Seated alongside about a dozen other Baltimore artists at a UMUC Art Gallery exhibit opening in May, Donna Rose imagined an alternative reality as only an artist might. 鈥淚 think that part of the insanity of our species is that we are divorced from nature,鈥 she said. 鈥淢aybe we need to bring bears and puma and whatever back into our cities.鈥
Then, when you leave the house in the morning, she imagined, you might check an 鈥淟PS app鈥 on your phone to see which threats registered on the 鈥渓arge predator scan.鈥 It would be, she said, 鈥渁 kind of rebalancing.鈥
What kind of community and world we want to live in and how we relate to our environment was a major refrain of the panel鈥攁nd is the focus of the exhibition they were gathered to discuss. 鈥淥rder Out of Chaos,鈥 open through July 30, was organized by guest curator Ruth Channing Middleman. It draws together works of 24 artists, all of whom maintain studios at Baltimore鈥檚 Artists鈥 Housing Incorporated.
As with every exhibition that UMUC hosts, 鈥淥rder Out of Chaos鈥 builds upon the university鈥檚 mission of offering a quality education to working adults, veterans, servicemembers and their families, noted UMUC President Javier Miyares in his exhibit-catalog commentary. 鈥淏y displaying works of art and hosting public exhibitions, free of charge, it serves our local communities while introducing new and established artists to broader audiences,鈥 he wrote.
The artists in this exhibit come from a range of backgrounds and have achieved varying levels of broader recognition. But one thing they all have in common, said UMUC Arts Program Director Eric Key, is that this is the first time they have been shown at UMUC.
鈥淲e wanted to reach out to artists whom we didn鈥檛 know and to bring guest curators in to do exhibitions,鈥 Key said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e nestled in an area that is very, very culturally diverse. The university student body is very culturally diverse. So, it鈥檚 natural that the Arts Program needs to be that as well.鈥
As Key explained it, he and Middleman went on studio visits at Artists Housing. 鈥淲e said, 鈥楾here鈥檚 a body of work there. Let鈥檚 do it.鈥欌
In his catalog commentary, Key added that, in many communities, artist collectives often prove a 鈥渘atural segue鈥 to neighborhood transformation. 鈥淓ven though artists鈥 collectives are established mainly so artists can create, they become places where artists can commune with one another, share ideas and techniques, and, as a result, often revitalize their neighborhoods,鈥 he wrote.
Walking through the exhibit, it鈥檚 easy to see that the range of techniques and styles is as diverse as the artists themselves. Here, 鈥檚 acrylic paintings, which he made by dripping thick paint on canvases he had placed on the floor, evoke the impasto of thickly layered cake icing. While, across the hall, 鈥檚 symbolism-laden work involves scratching at the paint in such a way that it combines painting and drawing mark-making. Rose, the artist who envisions the predator mobile app, displayed two ceramic works which depict animals in a manner that seems to straddle the boundary between the real and the fantastical.
By comparison, Greg Fletcher鈥檚 oil paintings appear considerably more straightforward. The scenes, which Fletcher paints quickly, are realistic landscapes, perhaps reminiscent of the works of Edward Hopper. One work, 鈥淪pring Street Snow鈥擝irthplace of the Artist鈥 (1986), relates in a deeply personal way to the city it portrays.
He points out one building, which is where he was born. Across the street is the house where the midwife who delivered him lived. And his house now, which he shares with his wife of 21 years, overlooks his birthplace. When he and his wife met, her studio was on the same block. 鈥淚鈥檓 back in my original neighborhood,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like I never left.鈥
Before becoming an artist, Fletcher attended the University of Maryland as a premed student. As a teenager, he鈥檇 worked in a research lab for a scholar who was trying to correct for the rejection problem in heart transplants. 鈥淚 was a 14-year-old kid from the inner city, and he showed me all these possibilities,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut the art thing kicked in, and it absolutely trumped everything.鈥
Fletcher鈥檚 brothers had always made art, and he鈥檇 grown up drawing as well. So, he began drawing again with pencil, and soon he took up acrylics. His first acrylic painting depicted a duck. But soon he was getting lost in areas like Abstract Expressionism. 鈥淚 was losing my mind,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 needed to get grounded.鈥
When a coworker used to go out and sketch during his lunch break, Fletcher recognized one of the cityscapes. 鈥淗ow dare he come into town and draw my church!鈥 he said. So, he started painting the neighborhood too. 鈥淚鈥檝e been doing that ever since, for 40 years.鈥
Two of his works in the show highlight how chaos and order can intersect. Once when Fletcher was painting a house, an octogenarian came over and informed him, 鈥淵ou know that house that used to be there? There were ex-slaves that lived there.鈥 The man was referring to the 1950s, so it was quite possible that his statement was true, Fletcher said. 鈥淵ou find out little bits of history.鈥
Another time, he decided he wanted to be away from people for a little while, so he set out to paint Green Mount Cemetery in Baltimore, which was covered in a couple of inches of snow. 鈥淚 said, 鈥楥emetery. Snow. Nobody is going to be around,鈥欌 he remembers. Next thing he knew, a car was driving up.
At first, Fletcher recalled, the human interjection into the landscape was disappointing. (In his painting, a group of figures is visible trudging through the snow.) But he soon found out it was a good thing when the cemetery caretaker came by an hour later before closing shop. The couple had informed him that Fletcher was there painting.
鈥淥therwise, I鈥檇 have been locked in,鈥 he said.
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