NOW SHOWING
Juror: Soon Y Warren
Exhibition Dates: November 9th – December 13th, 2024
Delighted to be exhibiting ‘The Windy Island’ as part of The Blue Mountain Gallery’s marvelous Traveling Show, ‘Earth, Wind, Fire, and Water’, at
The Marblehead Arts Association
8 Hooper Street, Marblehead, MA 01945
(781) 631-2608
August 10th through September 21st
Opening Reception: August : Saturday, August 10th
Juror: Bill Lane, Exhibition Dates: April 20th – May 24nd, 2024
The Rhode Island Watercolor Society, Pawtucket, Rhode Island
Opening reception April 27th, 1pm
Below: “Opening Event, or Red Geranium,“ watercolor , 12 x 10″
434 Columbia Street, Hudson, New York
Exhibition dates: April 13th – May 11th, 2024
Opening reception: Saturday April 13th, 5-7:30 pm
1. “Cat as Magician”, watercolor/paper, 14 x 18″
2. “Night Flight”, oil pastels / paper, 20x 25″
3. “Luna Opening”, 24 x 18″ watercolor /paper
Juror: Linnea Toney Leeming
Exhibition Dates: February 17th – March 22nd, 2024
I’m delighted to have my painting ‘Caged Bird, Early Spring’ (w.c./paper,22×30”) accepted into the Rhode Island Watercolor Society’s 2022 National Show, (juror: Irena Roman),
exhibit dates: June 4th – July 16th, opening reception, Saturday, June 11th, at 1 pm
So very pleased to have three of my paintings in The Blue Mountain Gallery’s Invitational show: ‘Once in a Blue Moon’ along with a truly wonderful group of artists.
The exhibit runs from August 1-19 with an artist’s reception on August 3rd 5-8
Below: “Behold the Moon,” oil on panel, 12 x 9″, 2022.
Also included in the exhibit will be: “Peonies at Dusk,” oil/panel 9 x 12″ &
“Entrance to the Greenhouse,” oil/canvas 12 x 9″
….I was trying to catch a feeling – from the first night of my painting retreat when I walked to the edge of the lake and a bright moon was moving through and scattering clouds – in the sky and by my feet in the water…and way across from where I stood someone had a light on…It was mesmerizing -and worked on this little painting for many days trying to catch that experience
I’m delighted to have been invited to exhibit my paintings in the show ‘The Mirror Blue Night’ curated by Patrick Neal at the Undercroft Gallery in The Church of the Heavenly Rest – (next to The Guggenheim)
Alongside a unique and fantastic group of artists –
Poogy Bjerklie, John Elliott, Alyssa E. Fanning, Cora Jane Glasser, Erik Hanson, Adam Hurwitz, Elisa Jensen, Tamara Krendel, Pamela Lawton, Donna Levinstone, Kathryn Lynch, Megan Marden, Itty Neuhaus, Emilia Wild Olsen, Sandra Taggart, Tamas Veszi, Lee Lee Walker, Eric Wolf
Opening: Tuesday, September 12, 6-8pm
The Undercroft Gallery/ Church of the Heavenly Rest
1085 5th Avenue, New York, NY.
Hours: Daily: 9am- 8pm
This exhibit runs from September 10th – November 19th, 2023.
My work on view includes The final Iris print of “The Night Blooming Greenhouse”
And “Night Flight or Sphynx Ascending” I wrote a few paragraphs about the making of these works below,
…some notes on NightBlooming Greenhouse, w.c./paper 24 x 18 “ ,1989, following the tragic death of my mother by car accident in 1983 I stopped commuting to the Hunnewell estate–where I’d been working on-site in their greenhouses —returning to PA to be with my father and sister who was expecting the first grandchild. I returned briefly in ’84 to complete a painting of the wall of nasturtiums in the wellsley college greenhouses- and worked from still lives and studies in our studio apartment in Boston. Years later expecting our first child – we moved North of Boston into an old house near conservation land and while I was quite pregnant began -transforming the mudroom into what was to be my current studio – raising the ceiling for storage and replacing the walls with glass doors and a large bay window to capitalize on the Southern exposure – always my preference. I painted the Night Blooming greenhouse shortly after my first son was born—referencing paintings I’d done on location at the Hunnewell estate. As I’d painted out of my head for many years before studying observational painting and drawing formally -this was exciting to return to. I added our night blooming cereus as well as my cat- George into the scene. The stars and sky were from memories of my childhood in Vermont lying on a grassy hill when the air was crystal clear and the sky seemed to go on forever.
…..I painted my first extensive series of moths for a curatorial competition I titled Winged & Whispered at FPAC , featuring 6 fabulous artist’s poetic interpretations of winged creatures in a variety of complementary styles and mediums; literally, as in birds, moths, etc., or implied wings or flight through atmosphere or environment. All the works were selected that conveyed a sense of magic, mystery and/or transformation that brought to mind visual poetry. Moths, along with other creatures were also included in other exhibits that I curated at various venues –including: Insecta Poetica at the Essex Art Center and Dreaming the Light, Unfolding the Dark (night moths ascending) & Order Insecta at Concord Arts.
I was/am interested in creatures that inhabit both land, air and sometimes the water as well – as in dragonflies; subjects that forever have been experienced as metaphors for the spirit, transformation and transcendence, although when all is said and done it was the compelling visuals that initially drew me to paint them.
I’d wanted to paint moths for years – having included them in still lives but not always as my central theme.
For these exhibits I raised my subjects– spending two years raising Luna moths in a huge netted cage inside my studio’s bay window in an attempt to capture something of their mysterious poetry.
I was first captivated by moths as a very young very myopic child, experiencing them as pure magic : messengers drawn to our light from another realm, especially the ones that appeared suddenly out of complete darkness with their hidden flashes of color. The Luna is perhaps the most astonishing of all moths, with its otherworldly hue, brief life span and rare appearances. I also raised monarchs and king swallow tails .The monarch’s unfolding wings, reminded me of the cloaks of abstract flowers and of the gold and jewel-like color in Klimt paintings with their saturated patterning. The king swallow tails were the opposite – their wings like the unfolding curtains of night skies in Persian miniatures.
A subject like butterflies or moths is also an interesting subject to me because they are so beautiful just as they are and because their image has been so commercialized – and very easily becomes “corny” or overly sentimental – To try and move beyond their obvious beauty and butterfly “ness” – was part of the appeal in attempting to reclaim these creatures . So that while they are large depictions of beautiful evocative creatures – it is important to look past the image to the timbre of the lines in the drawings and to the paint qualityin the oils and watercolors. In the watercolors I was very involved in the whole ballet of the medium and there was a great deal of internal struggle between he strokes – and many studies preceded the larger watercolors as I was aiming to simplify the composition, light and expression; each brush stroke was of extreme importance. I wanted to make everything more monolithic in order to communicate their solitary Herculean task of emerging into winged creatures.
As I mentioned, I raised my moths and butterflies in my studio – finding my first Luna moth caterpillar in the middle of a mountain pathway in the wilds of Northern Maine – and then having this first caterpillar begin to spin in my sierra drinking cup as we hiked. Later I was lucky enough to come across another cocoon. I overwintered my cocoons in the bay window of my studio. In the late spring they emerged — the sound was loud like mice crunching crackers as they cut through their silk cocoons. The female produced hundreds of eggs inside their netted cage; I saved about 60 and forty or so caterpillars survived for a month of rapid growth and feeding frenzy to spin cocoons.
A month later, as we were packing up to go to Maine for two weeks – the moths began to emerge – I put down the back of my car and brought their netted cage with me – driving all night with these fluttering lunas behind me – by this time I also had a brood of black swallow tails. I’d found their tiny larvae on my dill plants – their stages are half as long – weeks instead of months.
In Maine I was able to film and paint and sketch the lunas as they continued to emerge—the light was beautiful – if you held the cage up to the trees they completely disappeared the color was so much like all the leaves around our cabin. By the time we were packing up to leave another brood was emerging and despite my better judgement I was gathering leaves and containers and we came back home with many tiny caterpillars.
juror: Shannon Ferrari
December 16th – January 19th, 2024
Opening on zoom, Th., Dec. 21st, 6pm
January 2–27, 2024, 547 W 27th St. New York
Opening Reception: Thursday, January 4th, 5-8 pm
Below: “Caged Bird, Early Spring,” watercolor, 21 x 32 “
April 7 – June 29th, 2022
The Atrium Gallery of the Moakley Courthouse, Boston, MA
Erica H. Adams, James Baker, Walter Crump, Tamara Krendel, CJ Lori & Joanne Tarlin.
curated by Erica H. Adams
Opening Reception Thursday June 2 (4-6 pm)
Night Flight, the Naming of the Birds, (November 2021) and its companion piece ‘Bird Tree, I Can Fly’ (September 2021)
For the last eight years I’ve travelled to sketch and paint this tree of birds– setting up in a swamp in S Carolina then later using my sketches in an attempt to recreate the experience of amazement and awe watching these various birds return to their tree at twilight.
Both paintings were inspired by a single nesting tree in this cypress-tupelo swamp that was continually animated by a stunning profusion of birds including Great White Egrets, Great Blue Herons and dark iridescent Anhingas –nesting and interacting together.
As the nestlings grew they increasingly exercised their magnificent wings – at times creating the illusion that the tree and/or their spirits could lift off.
‘Night Flowers, Summer into Fall’ (or wild flowers in a glass) (October 2021)
I began working on this piece a week before leaving my painting retreat. The painting evolved as the flowers opened, stretched, went to seed and reached towards the harvest moon when it appeared outside the window. The curtains became shadowy Hemlocks and stars fell from the sky.
Since March 2020 all of my paintings have been or have evolved to become nocturnes.
I love how light and color can be transcendent, transforming what one sees and feels – and that deeply personal imagery can become universal, often revealing that we’re more similar than we are separate.
Bio
TAMARA KRENDEL received her BFA and MFA from The University of Pennsylvania and pursued independent post-graduate studies in Antwerp, Belgium* (*Painting independently, commuting to Brussels where she’d been granted permission to paint in King’s The Royal Glass Houses, and copying Jan van Eyck’s Madonna of the Fountain at The Royal Museum of Fine Arts in Antwerp.)
Other honors and awards include Fulbright and Belgian Ministry of Dutch Culture Grants to Belgium and full fellowships to YADDO and Yale University’s Yale-Norfolk program.
She has exhibited, given talks, demonstrations and presentations at various venues including: The Whistler House Museum, Fort Point Channel Community Gallery, The Concord Art Association, The Attleboro Arts Museum and Widner’s Art Museum, she spoke at Mass General’s Illuminations program where her greenhouse series was recently on display. She has curated eight exhibits since 2002.
Tamara has taught art for many years designing classes at various schools and colleges.
Her work has been widely reviewed and is in many private and public collections.
Noted critic Burton Wasserman wrote in a review for Art Matters, of her exhibit of paintings at the Widener University Art Museum:
“Krendel exercises considerable poetic license, freely transforming the shape of growing plants and botanical settings in which they’re found into oil and watercolor compositions rippling with light and patterns of excitement. Poetic transcriptions of her most naked perceptions, these pictures are not observations based on external realities as much as they are playful inventions, inspired composites of jewel-like incandescence, sparkling vitality and imaginative joy…”