TERRE HAUTE — Fuchsia, persimmon, burgundy and emerald are shades of colors that in the right hands create a rainbow of contrasting artworks with strong visual messages.
That’s precisely the result of woodworking, paintings and photographs created by Debbie Anderson, Edie Richards, Matthew McNichols, Jeff Paitson and Lindsay Rae Pameijer in a special winter art exhibition at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.
The exhibition, covering the top two hallways in Moench Hall, opened Thursday. The event is free and open to the public.
The exhibition will be available for public viewing weekdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. through May 28. Guided tours are available.
Anderson, a Parke County resident and Vigo County teacher, has won many awards for her intarsia artworks, featuring shades of colored wood fitted and glued into a wooden support popular in 15th-century Italy.
“The variety of grain design and color from our Earth’s trees is exciting, breathtaking and endless,” said Anderson, who began creating art with wood in 1999. “A trip to the lumberyard sparks an adrenaline flow of my senses … I love the beauty of wood grains and the quality it brings to art.”
Anderson’s “To Remember is to Honor,” a large piece featuring assorted heroic firefighters’ scenes, won first-place honors at the Wabash Valley Art Guild’s 2009 Spring Art Show.
“Take A Moment” honors soldiers in different acts of heroism, while “Kenny,” “Fall Colors” and “Branching Grandeur” showcase the artist’s experimentation with the fields of abstract, realism and perspective.
McNichols, a Terre Haute resident and former Rose-Hulman art curator, creates unique visual experiences that are a catalyst in the generation of aesthetic consciousness and a good mood, where observation and sensation combine as illuminated, timeless space. That’s true of “The Visitation,” a colorful 2009 oil painting on board that features a human face, and “Vinculos Imposibles,” a 2007 acrylic painting and vinyl on canvas that has a multitude of bright colors.
“Through the use of repetition, color and line, I seek to randomly reveal unrealistic spatial relationships that are then harmonized with an opaque, multicolor and tropical palette,” said McNichols, who has 12 pieces in the exhibit. “I make my art optimistically and seek to create simple complexities that are both visually interesting and harmoniously weird.”
Richards is still cultivating her artistic skills through expression of visual inspirations in a variety of styles – photography, painting and mixed media. She earned a bachelor’s degree in fine arts from Indiana State University and taught art in Indianapolis before moving back to the Wabash Valley. Her exhibit at Rose-Hulman features pastels, ink and acrylic paintings, and black-and-white photographs.
More than 20 digital photographs taken by Paitson during the past two years feature scenes from some of America’s most picturesque scenes: Monument Valley, Chiricahua National Monument and the Petrified Forest, all in Arizona; Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming; and McCormick’s Creek State Park in Indiana.
“My quest is to use photography as a way to illustrate how God and His Word are present in every situation we find ourselves in,” said the Terre Haute resident.
Pameijer also uses the bright colors and flowing lines of beautiful landscapes to create acrylic and oil paintings, colored pencil prints and ink artworks that depict scenes near Summit County, Colo., where she lives.
Individuals or groups seeking guided tours of Rose-Hulman’s winter art exhibit should contact Letsinger at (812) 877-8452 or Steve.Letsinger@rose-hulman.edu.
Arts
Rose-Hulman exhibit features variety of colors, artwork
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