Old Lyme’s ‘Cooley Gallery’ Hosts Show Featuring ‘Fearless’ Art of Helen Cantrell

Saltmarsh Radiant Pink, oil on canvas, 48” x 48”, by Helen Cantrell will be on view in the exhibition at The Cooley Gallery.

OLD LYME – On Friday, May 5, The Cooley Gallery is hosting an opening reception from 5 to 7 p.m. for ‘Laying it On,’ an exhibition and sale of paintings by Helen Cantrell.

“Finally!” says Jeff Cooley. “We were so excited when we saw this group of Helen’s paintings before lockdown. Her use of color and fearless application of paint drew us in immediately. The surfaces are full of energy and gesture. It’s as if you are witnessing the moment the light bulb goes on.”

Over 15 paintings will be on display at the gallery on 25 Lyme St. Laying it On includes bold landscapes and figurative scenes. Cantrell’s paint surfaces with their additions and subtractions are as lively as her subjects and the artist has never been afraid of tackling a large canvas.

She adds paint, takes it away … and then adds more.

Her landscapes might include roads or overheard wires implying structure while her brushwork resists it. She is openly influenced by California artist, Richard Diebenkorn, who, like Cantrell, was also a printmaker and a painter comfortable wielding the power of color.

There is an “in the moment” quality from a gesture of last light or to a couple turning to look at the viewer. The moment Cantrell captures may seem new but there is a familiarity like a distant memory gently returning.

River Forest Field, oil on canvas, 48” x 48”, by Helen Cantrell.

Cantrell moved to New York from her birthplace of Chicago when she was 21 and never looked back. She was gainfully employed as a typesetter in the city until 1998, the year she became an elected member of the Silvermine Guild of Artists and a full-time painter and printmaker.

Cantrell and her husband John live in Old Lyme.

Narragannsett, oil on canvas, 40” x 60”, by Helen Cantrell.

This exhibition runs through June 10.

The Cooley Gallery is located at 25 Lyme Street in Old Lyme, Connecticut. Gallery hours are Friday and Saturday 12 to 5 p.m. or almost any day by appointment. There will be special gallery hours during this exhibition to include Sunday from noon to 5 p.m.

For more information, call Jeff Cooley at 860-304-2386 or visit cooleygallery.com

Editor’s Note: This article is based on a press release issued by The Cooley Gallery.

Halls Rd. Improvements Committee Issues Update to Community, Announces Plan to Reapply to Old Lyme Zoning for Overlay District Approval

Editor’s Note: We thank Halls Road Improvements Committee (HRIC) Chair Edie Twining for sharing the following ‘Spring 2023 Update to the Community’ from the HRIC with us. Since it is such an important topic to the residents of Old Lyme, we are pleased to publish it in its entirety

OLD LYME — On March 27 the Old Lyme Zoning Commission voted 3-2 in favor of creating the Halls Road Overlay District (HROD).

Because the Planning Commission had previously given the HROD a ‘negative referral,’ it required a 4-1 vote to pass, and the measure failed.

The HROD is a significant piece of zoning regulation. It takes significant effort to understand the details. Many of the objections raised were covered by parts of the HROD proposal that apparently were not noticed or were misunderstood.

With the support of the [Old Lyme] Board of Selectmen and the heads of the commissions, we plan to reapply, and to do a better job of explaining the proposal in detail, and answering the objections raised. 

The challenges that prompted the effort to make changes along Halls Road still face us.

We need to acknowledge the changing business climate and support our retail businesses in the new environment of the coming decades. The people of Old Lyme want a safer, more attractive, walkable, bike-able, mixed-use town center where they can live, work, and shop.

Smaller-scale housing remains in short supply, and Halls Road is one place where it could be built without using up the remaining open space.

Old Lyme is planning major investments in public improvements, but the Halls Road area also needs to be allowed the option to change for the better.

Restricting Halls Road to “commercial only” now tends to favor highway services over all other uses—a thing that no one wants. Guiding our future is an important matter for Old Lyme. The HROD creates the option for a better future. 

In the area of improvements to public infrastructure, the town has hired A. I. Engineers (AIE) to proceed with design development of a new pedestrian/cyclist bridge and trails safely connecting our main commercial district on Halls Road with our Arts District and historic town center on Lyme Street. The bulk of the funding for this project is from the ARPA grant awarded last June.

In February of this year, we also applied for a small grant under the CT Recreational Trails Program to support the bridge and trails. The Halls Road Improvement Committee and the Town of Old Lyme will work on required easements and rights-of-way.

The work of AIE on the project will include an economic analysis, site survey and assessment, and geo-tech investigation leading to preliminary phased designs. AIE will produce three options (with cost estimates) for creating the bridge and trails. AIE’s work will be available for public review, and a final design selected. 

Once a final design is approved, AIE will create full construction documents (CDs) for the bridge and trails, and detail the project’s permitting requirements. The CDs will also be used to seek grants to cover the construction costs of the project. AIE will assist in seeking grants, and manage the bidding to move the project to the construction phase. 

Last year the BSC Group helped Old Lyme apply for a grant under the Connecticut Department of Transportation (CT-DOT)’s Local Transportation Capital Improvement Program (LOTCIP). The grant could cover a substantial part of the construction costs for the main improvements planned for sidewalks, lighting, landscaping, etc. along Halls Road. (The bridge and trails are a separate matter from CT-DOT’s point of view.)

Our LOTCIP application is also the first formal review of our plans by CT-DOT, and we must wait for their approval to proceed on this part of the plan. The LOTCIP program has many applicants and the waiting list for review is long. This is Old Lyme’s first request under LOTCIP, and we hope to see some action on our application in 2024. 

We appreciate your interest in the future of Halls Road and Old Lyme. Contact us at: hallsroadcommittee@oldlyme-ct.gov

Lyme-Old Lyme Schools’ Proposed $35.8M Budget Passes Easily in Both Towns

OLD LYME — UPDATED 5/3 with Superintendent’s comment: On Tuesday, May 1, voters overwhelmingly passed the Lyme-Old Lyme (LOL) Schools’ $35,844,345 proposed budget for the 2023-24 fiscal year by a more than 2.5 to 1 margin.

The combined final vote total from both Lyme and Old Lyme was 373 in support of the budget and 108 against.

Asked his reaction to the result, LOL Schools Superintendent Ian Neviaser responded by text, saying, “We appreciate the ongoing support of our communities which helps to ensure our students receive a top notch education.”

The totals by town were as follows:

Old Lyme:

Yes: 276
No: 97

Lyme:

Yes: 97
No: 11

The proposed budget represents a 2.91% increase over the budget for the current year.

Old Lyme PGN Library Offers Two-Part Event on Light Pollution, Part 2 to be Held May 17

Photo by Roger Charbonneau Jr.

OLD LYME — The Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library hosts a two-part series on Light Pollution in the Connecticut River Valley presented by Misha Semenov-Leiva and Alan Sheiness.

Learn the effects of a brightened night sky, as well as natural cycles in aquatic and terrestrial life. Semenov-Leiva will share simple site lighting design changes that can reduce impacts while promoting safety.

  • Part I met at the Library on Wednesday, May 3, at 6:30 p.m.
  • Part II will meet at Trail 53 Observatory located in Lyme on Wednesday, May 17, at 8 p.m.

Register at this link.

Death Announced of Thomas Vincent Yourell, 92, of Old Lyme; Former Owner of Rooney’s Package Store

OLD LYME — Thomas Vincent Yourell, 92, of Old Lyme, entered God’s kingdom April 29, 2023. He was born July 19, 1930, to Thomas and Kathleen Yourell of Dublin, Ireland …

Through the decade of the 60s and into the 70s the family grew to a brood of ten. It was in the mid-60s when the family found the “Cottage” in Old Lyme. There the family spent Summers enjoying the shoreline and developing close friends among the Old Lyme Shores community …

Thomas … loved to garden … Driving by the cottage in Old Lyme, one would see his work. Garden beds bursting with an array of vegetables and berries. Perennial and annual flowers offered a rainbow of colors throughout the growing year. He was also a beekeeper …

Thomas … owned Rooney’s Package Store in Old Lyme for many years and passed the business down to his family …

Thomas retired to Old Lyme, where he lived many happy years with family and friends. Old Lyme reminded him of Ireland and allowed him to enjoy the life well lived …

Interment will follow in Duck River Cemetery, Old Lyme …

Visit this link to view the full obituary published by The Day on May 3, 2023.