Every Picture Tells A Story

Every Picture Tells A Story

1037 Silvermine Rd New Canaan, CT 06840, USA Wednesday, February 28, 2024–Thursday, April 4, 2024


shame by miggs burroughs

Miggs Burroughs

Shame

1,800 USD

jazz singer by karen butler

Karen Butler

Jazz Singer

2,500 USD

how ya living by james buxton

James Buxton

How Ya Living

14,000 USD

deity by louise cadoux

Louise Cadoux

Deity

1,400 USD

codependency by louise cadoux

Louise Cadoux

Codependency

1,200 USD

mirror, mirror... by sharon b. cavagnolo

Sharon B. Cavagnolo

Mirror, Mirror...

4,200 USD

are we born connected, no.3 by eric chiang

Eric Chiang

Are We Born Connected, No.3

6,000 USD

the waiting room #3 by susan clinard

Susan Clinard

The Waiting Room #3

Price on Request

starry night at long nook beach by joan cox

Joan Cox

Starry Night at Long Nook Beach

1,850 USD

friday market  by beatrice del perugia

Beatrice del Perugia

Friday Market

575 USD

the ties that bind by elysa demartini

Elysa DeMartini

The Ties That Bind

3,000 USD

trilogy (triptych) by frances eber

Frances Eber

Trilogy (triptych)

1,500 USD

Silvermine invites viewers to explore the power of visual storytelling in Every Picture Tells a Story, a new Guild exhibition that opens on Feb. 28. The works on exhibit imply a narrative, evoke a question, or conjure up a place and time. Accompanying text from the artists provides a glimpse into the original impulse or intention. The works in Every Picture Tells a Story are complex and varied. Viewers will find themselves enveloped in worlds that are harmonious, discordant, dreamy, realistic, or symbolic. While viewers will bring their own interpretations to each work of art, text from the exhibiting artists brings context and insight into understanding the artist’s intentions and the underlying narratives.   Among the works on view are Nancy Breakstone’s photograph of a dark stair and hallway behind one of Havana’s colorful, painted exteriors; Louise Cadoux’s wire sculpture with two vessels conjoined and distorted; and Beatrice del Perugia’s painting of a marketplace bazaar in Kabul, Afghanistan, which includes the shapes of women in chador. In Shattered Copy, June Ahrens reveals meaning through her signature recycled blue glass and her method of direct installation. James Buxton uses the colors of the Black Liberation Flag in his sculpture, How Ya Livin, which is made of a ship’s wheel and a noose spilling from a dense circle of rope. In Sharon Cavagnolo’s Mirror, Mirror, framed mirror surfaces bring disorienting angles to her lush and complex composition. Brigid Kennedy’s painting, inspired by a family photograph, strips away all but one person—the smirking teenager in a patterned dress against a boldly patterned room. In Octopus Ascending, a ceramic work by Lisa Scroggins, an octopus on a ladder leaning against her family’s house speaks of a nostalgic yearning. Every piece in the exhibition is an opportunity to see how a work of art can both illuminate and transcend any single intention or idea.