LAA Hosts ‘A Fantasy of Color’ Tonight

Fantasty of Color Graphic for Web400

The Lyme Art Association (LAA) at 90 Lyme Street, Old Lyme, is holding its annual summer fundraiser, A Fantasy of Color, this evening from 6 to 10 p.m.  Individual tickets at $65 in advance or $75 at the door are still available.

For dinner, sweet and savory crepes by Perk on Church will be served, followed by delectable desserts donated by Coffee’s Country Market.

Guests will dance the night away to the eclectic sound of The Side Doors  and a silent auction of paintings and sculptures by LAA artists will be held.

Executive Director Susan Ballek says, “I’m very excited about our upcoming fundraiser, this event will pay tribute to the Impressionist movement which inspired our founding members.  ”

Sponsors of this event include: Coffee’s Country Market, Old Lyme; Fromage Fine Foods, Old Saybrook; Hamilton Point Investments, Old Lyme; Perk on Church, Guilford; Studio 80 & Sculpture Grounds, Shoreline Web News LLC,  Essex Savings Bank, The Bowerbird and Bank of England / ENG Lending, Milford.

Tickets purchased in advance are $65 per person, Patrons (including 2 tickets) are $250.  Individual tickets purchased at the door are $75.

All proceeds from this event benefit the Lyme Art Association’s Charles A. Platt Restoration Fund established in 2008 to refurbish the historic building and grounds.  Tickets are available at the Lyme Art Association, 90 Lyme Street, Old Lyme or by calling (860) 434-7802.

The Lyme Art Association was founded in 1914 by the American Impressionists and continues the tradition of exhibiting and selling representational artwork by its members and invited artists, as well as offering art instruction and lectures to the community.

The Association is located at 90 Lyme Street, Old Lyme, in a building designed by Charles Adams Platt and located within an historic district.

Admission is free with contributions appreciated.  Gallery hours are Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sunday 1 to 5 p.m.

For more information on exhibitions, purchase of art, art classes, or becoming a member, call 860-434-7802.

Lori Warner Studio/Gallery Features Kate Cordsen’s ‘Ravine’ Series, Opening Reception Tonight

Cordsen Ravine15.4X5 (1)

Kate Cordsen, Ravine 15 (2013). Chromogenic print. A portion of the sales from this print will be donated by Kate Cordsen and Lori Warner Gallery to the Lyme Land Trust.

The Lori Warner Studio/Gallery in Chester is featuring the otherworldly photography of Kate Cordsen with a solo exhibition of Cordsen’s landscapes entitled Ravine.  This series of large, minimalist work will be on display from July 13 to Sept. 30.

There will be an opening reception with the artist this evening, Saturday, July 13, from 6 to 8 p.m. and also a gallery visit by Cordsen on Sunday, Aug. 18.

“I am very selective in offering solo exhibitions,” says Warner.  “At most I will feature two artists a year, which allows me to carefully consider the integrity and process of each artist’s work.”

She continues, “I felt an immediate excitement the first time I saw Kate Cordsen’s photographic work.  Her huge, dramatic prints are widely collected and are often purchased by big name designers, notably her sold out River series.”

In this new work, Ravine, Cordsen is reinterpreting the traditional landscape into something modern and ambiguous.  Warner notes, “The end result is simply beautiful and as Moda magazine said, “Kate Cordsen’s landscapes are poetic and vaguely sexual. There is a tension that draws one in.””

Cordsen’s work has a transcendent quality.  Her landscapes are often surprisingly emotional and have a deceptive simplicity.  They are not directly representative of a particular place or time but rather a metaphorical expression of the land.

Corsden says, “My work boils down to a few fibers of form and emotion.  I love the structure and shape of the landscape as well as the innocence.  I hope that is conveyed in my work.”  She has an extensive background in the fine arts, having studied photography at The International Center of Photography, fine arts at Parson’s and the history of art at Harvard University.

Corsden’s photographs have the shimmering qualities of a Klimt landscape and the sheer, layered washes of color of a Whistler painting – two of Cordsen’s most significant influences.

Kate Cordsen Ravine 16  (2013). Chromogenic print. A portion of sales from this print will be donated by Kate Cordsen and Lori Warner Gallery to the Connecticut River Museum.

Kate Cordsen Ravine 16 (2013). Chromogenic print. A portion of sales from this print will be donated by Kate Cordsen and Lori Warner Gallery to the Connecticut River Museum.

The artist’s travels have greatly influenced her spare, minimalist aesthetic.  She lived in Manila as a young child when her father was a Peace Corps leader and later, before graduate school, in Japan for two years.

The last  10 years have taken her all over the world photographing for various publications.   Corsden comments, “I am drawn to watery scenes particularly where the land and water meet.  I have seen some extraordinary places these last few years but, truthfully, none that inspire as much as the Connecticut River Valley.”

She walks the trails in Lyme and Essex almost daily, noting,  “It is very impressive how much preserved land there is in this region.  This series, Ravine, started on the Ravine Trail in Lyme, but ultimately was shot all over Connecticut and New York.”

The collaboration between Cordsen and Warner is a natural one.  Both are artists who maintain studios in the area and draw inspiration from the Connecticut landscape.  Cordsen adds, “Lori Warner has a tremendous eye and is quite well respected in the art world.  I feel fortunate to be on her roster of artists.  Furthermore, she and I have a great deal of respect for the artistic heritage of this area.”

The Connecticut River Valley is well established as an important place in the history of American art and is still a vibrant community of artists.  With that, Warner and Cordsen have decided to donate a portion of the proceeds from two selected prints to The Lyme Land Trust and The Connecticut River Museum.

Warner is a graduate of Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts in Old Lyme.

The Lori Warner Studio/Gallery is a unique source for artwork and objects that make a lasting impression.  “My goal is to not just exhibit artist’s work, but rather to foster a collaborative relationship between the gallery and each artist,” says Warner, concluding,  “I see this as a platform to experiment with new ideas.”

The gallery is located at 21 Main Street in Chester, Conn.

For further information, call (860) 322-4265 or visit www.loriwarner.com.

Death of Gary Reynolds Announced, President of Reynolds Garage & Marine in Lyme

Gary Reynolds, who passed away July 9, 2013.

Gary Reynolds, who passed away July 9, 2013.

A post made yesterday evening on the Reynolds Subaru (of Lyme) Facebook page says:  “It is with great sadness that we inform you of the passing of Gary H. Reynolds.”

According to the obituary published by the Fulton Theroux Funeral Service, “Gary lived an incredibly full life in his short 69 years, dedicating the majority of his time and talent to the community of Lyme and his family.”  At the time of his death, Mr. Reynolds’ accomplishments included being the president and owner of Reynolds Garage and Marine, Inc. and chairman of the Lyme Board of Finance, having given 37 years of service.

Mr. Reynolds is survived by his wife of 45 years, Marilynn C. Reynolds, three children, Leland Thomas Reynolds and wife Shaleigh Reynolds, twins, G. Hayden Reynolds and wife Emily Reynolds, and Kathryn R. Wayland and husband Mark Wayland and a sister, Carleen Gerber, all of whom reside in Lyme.  He is the son of the late Laura and Leland Reynolds of Lyme.

A funeral service for Mr. Reynolds will be held on Monday, July 15,  at 11 a.m. in the First Congregational Church of Old Lyme.  Calling hours will be held on Sunday, July 14,  from 3 until 6 p.m. in Fulton-Theroux Funeral Home, 13 Beckwith Ln., Old Lyme, CT 06371.

A great landmark is gone.  We send the entire family of Mr. Reynolds our sincerest condolences.

Plein Air Exhibition, ‘Celebrating Lyme’s Beauty,’ on View at LAA in Old Lyme

Jacqueline White of Glastonbury works on her watercolor on the banks of the Eightmile River in Lyme’s Pleasant Valley Preserve on April 27 during the Third Annual Lyme Paintout.

Jacqueline White of Glastonbury works on her watercolor on the banks of the Eightmile River in Lyme’s Pleasant Valley Preserve on April 27 during the Third Annual Lyme Paintout.

Art lovers who were unable to take in the exhibit of a collection of more than 50 fresh new paintings of Lyme’s landscape at the New London’s Lyman Allyn Art Museum will have another chance when it moves to the Lyme Art Association in Old Lyme.

The exhibition, “Celebrating Lyme’s Beauty,” has moved to the Lyme Art Association (LAA), where it will be open to the public from July 6 through Sept 1.

There will be a special opening reception tonight, Friday, July 12, from 6 to 8 p.m.  The LAA is able to offer a Special Tax-Free Day beginning with the reception this evening and ending at 5 p.m. on July 13, so this is a wonderful time to shop for a painting for your home or for a gift.

All the paintings in the exhibition were produced by artists who participated in the Annual Lyme Paintout on April 27 of this year, which is the result of a special partnership developed between three local organizations that all have strong ties to the landscapes of Southeastern Connecticut.

Every spring since 2011, the Lyme Land Trust has welcomed artists onto one of its preserves for a plein air “paint-out,” inspired by one of the landscape paintings in the Lyman Allyn Art Museum’s permanent collection.

The paint-out artists are then invited to enter their completed works into a juried competition. The winners’ works are displayed first at the Lyman Allyn Art Museum, then at the Lyme Art Association, where some are offered for sale to the public.

The paint-out idea originated three years ago as a way to link the Lyman Allyn’s Lyme Impressionist paintings with the real landscapes that inspired them a century ago.  The project celebrates the region’s history as a mecca for artists, as well as Lyme Land Trust’s efforts to preserve these ecologically and culturally significant landscapes in perpetuity.

This year was the biggest ever for the “Celebrating Lyme’s Beauty” paint-out and exhibition.

The 2013 paint-out attracted dozens of artists from as far away as New Jersey and Massachusetts to paint scenes in Lyme’s Pleasant Valley, where a network of public lands (owned by the Town of Lyme, The Nature Conservancy, and the Lyme Land Trust) allows visitors to hike for miles through woodlands and meadows along the Eight Mile River and up Mount Archer.

Fifty-five artworks were selected by Lyman Allyn Curator Nancy Stula for this year’s exhibition to represent Lyme’s Pleasant Valley.

For more information, visit www.LymanAllyn.org, www.LymeArtAssociation.org, or www.LymeLandTrust.org for more information.