Debb VanDelinder Visual Artist
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Bye Buy 41

10/27/2012

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The gallery I am represented by, Exhibit A Contemporary Art, is moving from an upstairs location to a new street level location on Market Street in Corning, NY.  In preparation for this event, gallery owner Ann Welles is holding a special art sale:  Bye Buy 41.  She has invited artists from all over the region (many local) to bring in works.  She will be wheeling and dealing to make sales of small works this weekend.  I personally will be delivering seven works to this show.  My pieces were all made between 2010 and 2012.  Three are on canvas and four are metal prints.  

Included are works by Marshall and Caitlin Hyde, Lynn Rhoda Dates, Stefan Zoller, Andrew Gillis, Debb VanDelinder and more................So stop in, find a new treasure and give it a good home.  Support the arts in your community!

Bye Buy 41:  
Exhibit A Contemporary Art
41 E. Market Street (above Pure Design)
Corning, NY
Sat & Sun, Oct. 27 - 28
12:00 -5:00 pm, both days

Image at left:  From Once Broken
© 2011
Archival Aluminum Print
10" x 20"


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Working Out the Kinks

10/21/2012

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I recently mentioned that I had joined a critique group this past summer.  We meet every month and discuss our current art work in an informal, social setting.  It's not at all like those deadly critiques that I remember from my college days.  You know, the ones where someone always left crying and heated discussions over drawing with paint versus painting a painting ensued?  Well....those are the kind I remember.  These are much more humane and productive.  

The work above has made an appearance at two critiques.  In August it was shown on the computer screen.  It hadn't even made it to a print proof yet.  I liked the square format but I was struggling with the work.  The circular pattern of Peruvian Grasshoppers was interesting yet I felt it was lacking something.  During my five minute allotment we discussed the piece.  I got some good feedback on spacing which has been adjusted a bit.  Everyone liked the subject matter and the play of a flower like shape made of insects.  I took it back to the studio and continued to stare at it for the next month.  I finally decided that what it lacked was a central and symbolic focal point.  I had tentatively titled this The Mating Dance so I did a little research into what sort of fruit could convey fertility.  I found that tomatoes symbolize fertility and since I had a whole bunch of tomatoes growing in my backyard, I marched outside,  picked a few and went to work.

I will say that I immediately like the piece better with this red tomato in the center.  It seemed to emanate as a light or energy source for the work and also alluded to the formation of an overall floral motif.  Still, I wasn't 100 percent certain that this was the final solution.  So, in October it went back to critique as a proof print.  I reintroduced it to the group and talked about how I hadn't felt it was done without something in the center.  The immediate response was a positive one. Yes, they agreed that it had needed something there and this could work.  From the back of the room another artist suggested I make one more revision.  "Instead of a tomato, use a pomegranate."  said Bridget.  She elaborated that the pomegranate has a long standing symbolism of fertility because of its juicy red seeds.  Several others in the group agreed, the five minute duck warning quacked, and we moved on to the next artist,

After pondering it for several days I decided that I would give that a try.  Off to the grocery store, in search of a pomegranate, I went.  I found one that was a deep red and had a fairly round shape.  I brought it home amongst the apples, bananas and other produce for this week's cooking,  After storing the groceries I carefully sliced open the skin and pulled the fruit in half to reveal the ripe red seeds inside.  It took a bit of "fruit surgery" to produce the appearance I knew I wanted.  Next I took it down to my studio and made the scan, placed it into the original scan and followed that with a few hours worth of corrections.  The resulting image is a little more mystical in its appearance.  The addition of the pomegranate gives a feeling of a ceremony, or offering and speaks to traditions about courtship and marriage.

If it weren't for my critique group I may not have arrived at this particular solution to a piece I struggled with.  Instead, because I risked putting it up for discussion I ended up with a much more solid, symbolic and meaningful work.  Getting out of my own studio into a group setting for critique has been a positive experience for me.  I arrive, work in hand, with a goal of growth in my heart. 



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Entomos

10/14/2012

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My next show is coming up in mid November.  I've been busy working in my studio to prepare for this group show at Exhibit A, ENTOMOS.  It will be the first exhibition at Exhibit A's new street level location at 22 East Market Street in Corning, NY.  One of the works I created for this show is at the left:  The Fourth Power of Two © 2012, Archival Aluminum Print, Edition No. 1/5, 16" x 16".  

For this body of work I have been working with all kinds of exotic insects from South America, Africa and Australia.  It's been a real roller coaster ride in some ways because when I started I really wasn't a big fan of bugs at all.  In fact, the thought of actually touching them was a pretty repulsive thought.  In the name of art, I got over it, although it took me three weeks to actually bring myself to open the package when it arrived from the insect shop in Canada.  Yes, I bought my bugs online.  They spent a few weeks in customs until they were allowed to come into the country.  

Entomos features works by Bethany Krull, Cheryl Anne Lorance, Esther Neisen, Julian Montegue, Marc Dennis, Michael Rogers,  Nancy Sutcliffe, Jo Newman and Debb VanDelinder (me).  "This exhibition explores insect imagery in a variety of mediums and disparate conceptual intentions. Insects and arachnids possess unique aesthetic attributes, can evoke strong personal responses and tap into references ranging from cultural beliefs to scientific study.  People will be surprised by the variety of work brought together in this show. says Ann Welles, director of Exhibit A.   "They will see everything from anthropomorphic, and sympathetic figures created in porcelain by Bethany Krull to the highly stylized portraits of spiders by Julian Montegue."   ENTOMOS opens the evening of Friday November 16, 2012 and runs through January 19, 2013. Specific times of the Friday reception are pending.


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    Debb VanDelinder is an artist working in Scanography (scanner photography)

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