Wednesday, May 2, 2012

NANCY HAYDEN

Nancy Hayden is an artist, writer, organic farmer, and engineering professor living in Jeffersonville, Vermont, currently finishing a creative writing MFA in fiction at Stonecoast in Maine. As part of her MFA, she has been writing a novel set in France during WWI. This past year, she decided to make art with a similar theme. She used weathered wood, encaustic paints, and paper to recreate scenes from WWI to depict soldiers as silhouettes, shadows, indistinguishable from each other, and blindly following orders. Since war does not exist outside of society, but is a part and an outgrowth of it, she created a collage from the period book Youth’s Companion with advertisements depicting the militarism, racism, sexism, and consumerism prevalent in the U.S. at the time. Antique toys and Uncle Tom’s Cabin paper dolls reproduced from a 1905 Boston paper suggest how children become indoctrinated early into the violence of mainstream culture. The backside of the triptych is a collage of women from the time period..For more art and writing activities, visit her website www.northwindarts.com (still a work in progress. Photo of Nancy, above, taken in WWI French trench.)

EUGENE GARRON


"My photography is fine art images, taken with an idea or story in mind. Images designed to make the viewer think and enjoy. It's slows me down in what I do and each image is hand tinted with artist mediums. Colors are not always true but there to enhance the image. The images have moved away from black & white to printed monochrome images reflecting old style tinted images. Each image is hand tinted with artist mediums (not Photoshop) on all cotton paper, top-coated with a gloss medium then a final matt varnish is applied. There is a limited production of twenty five images and since each one is hand tinted they will not be exactly alike. "

SUZANNE DOLLOIS

Suzanne graduated from the California Institute of the Arts in 2008 with a B.F.A. in photography. She has a wide range of photographic experience from large-format to digital; however, she prefers to work primarily in 35mm film. In documenting her environment, she captures glimpses of travel and transportation, studies in architecture and deterioration, and observations of society and tradition. She uses the resulting photos to construct hand-cut collages. These collages combine the varying (both geographically and chronologically) but complementary elements from multiple images to become a new and often surreal photographic landscape that comments on the inter-relation of all things to one another. For more information, please see her website: www.sdobjectivelens.com/