November 2, 2011


Juror’s choice award winner, Stacey Page

 





When Stacey Page’s work arrived at the gallery we were all a bit taken aback. These labored little treasures were so strange, so charming, so captivating. Juror Ariel Shanberg was also quite captured by them upon seeing them in person, and chose Page as the recipient of our current Manipluated exhibition’s Juror’s Choice award.

Artist Stacey Page takes found portrait photographs and adds embroidery to the discarded images, creating cunning narratives. The artist states, “The original photograph desires a specific response. There are reoccurring hints of crowns, masks, mutations or developments. Themes and imagery based on status, avatar, identity, fashion, evolution, with the relationships and conflicts of humankind.”  

When asked whether she was trying to add or hide something in the images, she simply said ”It is a resurrection, perhaps allowing a little fame to a discarded identity.”



Enjoy our full interview with the artist, below:

Castell Photography: Where are you from, and what is your training and educational background?

Stacey Page: I live in Gillsville, GA.  I have some college where I studied painting.



CP: Have you always been creative? Or rather, when did you discover that you were artistically inclined? 

SP: Yes, I don’t remember when I discovered I was.  Perhaps when I discovered my dedication is when I borrowed my mother’s wood carving knives and ended up hiding a jab in the thigh. 


CP: Where do the names come from? Do you dream these characters up or just assign them names at random? 

SP: The names are given. I would describe the process similar to a christening.



CP: How do you mean? Do you create personas for these anonymous characters as you make the work?  

SP: It is a rebirth or a resurrection of a discarded identity and naturally I want to name the creation as the creator. Yes the work takes on a persona as the relationship develops. 


CP: Now, the actual photographs: where do you acquire them? Are you drawn to the ones that you choose for a particular reason? 


SP: The photographs come from auctions or antique stores or online.  The process of choosing has evolved to be more specific as far as technical aspects, but basically it is the start of a relationship so naturally I am looking for someone attractive in some way.



CP: For you, what is the relationship between the embroidery and the photograph? Basically, why are you embroidering these photographs?

SP: I had developed a strong respect for photography being on the other side of the lens for the performance side. I worked as an artist’s model for some years, developing different characters to portray. The embroidery and photograph compliment each other, and they are most successful at saying exactly what I want to say. There are reoccurring discussions within my work on status, avatar, identity, fashion, evolution, with the relationships and conflicts of humankind. At a time I found it hard to return to oils and painting, and I had to find a new medium. Basically, I enjoy the medium.  It is soft with a grid-like puzzle. The photograph is entertaining and easier than starting with something white and blank.



CP: What is it that leads you to make some more decorative, and others more narrative? Do you simply respond to some images more than others?

SP: I have a tendency to overdo some of my work, so maybe that is what you are reading into. It is a part of me that I try to accept and I take full responsibility for it.



CP: How would classify yourself as an artist? We really love that you are creating works that are photo-based, but that you’re not, in fact, a photographer. 

SP: I wouldn’t, I figure someone will place me in a group.



CP: We see that you have some pieces on your web site which are strictly embroidery — do you see yourself always working with embroidery in some capacity, and do you anticipate that you will consistently utilize appropriated imagery? 

SP: Those works are from my painting converting to embroidery, substituting paint and brush for thread and needle.  Always is such a commitment that I don’t make.  I am interested in learning and adapting.


CP: Would you consider yourself an outsider artist? Do you feel like you have an advantage or a disadvantage from not being classically trained?   

SP: I am isolated, but I would not consider myself as an outsider artist, because I use the web and conventional ways of displaying my work. I don’t think a true outsider would even know that they were such and pile work in a closet. I see myself as perhaps an insider and very aware of skill and development of that skill in order to become more specific about what I am communicating. As far as being classically trained, I do feel disadvantaged when I see a beautiful manipulation of thread or fabric, such as some surface corded quilting or a simple embroidered eyelet. I try to take the time to learn and develop the skill, and you can see this progress in the work. Since the embroidery on the photograph is very different from embroidering onto fabric, there is a lot of time devoted to stretching the medium through experimentation as there are no books on the medium. I feel advantaged in this way- that there are no rules to follow except for the rules I create for myself.


 CP: Any additional thoughts or details that you’d like to include? 

SP: It amazes me, the amount of discarded photographs or even boxes of lives.  It really gives me a different perspective of life, that is most involved in the self. and I am glad photographs are turning digital.

All of the works from our Manipulated exhibition can be seen on our web site under the exhibition portfolio. Keep checking back for a feature on our Director’s Choice Award winner, Timothy Pakron. 

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May 19, 2012


Coming in June: Vignettes

We are thrilled to announce our next exhibition, Vignettes, featuring works from Dan Estabrook, Sharon Hart, & Stacey Page. Though these three artists are each quite different, all three are creating unique works which have been manipulated by the artists physical hand. This is an exciting exhibition that we are elated to share with you!

The opening reception will be held on Friday, June 1st, from 6-8 PM. All artists will be in attendance, and the reception will feature specialty cocktails as well as a DJ to celebrate the evening! We will also host an informal artist talk with Dan Estabrook the following afternoon at 4PM. 

Stay tuned for additional details about the artists, the exhibited works, and the opening reception next week!

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May 24, 2012


Opening NEXT FRIDAY evening: Vignettes


JOIN US on Friday, June 1st, from 6-8 PM, for a very special opening reception event, Vignettes, featuring works from DAN ESTABROOK, SHARON HART, & STACEY PAGE.

All 3 artists will be in attendance, specialty cocktails will be served, and there will be a DJ to celebrate the evening. Additionally, Dan Estabrook will also be giving an informal artist talk at the gallery on Saturday, June 2nd, at 4p.m.


Read the full press release below:

Castell Photography is pleased to announce the opening of their newest exhibition,Vignettes, featuring photo-based works from artists Dan Estabrook, Sharon Hart, and Stacey Page on Friday, June 1st, from 6p.m. to 8p.m. Dan Estabrook will also be giving an informal artist talk at the gallery on Saturday, June 2nd, at 4p.m.

Dan Estabrook has been making contemporary art using a variety of 19th century photographic techniques for the past 20 years, most recently focusing on the earliest paper photographs - calotype negatives and salted paper prints - as sources for hand manipulation with paint and pencil. Estabrook, a modern master, has been exhibited widely and is represented by the Catherine Edelman Gallery in Chicago, Daniel Cooney Fine Art in New York, and Jackson Fine Art in Atlanta. Estabrook attended Harvard University, received his MFA from the University of Illinois and currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. Works exhibited will include Estabrook’s 9 Symptoms series in it’s entirety, as well a selection of work from his At Sea series. In Nine Symptoms, Estabrook tackles the emotions he has experienced falling in love, evoking old medical photographs to directly confront the passion, obsession, apprehension and excitement brought on by love, as well as its loss. The artist eloquently states “Using and emulating nineteenth-century printing techniques, and making visible the very physical materials of which photographs are made, I attempt to have seemingly anonymous photographs become highly personal objects. In these images a single repeated shape, a formation of fowers, or the patterns of dust and decay are almost legible texts, inscribed on the skin of paper, tin, and glass.”

Stacey Page, an artist currently living and working in Athens, Georgia, creates unique and charming one of a kind works using found photographs. Pageadds embroidery to the discarded portraits, creating cunning narratives. The artist states, “The original photograph desires a specifc response. There are reoccurring hintsof crowns, masks, mutations or developments. Themes and imagery based on status, avatar, identity, fashion, evolution, with the relationships and conficts of humankind.” When asked whether she was trying to add or hide something in the images, she simply said ”It is a resurrection, perhaps allowing a little fame to a discarded identity.” Page’s workhas be included in multiple exhibitions in both the US and abroad, and she was chosen by Ariel Shanberg, executive director of the renowned Center for Photography at Woodstock, as the juror’s choice award winner at Castell Photography’s annual juried exhibition in the fall of 2011. 

Sharon Hart, a native of Washington DC, is a professor and working artist living in Kentucky. Hart earned her MFA from the University of North at Chapel Hill and her BFA from Maine College of Art. Works featured in this exhibition will include a selection of work from the artists’ mixed media series entitled Reveal, in which all work have been manipulated through the use of photomontage, the darkroom, as well as digital processes. Lastly, the pieces are reworked with traditional materials such as charcoal and paint in order to bring about a more complex, layered depth both formally and conceptually. The artist states “This evolving body of work questions male and female cultural identities, interactions between humans and other animals, surveillance, mass media representations, and linguistic habits. I utilize often dark and occasionally humorous imagery that provokes a confrontation with critical social and political issues…The velvety, deep black that veils the pieces enhances and obscures. It also covers and conceals, just as the content of the work brings up issues that are often uncomfortable, sugar coated, or accepted as the status quo.”

Gallery Director Heidi Gruner states: “We are thrilled to exhibit this unique group of works from these three exceptionally talented artists. It’s intriguing to see such a varied selection of imagery, tied together by the artists’ use of subtle yet unforced narration, and by the use of physical manipulation by each artists’ hand . All three have given us, the viewer, just enough information to get lost in these works, enough story to entice intrigue, just enough narrative to fnd ourselves somehow attached to these characters portrayed.” 

The opening reception for Vignettes will be held on Friday, June 1st from 6p.m. to 8p.m, and will coincide with the Asheville Downtown Gallery Association’s June art walk. All three artists will be in attendance to meet guest, answer any questions, and enjoy the event. Specialty cocktails will be served, and there will be a live DJ to celebrate the evening. The show will remain on exhibit through June 30th.

Estabrook’s informal artist talk, held at 4pm on the 2nd, is open to the public, artists, collectors, and enthusiasts, and all others are encouraged to attend!

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