Letter to the Editor: Sen. Art Linares Thanks Area Voters

To the Editor:

Representing the people of the 33rd State Senate District at the State Capitol is an incredible honor.

I consider myself so fortunate to be a voice at the State Capitol for the people of Chester, Clinton, Colchester, Deep River, East Haddam, East Hampton, Essex, Haddam, Lyme, Old Saybrook, Portland, and Westbrook.

I will work with anyone from any political party to restore business confidence and hope, to revive Connecticut’s economy, and to make Connecticut the place where families and seniors and retirees want to invest their futures.

I love this state, and I know you do too.  That’s why I am so energized to improve our state’s policies.

Thank you for your continued support, and I encourage you to never hesitate to contact me with your ideas, comments and concerns at Art.Linares@cga.ct.gov or at 800 842-1421.

Sincerely,

Art Linares
Westbrook

Editor’s Note: The author was reelected for a third term to the position of State Senator for the 33rd District on Tuesday.

View “4th Dimension” Exhibition of Jan Dilenschneider’s Exceptional, Evolving Work at Lyme Academy

Jan Dillensheider (right) discusses her work with writer Nicole Prevost Logan

Jan Dilenshneider (right) discusses her work with writer and art critic Nicole Prevost Logan

This is the final week to view artist Jan Dilenschneider’s stunning exhibition titled, “4th Dimension,”which comprises 30 of her recent works on view in the Sill House Gallery at Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts of the University of New Haven.  The not-to-be-missed exhibit will run through the end of the day on Saturday, Nov. 12.

Dilenschneider gave a fascinating talk Oct. 27 to a large audience of artists and art-lovers.  An engaging public speaker, she was both amusing and articulate, and her audience was clearly captivated by her remarks.  

Explaining that the title of her exhibition speaks to her wish to invoke the participation of viewers into her paintings, Dilenschneider expressed her hope that the “4th Dimension” will, “keep you guessing,” thus creating a desire to look longer at her paintings and therefore experience a more intense emotional reaction to them.  

She mentioned the Leonardo da Vinci technique of sfumato that she uses in which a fine shading is meant to produce a soft transition — in her words, “the mystery of the shadows,” — between colors and tones.  Dilenschneider described the overall effect of the technique as  creating an image that is, “misty in the distance.”

gallery_view

A view of Dilenschneider’s “Impressionist Room” within the Sill House gallery.

Dilenschneider talked first to her audience in what she dubbed the “Impressionist Room” in the Sill House Gallery before moving into the second room where more of her abstract pieces are hung, including a vertical triptych.  She describes herself as, “An Expressionist who like Impressionism,” saying, “One cannot exist without the other.”

Some of her main themes were — to quote Confucius — that “there is nothing that does not have beauty in it.” She expands on that philosophy saying what everything you see around you is, in reality, “a work of art from which one can pull out the aesthetic.”  She notes there are four main themes to her work, “Color, relationship, design and gesture,” adding, “Color is the joy … gesture is the passion.”

Jan Dilenschneider stands in front of a dyptych - a pair - of her paintings in the Sill House Gallery.

Jan Dilenschneider stands in front of two of her paintings in the Sill House Gallery.

Dilenschneider often does paintings in pairs … or more, noting, “If you find a motif you like, paint it and paint it and paint it again …”  She is also captivated by color, saying, “I work on color … the theory of color … what is known as, ‘simultaneous contrast,'” adding, “If you get [the right] two [colors] together, they sing,” or to put it another way, she likes the colors to “vibrate” together by the juxtaposition of strong, clear or complimentary color schemes.

Dilenschneider’s vibrant landscape paintings, inspired by a passionate confluence of impressionist and expressionist styles, speak to the Old Lyme landscape that gave birth to American Impressionism. This idyllic setting is as appealing to artists today as it was when viewed over a century ago by Barbizon School painter Henry Ward Ranger, who called it a “landscape waiting to be painted.”

Lyme Academy College Campus Dean Todd Jokl chats with the artist.

Lyme Academy College Campus Dean Todd Jokl chats with the artist during the Opening Reception.

Emerging from a family of artists, Dilenschneider has painted all her life.  Yet, she never had a desire to exhibit or sell her work until the spring of 2013, when a friend insisted on buying two paintings.

Soon afterward her studio doors opened to the world. She was offered a solo show at the prestigious Galerie Pierre-Alain Challier in Paris’ historic Le Marais district, which started a remarkable chain of events: Three additional annual solo gallery shows in Paris followed by a solo museum show at the Bellarmine Museum in Fairfield, Conn. that broke attendance records.

Recently, she exhibited at the Art Paris Art Fair at the Grand Palais and the European Art Fair – Monaco (EAF-Monaco), which opened on July 19th at the Grimaldi Forum in Monte-Carlo. In addition to her participation in the Art Paris Art Fair and EAF Monaco, Dilenschneider will also be among the artists who will be part of a trip to Toledo, Spain, this fall under the auspices of the Springfield Museums in Springfield, Mass.

paintings_over_fireplace

Paintings on display in Dilenschneider’s “Abstract Room.”

Dilenschneider’s training includes studying at the North Shore Art League in Chicago, the National Academy of Design in New York and the Silvermine Art Center in Connecticut.  She has a BS in Fine Arts Education from Ohio State University.

Since she started exhibiting her work three years ago, Dilenschneider has sold more than 50 of her paintings, and developed a unique style of expressionistic painting.  Her inspiration comes from the ever-changing landscape around her Connecticut home on Long Island Sound. Living by the sea, she is inspired by shore grasses bending in the breeze, blue skies reflected in the cool water and extraordinary trees silhouetted against green lawns.

Vice President of development Fritz Jellinghaus with the artist.

Lyme Academy College Vice President of Development Fritz Jellinghaus, who conceived the idea of the exhibition, stands with the artist.  Both are members of the Connecticut Arts Council.

Philanthropic work is also an essential part of Dilenschneider’s life. She is a member of the board of the Connecticut Arts Council and is also a board member of Family Centers, Inc. in Greenwich, Conn. and Catholic Charities. She has been honored with the Helen Gratz Rockefeller Award for Outstanding Volunteerism and the Family Champion Award from the Connecticut Council of Family Service Agencies. She has also been honored by the Catholic Academy of Bridgeport for her artwork and her service.

looking_at_paintings

Visitors to the exhibit view Dilenschneider’s work in both galleries of the Sill House.

Dilenschneider established the Janet Hennessey Dilenschneider Scholar Rescue Award in the Arts, which is administered by the Institute of International Education (IIE), a world leader in the international exchange of people and ideas that oversees the Fulbright Scholars program and helps rescue artists from countries in turmoil. The program she created with IIE recently relocated a Syrian artist and her family to New Jersey, where the Syrian is now a professor at Montclair State University and has applied for political asylum.

Honoring Veterans Throughout Our Community

Poppy-Royal_British_Legion's_Paper_Poppy_-_white_backgroundLyme-Old Lyme Schools are open today with each school hosting a program to honor our veterans as follows:

Lyme Consolidated School
1:00 -2:00 pm: Tea
2:00- 3:10 p.m: Town Meeting Assembly

Mile Creek School
2:00 p.m: Assembly and Tea

Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School
8:00-9:00 am: Breakfast
9:00-10:00 am: Assembly

Lyme-Old Lyme High School
10:30-11:15 am: Reception/refreshments followed by assembly

Both the Lyme and Old Lyme Town Hall offices along with the Lymes’ Senior Center and Old Lyme Transfer Station are closed today in honor of Veterans’ Day.

There is no change to the trash and recycling pick-up schedule in Old Lyme.

 

 

Lyme-Old Lyme HS Band & Chorus Honor Veterans, Community with “Mahalo” Concert Tonight; Admission Free, All Welcome

The USS Missouri on which the Lyme-Old Lyme High School Band and Chorus will play during the 75th anniversary celebrations of Pearl Harbor in December.

The USS Missouri on which the Lyme-Old Lyme High School Band and Chorus will play during the 75th anniversary celebrations of Pearl Harbor in December.

 

Members of the Lyme-Old Lyme High School (LOLHS) Band and Chorus will present a “Mahalo” Concert on Veterans Day to honor our veterans and thank the Lyme and Old Lyme community for their support of the music department trip to Pearl Harbor in December.  (“Mahalo” is the Hawaiian word for “thank you.”)  This free concert will take place in the high school auditorium on Friday, Nov. 11, at 7:30 p.m., and is open to the public. 

On Dec. 7, these LOLHS students will perform alongside school groups from across the country and Japan on the pier of the USS Missouri, docked at Pearl Harbor, in commemoration ceremonies that mark the 75th anniversary of the bombing that launched US involvement in World War II. Lyme-Old Lyme High School is proud to be the only school from Connecticut — and one of just two from New England — to be participating in this historic event. 

The LOLHS chorus and band have been preparing for this performance all year, and Friends of Music-Lyme/Old Lyme (a support group of parents and teachers) has worked to raise funds to help defray the costs associated with trip, with events like the “Big Kahuna” tag sale, the “Hawaii Five.0 5K,” and the sale of grocery store cards, as well as through direct appeals.

The “Mahalo” Concert is the school group’s thank-you to the many businesses, organizations, and individuals who responded to those appeals and provided support in a variety of ways. It is also an opportunity to honor our veterans, and remember those who gave their lives at Pearl Harbor. The program for the concert will include some of the music that the students will perform in Hawaii, along with patriotic favorites.

 

Friends of Music–Lyme/Old Lyme is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization of parents, teachers, and community members whose mission is to support the music programs throughout the Lyme-Old Lyme Schools, Connecticut’s Regional District 18, at all levels. Donations are appreciated. Visit www.friendsofmusiclol.org to learn more.

Lyme–Old Lyme High School, a fully accessible facility, is located at 69 Lyme Street, Old Lyme.  The “Mahalo” Concert, Nov. 11, at 7:30 pm, is free and open to everyone.

Old Lyme Historical Society’s ‘Now & Then’ Calendar Now on Sale

screen-shot-2016-11-10-at-8-51-21-amThe Old Lyme Historical Society (OLHS) will be hosting a Community Event this afternoon at their building at 55 Lyme Street from 4 to 6 p.m. to mark the release of the 2017 ‘Now & Then’ Community Calendar.
The 2017 calendar will be available for sale, refreshments will be served, music will be provided by Skip Beebe and weaving demonstrations will also be given by the Connecticut Handweavers Guild Area 4. A door prize will also be offered.
All are welcome and admission is free

For more information, visit www.olhsi.org.