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CURRENT Exhibition

VOICES RISING: The Figurative Ceramic Artwork by Susan Wilson

Mar 13 - Apr 27, 2024

In the space where solitude and community meet, Putney artist Susan Wilson finds the dynamic tension that energizes her work. From the wisdom of ancestors and the past presences in her life to the urgent NOW of so many voices, she weaves into her figurative sculpture stories about being alone and together, about yearnings and unanswered questions, about reaching out and retreating into solitude, about fear, pain, and hope.

 

Rather than specific portraits, Susan makes archetypal figures over simplified three-dimensional molds.  As she rolls, pinches, pulls, and scratches into the clay, the person emerges while she works the detail of an eye, lips, and a nose.  This person who emerges reminds her of the people she has known and whose stories she wishes to tell.  In the increasing urgency of our time, by telling these stories she is trying to find her place in this world.

 

MEET THE ARTIST

Axel’s Gallery invites you to experience the world of mysterious figurative work by Susan Wilson. A closing Conversation with the artist is scheduled for Sunday, April 14th at 2pm. Don’t miss this chance to meet a veteran artist and to be inspired!

 

Light snacks and refreshments will be offered. All are welcome. 

 

Hands and Voices by Susan Wilson.jpeg

UPCOMING Exhibitions

Axel's Staff Exhibition

2024

More info to come soon.

 

Recent work by Rob Hitzig

Jun 26 - Aug 3 2024

More info to come soon.

 

Facets

Aug 7 - Sep 14 2024

 

You know their mugs, bowls, platters and such but did you know they also make artistic, decorative work too?

This group exhibition highlights the little known side of the ceramicist.

More info to come soon.

 

Sculptural Lighting by Benjamin Cheney

Oct 30 - Nov 23 2024

More info to come soon.

 

Celebrate the Smalls

Nov 30 - Dec 24 2024

More info to come soon.

 

A Selection of PAST Exhibitions

STILL LIFE by Denis Versweyveld

May 30 - September 30 2023

Denis Versweyveld is an award-winning sculptor, painter and draftsman who has resided in Vermont for over 50 years and whose art has been exhibited throughout the country. His work is characterized by iconic everyday household objects that are skillfully crafted. Each form, executed in plaster, lath, and cast concrete, is pared down to its essence. Signs of this process, like fine etching lines, remain in the exquisite surfaces.

Contemporary sculpture by Denis Versweyveld at Axel's Gallery, Waterbury
Painting by Denis Verswyveld at Axel's Gallery
Recent Work by Sam Colt

Oct 26 - Nov 19, 2022 

“I make work in a bid to amplify and make visible to myself the knocking from within.”

– Sam Colt

 

In the studio Colt uses trowels, knives and brushes to apply multiple coats of Italian marble plasters ~ “grassello” ~ on Masonite panels. With knives, she zips around through the grassello surface while it’s still wet to reveal under-stories, sometimes burnishing ashes from a fire or a cremation into the matrix. The resulting complex grounds serve as backdrops for quick sketches of a fairly unhinged inner cartography peopled by ships, key-stoned bridges, architectural ruins and phantom hermitages. Oils, gold leaf, gouache, charcoal, shellac & varnishes are used to punctuate and/or disguise.

The First Figure by Sam Colt at Axel's Gallery, Waterbury VT

"The First Figure" by Sam Colt

Duo Exhibition: Kate Smith & Elizabeth Nelson

Sept 07 - Oct 08, 2022 

A conversation from the sidelines of the soccer fields blossomed into a collaborative exhibition of complimentary work at Axel’s Gallery in Waterbury, VT.

One artist moved by emotion. The other moved by the minutiae. Both are creating art from memories of the special places where they are drawn to.

Mixed Media by Kate Smith at Axel's Gallery

"Trailblazer" by Kate Smith

Glacier Lagoon by Elizabeth Nelson at Axel's Gallery

"Glacier Lagoon" by Elizabeth Nelson

Duo Exhibition:
Matt Larson & Ashley Roark

Aug 10 - Sept 03, 2022 

Working towards similar ends through a variety of media and processes, Larson and Roark each present unique bodies of work within their own respective practices. Each finds inspiration in mark making, color blocking, graphic elements, and producing work in experimental series. While Larson employs vibrant colors to capture connections between ourselves and the local landscape through memories, Roark’s approach seeks to capture a metaphorical snapshot of a fragmented moment using a palette more reminiscent of low light film. This show presents these two individual approaches towards setting the scene.

Ashley Roark at Axel's Gallery
Under the falling sky III by Matt Larson at Axel's
ROCK - PAPER - SCISSORS
Neha Shukla & Nora McDonough

July 20 - Aug 06, 2022 

Rock - Paper - Scissors is a literal description of the subject, material, and processes of the work by two emerging Vermont artists: Neha Shukla and Nora McDonough.

 

Visual cues are gathered from the artists’ natural surroundings and transcribed onto paper using layers either within the composition or quite literally with collage.

Artwork by Neha Shukla at Axel's Gallery

"Deep Pool" collage

by Neha Shukla

Fool's Spring: Abstract Landscapes by Kasey Loyer

May 11 - June 18, 2022 

As Vermonters we know- there are more than just four seasons in our little state. 
Fool’s Spring is an ode to all those in between seasons.

This series is an exploration of abstract paintings by the South Burlington-based.

Untitled landscape by Kasey Loyer at Axel's Gallery, Waterbury VT
"Transitions"
Work by 17 Vermont Surface Design Association members

April 06 - April 30, 2022 

Transitions surround us, create us, define us. There are transitions we see and feel as we move from winter to spring, from land to water, from illness to health, from isolation to community, from youth to old age. Others reflect emotional and intellectual states as we move from beginner to expert, from naiveté to wisdom, from ignorance to knowledge. The artists in this exhibition use transitions of color, shape, and material to reflect on conceptions of transition.

The Surface Design Association is an international organization focused on inspiring creativity, encouraging innovation, and advocating for artistic excellence as the global leader in textile-inspired art and design.

My Stitched Spine by Webster at Axel's Gallery, Waterbury VT
Ellen Langtree: A Retrospective

A unique mix of past and present work by Ellen Langtree on display at Axel’s Gallery from March 9 until April 2, 2022

 

The last time Ellen Langtree’s paintings were publicly shown was in the 1990’s.

And it makes sense. 

While Langtree was providing for her new family and navigating life’s changes, she took a hiatus from making art. That is, she stopped making art for herself. This hiatus turned out to be 18 years long during which she not only raised her children but taught hundreds of others as well. As an arts educator, her focus was on others. It wasn’t until recently, pre-pandemic, that Langtree returned to the studio. And this time her medium is clay.

EllenLangtree.jpg
Musings from the Nurses Room
Current Work by Heather Guptill

Jan 05 - Feb 05, 2022 

Artist Reception: Thursday, Jan 27, 2022 6-8pm

Working from a small studio, once the Nurses Room, in a converted school in Kittery, Maine, Heather Guptill lets her instincts guide her artwork. The results are raw, deeply visceral, abstract, mostly non-representational, and full of emotion and color.

 

Theese are large-scale original acrylic works on ram board - a material choice that supports the artists intention of exploration and spontaneity without the restriction or seriousness of the typical and expected.

What is Orange, Blue and Green by Heather Guptil.jpg
Compositions in Wood by Philip Herbison

Sept  29 - Nov 06, 2021

"The reason I make art is to explore the mysterious realm of new aesthetic possibilities with materials at hand. I’ve rarely made art as a means of self expression, but rather more like an inventor of shapes and substance - associations that, when put together in a certain way, becomes an object that is new, yet somehow familiar to the psyche of the viewer. Working with piles of re-cycled wood scraps as a medium brings with it a lot intuitive play. Recognizing happy accidents when they happen leads to discovery of new aesthetic statements."

-Philip Herbison

 

Comp TX 7x5 .jpg

TX by Philip Herbison

The Way Light Answers
Cold Wax and Oil work by Jan Sandman

July 07 -  August 14 2021

 

The paintings in this show, cold wax and oil, have primarily been created during the time of the pandemic. Many of them have been created with the discipline of a limited palette. As we have been held in certain ways during this past year, Jan utilized that restraint by limiting her choice of colors to both deepen her relationship with them, and with what is possible within a boundary. In relationship to deep questions, Jan consults and meditates with the vibration of Light itself. The theme of the whole body of work is “The Way Light Answers.”

Breathng Light by Jan Sandman at Axel's Gallery

Breathing Light by Jan Sandman

Blue by Kate Fetherston

Rarest color in flora and fauna, once in a blue moon is an occasion of omen or of celebration. Blue skies, blue waters foster feelings of hope, freedom, possibility. Happiness is symbolized as a bluebird. Then again, a blue mood might be sad, lonely, wistful or pensive. Blue’s the color of shadows, of twilight, of changing light. This show is an homage to blue’s power to evoke a range of expression perhaps unequaled in the rainbow. 

36” x 48” Elysium by Kate Fetherston at Axel's Gallery, Waterbury VT
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