and experiments is the series from which the images on display at Housatonic have been drawn. Accompanying each of Chernow’s works will be a copy of the Picasso work to which it relates, an explanation of why Chernow chose that particular image, and comments about the printing methods Reed used in making the print.

The exhibit will be on display from Thursday, February 12 through Sunday, March 22, 2009, at the Burt Chernow Galleries, named for Chernow's late husband who was founder of the Housatonic Museum of Art.

Chernow will discuss the project on Feb. 19 at 1:30 p.m. in the Galleries, located in HCC’s Lafayette Hall, The event is free and open to the public. For more information, visit http://www.HousatonicMuseum.org or call 203-332-5052.

The Housatonic Museum of Art is located on the campus of Housatonic Community College at 900 Lafayette Blvd. in downtown Bridgeport, less than 150 yards off I-95 and Rte 8 in downtown Bridgeport, one block from the Arena at Harbor Yard.

HCC Faculty Art Show 2009

Transitional Moment, an exhibit of the work of Housatonic Community College’s
art faculty, will be on display April 2-26, 2009

Contain For Now
Ron Abbe
(Oil on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Black Light
Ron Abb
(Oil on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

The Sounds of Water
Ron Abbe
(Oil on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

White Water 1
Ron Abbe
(Oil on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

White Water 2
Ron Abbe
(Oil on Canvas)
Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Leaves in a Tangle
Ron Abbe
(Oil on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Double Diamond
John Favret
(Acrylic on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

The Wave
John Favret
(Acrylic on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

The Savoy Hotel
Andy Pinto
(Acrylic on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Star Pin
Andy Pinto
(Acrylic on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Sunset
Andy Pinto
(Acrylic Stain on raw Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

The Artists Nest
Andy Pinto
(Acrylic on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

The Orange Door
Andy Pinto
(Acrylic on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Provence Sun
Judy Corrigan
(Acrylic on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Nova Scotia 2
Judy Corrigan
(Acrylic on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Youkilis vs. the Dragon
Jason Buening
(Oil on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

The Dream of Jean Helion
Jason Buening
(Oil on Canvas) Photograph by Mario E. Velez

HCC Student Art Show

The Factories and the Waste
Jeff Ladue
Oil on Canvas

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Self-Portrait
Jeff Ladue
Oil on Canvas

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Young Couple
Daniel Lee
Oil on Canvas

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

KL
Daniel Lee
Oil on Canvas

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Migratory Worker
Mario Velez
Photography

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Ripples
Mario E. Velez
Photography

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Late Spring
Mario E. Velez
Photography

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Out on a Limb
Sy Hirsch
Acrylic

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

The Unveiling
Tony Calendrillo
Oil on Canvas

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Music
Anthony Colon
Oil on Canvas

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Practice Time
Tony Calendrillo
Acrylic

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

The Widow
Mario E. Velez
Photography

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Shanghai Ghetto
Manfred Lobel
Acrylic

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Palm Trees
Manfred Lobel
Acrylic

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Morning Scene
TJ Tower
Acrylic

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Artists and Models
Tony Calendrillo
Acrylic

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

The Shot Tower and the Scarecrows
Jeff Ladue
Oil on Canvas

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Sky, Water, Trees
Alex Boboc
Oil on Canvas

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

The Blue Barn
Alex Boboc
Acrylic

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Creatures'N Critters
Al Coyote Weiner
Acrylic

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Transcendence
Al Coyote Weiner
Acrylic

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Baby Gone to Hell
Al Coyote Weiner
Acrylic

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Joy
Leon Gould
Mixed Media

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Judy
Leon Gould
Acrylic

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Fantasy Lady
Shirley Beitman
Mixed Media

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Windmill Point Lighthouse, VT
Hank Franked
Oil

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

Cape Cod Lighthouse
Hank Franked
Oil

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

St. Mark's Lighthouse, Florida
Hank Franked
Oil

Photograph by Mario E. Velez

PostSecret

The Housatonic Museum of Art in Bridgeport, CT opens PostSecret, the community art project that grew into an international phenomenon with an award-winning blog and four New York Times bestsellers.

August 3- September 13, 2009 (see below for Gallery Hours)

Opening Reception: Thursday, August 27, from 5-7 p.m. in the Burt Chernow Galleries in Lafayette Hall

Frank Warren, creator of PostSecret, will speak at the Beacon Hall Events Center at Housatonic Community College on

View More PostSecrets
View more PostSecrets

PostSecret, an exhibit of people’s innermost secrets by Frank Warren, will be on display at the Housatonic Museum of Art  Aug. 3- Sept. 13.

The exhibit, which has traveled the country since opening in Washington, D.C. in 2004, consists of anonymous postcards, many of them handmade, on which people have written their innermost secrets. Warren has culled some 400 postcards from the more than 250,000 he’s received for the exhibit.

“Warren’s exhibit taps into the universal stuff of being human, - the collective level of existence that defies age, culture, gender, and economics,” said Museum Director Robbin Zella. “The cards reveal our deepest fears, desires, regrets, and obsessions.”

The cards, carefully and creatively constructed by hand, are made from cardboard, old photographs, wedding invitations and other personal items artfully decorated. They have been sent to Warren from all over the world.

“The exhibit brilliantly reveals that human emotion can be unique and universal at the same time,” she added. “The secrets in the cards are provocative and profound, and the cards themselves are works of art.”

Warren is a small business owner who started PostSecret.com as a community art project. The website won two Webby Awards in 2006 and this year was named Weblog of the Year.

Warren, an Arizona native now living in Maryland, began the project in 2003, handing out 3,000 postcards to strangers, asking them to write down their secrets anonymously, and return the cards to him. He requested that the secrets be true and things that hadn’t been shared with anyone else.

After the first exhibit, word of the project spread and these “artful secrets” began arriving from every continent. They continue to arrive at the rate of 1,000 per week.

Warren, who is author of four successful PostSecret books, has appeared on the Today Show, Good Morning America, 20/20, CNN, MSNBC, CBC, NPR and Fox News says, “I have been asked many times why I started this. It still feels to me as though this project found me. All I try to do is make the right decisions every day to protect the integrity of the project – and learn to trust the journey.”

Proceeds from the PostSecret project have been used to help suicide prevention. When the All American Rejects  offered Warren  $1,000 to use some PostSecret images in their “Dirty Little Secret” music video, Warren asked them to donate $2,000 to 1(800)SUICIDE where he is a volunteer. The PostSecret project now has raised over $750,000 for the program and has received a special award from the National Mental Health Association for raising awareness and funds for suicide prevention.

The opening reception will be held Thursday, August 27, from 5-7 p.m. in the Burt Chernow Galleries at Lafayette Hall on the campus of Housatonic Community College. The college is located at 900 Lafayette Blvd. in downtown Bridgeport, less than 150 yards off I-95 and Rte. 8 in downtown Bridgeport.

Gallery Hours:

August 3 through August 28: Gallery hours are Monday through Friday from 8:30am until 5:30 pm and Thursday until 7 pm

CLOSED LABOR DAY WEEKEND September 5, 6, and 7

AFTER August 29th: Gallery hours are Monday through Friday from 8:30am until 5:30 pm and Thursday until 7 pm; Saturday 9am until 3pm and Sunday Noon until 4pm.

The PostSecret exhibition tour is organized by International Arts & Artists, Washington, D.C. The exhibition will travel to Brevard Art Museum, Melbourne, FL (May17 – July 13, 2008); Yeiser Art Center, Paducah, KY (July 26 – September 20, 2008); Minneapolis Public Library, MN (October 4 – November 30, 2008); Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR (December 12, 2008 – February 1, 2009); Bedford Gallery, Dean Lesher Regional Center for the Arts, Walnut Creek, CA (March 1 – April 26, 2009); Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, NY (May 16 - July 12, 2009); Housatonic Museum of Art, Bridgeport, CT (August 1 - September 13, 2009) and the Yellowstone Art Museum, Billings, MT. Please go to http://www.artsandartists.org/exh.detail.php?exhID=33 for updates to the three-year tour schedule.

International Arts & Artists in Washington, DC, is a non-profit arts service organization dedicated to increasing cross-cultural understanding and exposure to the arts internationally, through exhibitions, programs and services to artists, arts institutions and the public. Visit www.artsandartists.org

Exhibit Information

PostSecret Speaker Event Information

Frank Warren

creator of PostSecret

will speak at the Beacon Hall Events Center at Housatonic Community College on

Thursday, September 10, 2009 at 7 pm

Important Ticket Information:

No tickets will be available after September 8th!

HCC Students may obtain a ticket in the Dean of Students Office (Lafayette Hall room A110).
Please read the following:

  • Admission for current students is free of charge but will be limited to the first 100 students to request a ticket. First come - first served.
  • Only one (1) ticket per student.
  • If you have registered for the Fall 2009 semester after August 19th you must bring a copy of your registration with you to request a ticket.
  • You must bring your Banner ID number with you to obtain a ticket in the Dean of Students Office.

General Admission tickets are available in the Museum office (the rear of the Gallery) payable to the HCC Foundation for a $15 donation.
Quantities are limited:

  • Pick up tickets in the Museum office (the rear of the Gallery) in Lafayette Hall
  • Make a $15 donation for each ticket requested, payable to the HCC Foundation.

Post Apocalyptic Tattoo:
D. Dominick Lombardi’s Dark Vision

December 2009 - WhiteHotMagazine.com
D. Dominick Lombardi @ The Housatonic Museum of Art

Tattooed Landscape

Review in d'ART International Magazine

September 24 - October 23, 2009

Opening reception for the exhibit will be held Sunday, September 27 at 1-4 pm

Gallery Talk by the artist on Thursday, October 1st at 2pm

Essay by Carol Kino

Post Apocalyptic Tattoo, an exhibit of reverse paintings, sculptures, prints and drawings by New York artist D. Dominick Lombardi, will be on display at the Housatonic Museum of Art September 24 - October 23, 2009.

The artwork presents a view of the future, as filtered through the designs of a tattoo artist. The significant mutations seen in the anatomy of the various characters depicted in the works are the result of centuries of exposure to transgenics in foods and various pollutants.

PreRaphaelite Preemie“Dominick’s works show severely damaged characters who have survived a horrific environmental apocalypse,” said Robbin Zella, director of the Housatonic Museum of Art. “His dark vision certainly asks us to stop and reflect on his message,” she said.

“The project is rooted in Lombardi’s concern about the fate of the planet,” she said. “His work, as he says, is about 'where we're headed as a species in this world in which humans are guinea pigs in a larger experiment and grab for power and money run by sinister enterprises,’” she said. “Indeed, they are victims of a slow apocalypse, being altered by degrees over time.”

His mutant creatures include Blue Boy, whose innards spill down his legs; his sweetheart, the rubbery-boned, turquoise-lipped Twister; Big Foot, who perambulates on a single massive foot; and Clown, who dies early on in the story from an enlarged hair follicle on his tongue. Nonetheless, they show an enthusiasm for life that belies their infirmities, making the best of a truly bad situation.

Central to the tale is the unseen Tattoo Artist, whom Dominick channels and chronicles by producing all these drawings, paintings, and sculptures. Lombardi is the medium by which Tattoo Artist is made visible.

“Are you the Tattoo Artist?” Dominick was asked once. “No,” he said. “I’m the vehicle for the Tattoo Artist who’s sending these images to me.”

Exotic Tumor Death of a Clown

water, algae, ice

November 5 – December 18, 2009
(Museum/College closed November 26 - November 29)
Opening Reception, Saturday November 7, 2 – 4pm

Water, Algea, Ice

A catalog with essays by Kay Larson and Patricia C. Phillips is available for $15.00

This exhibit is brought to you through the generosity of the Werth Family Foundation,
The Housatonic Community College Foundation, and Housatonic Community College.

Remembering Stanley Boxer

Stanley Boxer Reception

The exhibit will feature more that 60 works by the prolific abstract artist. His works are in the permanent collections of many museums including the New York Museum of Modern Art, The Whitney, The Museum of Fine Arts Boston, and others. The opening reception is on Thursday, Feb. 11 from 5:30 to 7 p.m.

The Gallery will be closed on President's Day, Monday, February 15, 2010

 Gleedtwistofflayeddanknessasunder, 1978

Passionseekingwhere, 1996

The Museum is open when the college is open, daily and weekends. No charge and open to the public; Closed on state holidays. At Housatonic Community College, 900 Lafayette Blvd., Bridgeport, CT 06604. Phone 203-332-5952. Contact Robbin Zella, Museum Director, .

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