For the word “mod,” like all homonyms, everything is a situation. It’s a slippery term with many meanings that depend on context, which could be […]
Search Results for "sharon butler"
Invitation: Sharon Butler and “Morning in America”
Contributed by Sharon Butler / Please join me for “Morning in America,” an exhibition of new paintings at Theodore:Art that opens on January 15, 2021. […]
Invitation: “Sharon Butler New Paintings” at TheodoreArt
From the press release: Sharon Butler just spent a month at Yaddo, and used the time to, among other things, ruminate and transform ideas developed […]
Invitation: “Sharon Butler: Good Morning” at SEASON in Seattle
UPDATE (May 26): Thanks Erin Langner for including the exhibition in art ltd Magazine‘s “Critic’s Picks” section. The show is on view through June 3o: […]
Invitation: “Sharon Butler: New Paintings” opens Friday, January 8, at Theodore:Art
UPDATE: The show has been extended through February 21, 2016. Images of the paintings on view are available here. Big thanks to all the critics […]
Invitation: Tamara Gonzales and Sharon Butler, An Artist Dialogue
On Saturday at 2:30, please join me at the Mid-Manhattan Library for a lively conversation with painter Tamara Gonzales about blogging, zines, artists books, and […]
“Sharon Butler: Precisionist Casual” at Pocket Utopia
From the press release: Pocket Utopia is pleased to present “Precisionist Casual,” a solo exhibition of new paintings by Sharon Butler. The exhibition will […]
Sharon Butler, Joy Curtis, Cathy Nan Quinlan at STOREFRONT
Sharon Butler, “Brightly Colored Separates 6,” (detail) 2010, oil on canvas, 30″ x 40″ This month my paintings will be in “On Display,” an exhibition […]
Two Coats Resident Artist Katie Butler, June 8–13
Contributed by Sharon Butler / Katie Butler (no relation to me as far as we know) creates vivid still life paintings that dive into the fraught realms of American politics and economics, riffing ironically on the “kitchen-table” and “bread-and-butter” issues affecting average people that political figures are supposed to address. While she establishes a journalistic sense of authenticity by sourcing her imagery from White House archives and the Ohio Statehouse, the discrepancy between reality and painted presentation raises burning questions about the veracity and integrity of the sources.
Sharon Louden: Consultants, careers, and community
I frequently get pitches via email from art consultants who offer to help me (and I imagine many other artists) get exhibitions, grants, publicity, and […]
Butler gets a Jackson Pollock valued at 2 million
Jackson Pollock, “Silver and Black,” 1950, oil and metallic paint, 21.25 x 15.75.” The Business Journal Daily reports that a painting by Jackson Pollock, valued […]
Two Coats Resident Artist Sage Tucker-Ketcham, July 20–25
Contributed by Sharon Butler / This month, Two Coats of Paint welcomes Vermont artist Sage Tucker-Ketcham. Sage’s recent nature-based work operates in the space between observation, memory, and imagination. Each painting begins with something she saw on a walk or caught in her peripheral vision from a car window – moments that lodge into her consciousness, like seeds waiting to germinate.
NYC Selected Gallery Guide: July, 2025
Contributed by Sharon Butler / A special note to New Yorkers who, like me, are loath to leave the city over holiday weekends or at any point during the summer, really: always check to see if galleries are open on Saturday. Chances are they aren’t. Many gallerists, kind of like Bartleby, simply prefer to close up shop for the entire long weekend. Other galleries, possibly your favorites, are shuttered until late summer or early fall, back to work only after the dust has settled from the September art fairs and blockbuster openings. For the hardcore stay-cation crowd of course, a slew of wonderful group shows are on view – sometimes freewheeling affairs in which emerging artists hang alongside more established ones we know and perhaps love. Where possible, I’ve listed the artists in each show so that you can hunt down the names already on your radar or target a few less familiar up-and-comers. Some of my best memories involve wandering around a nearly empty gallery with the editor on a sweltering summer afternoon and then ending up in a dark hideaway, drinking pints and arguing about the shows we saw. Save the shore for the off-season. As my mother, a woman who lived in a seaside town for most of her life, used to say, why go to the the beach in the summer? It’s a mob scene!
Two Coats Resident Artist Marie Thibeault, June 15–19
Contributed by Sharon Butler / From June 15 to 20, Two Coats of Paint will be hosting LA artist Marie Thibeault for her second residency. Marie has spent years immersed in the world of color and geometry, vividly translating the rigid language of architecture, the logic of technical data, and the unpredictable realm of human emotion onto the canvas. She explores the intersection of science and imagination in visual stories of environmental instability that incorporate references to scientific diagrams, predictive models, cartographic references, geological graphics, weather charts, and photographs. Although she employs abstraction to clear and substantial effect, she considers herself primarily a landscape painter and counts among her strongest influences Paul Cézanne, drawing especially on the dynamic horizontal planes of his work.
NYC Selected Gallery Guide: June, 2025
Contributed by Sharon Butler / June, academics’ favorite month, is here. I’m looking forward to checking out Smack Mellon’s“Remains to be seen,” a group show that brings together nine emerging artists whose practices find meaning in waste. Artist Austin Eddy has curated a star-studded exhibition called “A Movable Feast” at Halsey Mckay’s Greenpoint outpost. Abbey Lloyd has a solo at Ptolemy, a newish gallery in Queens. I’m looking forward to seeing some aggressive abstraction, with Iva Gueorguieva’s solo at Derek Eller and…