T.L. Solien – “Norwegian Costume”

T.L. Solien’s new work “Norwegian Costume” is both monumental in scale and subject.  This dramatic acrylic on canvas painting measures 96 x 68 inches, and like most of Solien’s work is psychologically intense.  The woman in this painting is dressed in atraditional costume from her home country.  Does she look so serious because she realizes that she left many friends and comforts back in the old country? The figure is based on a circa 1938 photograph of the artist’s mother and from T.L. Solien’s “Westward Expansion Series.”  Solien says of this painting, “The image stands as a metaphor for the disruption of tradition, isolation…..imposed or self-imposed, and potential for a violent response of conclusion. Part of what appears to be a small coffin is on one side, a kitten walks nonchalantly toward the other edge, as woman clutches a pair of rakes behind her back.  Silhouettes of discarded bottles, cans, cacti and a broken window and fence suggest the harsh life of a new immigrant in an unforgiving environment.  The straight stance, direct gaze, and colorful costume of the Norwegian woman suggest pride, perseverance, and tenacity in spite of the difficulty adjusting to a new life.

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Charles Munch – “Wind River”

“Wind River, ” a new painting by Charles Munch for our Summer in Wisconsin exhibition embodies many of the issues that interest Munch.  As he says, “I really do want people to care about what nature is.  I want people to be more in tune with nature as one of the big forces in the world, something to be reckoned with, to be respectful of, to take pleasure from.  It is not just something to be ignored, exploited, or conquered.”   As in many of Munch’s paintings, human and animal life interact in an enigmatic fashion surrounded by a meticulously painted landscape.  Charles Munch’s penchant for color comes from his training in art conservation, where colors cannot be approximate, but must be exact.  Brush strokes are purposely made as smooth as possible, lending more importance to color and the reductive composition.  Wind River measures 39 inches tall by 63 inches wide, and like all of his large work, the details have been carefully worked out in a much smaller version.

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