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Peggy Clarke & Grace DaviesPeggy Clarke | Grace Davies

Artists' reception:
Friday September 7th, 6–9 pm

This exhibit highlights the work of two artists whose curiosity about clay challenges them to explore the range of this versatile medium.  Although they have different styles, they share an enthusiasm for new techniques to expand their artistic vocabularies.

They work in separate studios, but regularly engage in a lively dialogue about what they are pursuing independently, bouncing ideas off each other and supporting experimentation and dedication to the craft.

Peggy Clarke specializes in functional art—sometimes infused with whimsy, sometimes more classical in shape.  Grace Davies devotes most of her energy to creating animal forms, trying to capture the essence of the creature and not just its taxonomical shape.

Architectural Pottery and Paintings of Architecture
Robert Pesce, ceramicist | Diane Waller, painter
July 15–August 31
Artists' Reception: July 20, 2012,  5–8 pm

The exhibit is an exciting juxtaposition of two art techniques by two dedicated artists. Robert Pesce makes pottery thrown on a wheel at La Mano Pottery. Diane Hardy Waller paints on the sidewalks and in the parks of New York. Both have a unique style and spirit to their art.

La Mano Pottery, est. 1998, the sponsoring organization, has recently moved to this location in the heart of the new Chelsea. La Mano offers classes and artist residencies to potters of all ages and craft techniques. The gallery has been host to many respected and loved potters in the NYC area. This is a first show of combination of mediums.

Robert, known as Bob to his friends, says about his art of pottery, "Art is the right making of that which has to be made. The artist is compelled to create work by his/her inner self trying to express emotion. I feel that the best art draws you into the work on a very personal level. It is inner self talking to inner self. That dialogue between you and the work is what counts whether it is one word or volumes."

Diane says about painting New York, "When I am painting, I know I am a citizen of the universe. I co-create with something much larger than the local person who eats and sleeps in a coop and paints on the streets of Manhattan. Painting outdoors on the streets and in the parks, looking at the awesome skyscrapers and imagining what is going on behind those windows too high to peek in gives me a feeling of belonging to the world and the comfort of having a personal place in it. The buildings with the colors, shapes, varying sizes and changing light inspire me to explore my inner architecture.

Diane thinks Robert's pottery is beautiful beyond description and says, "Bob's architectural pottery pieces are as structured as New York City's sky scrapers; however the undulating shapes are reminiscent of feminine form as in Botticelli's Venus or Georgia O'Keefe's flower paintings. The dignity and craftsmanship of these fluid and statuesque pieces bring to mind and heart, classic beauty made contemporary, in a fine blend of curves and lines."

Bob thinks of Diane's paintings "Diane's paintings draw you into the scene and you become part of it, a tourist in the city of her vision. When I see her cafe and umbrellas, I hear accordion music as I stroll down the Champs Elysees. Her city towers make me feel like a young boy in the forties in NYC, growing up as the city grows up around me. Her work is evocative, her style impressive as well as Impressionistic."

About Bob:
Born in Brooklyn, NY in the early 50's, R.A. Pesce, known to his friends as Bob, has been fascinated with ceramics since the age of four. Learning to throw pottery on a kick wheel at age 15, his interest led him to ceramic/sculpture majors at both Pratt Institute and Brooklyn College. At Pratt, he was the only sophomore to have his work shown in the annual senior ceramic show and the one man show of his wood sculpture at Brooklyn College showed him to be both talented and skilled at his craft.

He has designed dinnerware and flatware for the Farberware Company. Working as an antique dealer, he specialized in pottery and textiles of the Arts and Crafts period. The influence of this period is seen in much of his ceramic work today. Take a look at his website: www.rapesce.com

About Diane:
Diane Waller has been an artist her whole life. However, she started exhibiting publicly in 1996 as a photographer. Drawing and painting resurfaced after years of being pushed aside for professional careers.  After arguing with her inner artist, Diane left the commercial world to be a full time artist and took her business experience on to co-ownership in La Mano Pottery studio in Chelsea.  Since then, all three aspects of her art have been exhibited in galleries and exhibition spaces in New York City, Florida, the Tri-state area and Europe. Diane's photographs appear in the award winning children's books, "Where Does God Live?", "Does God Hear My Prayer?" and "Does God Forgive Me?" The Bronx Zoo uses her nature photography in signage and various Wildlife Conservation publications.

The other side of Diane is that she was educated as an engineer, worked in the aerospace industry which she left to get her MBA.  With that, she was successful in the not for profit sector. After finding that business less than satisfactory to her creative nature and financial desires, she sold real estate in several states, landing in NYC in 1980. Looking deep within her nature, in 1993, she was ordained as a minister. All in all, it came back to making art fulltime in 2002. Today, Diane is happily painting, taking photographs and making non functional art clay.  Please visit her website to see the latest. www.dianewaller.com

This exhibit was featured on MadParkNews.com

Doug Rochelle's ceramic sculptures and masks, as well as his Subway Drawings, will be on view in the gallery May 5–27. The opening reception will be on Friday, May 4th from 6–8 pm.

About the Artist
Doug Rochelle came to New York in 2001 from Kansas City and got a job as a waiter, working nights. Doug joined the LaMano Pottery Studio in August 2001. After work, and inspired by what he calls "the madness and mayhem of working the graveyard shift... where fights, barf, homeless and drunks cyclone the edge" Doug would decompress at the studio by creating his haunting ceramic images until the wee hours of the morning.

As he describes his process: “I smash two 25 pound blocks of clay together, then I draw, dig, scoop and poke. The sculptures take about one month to create and four to eight months to dry. The faces/heads are then bisque fired in the kiln, glazed and then high fired. Hopefully they survive..."

His imagery, which began when he was 13, with doodles over the Yellow Pages while on the phone with his girlfriend, has continued to develop and grow. "I did try all the isms -- Abstract Expressionism, Impressionism, Fauvism, and Surrealism, but I was always drawn back to the doodle figure/head. I like sculpting heads. They are made of abstract shapes yet easily recognizable. The masks also express my search for the truth which, in theory, can be better seen by looking at something from different points of view.”

 

Artists-in-(New!)Residence

Group Show: March 8–April 30
Reception: Friday, March 23, 6–8pm

Annabelle Bascou-Fonte
Kate Burns
Brady Candell
Melissa Chow
Peggy Clarke
Ali Epstein
Nicole Donnelly
Rivkah Feldman
Joahua Fraoili
Melissa Green
Julie Hadley
Nonna Hall
Bonnie Hanna
Martin Hanna
Danica Holoviak
Deborah Hunter
Bri Johnson
Sacha Jones
Stuart Kabakoff
Jessie Lazar
Daniella Lekach
Pei-yu Lin
Marge Lurie
Robert A. Pesce
Doug Rochelle
Joanna Shaw
Richard Stauffacher
Barbara Stone
Diane Waller
Jacob Cannon Wilson
Mimi Young
Joseph Zwechkenbaum