| New
Paintings
Jon
Imber

The
CONCORD ART ASSOCIATION, located at 37 Lexington Road,
Concord, MA will open an exhibition featuring the contemporary
paintings of Jon Imber, Friday, April 8 from 6 to 8:00 pm. The
exhibition will run from April 7 through May 1, 2005. The exhibition
will include a artist talk on Thursday, April 14, from 7 - 8:00
pm.
"Jon
Imber's new paintings breath with life and joy. Imber paints the
landscapes of Maine in the spiritual tradition of Marsden Hartley.
He uses recognizable forms to explore man's relationship with
nature. Subtle diagonals pull us slowly through the landscape
while expressive vertical marks provide tempo for our progression
as we experience a moment of color here or find a piece of identifiable
landscape there. This richly orchestrated pilgrimage is as much
an ode to the landscape as it is a display of the sheer exuberance
of laying paint on canvas."
Carrie Sanin, Northern Woodlands, Winter 2004
All of Jon
Imber's paintings in the exhibit at the Concord Art Association
are plein air paintings. Jon rarely "works up" a painting
because he doesn't find it as fulfilling as responding to change
in light, weather, shadows and forms on location. He needs to
look and respond to nature and transforms what he sees into his
own vocabulary of shapes and color. His landscapes, still image
based, are pushed towards his own invention using shape, colors,
marks and gestures. Jon doesn't try to capture what he sees but
uses it as a stepping off point. Very specific landscapes grab
his attention, yet not necessarily on an emotional level. "On
some level a place speaks to me, but it's not content, like something
about home, unlike my wife who connects to the landscape of Maine
because of her childhood memories of it."
In 1985,
Jon Imber started painting the landscape, in earnest, after ten
years of working with the figure. In 1985, he completed a large
painting of his uncle's farm located in the New York side of the
Berkshires, not far from Tanglewood. At this place, there was
that emotional connection to the landscape. It was a dramatic
background for many childhood memories. Completed in 2004,the
painting is called "Hillside, October." Imber says,"For
me, it holds dramatic exciting shapes, not spectacular, yet there
are a lot of ups and downs, back and forth movements in the painting."
The landscapes
in the exhibit at the Concord Art Association are culled from
work the artist created in the last two years. In 2002, Imber
spent time painting in Ireland. Painting someplace new freed a
part of his painting and he found himself more informed by the
Irish paintings.
The impetus
behind the paintings does change from one painting to another.
Sometimes it's the form or lighting and on occasion some sense
of emotional attachment. He wants the painting to be challenging
and exciting taking off after the shapes and forms.
"As
much as I'm drawn to the place I like to mess it up a little either
with a challenging color or a mark that functions as a dissonant
cord." His work resonates with the enthusiasm for nature's
surprises, always eager to open the door to an unexpected moment.
With a BFA
from Cornell University and an MFA from Boston University, Jon
is currently represented by Nielsen Gallery, Boston and G. Watson
Gallery, Stonington, Maine. His work is in numerous collections,
including the Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge, MA, the Museum of Fine
Arts, Boston, Farnsworth Museum, Rockland, ME and the Currier
Gallery of American Art. Manchester, NH. In addition, he has been
the recipient of numerous awards from the National Endowment for
the Arts, the Engelhard Foundation, Massachusetts lottery Grant
and the Ballinglen Arts Foundation. Jon lives and works with his
wife and son in Somerville, MA. |