A Look at Swann Galleries’ Staff Art Show The Swann Staff Art Show, which was on display from July 11 to 18, featured selected artworks in various media from Swann’s talented staff. Take a look at our show below! Harold Porcher, Director, Modern & Post-War Art Works by Harold Porcher: Outside the Law, Oil on paper laid to birch plywood panel, 2022; Chicken Ranch, Oil on paper laid to birch plywood panel, 2022; Fever Ship, Ink, acrylic, gouache, and colored pencil on grey paper, 2022; Series I, Image IV, hand-colored linoleum cut on tan paper. “When I choose to share my struggles, feelings, pain, and happiness, I choose abstraction because I feel I can convey my feelings and be heard, yet the imagery is open for the ideas the viewer wishes to interpret. My line-flow, or scribble scrabble paintings and drawings were born out of working with my two-year-old son on his drawings. The term scribble scrabble was what he called this drawing form back in 2002. I began exploring the beauty and freedom of scribbling, modifying to create forms, and then using color to add push-pull dynamics to my compositions. I hope that I can find my audience and encourage you to follow me on this journey. I welcome feedback, as I see the arts and human existence itself as a social and interactive experiment.” Mars Boatwright, House Photographer Left to right works by Mars Boatwright: Self-Portrait, archival inkjet print, 2020; and Bougainvilla, archival inkjet print, 2020. Mars Boatwright, Family Portrait, archival inkjet print, 2020. “In 2019, I began taking photographs of my family when I was visiting them in Florida for the first time. When I returned to my own life in Boston, with the pictures I’d taken and handfuls of images plucked from scrapbooks, I began my current project. They Get it Honest, focuses on my relationship with my family and what it means to return home. When taken as a whole, the images make connections between memories and time, and photography is a meditative practice that builds my own personal space and identity.” Lauren Cooper, Associate Director, Vintage Posters Lauren Cooper, Wiener Werstatte Embroideries, Embroidery thread on linen, 2020 “I started teaching myself embroidery techniques back in 2017 and created these six works in 2020 when the onset of Covid left me with much more free time in my apartment. I was inspired by fabric swatches and gouache studies from the Wiener Werkstätte collections of the MAK Vienna and Cooper Hewitt museums. I became enamored with this Austrian Arts & Crafts movement as it pertained to vintage poster artists Koloman Moser and Josef Hofmann – two of its founders – and soon delved into the collections of textiles and wallpaper designs. Some of these designs, by artists Julius Zimpel, Maximilian Sinchak and Maria Likarz-Strauss, that I re-created as hand-embroidered patterns, were put into production by the workshops, but others may just be studies that never came to fruition.” Devon Eastland, Senior Specialist, Early Printed Books Devon Eastland, Untitled, swatches, stamps on ceramic “I am bringing hand-built ceramics fired in a gas reduction kiln to cone 10. I create surface textures with hand-knitted swatches and stamps I make myself. The squiggles are jewelry pieces inspired by some earrings I bought in Paris in the 1980s.” Nigel Freeman, Head of Fine Art Nigel Freeman, San Miguel, mixed media and collage on paper, 2024. “I’m exhibiting two recent works on paper of collage and acrylic. I like to create artworks that function abstractly and aesthetically while incorporating recognizable or figurative elements. My collages use various found papers, including torn subway posters and photographs, that reference my personal experiences in various cultures.” Alayna Ho, Cataloguer, Fine Art Alaynna Ho, Touching My Shadow, mixed media, 2020. “Touching My Shadow was created in the aftermath of the Covid lockdown, creating a visual collection of ways we could regain touch during a time when it was so heavily discouraged. In this book, shadows reclaim a physical presence, questioning whether touching the shadow of something can be the same as touching the thing itself. Each page was screenprinted in blue and red, and the hand-stitched pattern along the spine was designed by the artist utilizing elements of traditional Japanese stab binding techniques.” Shannon Licitra, Shipping Manager From left top to bottom works by Shannon Licitra: Untitled, Paper collage, 2020. Untitled (Echo Chamber), Paper collage and film negative on canvas, 2016. Right: Untitled (Flora), Paper collage and textile on canvas, 2016. “I have a fascination with found papers of various colors, textures, and histories, and I enjoy the process of building images with them. For me, making a collage is always intuitive and an opportunity to play. The resulting images are abstract and a study on how colors and shapes interact with one another.” Nicholas D. Lowry, Swann President Nicholas D. Lowry, Untitled, Mixed media collage, 2018. “When I was living in Prague in the early 1990s, I was exposed to the interwar graphic designs of the Czech Avant-Garde artists. I was particularly captivated by the picture poems, the photo montage, and the photocollage work by Karel Teige, Ladislav Sutnar, Toyen, Jindrich Styrsky, and others. Their surrealism and constructivism have continued to be my inspiration, and I enjoy pouring over vintage paper to find images to incorporate into subsequent collages.” Amber Mustafic, Cataloguer, Vintage Posters Hand embroidered works from top to bottom by Amber Mustafic: Parched Earth, 2024, and Respite 2024. “I create autobiographical thread-paintings that center on themes of freedom, autonomy, consciousness and sensuality. Featuring depictions of myself and the people in my life as fantastical figures in vivid landscapes, I build a world of my personal mythology to explore my inner experiences and translate them into images.” Marta Sharapova, Digital Media Associate Works by Marta Sharapova: Duration, artist book, 2021; and Atlas of Strings, artist book, 2022. “I am presenting two books and a short film, all featuring playful approaches to graphic design. The first book, Duration, is an inquiry into the visual composition of time through images, cinema, interpretation and theory. I consider this book an attempt to recreate the “Kuleshov Effect” in book form, as if to invite the reader to submerge into time references, derive meaning, and emerge changed somehow. The second book, Atlas of Strings, is a poetic taxonomy of anything that could be classified as a string—point a to point b—otherwise understood as a line. For me strings became a canvas for linguistic and information theory. A film accompanies the book, coinciding with the book’s chapters. This pair of works was made with an intentional focus on analogue techniques; the book’s research was photographed, reproduced, strung together and photographed again, and the film was created by shooting on mini-tape with a Camcorder and combined with hand-animated Super 8 film. I invite you to explore the books and take a look at some of my experimental films!” Marta Sharapova, STRINGS, 2021 Browse the Fall 2024 Auction Schedule & Consign with Swann Share Facebook Twitter July 24, 2024Author: Chloe LesserCategory: Swann Previous Auction Highlights: LGBTQ+ Art, Material Culture & History — August 22, 2024 Next The Danish Girl and the Erotic Art of Gerda Wegener