events

It’s a BIG DAY at Miller Gallery

Friday, February 22nd, 2013

2 Events – One night

#1 – We did it – we actually herded cats!

All 12 of our remarkable hometown artists will be here tonight for their opening. Please join us and see their world-class work and celebrate Miller Gallery Day!

JOHN AGNEW: Dayton-born, this award winning artist applies his great technical skills–and passion for nature and science–to meticulous, photorealistic paintings of wildlife and nature.

DAVID MICHAEL BECK: Careful executions of his keen observation, Beck’s narrative landscapes, often of Ohio, are a focus of more recent years as he moves away from a very successful career as an illustrator.

TOM BLUEMLEIN:    A recent past-President of the American Impressionist Society and the Cincinnati Art Club, Bluemlein’s classic impressionist landscapes feature locations across the United States and Europe.

PAM FOLSOM:  Using a palette knife, Pam Folsom, conjures landscapes and cityscapes–mainly of Ohio and the Florida Keys–with an inherent joyous energy, both in mood and color palette.

STEPHEN GEDDES (Sculptor):  During his 30 years as a product sculptor in the toy industry (including prototypes of action figures for Star Wars) Geddes has also worked as a fine artist, carving the quirky and unusual in wood.

ADAM HAYWARD:  Raised on a wine farm in rural Ohio, the impact and influence of open spaces and nature, particularly trees, has always been profound for Hayward, heightened by his awareness from a young age, of the works of American icon, Maxfield Parrish.

ROB JEFFERSON: Best known for his small, very detailed, story-telling, black and white paintings, Jefferson has more recently become fascinated with exploring–and painting–the sculptural form of scrapped motor vehicles.

DALE LAMSON: A well-known graphic designer, Lamson revels in his fairly recent return to figurative painting, creating playful, provocative, sensual imagery that is bold in color and concept.

OBER-RAE STARR LIVINGSTONE:  It is the brilliance of his colors that make the vibrant, yet ethereal, landscapes of this artist really stand out in a crowd: dramatic and tranquil all at once.

DEBORAH MORRISSEY-McGOFF: Her intriguing compositions and concepts with their elements of surrealism entice the viewer to unravel, imagine, or create the stories that lie within.

JONATHAN QUEEN:  Nationally collected, Queen is a story-teller, telling stories with toys in meticulously rendered still life paintings with a heightened sense of realism.

RONDLE  WEST (Sculptor): Often bold in color, always monochromatic, with both seductive and unnerving elements, West’s assemblage sculptures are like mini-stage performances, telling their own individual stories to each viewer.

February 22  6-8 PM

 

#2 – 2/22 – MAYOR’S PROCLAMATION:

Miller Gallery Day

6:30 PM presentation 2/22/2013 at the gallery

A highlight of the opening celebration of

ART CINCINNATI: A Splash of Local Color,

will be a presentation by Cincinnati City Councilman P.G Sittenfeld at 6:30 pm to gallery owners Laura Miller Gleason and Gary Gleason.

The Proclamation, signed by Mayor Mark Mallory proclaims this date as Miller Gallery Day
- for recognition of the Gallery’s 53 years in business
- for being continuously owned and operated by the same family
- for its contribution to the fostering of an appreciation of fine art
- for being the oldest fine art gallery in the city

 

Can’t wait for tonight – We have cake and bubbly!

 

Installation photos: TYLER SHIELDS: Controlled Chaos October 2012

Monday, October 15th, 2012

Many thanks to Tyler Shields for taking amazing installation images of Controlled Chaos. And thanks for trying to help me with the settings on my crappy camera.

 

Tyler Shields: Event Pics

Sunday, October 14th, 2012

 

Photographer Tyler Shields visits Cincinnati for his show that openend October 12, 2012. An amazing time was had by all.

 

Chidlaw for Children’s

Friday, September 7th, 2012

PAUL  CHIDLAW (1900 – 1989) – The Works on Paper

This opportunity to acquire an original work of art, on paper  by beloved Cincinnati artist, Paul Chidlaw will be on view for three days.

Opening Friday, October 5, 6-8 PM

**SALES  BENEFIT CINCINNATI CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL**

Paul Chidlaw (1900-1989)

These last works in his estate were bequeathed to Cincinnati Children’s Hospital for the benefit of this renowned institution and have never been seen before.  Newly framed, the paintings and drawings have been made available with the directive that they be sold at very reasonable prices to make acquisition of a work by this beloved Cincinnati artist accessible to all.

See selected images below.

The Paul Chidlaw 3 Day Event begins Friday evening at 6 pm, with an introduction to his life and work by the artist’s dear friend, Owen Findsen, historian and former Enquirer art critic.

 

 

 

Billboard fun

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

Last month’s billboard on Wooster Pike. Johanne Cullen   “Let The Sun Rise..  40″ x 78″ oil on canvas

Johanne Cullen visits her billboard

 

This month look for James O’Neil in Hyde Park. Pictured is Amphibious, 24″ x 48″ acrylic on panel

James O'Neil billboard

 

 

 

Mixed Messages: GUILLERMO RIGATTIERI + GRACEANN WARN

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

 Opening Party and Reception for the Artists

Graceann Warn
Guillermo Rigattieri

Friday, October 21

Show continues through

November 3, 2011

Working in a variety of media, Argentinean sculptor Guillermo Rigattieri and Michigan artist, Graceann Warn present their latest works: Guillermo, his quirky, endearing sculptures in metal plate, and Graceann, her alternately ethereal and bold paintings/assemblages in encaustic, oil and collage.

Guillermo Rigattieri was born in 1976 in the town of San Rafael, Mendoza. At the age of 18, he moved to the city of Mendoza where he studied at the Faculty of Arts, receiving a degree in Fine Arts. In searching to find his own personal style of work, Guillermo began experimenting with various media in his studio. His first forays into the world of sculpture were made with “plastic” materials such as clay and latex. Once the artist felt more confident with the language of shapes, he turned his focus to welded and wrought metals which quickly became his preferred medium.

With his excitement at discovering the flexibility and immediacy of metal his expressiveness took flight. His fascinating, playful, thought-provoking sculptures have a broad range of themes, from the dramatic to the fantastic and amusing.

Guillermo Rigattieri, Heroe, 24" x 22" x D 19" metal plate

Using metal plate, Guillermo cuts the first shapes and then creates volume by pounding the pieces with a round point hammer. The pieces are welded together, polished, then finished with varnish or an enamel patina to protect the pieces against humidity.

Guillermo Rigattieri exhibits in South America and the United States, and has received numerous awards and honors. His sculptures are included in private collections around the world. He lives with his wife and young son in Mendoza, Argentina.

 

GRACEANN WARN, as a young child, began to think of herself as an artist but it never occurred to her that people could make their livings as such.

“I never knew an artist when I was growing up. I grew up in a really small town in New Jersey. We barely had an art program in my school. I went to college and became a landscape architect—it was the closest thing to art I could find. After I graduated, I was working for a private office in Ann Arbor, and they sent me to Minneapolis to attend an urban design conference, and when I was there I took a look at the Walker Art Center. What was showing was an exhibition of the last works of Mark Rothko. I went into the gallery, and, surrounded by these paintings, I had a strong emotional reaction — my heart was beating so fast and my eyes filled with tears. This was the first time that abstract art had affected me in such a profound way. In retrospect, I realized that my own work, the design work I was doing in an office, couldn’t compare with what art had to offer, and I decided to get a studio. My life changed within that year.” Graceann feels her profound reaction to Rothko’s abstracts was probably influenced by her synesthesia, a neurologically-based phenomenon.

“I’ll look at a color and I’ll taste it–as if colors have flavors. And numbers have colors. In my

Graceann Warn, Distance + Observation # 17, 11" x 11" mixed media assemblage

weirdly wired brain, I think: Yeah, well, it’s red, so of course, you have to have a number four there. There are all kinds of things that cross over in my head. I’ve only recently realized that I do this. I guess I assumed everybody did–that it was a normal thing. I think for me abstract art, especially color and form, has something to do with that, because when I look at an abstract painting I can taste it or I can hear it.”

Warn’s current work, encaustic painting and part assemblage, is inspired by walls–the layering of plaster, paint, graffiti, the covering over with time, over centuries, the palimpsest. Her greatest influences are Antoni Tapies, Cy Twombly, Franz Kline. Newer influences are Caio Fonesca and Sean Scully. Warn’s work is collected worldwide.

 

Mixed Messages: October 21 to November 3, 2011

Melissa Hefferlin is on her way!

Friday, July 29th, 2011
Melissa Hefferlin

Melissa Hefferlin

Melissa Hefferlin, our lovely friend and fine artist, is currently on the road from Chattanooga to visit us, bring new work—and to do a live painting demo at the gallery on Sunday, 10 – 2!
This will be Melissa’s last visit to Cincinnati for a while. She and her artist husband, Daud Akhriev (also represented by Miller Gallery) are about to make a permanent move to their beautiful home in Spain!
Melissa grew up in the countryside outside of Chattanooga, TN. She studied at the the Academy of Fine Arts (Repin Institute of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture) in St. Petersburg, Russia, under Andrei Mylnikov , from 1990 to 1991. She was the only American to study at that academy during the Soviet period, and was preceded only by James Whistler, who studied there in 1884.

Flamenco, 5" x 7" oil on board

Flamenco, 5" x 7" oil on board

She also attended the University of Tennessee in Chattanooga, and the Otis Art Institute in Los Angeles, where she apprenticed with painter Michael Newberry.

Clear, 20" x 16" oil on board

Clear, 20" x 16" oil on board

In September of 2007, Melissa won the Prize of Excellence at the Pastel Society of America nationally juried exhibition, in NYC. The City of Chattanooga chose her to paint the commemorative mural celebrating the opening of the 21st Century Waterfront Development. In 2002 the Hunter Museum of American Art presented a solo show of Hefferlin’s work. That same year she received the grand purchase award from Seimens at the “Art For Healing” exhibition presented by the Association for Visual Arts. Her work has been exhibited in Zurich, London, New York, Los Angeles, Denver and around the Tennessee region. She is an exhibiting member of Oil Painters of America. American Artist (June 2009issue) featured Melissa and her work.
Welcome, Melissa!

Painting with Pastels–Ron Monsma this Sunday!

Friday, July 15th, 2011

Balancing Act, 16" x 20" pastel

We are so excited that Ron Monsma is coming to town! The renowned Indiana artist will demonstrate his skills in the medium of pastel at the gallery this Sunday from 10 until 2. Best known for his dramatic still lifes, provocative figures, and moody landscapes in both pastel and oil, Ron will work on a figurative composition with a female model.

Setting up in the studio or painting from nature, Monsma works from life.

“In many respects I am a traditionalist,” explains Ron, “in that I use the approach to painting that artists have used for centuries. If I am working with a figure, I pose the model in my studio, and if I am painting a still life, I set that up as I want to see it. I don’t use photographs of my subjects unless I am painting a bird or a greyhound that won’t stand still!

“My interest is in responding to the real world as I experience it,” he adds. “Working from life defines my personal vision, and even when I am seeking an exact representation, I am acutely aware that my observations are going to be selective, personal and drawn from my own emotional sensibilities. This is what I count on.”

Sentinel, 30" x 40" pastel

Ron Monsma has been painting and teaching for more than 20 years; he is currently an Assistant Professor of Drawing and Painting at Indiana University, South Bend. His work has been widely published in books and in national and international magazines. He has exhibited extensively in solo and group shows across the country, and his work is represented in private and corporate collections throughout the United States and Europe.

Stop by and meet Ron during the Hyde Park Farmer’s Market on Sunday and witness his portrait magically emerge from a blank sheet of paper.

Slideshows: Tom Bluemlein Demo 6/12/2011

Tuesday, June 21st, 2011

Tom Bluemlein did a 4 hour demo outside in front of the gallery.  Here are some images from that beautiful Sunday

Slideshow: Jonathan Queen’s All-Summer Painting Demo

Tuesday, June 21st, 2011

Jonathan Queen began this painting on Friday May 13, 2011 in the front window area of Miller Gallery. The still life lives in the gallery all week, waiting for Friday when Jonathan settles in for a 3 hour + painting session; 5-8PM (and occasional Sundays.) He had about 15 hours into this portrait creating it’s subject, before he ever picked up a paintbrush. Clearly not his first one, Jonathan stuffed and sewed this “Popeye” sock monkey himself, deciding upon it’s completion that it was “Portrait-worthy.” To learn more about this extraordinary artist and see his finished work, please visit Jonathan Queen’s page here.

This slideshow was updated every week and will always be available for viewing on our “slideshow” page (see link on sidebar) You can click on each image to advance to the next if you like to go faster. Sometimes it takes a few “rounds” of clicks to get all the images to show. Sorry – I have no idea why.

    UPDATE: This painting is finished and has been acquired by a lucky longtime Queen collector and fan. If you’d like to see the finished work before it goes into the private collection, it is included in  Contemporary Realism Invitational September 30-October 18, and will be on display for the first week of the exhibit.





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Cincinnati, OH 45208     (513) 871-4420
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