Public Radio

Artists Talk With LVA: May 19, 2022

Teri Dryden & Andrew Preston are both opening new exhibits on May 21 and came together to talk about it with us. Tune in to WXOX 97.1 FM/Artxfm.com each Thursday to hear Artists Talk with LVA.

Teri Dryden is a Louisville, Kentucky-based artist, having moved here from Los Angeles following a career in theater and performance. A fiber artist for several years, she eventually became an abstract painter and collage artist.

She is a member of the Collage Artists of America, National Collage Society, and Women Painters West. Her work is included in many private and public collections and has been exhibited in numerous solo, group, and juried exhibitions across the U.S. Her solo show, And We Floated On Home, opens at WheelHouse Art on May 21.

Andrew Preston is the owner/manager of Preston Art Center, a locally owned family business since 1941. But he is also an artist who will be exhibiting his most recent work in Putting the Bling in Marbling to be shown at Preston Art Center’s Jeffersonville location also beginning May 21.

Public Radio

Artists Talk With LVA: May 12, 2022

Sarah Battle has been researching Louisville-born artist Kenneth Victor Young & the Louisville Black Artists Renaissance of the mid-20th century. She tells us all about it this week on Artists Talk with LVA. Tune in to WXOX 97.1 FM/Artxfm.com each Thursday at 10 am.

Sarah Battle works in the education division at the National Gallery of Art and also researches Washington Color School artist Kenneth Victor Young. Sarah has spent much of the last few months on sabbatical to better understand Young's formative years as a painter in Louisville through an oral history project. This project aims to document the mid-century Black art scene in Louisville, KY. The oral history project is made possible thanks to the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts, the Kentucky Oral History Commission, and the University of Louisville.

On May 6 she presented her current research on Washington Color School artist Kenneth Young at the 2022 DC History Conference organized by the DC History Center and DC Public Library !

Public Radio

Artists Talk With LVA: May 5, 2022

[In]Fertility is a new play with music premiering May 12, 13, & 14 at The Mex Theatre in Kentucky Performing Arts.

Margaret Miller is a writer from Texas. She received her BFA in Theatre from Tisch School of the Arts at New York University and her MFA in Playwriting from Trinity College Dublin. Her radio play “Nothing and No One Go To The Moon” was featured on RTE Radio Drama. She co-wrote the documentary “Dress A Cow” which premiered at South By Southwest 2022. Her short film “Animal” is in post-production in Los Angeles. She lives in Louisville with her husband, Stephen, and her dog, Rosie.

Heather Summers is a singer, songwriter, and folk musician from Louisville, Kentucky. She grew up with her grandpa on a houseboat at Dale Hollow Lake and with her adopted family in Columbia, Kentucky. Her songs often feature lyrical content from these inspiring times in her life. Storytelling through her song, she takes her listener by the hand, where they may find themselves walking down a wooded path by a winding stream and blooming bluebells.

Martin French is from Ireland and has worked in theatre for many years, covering a wide variety of positions. By trade a designer, and by preference a director, Martin has worked professionally in theatre for over 20 years in Dublin, London, and Louisville, where he is the Co-founder & Co-Artistic Director of The Chamber Theatre. He has been an artistic director with Ourclann and Dublin Shakespeare in Ireland, and in Louisville has previously been on the board of The Alley Theatre.

Some highlights of his directing work include The Bloomsday Breakfast Show, Elektra, Busu, Electile Dysfunction, Metamorphosis, and Chek-Mate.

The Trestle At Pope Lick Creek by Naomi Wallace runs May 12-15 at Carbon Copy Gallery at  1212 S 4th St.,









Painting

Vignette: Macel Hamilton

Macel Hamilton, “Love”, oil, 11in x 14in, 2021, NFS

By profession, Macel Hamilton has been a Registered Nurse for 34  years, but seven years ago she started teaching herself to draw, and within a year she was painting. A native of Beaver, located in the hills of Eastern Kentucky, her simple portrait work captures a rural sensibility. Whether through technique - Hamilton favors natural lighting and has a knack for capturing it - or subject - each portrait is of a family member or close friend - the artist expresses the prosaic existence of the Appalachian region.

“My main goal with my art is to improve and learn. I really enjoy my art when I feel like I am learning and improving.”

Macel Hamilton, “Uncle”, oil, 11in x 14in, 2021, NFS

Not that the inspiration is the cliche of rural unsophistication. In “Husband”, Hamilton paints a spouse who was a professional studio musician for over 50 years with Capitol Records, working with many famous musicians in the 1960s, and an “Uncle” who was an Old Regular Baptist preacher in Eastern Kentucky. The focused energy present just before he begins a sermon is palpable.

Hamilton’s gift for rendering people with such unsparing realism doesn’t prevent her from capturing their humanity, it elevates it. There is empathy in the exploration of every hair and wrinkle in the flesh, and great warmth injected into the details. With “Love’, the deep connection between a middle-aged man and his aging father acknowledges the complicated emotions in familial relationships while hinting at the pain of witnessing the passing of generations. In 2021 “Love” was exhibited for six months in the Kentucky Capitol as a part of the Team Kentucky Gallery.  

SCROLL DOWN FOR MORE IMAGES

Macel Hamilton, “Husband”, oil, 16in x 20in, 2020, NFS

Macel Hamilton, “Old Rusted Lock”, watercolor on paper, 16in x 20in, NFS

Macel Hamilton, “Uncle”, oil, 11in x 14in, 2021, NFS

Macel Hamilton, “Life Is Good”, acrylic, 16in x 20in, 2019, NFS

Written by Keith Waits

Entire contents are copyright © 2022 by Louisville Visual Art. All rights reserved.






Public Radio

Artists Talk with LVA: April 28, 2022

This week we talk about "Seeing Sam Richards Sculpture", the new book by Frances Kratzok, and others, including Melinda Walters & John Begley. Tune in to WXOX 971.1 FM/Artxfm.com Thursdays at 10 am to hear Artists Talk with LVA.

Sam Richards was a prolific sculptor. His experimentation was broad, deep, and lifelong. He was knowledgeable, articulate, and down-to-earth, a man of sparing speech, and personal and artistic integrity. Richards taught at the University of Louisville for almost 19 years and making most of his sculptures in his campus studio. 

Louisville sculptor Frances Kratzok received a B.F.A. in sculpture from the Tyler School, Temple University, and an M.F.A. in sculpture from Rinehart School of Sculpture of Maryland Institute College of Art.

She has taught sculpture and art classes at several colleges in the Louisville area and exhibits regionally. She was married to sculptor Sam Richards.

Melinda Walters is currently a special education teacher in Louisville. She received her BA in Fine and Studio Arts with a concentration in Sculpture from the University of Louisville where she studied with Sam Richards. She went on to earn an MFA from the University of Albany SUNY before returning to U of L to get a Masters in Education.

John Begley is a freelance art worker (artist, curator, art services provider) He was Gallery Director, Assistant Professor of Art (Emeritus), Critical and Curatorial Studies graduate program coordinator for the Allen R. Hite Art Institute, University of Louisville 2001 – 2014 (Retired). He was also the Director, Louisville Visual Art Association 1983 - 2001