Tuesday, March 4, 2025

San Diego Mesa College Fine Art Faculty & Staff Exhibition - 2025

 by Patricia Frischer


Closing Reception and Gallery Walk-Through: Wednesday, March 5, 4:30 - 6:30 pm

Alessandra Moctezuma

San Diego Mesa College Art Gallery is featuring the art made by its own 2025 art faculty and staff until March 6.  A faculty exhibition at a college or university has a number of roles.  It is good for the students to see the art of their professors. It is a way for potential students to start to judge if this is the right program for them in higher education. It gives the teaching artist a showcase for their work. It might even give them an incentive to be personally creative on an ongoing basis. Whether the works are chosen by the artist themselves, curated into the display or juried in, the exhibition does not usually have an imposed theme except, hopefully to show the best art possible. 

Obviously, the space is fill by an array of contemporary media, including painting, photography, installation, sculpture, ceramics, digital art, and more.  The selection below is only a small representation.  The work above is by the Gallery Director Alessandra Moctezuma, and does set a tone for some of the works that are reflecting present day politics. But the painted metal sculpture by Kraig Cavanaugh of flowers, puts a conceptual twist on that most common of subjects. The other piece on display by Cavanaugh is an installation from his own collection of the 6-sided Roto Reliefs of Marcel Duchamp. The originals are from 1933 and these were acquired after they were reproduced in 1987. The variety of photographed and the raised disc display (the reliefs have no central holes) are all Cavanaugh's choices. Brian Benfer distressed paper wall work has to be observed closely to see that the marks are made by a tennis ball, probably also causing the tears when it slammed into the surface. 

Jacqueline Ramirez produces a remembrance of things past as she display some of her early work which she declares has a raw power of the musicians, which rises above some technical flaws she might see now. Both of the Misty Hawkins' works continue that self reflective view with two portraits of herself with variation on color value and hue. Her intimate image of her dog in recovery calls out for our empathy. Juan Carlos Toth defines himself when he presents 20 averages Joes in a work titled There but for the grace...

The exquisite ceramic vessels of Nathan Betschart in their elegant simplicity show just how wide a range this faculty has. But take a closer look. The surface has a host of other worldly shapes with a whole other story to tell. 

Chris Lahti large steam-rollers prints are a hallmark of Mesa College Fine Art department. Several are on display including another by Moctezuma. This one that is on display in the front window of the gallery of a hand, a wrench and a pen makes one wonder if the pen is mightier.  On a much smaller scale are Lisa Hutton's ongoing series of individual hand drawings over pages from the Encyclopedia of Real Estate Advertising of 1977. Together the 96 images have an impact. Yes, it is a fun fact that the book was found in the free box at Mesa College Library. 

Kraig Cavanaugh


Kraig Cavanaugh

Brian Benfer

Jacqueline Ramirez

Misty Hawkins

Misty Hawkins

Juan Carlos Toth


Nathan Betschart


Nathan Betschart - detail


Chris Lahti


Lisa Hutton

Lisa Hutton, detail





SAN DIEGO MESA COLLEGE FINE ART FACULTY & STAFF EXHIBITION - 2025
San Diego Mesa College Art Gallery

Closing Reception and Gallery Walk-Through: Wednesday, March 5, 4:30 - 6:30 pm

Artists included: Trevor Amery, Jenny Armer, Brian Benfer, Nathan Betschart, Kraig Cavanaugh, Patricio Chavez, Christopher Ferreria, Misty Hawkins, Gosia Herc, Lisa Hutton, Wendell Kling, Chris Lahti, Georgia K. Laris, Alessandra Moctezuma, Amy Paul, Jacqueline Ramirez, Robyko, Chelsea Ruwe, Juan Carlos Toth, Sandra Wascher.
Feb 12 to March 6
FA103, 7250 Mesa College Drive, SD 92111
Gallery Hours: 12 – 5 pm, M-Th or by appointment. Closed Fridays, Weekends & Holidays.(closed Monday, February 17). Park in visitor spots or purchase a parking permit by the yellow machines
Alessandra Moctezuma  619.388.2829

Sunday, March 2, 2025

The 9th annual American Impressionist Society’s Small Works Showcase at The Fallbrook Art Center

 

Making an Impression

There’s still time to catch the incredible 9th annual American Impressionist Society’s (AIS) Small Works Showcase now through March 29, at The Fallbrook Center For The Arts. This exhibition celebrates Impressionism's intricate beauty and artistry through a curated collection of over 170 small-scale artworks. This one-time-only Southern California pays homage to the traditional techniques and themes of American Impressionism.

There are 2500 members of the American Impressionist Society, whose Director/Curator Brenda Andrews says, “Art has the unique ability to connect us to our emotions and to one another. …. the beauty of these small-scale pieces lies in their ability to convey profound narratives with a mere brushstroke, inviting viewers into the artist's world.”

 

A standout of exhibition is the diversity of subject matter coupled with the attention to light that is the hallmark of Impressionism. And in a world where larger-than-life pieces often dominate, this exhibition serves as a refreshing reminder of the power of simplicity and restraint.

 

The exhibition also includes works experimenting with more abstract interpretations of Impressionist principles. These pieces challenge the traditional boundaries of the genre, incorporating modern techniques and perspectives.

 

Online sales from $500 to $2,500 are now possible worldwide. Each acquisition comes with a provenance from  four national art publications containing this exhibition and Fallbrook Art Center, adding significant value to the purchase. Guided tours are free. 

Artist Noel Glaset stated, “ The art center’s  small works show is one great painting after another. It’s like a Disneyland for artists.” 

This exhibition is a vibrant reminder of how art can inspire and resonate across generations.

Here is a small selection of just a few of the genres represented. We couldn't resist either cow's head images!


J. Ken Spencer

Head Study - John





 




9th annual American Impressionist Society’s Small Works Showcase  
The Fallbrook Center for the Arts Gallery  
Feb 14- March 29 
103 S. Main Ave., Fallbrook, CA 92028
Both the gallery and The Fine Art Gift Store are open Tuesday - Saturday  11-4 pm.
760-728-1414 

Back in the Spotlight Doug Simay’s Collection at Sip art Space

by Patricia Frischer


Ernest Silva  - Deer on a Raft, 2001, print on paper


The 12 artworks in this exhibition at Sip art Space until March 28th represent about 1% of the collection of Doug Simay.  His dedication to looking has given him a keen eye and every object is considered and placed in this display with that same acute sense of purpose.

He explains in his own words why these works are Back in the Spotlight. “For well over 30 years, I was a very active participant and collector in Southern California’s art world. My collection is very large (some would say huge) and that has necessitated actively storing acquired art objects given my full household. It is from this storage that I rotate works within my living environment. The works in this exhibition come out of storage and thus the title. “

This is a man who wants to de-access in a responsible manner, the art he has so lovingly brought together. As he ages, he does not want to burden family or friends with making decisions about such a large holding. Giving these works a safe home would bring them full circle and might give him a sense of another job well done.

In respect for that art, you will read a bit about five of the works on view, including the shortest possible biography, a quote from the artist, and a description of the work.  Please take the time to see the show, think of giving a piece a new home by deciding why the art is important to you.

 Ernest Silva  - Deer on a Raft, 2001, print on paper (above)

1949 -  2014 born in Rhode Islandlived and worked in San Diego
MFA  1974 Tyler School of Art of Temple University. Phil. Penn.
“I'm a representational artist. Not in the sense that my work looks photographic in the way the eye sees, but primarily that I work with images of people and images of the natural world—whether it's landscape or the ocean. I tend to see myself as a visual poet….”  

This is the sweetest little deer, saved or abandoned on a raft in choppy water. The marks are almost cartoon like and
  have that sense of fantasy  and wonder that makes you question what sort of journey this is.



Norman LundinGreen and Red Tablecloth and Two Bottles, 1986, pastel on paper
Born in Los Angeles, CA, in 1938; lives and works in Seattle.
MFA, 1963  University of Cincinnati

“Any object depicted that has significant emotional associations will tend to dominate (which is exactly what i don’t want to happen). The objects are not there to be described; they are there to explain the space.”

This pastel on paper is just as the title describes, but the artist after 1986 worked for years to get the same effect in oil painting. The wrinkles in the cloth and their horizontal stripes, the verticals lines on the wall,  the spacing of the bottles, the light reflected on the top lip of each, the light switch, these are what defines the space and the space is the subject.

 



David Hines   - Still Life with Red Drape, 1996,  oil on canvas

Born in Nova Scotia in 1978, lives and works between there and New York.
M.A 1977 University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM
“Painting, no matter how realistic, refers back, via the artist's handiwork, to the artist.” 

A very hard-edged table, what we used to call a parson’s table, is softened, or covered, or caressed by a very red cloth.  The luminous light seems to glow from within.

 


Roger Camp
- Zebra Yellow, 1990, Cibachrome photograph

Born  in 1945
MFA, 1974 University of Iowa

“I felt like an outsider because of the art world’s bias against photography AND because I was a color photographer,” 

Brown and very tanned skinned swimmers all in red swim suits and all with yellow caps, all facing away from us except for the one capless man facing us with black and white sunglasses. The man is so tall, these must be children around him. He is speaking but is he warning them or urging them on?

 

Bruce Cohen  - Untitled, 1987, lithograph

Born in Santa Monica, California in 1953,  lives and work in Santa Monica, CA
BA, 1975.College of Creative Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara

 “It (Light)  gives me an initial motivation, and then other things start to develop”

Two magenta irises in a vertically black and white stripped vase with a window to the left casting light on the wall, and on the back of the vase. The flowers look stylized, but not realistic.

 

Back in the Spotlight Doug Simay’s Collection at Sip art Space
215 S. Pacific Street, Suite 104, San Marcos
By appointment only March 1 to March 28

Vicki Walsh  858-336-6678