news

BUY - Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art (BMoCA) at Macky

August 28 through November 16, 2014Sharon FederThe exhibition features a new body of paintings by Colorado-based artist Sharon Feder. The new paintings stem from Feder’s long-standing interest in urban archaeology. This series of work is based on ph…

August 28 through November 16, 2014

Sharon Feder

The exhibition features a new body of paintings by Colorado-based artist Sharon Feder. The new paintings stem from Feder’s long-standing interest in urban archaeology. This series of work is based on photographs Feder has compiled over the last five years of “big-box stores,” such as Target and IKEA, and of vacant and empty store signs. The work explores how the ubiquity of such stores in both urban and rural environments across the country negatively impacts society and nature. For Feder, the empty signs signify the spoiling effects of American mass-consumerism, which leaves an overabundance of things to buy and makes it difficult for small, independently owned stores to survive. The surplus of readily purchasable goods and materials has instilled a greed for convenience that in turn generates a “throw-away society”—whether it is in the product purchased or the unimaginative architectural planning of retail stores built quickly and carelessly to serve the needs of mass-consumerism.

Feder’s approach to painting exists between abstraction and representation. She is interested in both the visual and metaphorical geometry and emptiness of the large retail stores and their signs. Her handling of paint and use of color draw our attention from the subject of the work to the formal elements of the painting. One can look at the works and see color, shapes, and paint, rather than or in addition to the representation of a retail store. Obvious visual references to specific stores, parking lots or buildings remind us that Feder paints scenes mired in quotidian detail.

Sharon Feder (b. 1957, Denver, Colorado) is a third-generation Denverite who has studied painting intently since early childhood. Feder’s work has been exhibited in New York, Los Angeles and extensively in the Denver area. Her paintings and murals are included in a number of national and international corporate, private and public collections.

BMoCA at Macky is a series of exhibitions curated by BMoCA and presented in the Andrew J. Macky Gallery in the foyer of the Macky Auditorium Concert Hall at the University of Colorado Boulder. The Macky Gallery is located at the intersection of 17th Street and University Avenue on the CU Boulder campus. Admission to the gallery is free and open to the public Monday–Friday, 10am–5pm and to ticketed patrons during Macky Auditorium performances and events. For more information, visit macky.colorado.edu or bmoca.org.

Opening Reception & Expert Talk with Sharon Feder and Lanny Frances DeVuono
Thursday, August 28
5:30pm reception
6:45pm talk at Macky Auditorium Concert Hall, University of Colorado Boulder
Free and open to the public

Urbanism at Goodwin Fine Art

Jeffrey Carlson Reporting

Contributing Editor, Fine Art Today

Two unique artistic visions capture the city's built environment in a new exhibition of paintings at Denver's Goodwin Fine Art.

"Urbanism: Paul Ching-Bor + Sharon Feder" opens July 26 and will be on display through September 14. New York artist Ching-Bor and Denver-based Feder both respond to the urban environment in their artwork, producing very different but complementary visions... (read full story)

6_-URBANISM-SHARON-Feder-BldgNo34-24x24.jpg

Sharon Feder, "Building No. 34," oil on panel, 24 x 24 in. Goodwin Fine Art

Cityscape Show III at George Billis Gallery

Jeffrey Carlson Reporting

Contributing Editor, Fine Art Today

How does a painter respond to the modern city, with its extremes of beauty and ugliness? An upcoming exhibition at George Billis Gallery explores that question and provides poignant responses. (read full story)

                             Sharon Feder, "Trainyard No. 8," oil on panel, 48 x 24 in. George Billis Gallery LA

                             Sharon Feder, "Trainyard No. 8," oil on panel, 48 x 24 in. George Billis Gallery LA

Urban Archaeology - Colorado Expression magazine by Corinne Joy Brown

sharon_headshot.jpg

Colorado Expression

NO TWO PEOPLE

view the world quite the same way: for most artists, the truth is his or her own— a subjective experience. That definition might be the best explanation for the transformative view of urban life by Denver native and widely collected painter, Sharon Feder. In her eye, and via her hand, the viewer sees the everyday in heightened and aesthetic terms where the ordinary becomes extraordinary.

Full article [pdf]

SHARON ²: INTERIORS at The Pattern Shop Studio -- From the RiNo’s Horn by Rexford Brown

When we hear the word "interiors" in association with art, most of us imagine Vermeer and the great Dutch genre painters of the 17th century.  But when you think about it, the style didn't die with them. Scores of great artists have painted unforgettable interiors-- Cassatt, Renoir, Bonnard, Picasso, Matisse, Hopper, and Hockney come immediately to mind--and a good many contemporary painters continue to find the tradition attractive and useful.  Among them are the two master oil painters in this show...(read full story)

                          Sharon Feder, Contemplating Love, No. 1, oil on panel, 36 x 24 in.  private collection

                          Sharon Feder, Contemplating Love, No. 1, oil on panel, 36 x 24 in.  private collection

Michael Paglia Review in Denver's Westword

By Michael Paglia 

Contemporary painter Sharon Feder, a longtime resident at Ironton Studios and Gallery, is the subject of a good-looking solo there called Topologies, which represents both a continuation of her interest in urban archaeology and a change in direction. The subject matter -- rundown warehouses -- links her work to that of others in the area like Rick Dulaand Sarah McKenzie; together, they constitute a veritable school.

Click here to read the full article

Topologies - solo exhibition

 


Building No. 29    36" x 48"   oil on panel

“Topologies”
Recent Paintings by Sharon Feder at
Ironton Gallery, Denver
November 20, 2012-January 12, 2013

Colorado artist Sharon Feder will open an exhibition of her most recent paintings with a show entitled Topologies at Ironton Gallery in Denver on November 20, 2012. 

These paintings, all completed during 2012, are an extension of the artist’s previous six year’s work.  Here Feder expands her study of space and place and the interplay between them. These powerful, large scale panels are composed of multi-dimensional planes that build and break apart; fractal views into the larger world.  Reflective of Feder’s own philosophy, these paintings demonstrate that the choices we make in each moment eventually determine how our visual world is structured.

About her work, the artist says:

Humanity is archival, like the strata that compose the earth beneath us. Our structures and art, superfund sites to cathedrals, exist because of us. The things we create form layers upon the earth, reflecting humankind, interwoven with the natural world that birthed us.

We make the marks we make, like the creases in one's face, witnessing and demonstrating the story of each life. We won't be here forever. We can't be. It is not tragic.

The paintings in this series, “Topologies”, ask questions: what will the layers of our own existence look like in one hundred years, in one hundred thousand years? Will our leavings appear gem-like, as petrified dinosaur droppings; provide essential fuel to some distant descendants; or when excavated, simply disappear into the air?

Our choice is whether to exist in fear or to see our existence as a celebration of our existence. Life is archival.

The exhibition will open to the public on November 20, 2012 at Ironton Gallery, 3636 Chestnut Place, Denver, CO  80216 and the artist reception is on Friday, December 7, 6-10 pm.  A closing reception will be January 4, 2013 from 6-10 p.m.  Ironton Gallery is open Monday-Friday, 10am-4pm and Saturday’s from 12pm - 4pm.

 

The Arvada Center Summer Gallery Exhibition FACES, PLACES & SPACES

Arvada CO – The nationally recognized Arvada Center will open its latest art gallery exhibition, FACES, PLACES & SPACES sponsored by Exempla Lutheran Medical Center with a public reception on Thursday, June 7 from 6-9 p.m. FACES, in the main gallery, goes beyond the traditional portrait show focusing only on the face, the quintessential expression of humanity. Through painting, photography and sculpture, PLACES, in the upper gallery, will highlight the juxtaposition of the interior, intimate and exterior, urban spaces created by humans. SPACES, in the theater gallery and in collaboration with Michele Mosko will feature large encaustic work by Earl Schofield and ethereal paintings by Lanny DeVuono, two artists who tackle open spaces.

"The Arvada Center is proud to be presenting a major exhibition featuring 36 of the region’s top artistic talents.” Remarked Collin Parson, Exhibition Manager, “From emerging to internationally known, these artists aim to explore the artistic dialogue that these genres have created in art and the continued evolution of their various representations. We are honored to be partnering with eight of the state’s top galleries to help secure these top-flight artists." The galleries represented are Walker Fine Art; David B. Smith Gallery; Michele Mosko Fine Art; Plus Gallery; Rule Gallery; Sandra Phillips Gallery; Shark’s Ink. and William Havu Gallery.

PLACES
Upper Gallery
June 7 - August 26, 2012
When one thinks of place, we think of an architectural landmark, urban landscape, or somewhere as simple as home. It is we, as human beings, who often define them as a place. These places can be large or small, inside or out, but we determine their function or purpose. No matter where we go, we are always in a place, both literally and metaphorically. The artists in this exhibition express their interpretation of place through many forms of media and matter, giving credence to the sense of place. Artists represented in PLACES include Marc Berghaus; Lisa Calzavara; Alan Chimacoff; Rick Dula; Sharon Feder; Sarah McKenzie; David Menard; Chandler Romeo and Denis Roussel.

There will be two free panel discussions moderated by Erik Isaac and Michael Keen from the Untitled Art Show, one on Thursday, June 28 at 6:30 p.m. with Adam Milner (Faces), Sarah McKenzie (Places), Lanny DeVuono (Spaces), Xi Zhang (Faces), Danyl Cook (Faces), and Chandler Romeo (Places). The other will take place on Saturday, August 4 at 1:30 p.m. with Sharon Brown (Faces), Barbara Shark (Faces), Lisa Calzavara (Places), Sharon Feder (Places), Rick Dula (Places), and Dave Seiler (Faces). Please RSVP at 720-898-7242 or Kbueb@arvadacenter.org The Untitled Art Show is a weekly, internet, talk-radio show about art and the art world hosted by Erik Isaac and Mike Keen. To view recent interviews go to www.untitledartshow.com

Exploring Abstraction - Michele Mosko Fine Art

EXPORING ABSTRACTION opens Sunday, June 26th with special gallery hours of 11 – 5 pm and will continue through August 21st with regular gallery hours Wednesday – Saturday, 12 to 5 pm.

Michele Mosko Fine Art is pleased to introduce the second in a series of Salon Sunday exhibitions.  Gallery Director Brenda LaBier has curated this dynamic exhibition entitled EXPLORING ABSTRACTION, featuring works on canvas, panel and paper by Andy Berg, Ken Elliot, Sharon Feder, Edward Lentsch and Michael Rubin. 

Salon Sunday’s are eclectic exhibitions with diverse and varied works. This month’s exhibit of abstract painting is particularly bold as the artworks selected vary greatly in technique, style and approach.

In spite of the different artists selected and their unique applications, the reference to nature reveals itself as a theme in three of the painters shown.  Ken Elliot and Sharon Feder depart from their often recognizable and sometimes literal style to create emotive works that are abstracted expressions of city and land. In AfterGlow a richly painted square canvas by Elliot, the turbulent sky builds to contrast with the pastoral ground below but ultimately abstracts to blocks of color. Feder’s paintings of Jet’s Trees-Blue allow us to look up to the sun filled sky and beyond so that what might be exact imagery blurs to a hazy sunlit distance. Michael Rubin utilizes mark making in a completely abstract style, but his colors and the internal order of Black Current and Fall succeed in bringing us to the river’s edge and to an autumnal day.

Andy Berg and Edward Lentsch’s paintings complement one another as purely abstract with emotive works. Lentsch utilizes natural materials of wax, silica and paint to create a textured and visceral surface that is both brut and zen in effect. Andy Berg’s bold colors and naïve mark making create fresh imagery that seem to carry the viewer beyond the canvas to touch the subconscious; his and our own.

For further information and images, please contact Gallery Director Brenda LaBier at 303-534-5433 and brenda@michelemoskofineart.com

Peter Illig writes about The Art of Saming

Highly accomplished artist and art writer, Peter Illig has posted the following about Feder's most current exhibition on his blog at:

http://peterillig.wordpress.com/2010/11/07/sharon-feder-at-ironton-denver/

Sharon Feder at Ironton, Denver

by Peter Illig,   Sunday, November 7, 2010

Painter Sharon Feder’s work fills the main gallery at Ironton. The paintings are hung neat and orderly but they reveal nothing less than the hidden tensions of contemporary life.

Oil paintings of quotidian scenes and subjects: commercial spaces, warehouse districts, gas stations. Geometric shapes suggested by old buildings and modern businesses. Muted complex browns and grays, accented by reds and sky blues. Highly personal brushstrokes remind us of the materiality of paint and subject. But these spaces are not what they seem. They stand in for human relationships, analogous to isolation, despair and the constant contradictions of appearance versus truth.

Ostensibly, these are buildings with commercial promise but closed and empty. But let me add, before the reader thinks Feder’s work is negative or cynical, that her sharp vision redeems the spaces, finds the visually exciting composition, color contrast, and implied human narrative that takes our observations of the work to a higher level.  This is not a cold, hard clinical view of the world, but a view filtered through the warm human sensibilities of an accomplished artist.  The starkly cropped view of a scene is modulated by sensuous paint and color combinations. An example: two metal barrier poles in a parking lot, seem like a couple of characters in a play, red and worn, doing their job on a stage of gray and brown, lit from the side.

Familiarity is deceiving. We have seen these places many times; we take them for granted. Feder’s images themselves are not shocking but ring true to our lives, if we are familiar with urban areas. We recognize the shine of glass, painted metal, and the expanses of concrete. It is a distinctly American and Western place. The sunlight that fills the American West strikes obliquely, unmitigated, and a hint of distant hills can sometimes be seen behind the brash metal and concrete. Shadows play a role here. They stretch across the empty spaces, reminding us of the lateness of the day, and the time we have left.

What can we conclude about this series of paintings? Like most art works they are about the inner self — a portrait of the artist’s mind at a certain point in time. Ordered spaces, with exterior layers that show evidence of the passage of time and exposure, but with hints of intimacy and full of surprises.  Interiors that are hidden and unknown. Paradoxes that will remain so.

After looking hard at Ms. Feder’s paintings, I was offered a private glimpse by the artist, in a backroom, of her future series: a new painting that I will not describe here, but offers new, even more complex vision, and direction.

Stay tuned.


‘The Art Of Saming’, Sharon Feder.

through December 4th, 2010,  at Ironton Studios, Denver

http://www.irontonstudios.com/

~ by Peter Illig on November 7, 2010.

Edge of the Plains

Theater Gallery, Arvada Center for the Arts and Humanities
January 13-April 3, 2011

Sharon Feder’s Edge of the Plains is a contemporary look at today’s West with the ever-changing architecture of Denver. Her exhibition supports the Arvada Center’s long-standing mission to showcase and acknowledge the area’s regional contemporary artists.

A Colorado native, Feder’s urban imagery speaks to the tensions—economic, social and spiritual—of our post-industrial world. In subject matter and through the rhythmic compositions of form and color, her paintings document and celebrate the choreography of our existence. The exhibition consists of approximately dozen paintings from small to large scale, oil on panel.

 

Art of Saming

Opening reception October 29th, 2010, 7-10 pm
Show runs through Saturday December 4th
Gallery hours: 10am – 4pm Mon. – Fri., noon – 4pm Sat.
also open:
First Friday Nov. 5th 7-10 pm
First Friday Dec. 3rd 7-10 pm 

Ironton Studios and Gallery,
3636 Chestnut Place, Denver Co 80216

In The Art of Saming, Feder takes a careful and caring look at the epidemic of homogeneous architectural forms which have been consuming our lands. Within the superficial uniformity, the artist finds a symphony of color and geometry and movement. Feder paints at the boundary between realism and abstraction, where a reflection is as much an abstract shape as it is light against a reflective surface. 

Gallery contact: hadleyhooper@earthlink.net