Tag: Selby Fleetwood Gallery

  • Complexity of Simplicity: Gigi Mills

    Complexity of Simplicity: Gigi Mills

    Dance is one of the few art forms requiring no materials, only ourselves.  Santa Fe artist Gigi Mills, a former dancer now self-taught painter, transfers her dancer’s fluidity and grace into her compositions.

    Girl With Dog and Boxes, oil on panel, 24×18 ( via Watts Fine Art )

    Mills’ work focuses on simplified forms, figures and shapes are reduced to their simplest outlines, planes and colors, so that the viewer is instead caught by the emotional power present.

    Girl With Plaid Dress and Bird Dog, oil, crayon, paper & charcoal on paper, 11×14 ( via Gallery Orange )

    By keeping her color palette neutral, her use of the occasional bright color takes on a much more powerful significance, it becomes the staccato highlight, delightfully drawing the viewer’s attention.

    Girl With Striped Dress and Birthday Cake, oil on panel, 30×24 ( via Gallery Orange )
    Resting Spot With Birds, oil on panel, 18×24 ( via Gallery Orange )

    Gigi Mills doesn’t currently have a website, so check out her work online at representing galleries: Gallery Orange in New Orleans, Watts Fine Art in Indiana and Selby Fleetwood Gallery in Santa Fe.

    This artist found via Gallery Orange.

    Featured image is Ocean With Sea Birds and Yellow, oil on canvas, 60×36.  All image sources are noted above.

  • Deconstructing Beauty: Christina Chalmers

    Deconstructing Beauty: Christina Chalmers

    As you probably noticed during the recent artsyF A S H I O N Week, I have a keen interest in the gray areas where art and fashion collide.  What we wear and it’s design is such an integrated part of our culture and psyche that it is no surprise that clothes influence art and vice versa.

    A Magical Life, steel mesh, plaster, oil and mixed media, 56x30x30

    Often in art, clothing is used as a symbol, as a vehicle for deeper thought.  This is especially true in the work of New Mexico artist Christina Chalmers.  Her sculptures and mixed media pieces are, in her own words, contemplations on the “cloaking and revealing of the inner self”.

    Acquaintance of Kelp Forests, kelp, driftwood, vintage silk and lace, 56x41x41

    Through her use of organic and weathered found materials, we see an interconnectedness with who we truly are and the self we are projecting out to the world via our appearance.

    The Fleeting Things of Time No. 4, mixed media, copper and oil on panel, 60×48
    Sea Dress II, kelp, shells and steel mesh, 34x25x9

    In her sculptures especially, I see this connection between the deconstructed, feminine garments and the found and organic materials that is incredibly intriguing.  The texture and patina of the materials are such a striking juxtaposition between the ladylike flowing shape– powerful in their vulnerability.  Just like us as women.

    What do you think of these?  Do you see what I’m seeing or have a different perspective to share?

    To see more of Christina Chalmers’ work, visit her page on the Selby Fleetwood Gallery website.  If you’re in Santa Fe, you can see her work in person at the gallery.  It will definitely be on my list when I finally get to Santa Fe!

    Featured image is I am the Root, the Wind and the Bird ( detail ) by Christina Chalmers, mixed media on panel.