Arts & Leisure
All the downtown's a gallery
Donna Estabrooks Hangs 56 Paintings in Nine Locations
by Steven Ruhl
If someone tells you the current exhibit by Donna' Estabrooks
is "pedestrian," they probably don't mean that it's
dull or ordinary. Chances are, they're referring to the fact that,
to see it all, you have to do some walking.
Estabrooks, an artist in residence at UMass, has essentially turned
all of downtown Amherst into an art gallery. Until June 7, in
a project called "Everything Seems Possible," she's
showing 56 paintings in six restaurants, a bank, a stationery
store, and a printing shop.
A viewer can sample the work randomly, while dropping in for coffee
and a sandwich or while buying envelopes or getting some xeroxing
done. Or - in a modest variation on the I8th-century custom of
"The Grand Tour," whereby cultivated young English people
were sent to the Continent to roam about gazing at famous paintings
- a viewer can undertake to start at South Pleasant Street and
wander over to Triangle Street, seeing all of Estabrooks' work
en route. It's aesthetic! It's peripatetic! And it's a great concept.
At Bonducci's, Estabrooks is displaying two series of site-specific
acrylic paintings: "Silent Prayers" uses stenciling
and repetition, an engaging roughness of texture and execution,
a palette of pink, blue, and violet, and a carefree incorporation
of scratched surfaces and collaged bits of lacy gauze in its arrangements
of hearts, letters, and numbers, while "Primary Concerns"
is bouncy and bright.
In the Upper Crust she has a series of lithographs. They're intentionally
primitive, expressionistic, dense, with silhouettes of childlike
animals, houses, factories, apocalyptic fire and raging wind,
and they're rendered in scrawled lines, strong segments of black
and frayed patches of white.
In Panda East the display includes "Allison," in acrylic
on canvas; it's an airily balanced composition of a central green
square overlapping a purple one, a wavelike squiggle of black,
a horizontal band of blue and four lower gold squares against
a swath of lavender.
At Classe Cafe an extensive range of more than 15 paintings and
prints, many of them in pastel
colors, includes "Big Brother," with its charmingly
crude and cartoonish big blue cars and its elaboration of Estabrooks'
image of a black-suited businessman, which recurs in much of her
work, and "Bride," in which the blindfolded woman stands
in her frosted gown against tilting houses and a sort-of Kandinsky
background.
At Amherst Deli, her work includes "The Painter," a
mixed media collage of oil on canvas and found objects, with a
pink face sporting green shades, Estabrooks' childlike houses
and businessmen motif, slashes of color, and the artist's paint-spattered
apron affixed to the canvas. Estabrooks also has paintings at
Judies, at Hastings, at the Northampton Cooperative Bank, and
at the Copy Cat Print Shop.
Seen individually, some of the work is more powerful than others,
but viewed in its entirely the show is impressive for its "try-anything"
diversity of media, its unity, its success with both simple, figurative
images and abstraction, its range of dominant colors - from subtle,
pale mauves and blues to splashy, alarm-clock reds and yellows
- and its emotional tone. Estabrook's work can convey dread and
terror, goofiness and optimism, sometimes in the same painting.
One of Estabrook's goals in setting up the "Everything Seems
Possible" exhibit was to get her work out of galleries and
into public spaces where a whole new audience could see it. "I
love gallery shows, but this is a great alternative," she
says. "Maybe it's not as prestigious, but I'm getting the
best response from it that I've ever had; people have been coming
up to me since the show opened two weeks ago, saying, 'You do
this?'
"I've sold work in New York at high-class art parties, and
was very I determined to make it there; I knew which of my paintings
were selling, but I began to realize that thinking this way would
compromise my work," she continues. "And it was getting
so boring, doing two gallery shows a year; I'd think. 'Is this
all there is?'' I decided I didn't like the New York scene; I
decided I wanted to be an artist here where I live and work in
Amherst."
And so one day recently, sitting in Classe Cafe, she impulsively
asked if she could hang some paintings. The response was favorable,
and within minutes she was hurrying to other stored and restaurants
with a hot idea: she'd place her work all over town. Two hours
later, it was all set.
"Everything Seems Possible" was on it way from brainstorm
to reality.
Sounds lucky? "I'm a lucky person," Estabrooks confirms,
laughing,"That's why I gave the show that name. If you go
after something, you'll get it."
She adds, "There's more confidence and positive spirit in
my recent work, and I'm gutsier with color; it's like 'Go ahead
throw that yellow on there! I like to go back to that pure sense
of art, like you see in kids' work. I love sitting down with kids
and painting. If you tell them, 'Paint a picture of yourself 50
years ago,' they go nuts; they're so creative. I also like Paul
Kier and Balthus, and Terry Rumble, and Joan Snyder, and Patricia
Faye. I like to try different things. That's one of the great
things about being an artist; there are no rules. You can do what
you want!"
30 North Maple Street, Florence, MA 01062
(413) 586-3869 · betrueart@aol.com
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