Friday Jul 12, 2024
3:00 PM - 5:00 PM EDT
July 12th Tree Talk Art Exhibition Opening begins at 3pm with the Elm City Strugglers string trio playing from 3.30 to 4.30.
Jemma Gascoine Gallery/Monson Pottery at 16 Greenville Road, Monson, 04464
Free
The Tree Talk art exhibition developed from a conversation I had with Mike Decker, Monson Art’s Edu- cation Officer, when Monson Pottery/Gascoine Gallery was hosting the November 2023 Artist Meet n’ Greet. The ‘Meet n’ Greet’ is an event hosted by local businesses to welcome the ten artists juried into Monson Arts International Artist Residency Program. Both Mike and I agreed that we wouldn’t want to live in a place without many trees. (About 90% of Maine is forested, the highest percentage of any state.)
As we were chatting, the Abbott/Watts resident photographer, Sam Margevicius from New York, was milling around in the crowd, so it is fitting that his photograph ‘Picnic Table Tableau’, made during his residency in Monson, is featured in the show. The show highlights six other artists who have been resi- dents of Monson Arts: Anne Alexander, Susie Brandt, Helen Glazer, Don Miller, Jonty Sale and Barbara Sullivan. It also includes five artists who have taught workshops for Monson Arts: Alan Bray, Randy Fein, Rebecca Goodale, James Pullen and I. Other exhibiting Tree Talk artists are Dan Falt, Sam Giberson, Sumner Roberts, Candace Thomas, Todd Watts and Kathy Weinberg. All of these artists have studios in four different states and two different countries.
This is the sixth art show that the Gascoine Gallery has hosted, but this time I tried a new approach. I invited artists who explore very different media to hone in and celebrate a single theme. The show includes book arts, ceramics, fiber arts, frescoes, stone carving, wood carving, wood cuts, paintings, drawings and photographs.
Trees are in our DNA, which is why hiking in a forest or picnicking in a park is so nurturing for our souls, something Henry David Thoreau alludes to in his book, The Maine Woods, which was inspired by his travels in this region. Monson is the last town on the Appalachian Trail before the famed ‘100 mile Wilderness’, the most grueling section of the whole 3,000 miles. Approximately 3,000 hikers trek through the town each year, and often visit the Gascoine Gallery.
Historically, many people in Piscataquis County derived their income from the forest and wood prod- ucts, whether it was logging, working in a wood or paper mill, trucking logs, or making furniture and paper products. Trees have been central to this Highland Community’s life, so it is no surprise that they have been the source of much artistic inspiration, too.
The exhibition is located on the second floor at 16 Greenville Road, Monson, Maine above Monson Pottery. The exhibition will be open Wednesday through Saturday from 10 AM to 5 PM, or by appoint- ment, and will run until the end of the year. The show opening is July 12th, from 3 to 5 PM. There will be appetizers, and the string trio, the Elm Street Strugglers, will be performing 3:30 to 4:30 PM.