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Art

New Guild Brings Chelsea to Chappaqua

August 5, 2015 by The Inside Press

art one
Donna Soszynska: “When Trees Dream”

The Northern Westchester Artists Guild (NWAG) was founded in 2014 with the mission of supporting its members creatively and through exhibition opportunities. A non-for-profit, NWAG is comprised close to 40 members who work in a variety of 2D and 3D formats; drawing, watercolor, painting, fiber, ceramics, enamel, jewelry.

cups
Nancy Modlin Katz: “Crossing the Bay” Ceramic

Although based out of New Castle and a proud member of the NC Chamber of Commerce, the guild has members from all over Westchester and Putnam Counties. The guild is an inclusive group that meets monthly to discuss exhibition and selling opportunity for the membership as well as a lively forum during which members can share information regarding pricing, insurance, framing, marketing and other topical subjects.

Cindy Sacks: “Fishmonger”
Cindy Sacks: “Fishmonger”

Some of the 2015-2016 guild events are: Art Under The Bridge, an outdoor arts show on the 3rd Saturday of the month from May to October simultaneously with the Farmers Market; Art Around Town, a month long pairing of artist and merchants in Chappaqua during June 2015 where NWAG members work will be displayed in local businesses; November 2015-Jan 2016 exhibition at the Chappaqua Library Gallery; June 2015 and October 2015 NWAG has rented gallery space in Tarrytown for its artists to display and sell their work; December 2015, the annual NWAG exhibition at the Chappaqua Community Center; June 2016 NWAG exhibition at Muscoot Farm in Somers. To learn more and to see a sample of our artists’ work, please visit us at nwartistsguild.org or please email us at nwartistsguild@gmail.com

Filed Under: Inside My New Castle Tagged With: Art, community, guild, Inside Press, theinsidepress.com, Westchester

Chappaqua Supports NWAG’s Art Around Town Exhibition

June 12, 2015 by Janine Crowley Haynes

NWAG Members Kick Off Art Around Town Exhibition
NWAG Members Kick Off Art Around Town Exhibition (photo by Maria Larramendi)

On June 4th, the Northern Westchester Artists Guild (NWAG) kicked off their month-long Art Around Town exhibition. NWAG members will be displaying their artwork in participating stores in Chappaqua until June 29th. The opening festivities began at 5 p.m. A tent was set up on the corner of King Street and North Greeley Avenue where walking-tour maps and directories were provided to locate specific artists with their respective venues. To add to the festivities, participating merchants offered drinks, appetizers, and desserts to all who entered to view the exhibits.

The nonprofit organization, NWAG, is still in its nine-month infancy yet is growing at a rapid pace with approximately 50 members to date. The idea of forming an artists’ group came to lifelong Chappaqua resident and artist Leslie Weissman while out for a walk one day in the spring of 2014. Weissman shared her vision with fellow artist Peg Sackler, and, by September 2014, a meeting took place around Weissman’s kitchen table along with approximately 15 fellow members. “The energy was amazing….We began to function as a collective; tossing out ideas, suggesting new members, creating opportunities, developing ideas for marketing material, and determining a dues structure,” says Weissman.

Kombers:EyeGallery
Mindy Kombert (center) exhibiting work at Eye Gallery

The spirit of an artist is captured in their work. Artists are creative and bold in their expression. Yet, choosing to exhibit one’s artwork  is, perhaps, the boldest thing an artist can do. NWAG is made up of a group of multitalented, multifaceted artists. When you begin to peel back the layers that make up one particular artist, the word artist just doesn’t suffice. On her website, NWAG member Mindy Kombert simply describes herself as a maker, but for Kombert, being a maker encompasses a whole lot–a potter, a painter, a photographer, a scrapbook quilter, a graphic designer, a knitter, just to name a few.

 

Sacks:Ward:HistoricalSociety
Executive Director Cassie Ward (left) of New Castle Historical Society with artist Cindy Sacks at the Horace Greeley House

Painter Cindy Sacks has a prime spot. Her venue? The Horace Greeley House on King Street. Sacks expresses how grateful she is to the New Castle Historical Society for HoraceGreeleyHouseexhibiting some of her paintings now on display throughout the first floor of the historical site. Sacks’ watercolor and oil paintings appear in regional exhibitions, galleries, and in corporate and private collections.                                                                                                 

LyonsPickel
Weaver & textile designer Barbara Pickel at Salon 228
Loom
Pickel’s 39″ wide Glimakra loom

Another NWAG member exhibiting some of her work is longtime Chappaqua resident and weaver Barbara Lyons Pickel. Her intricate handwoven pieces take many forms: fine linens, blankets, rugs, scarves, and bags. Her studio? Her home. What was once the music room, where her children (now grown) used to practice their violin, viola, and cello, is now her weaving room. In addition to a table loom, a substantially large 39” wide Swedish loom occupies a good portion of the sunlit space and easily stands alone as its own art form. For larger projects, an even wider 54” loom resides in her basement. Pickel took up weaving eight years ago after daughter Molly Pickel, then 14, returned home from a summer arts and craft camp. Molly knew weaving would be something her mother would enjoy. Pickel immediately searched for an adult workshop that would also allow a 14-year-old. She finally found a five-day workshop at Vavstuga Weaving School. The mother-daughter bonding trip instantaneously sparked Pickel’s love of weaving. She was drawn to weaving for its variety of design options as well as the planning aspect. Setting up the loom is a complicated and important part of the design process. “When I begin planning a new project, I have to make decisions regarding the function, the fiber, and the structure before I even begin to consider color choices,” says Pickel. “Every step of the process must be done precisely, or the final process will be unsatisfying,” she adds. Pickel continues to master her craft in the Scandinavian tradition while incorporating new design and textile techniques. In 2012, Pickel took a workshop in Fujino, Japan, exploring several Japanese textile techniques including indigo dyeing, shibori, katazome, and kumihimo.                                                                                                                                                                                

Ocko:DonnaHair
NWAG Artist Helene Ocko at Donna Hair

Guild member Helene Ocko’s abstracts and florals are as colorful and whimsical as she is. Her studio? Her kitchen…and backyard for larger pieces. For Ocko, painting is a joyful process. “I don’t like to explore the dark places of my emotions in my artwork,” says Ocko. “If I want to do that, I’ll talk about it…not paint it,” she adds. Ocko works in acrylics and experiments with various textures and uses unconventional techniques. Her sense of humor comes out when describing what went into making a particular piece. It’s not unusual for her to use random tools like a fork, a comb, a dog brush, or some crinkled plastic wrap to create texture and movement in her work. In addition to exhibiting in town, some of Ocko’s larger pieces are on display at Northern Westchester Hospital.                                                                                                                   

To view all NWAG artists and their profiles, click here: nwartistsguild.org/#!artists/c1sqx

To download the list of all NWAG artists exhibiting work and their respective venues, click here: artist_merchant_location list (2)

By Janine Crowley Haynes, Chappaqua resident and freelance writer

Photos by Michelle Hecht

Sacks:HistoricalSocietyDunn:HoulihanAikens:ICDKockler:Breeze
Post:JardinShobha:ComesticsBoutiqueVanFleet:HallofScoopsChrissanth:Emmary Day SpaNan:GreatStuff

 

 

Weissman:DesiresWasserman:DesiresStandingOcko:DonnaHair

NWAG Members Kick Off Art Around Town Exhibition
NWAG Members Kick Off Art Around Town Exhibition

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: New Castle News Tagged With: Art, Art Around Town, Chappaqua, Inside Press, merchants, Shopping, theinsidepress.com

ART UNDER the BRIDGE: Making Connections through ART

April 20, 2015 by The Inside Press

May 16th kicks off the Northern Westchester Artists Guild’s  “Art Under the Bridge” series running every third Saturday from 9:30 a.m. – 3 p.m.. May through October by the Chappaqua train station  under the bridge.

Local fine artists, painters, printmakers, ceramists,  photographers, fiber artists, sculptors, and  jewelry designers all will exhibit their work under the bridge that links the   Farmers Market and the Flea Market to the shops at lower King Street.

Shop for fresh locally grown farm goods, shop at the flea market; then stroll under the bridge and see the amazing art work also locally produced!

All work is available for purchase.

NWAG is a non profit organization, and a proud member of the Chappaqua/Millwood Chamber of Commerce.

The Northern Westchester Artisits Guild supports and encourages artists in their endeavors.

We see all forms of art as a vital expression of our voice in the community.

If you would like more information about this event, contact Peg Sackler:

914-715-0575, pegsackler@optonline.net or visit: www.nwartisitsguild.org

nwag_art around town

Filed Under: Happenings Tagged With: Art, Art Under the Bridge, Inside Press, Northern Westchester Artists Guild, theinsidepress.com

If You GUILD It …

March 4, 2015 by The Inside Press

By Leslie Weissman

As a working artist, I have longed for a group of fellow artists in Northern Westchester with whom I can share ideas, mount exhibitions and have a support network. The life of an artist tends to entail a great deal of quiet time in order to work on one’s practice, either during a thought period or while producing. That said, artists do look to their peers

Guild members in the Community Center’s raw space prior to its pop-up transformation. From L - R: Cindy Sacks, Peggy Davidson Post, Randy Matusow, Peg Sackler, Nan Zinaman, Debra Graham, Mindy Kombert- Rosenblatt and Helene Ocko
Guild members in the Community Center’s raw space prior to its pop-up transformation. From L – R: Cindy Sacks, Peggy Davidson Post, Randy Matusow, Peg Sackler, Nan Zinaman, Debra Graham, Mindy Kombert- Rosenblatt and Helene Ocko

for critiques, for sharing ideas and for information and a means of outreach related to exhibiting their work. I personally like the romantic “cafe and coffee-conversations” images depicted in movies and novels which paint a picture of artists whiling away the hours together, steeped in creative conversation.

Artist’s studios, galleries and those very romantic cafes are springing up in neighborhoods in Queens and Brooklyn. These city blocks have a sense of cohesiveness and have created built-in community networks. So, five years ago, when I began to focus on my art as a full time endeavor I also wanted to create a sense of an artists’ collective. At first blush, this seemed like a monumental effort in our geographically large region comprised of small towns and hamlets. But I knew this would be important in an effort to satiate my desire to feel connected to a working community and for artistic inspiration and support.

My first step was to reach out to other guilds in the area. I began calling and emailing those I knew of to see if they would be interested in franchising or having me open a chapter in Northern Westchester. As it turns out, the model of a franchise does not work in the guild world, so I needed to take my conversation on the road, literally, to garner support.

While out walking one day last spring, I had an impromptu meeting with, now-fellow Guild member, Peg Sackler about trying to form a local organization of artists. Still not exactly sure about the specifics, we were both excited about the prospect of group, a space, an exhibition and people with whom we could bond over art. That was enough of a starting point.

Patrons browsed NWAG’s inaugural pop-up show at the Chappaqua Community Center. Above, works by Guild Artist Chrissanth Green-Gross, a teacher at the Katonah Art Center.
Patrons browsed NWAG’s inaugural pop-up show at the Chappaqua Community Center. Above, works by Guild Artist Chrissanth Green-Gross, a teacher at the Katonah Art Center.

I have been studying at, among other places, The Westchester Center For The Arts in White Plains. Sharing a studio with a group of artists can be simultaneously intimidating and exhilarating. I was excited to have found a group of artists with whom I could converse and from whom I could get feedback. Eventually, I connected with Patti Ettinger and Helene Ocko, and brought up the idea of a guild in Northern Westchester. To my delight, they loved the idea and encouraged me to forge ahead.

I let the idea percolate for a few more months and tossed the concept out to artists I would run into along the way. I started collecting email addresses, and finally got up the courage to send out a note to a small distribution list to test the waters. I figured if there was enough interest, we could have a meeting; if not, I would humbly send out a retraction of the idea. So the email went out with the Subject Line:New Castle Artist Guild. I was thrilled by the responses. Not only did those on the distribution list jump in with two feet, but people were forwarding my note around and strangers’ names were popping up in my inbox with requests to join.

Artists’ guilds are as old as the practice of art itself. Guilds have a rich history of uniting artists and people who love art. Guilds are usually a non-profit organization dedicated to the promotion and exhibition of its members work. Guilds serve as a resource and network for community artists of all ages and interests, and include making cultural and economic contributions to the community, connecting artists and art patrons, and acting as an arts educating center.

The inaugural meeting was September 2014. We had approximately 15 artists around my kitchen table and the energy was amazing; there was an immediate sense of communal purpose. With little structure and no formality, we began to function as a collective; tossing out ideas, suggesting new members, creating opportunities, developing ideas for marketing material and determining a dues structure. Several items where set in place immediately. Mindy Kombert-Rosenblatt suggested the more inclusive naming convention of Northern Westchester Artists Guild, NWAG. 
We began calling ourselves that during the meeting, which was an acknowledgement that this entity was formed and moving forward. We enjoyed our meeting, and established that we would have meetings the first Monday of every month. It was decided that the goal of NWAG is to raise awareness and appreciation for the visual arts through exhibitions and education in Westchester.

By our second meeting, Nan Zinaman was spearheading an effort for the Guild to be represented at the Chappaqua Farmers Market. True to our creative spirit, a handful of members represented NWAG with a display of work, a book of the members’ bios and a poster created by member Carolyn Simpson which serves as our marketing platform and includes information on the artists and their websites. By the second month, our website was up and running, and we were now talking about doing a pop-up exhibition.

We christened our fledgling Guild with a pop-up show at the Chappaqua Community Center on December 7th, 2014. Peg Sackler showed up to our November meeting with a poster sized flow chart of how we would transform the community center’s main room into a Chelsea-like gallery for four hours. We arrived at 12 p.m. with a 1 p.m. scheduled opening. Twelve of our members participated and we unpacked cars, set up tables and coverings, assembled easels, spread out promotional material, and created a café. While music played and the sun shone in, our patrons began arriving at 12:50 p.m. From that moment until 4 p.m. on the nose, the house was packed. It was an absolute thrill to hear from the audience how excited they were to come out to participate in this creative community event. Almost all the exhibiting artists sold works that day, or did so following the show, and close to two dozen pieces were purchased.

We are currently 25 members strong and growing each month. Our members work in a variety of two-dimensional art forms such as painting, printmaking and drawing as well as textiles, pottery, mixed media, beadwork and jewelry. The Guild is supported in part from our members’ dues and commissions from the sale of artwork, as well as fundraising events. Our Guild is a volunteer-based collective, which helps keep our operating expenses to a minimum, and, in turn, encourages the members to participate which adds to the feeling that the organization is ours.

NWAG is currently working on an opportunity to curate monthly shows at Peter and Erin Chase’s new Chappaqua Station venue. Launching 3Q 2015, this curatorial opportunity pairs community resources with common goals of enriching our neighborhood. In addition, the Guild is working with Tara Mikolay to develop an Artists’ Walk event to take place in New Castle. The event will match Guild members with local merchants who will exhibit the artists’ work in their establishments. The Artists Walk will commence with an opening cocktail reception at the participating merchants’ stores, and the work will be on display for approximately a month. Proceeds from the sale will benefit both the Guild and local charities, which are still to be determined.

We are also very excited to have a show scheduled at the Chappaqua Public Library, which will run from November 7th 2015 through January 2nd 2016. All Guild members will be represented, and we will host an opening reception on November 7th from 2-4:30 p.m. with food, music and wonderful art.

During 2016, we’ll be searching for a space to call our own, a starter house of sorts, where we can have continuous exhibits, host meetings and open our doors to local art enthusiasts. We will explore purchasing and renovating a space, renting a space or continuing to find creative pop-up locations in Northern Westchester. Towards that goal, two of our many fundraising efforts for this year will include the production of an NWAG calendar and an NWAG Art Box, which will be a limited edition collection of work created by our members.

My dream of an artist collective or guild began back in college when I did a study abroad at the Bath Academy of Art in the UK. I often took the 30 minute train ride over to Bristol, home of the celebrated street artist Banksy, where I would spend hours at the Arnofini Center. This inspiring arts venue is home to a gallery and exhibition space, art shops, a café and reading room and artist studios and workshops. NWAG is just in its infancy, but it’s a thrill that, within six months, we are a vibrant, thriving group with endless possibilities. It is not surprising that artists would seek communities like these. Art-making is often a solitary activity, but working in isolation can be difficult and NWAG gives its members a creative family with whom to bond.

If you are interested in learning more about the Guild, please visit us online at www.nwartistsguild.org or send us an email at nwartistsguild@gmail.com

Leslie Weissman is a local artist and business owner of Presents For Purpose. You can see her work at www.leslieweissman.com and consider purchasing a 
gift or gifts that give back to charity at 
www.presentsforpurpose.com

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: Art, Art guilds, Artists, community, Northern Westchester Artists Guild, NWAG

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