Trina May Smith: Entangled

March 18 – April 9, 2015

Opening Reception: Friday, March 18 from 5 – 7:30 PM

Trina May Smith is fascinated by urban places that have passed their prime. As a remembrance of the companies and people who once occupied now mostly abandoned towns, Smith captures the heart and soul of these places in small, intimate portraits. Whether it is an old factory or an abandon house, these paintings record clues as to what the town might have been like before its decline.

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Introducing Katie Musolff and Andy Fletcher: Old Souls

February 13 – March 12

Opening Reception: Feb. 13 from 2 – 4 PM

The Tory Folliard Gallery is pleased to announce the representation of two Wisconsin artists, Katie Musolff and Andy Fletcher. Their debut exhibition includes paintings from Musolff’s River Journal Series and Fletcher’s plein air landscapes.

An astute observer, Katie Musolff paints plants and animals that she finds along the Mississippi River. Her current body of work, River Journal, consists of meticulous watercolor and gouache paintings that concentrate on the beauty and grace of her surroundings while embracing the remains of the organic world.

Andy Fletcher‘s landscapes explore man’s changing relationship with the land. His paintings evoke feelings of nostalgia as they celebrate the family farm and an older, more sustainable way of farming.

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Elizabeth Shreve – The Mysteries of Flight Revealed

January 8 – February 6, 2016

Magic Realist painter, Elizabeth Shreve, describes her work as a meeting place of her psychological background and her artistic identity. The Wisconsin artist’s second solo exhibition with the Gallery consists of many curious narratives such as birds giving humans the gift of flight. Her paintings express compassion, empathy, struggle, transformation, and human vulnerability.

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Wallflowers

January 8 – February 6, 2016

This group exhibition focuses on the flower in contemporary art by the region’s top artists. The artists’ styles are as unique and personal as the artists’ intent when capturing their subject. The exhibition includes paintings, works on paper, photography and sculpture.

Participating artists are: Stephen Warde Anderson, Tara Austin, Kim Benson, Tom BerenzMary BeroChris BertiDerrick BuischMarion CoffeyTerrence Coffman,Laura DronzekBeth EdwardsPatrick Farrell, Joshua Huyser, Ron IsaacsClare MalloyNancy MladenoffMark MulhernCharles MunchDennis NechvatalMichael NolandMelanie ParkeBill ReidJeffrey RippleJan SerrBrook SlaneT.L. SolienNathaniel SternFred StonehousePaula Swaydan GrebelStephanie TrenchardMichael VelliquetteMary Alice Wimmer, and James Winn.

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John Dilg - Blue Smoke

November 20 – January 2
 
Artists’ Reception: Friday, November 20, 5 – 7:30pm
 
John Dilg concentrates on the trope of “landscape” for his visually clarified, multi-layered paintings. The essence of his subjects is captured by outlines from the colors below, evoking a sense of archaeology and meaningful message. A professor of painting at the University of Iowa, Dilg has served as Visiting Artist at nearly 50 institutions. Among many other awards, he received a Fulbright Grant to India and a National Endowment for the Arts Individual Artist Fellowship. In December, 2014, The Huffington Post called him “One of 15 Artists to Watch.” This is Dilg’s first solo show at Tory Folliard Gallery.

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Fred Stonehouse – A Peaceable Kingdom

October 16 – November 14

Artist’s Reception: October 16 (Gallery Night) from 5 – 9pm

Artist Talk: October 31 at 2pm

Beautifully executed, Fred Stonehouse‘s work expresses his personal psychology and dreamlike vision as influenced by Renaissance painting, folklore, magic realism, and the unseen mysteries which abound in the world. In this exhibition Stonehouse delves deeper into the metaphor behind his crossbred animal paintings. Working from a biblical vision of harmony between all earthly creatures, Stonehouse’ new work strives to capture the realistic consequences of such unlikely animal pairings.

The Gallery’s exhibition runs concurrently with the Fred Stonehouse exhibition at the museum of Wisconsin Art (MOWA).

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Susan Stamm Evans – Unspoken

October 16 – November 14

Artist’s Reception: October 16 (Gallery Night) from 5-9pm

Susan Stamm Evans continues to explore the human figure in her new eries f bronze sculptures. The exhibition includes e intimat “ace Fragment” nd e ”hread” and ”nterwoven “ series, both containing her on---ind sculptures that appear woven. Susan tamm Evans expresses ur connection to the universal human experience through the “common threads” that weave her abstracted face nd metaphorically intertwine us all.

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Laura Dronzek – New Paintings

September 11 – October 10, 2015

Laura Dronzek‘s new collection of landscape and still-life paintings are intimate in size, but offer views of grand themes suggested with richly layered surfaces. Her imagined landscapes are composed of the most basic features: a horizon line, a sky, and a subject, but so carefully rendered, that each one is precious. An avid gardener, Dronzek explores the core properties of form and color in her floral still-lifes as she seeks out mystery found in everyday objects.

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Flora Langlois – Paintings

September 11 – October 10, 2015
 
Flora Langlois is a native of Costa Rica whose first inspiration is the natural world. Her Magic Realist paintings depict creatures amidst intensely detailed tropical fauna and suggest mystical tales and magical places. Langlois’s enchanting paintings seek to enter the natural world and explore “the spiritual connection of things natural to us and how all creation is united.” It is the rainforest’s complexity that influences her tangled and exuberant compositions.

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The Salon Show

July 11 – September 5, 2015

Artists’ Reception on Gallery Night, Friday, July 24 from 6 to 9 pm

The Salon Show is the Gallery’s biggest exhibition of the year. Featuring new work by many of the top artists from the Midwest. Participating artists are: Tom BerenzMary BeroChris BertiCraig BlietzMark BrautigamDerrick BuischMark ChatterleyMarion CoffeyTerrence CoffmanBen GrantDoug HatchKathy HofmannLaurie HoginMark HortonBreehan JamesEd LarsonClare MalloyCathy MartinNancy MladenoffMark MulhernCharles MunchDennis NechvatalWilliam NicholsMichael NolandJennifer PriceBill ReidJeffrey RippleJason RohlfJan SerrElizabeth ShreveBrook SlaneT.L. SolienNathaniel SternFred StonehouseStephanie TrenchardTom UttechRuss VogtMary Alice Wimmer, and Betsy Youngquist.

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Breehan James – Way of the Wilderness

May 30 – July 3, 2014

We are pleased to introduce the rarefied paintings of Breehan James. A Wisconsin native, she is inspired by adventures in the wilderness including deer hunting in fall and canoeing the Boundary Waters in summer. James earned her MFA from Yale University and has studied Norwegian landscape paintings and drawings at the National Museum of Art, Architecture, and Design in Oslo, Norway and the drawings of early Canadian explorers at the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa.

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Harold Gregor – Midwestern Master

May 29 – July 4, 2015

Artist’s Reception on Friday, May 29 from 5 to 7pm

Known as “America’s Heartland Painter,” Harold Gregor captures the vast beauty of the Midwest in a diverse range of styles. Included in the exhibition are “Flatscapes”, vibrant farmland scenes painted from a bird’s eye view and his latest series of “Vibrascapes,” and “Tanglescapes”, colorful abstract paintings which fuse intense color theory with spontaneous brushstrokes.  

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Chris Berti – Concerning Nature

March 19 – April 19, 2014

Sculptor Chris Berti is fascinated with the colors and textures of 19th century brick paving stones. The amazing warmth and variety will be evident in his small scale sculptures incorporating the brick’s shape, earth colors, and at times, text of the brick manufacturer with carved imagery. Berti, an active NCECA exhibitor, has been the recipient of numerous awards and has work in the permanent collections of the Smithsonian Museum of American Art, Washington, DC; Cranbrook Art Museum, Bloomfield Hills, MI; and the Frederick Meijer Sculpture Park, Grand Rapids, MI.

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The New Still Life

April 25 – May 24, 2014

Gallery Night and Day: April 25 & 26

The New Still Life celebrates one of art’s greatest themes with a range of techniques from photorealistic to abstract by the Midwest’s best sculptors and painters. The exhibition includes glass sculpture by Beth Lipman and Stephanie Trenchard and new paintings by Melanie ParkeClare Malloy, Lon Michels, Jeffrey RippleDennis Nechvatal, and John A. Sayers and vintage works by John Wilde.

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Doug Hatch – "Urban Landscapes"

April 17 – May 23

Artists’ Reception on Gallery Night, Friday, April 17 from 6 to 9 pm

Doug Hatch is best known for his realistic paintings of urban scenes. Working in his studio from photographs, Hatch employs traditional methods of photorealism using strong diagonals, reflected surfaces, and transparent components to elucidate vibrant street scenes. Influenced by Edward Hopper and Richard Estes, Hatch is particularly interested in interpreting daily life. Vibrant, detail oriented and filled with movement, the paintings of Doug Hatch capture a place and time of day, perfectly.

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Ron Isaacs – Other Selves: New Trompe l’Oeil Painted Constructions

April 17 – May 23, 2015

Artists’ Reception on Gallery Night, Friday, April 17 from 6 to 9 pm

In his second solo exhibition at Tory Folliard Gallery, Ron Isaacs continues his 30+ year career of constructing and painting wood to resemble architectural clothing and other antique objects. Purposely devoid of figures, Isaacs invites the viewer to question what they are actually seeing. In this master’s hands, wood appears to be fabric, and leaves and branches are actually carefully constructed details. Combining trompe l’oeil painting with master wood assembling, Isaacs presents new sculptures that quietly demand a careful look to determine their true nature.

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Bill Reid – What Could Bee?

February 8 – March 8, 2014

The painted steel sculptures that inhabit the world of Bill Reid are headliners from a fantastic mythology, imparting “Bee’s” stories of heroics, tragedy, comedy and drama. From Lilliputian to gigantic, his unforgettable characters may also double as mechanical toys, light fixtures, or pedal cars. Always a favorite in the Racine parades, Reid continues to delight and inspire with humor and whimsy. Reid has been awarded numerous public commissions and has work in the permanent collection of the National Music Museum, Vermillion, SD.

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