Dream by JW Harrington

in the studio of my friend young Alice,

born of painter and poet.

I admired her deeply.

She encouraged my work.

 

Her widowed mother

showed us two pieces,

red background, black or blue detail:

on one, rough figures in black, streaked with red,

and a few clearly drawn distractions;

on one, a cerulean circle, bold and smooth.

 

The difference, she said, was suggestion, the basis of art.

the roughness and red obscured and denied; 

the blue-on-red suggested colors unseen.

 

She gave us principles – very rare for her:

paint, don't record.

the act of painting must be primary

through visible brushstrokes - even those created by artifice.

Form is key, the major virtue of the work.

Represent by suggestion.

Together we breathed only one word, how.

Deep breath.

 

Rapidfire:

we know circle, we know sky, sun -- don't draw

do we need circle, or can it be transformed,

folded on itself, present as shadow, present as void?

overpainted, incomplete? 

ovoid imperfection?

Embarrassed by such explicit wordrain, 

she fell Silent. 

 

color is the gift, the bonus

color suggests things not drawn

color is emotion

color is beautiful.

 

It is a striking afternoon, I must go.

We paused by the sink:

she touched each of us, ran fingers thru gloss-black hair,

held a small mirror angled toward the ceiling and said

Henry, I'd like a special gift;  nevermind though, I'll pick it up.

Turned to us effusively -- happy thanksgiving.

Mother flinched;

they planned to spend thanksgiving together.

No, thanks can be more thoughtful alone.

I’ll go get my treat, this gorgeous afternoon.

 

Bainbridge "Fresh Talent" by JW Harrington

Bainbridge Arts & Crafts selected my paintings The Impossibility of Knowing (27) and MBTW17 for its “Fresh Talent” show, 7-30 October.  Bainbridge Island is a great setting, a 30-minute ferry ride from downtown Seattle or an hour drive from Tacoma.  The exhibit is at 151 Winslow Way East, open 10 – 6 on Mondays through Saturdays and 11 – 5 on Sundays.  The opening reception is 6 – 8PM on Friday 7 October!

When you’re on the island, visit the Bainbridge Island Japanese-American Exclusion Memorial, a powerful tribute to the 227 Bainbridge residents who were forced to leave by the US Government in 1942, transported to internment camps.

Tacoma Studio Tour is back! by JW Harrington

The self-guided Tacoma Studio Tour is back, after a two-year suspension because of COVID-19. On Saturday & Sunday, 15-16 October, 50 artists will share and discuss their work in 38 studios across the city. I'll be at Studio 4 (see the map) both days, 11AM - 5PM. Each studio will feature an active demonstration or a hands-on activity -- I'll have two stations set up where you can create your own acrylic painting. (I've done this in the past -- children love it!)

The interactive map makes it easy for you to select the studios you want to visit, thereby generating an itinerary and personal map of your day. During the tour, you can sign up for a drawing for prizes offered by participating artists.

"AutumnScapes" at Tahoma Center Gallery, September-October by JW Harrington

The Tahoma Center Gallery has invited me back to present a show titled “AutumnScapes.”  I’ll show land- and waterscape paintings in acrylic and in oil, featuring scenes from the Northwest.  I revel in abstract painting, but it’s impossible to live in this wonderful region and fail to use the settings for naturalistic paintings.

Frenchtown cabin. Acrylic on canvas.

Haystack Rock, Dusk. Oil on board

The show will go up the week of 12 September, and will be up through October.  Another area of the gallery will feature some of my larger black-and-white abstractions, as well.  The gallery is on the second floor of the Catholic Community Services building – the grand old St. Leo School at 1323 S. Yakima Avenue in Tacoma.  We’ll have a reception during the Tacoma artwalk on Thursday 15 September, 4-7PM.  The space is open 8:30 – 5 on Mondays through Fridays – just come in the main entrance and ask the receptionist for the artwork upstairs.