Library Art 2020

Bandon Library Art Gallery

Visit art displays at the Bandon Library in the lobby gallery and cases. Click here for background and contact information.

CHECK OUT Bandon Library Art Gallery Facebook Page

The show is open to the public from Tuesday through Saturday during the library’s hours:

Tuesday: 10:30 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday: 10:30 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Thursday: 10:30 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Friday: 10:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Saturday: 10:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

Closed on City of Bandon holidays


May 2020 & June 2020

“A Silver Lining” Virtual Mosaic Show 2020

View complete virtual Mosiac Show of more than 90 images.


“Activate the Midline” by Lynn Adamo

On June 1st 2020 the 6th Annual Mosaic Show would have gone up at Bandon Library Art Gallery. This is an annual event that is eagerly looked forward to by people in Bandon and the surrounding towns. The public would have been invited again to make their own small mosaics, and a talk on the art of mosaics would have been given. Sadly, the COVID-19 virus has canceled the mosaic show, as it has so many other things we all looked forward to.

However, gallery director Tracy Hodson has curated a special virtual show, “A Silver Lining,” which is available online for all to see. Without the restrictions caused by expensive shipping and limited gallery space, she has been able to put together a collection of more than 90 mosaics made by an international roster of artists. You will see the most recent works by regular contributors to the annual show, as well as exciting mosaicists whose work will be entirely new to Bandon residents. “A Silver Lining” is a great introduction to—or continuation of, for regular mosaic show attendees—experiencing the vibrant, ever-growing world of fine art mosaics. Many of the mosaics are available for purchase, including the ones overseas, and most of the artists are available for commissions.

Bandon Library Art Gallery invites you all to view the show, and encourages you to share the link with others. Hodson says she expects to mount the 6th Annual Mosaic Show next June 1st in the gallery, and reminds you to watch for an announcement of gallery reopening later this year. “There will continue to be great art shown at the library,” she said, “in the Gallery and on the Long Wall, so stay tuned.”

You can find “A Silver Lining” on the Bandon Library Art Gallery Facebook page, on the Bandon Library Friends and Foundation Facebook page and website, on the Bandon Public Library page, or directly by following this link: https://tinyurl.com/ycuz8qr7

“Crazy Horse” by Tony Welch
“Multnomah in May” by Peggy Jackson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


February 2020 & March 2020

“A Grain of Sand, A Drop of Water” Photographs by Susan and Steve Dimock

Jewelry by Jane Ujhazi

There will be a reception for the artists on Saturday, February 29th, 2020, from 3-5pm in the Sprague Room.

“New Life” by Susan Dimock

Just as it is easy to take a good photograph of a beautiful woman, so too it is easy to take a good photograph of beautiful scenery such as we have here—in abundance—in Bandon. The ocean just sits there looking gorgeous, and one aims a camera at it; after that, it’s just a matter of the degree of artistry the photographer brings to bear on the scene. Bandon has many excellent scenic photographers, and we certainly count Susan and Steven Dimock among the very best. But a deep dive into their body of work reveals that they have often gone beyond the seascape and into a more intimate examination of their surroundings. They focus not just on the majesty of a rock, but on the textures in the rock. They pick out the lone and glowing bulb of stranded kelp, or water streaming off a cluster of mussels, or the play of light on a small patch of sand and sea, creating images that are specific and yet abstract. They capture a mood, a moment, something unique and fine. It is an unveiling of the small mysteries that make up the whole of our world. William Blake urged us “…to see a World in a Grain of Sand and a Heaven in a Wild Flower, Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand, And Eternity in an hour.” With this show the Dimocks offer us a chance to do that, and spur us to make such efforts on our own.

 

 

 

Necklace by Jane Ujhazi

Jane Ujhazi returns to Bandon Library Art Gallery with another collection of her one-of-a-kind necklaces, earrings, and bracelets, made of semi-precious stones, worked metals, and beads. An avid collector of antique and tribal beads, she constructs her pieces to marry the contemporary with the ancient. Inspired always by the natural world and its gifts of beauty, as well as the long tradition of self-decoration that has ever been a part of being human, her work evokes many times and many lands. Jane’s studio is appropriately called Terra Nova—New Land—a place where each piece is a small treasure, a work of art like no other.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


December 2019 & January 2020
“Oracles and Icons” Paintings by Angele Passalacqua
Vintage Tin Collection from Dawn Vonderlin

“The Sextant and the Apple” by A. Passalacqua

Human beings have been telling and retelling stories since the beginning of time, stories whose function is to untangle the mysteries and describe the truths of our world. Out of these stories grew symbolic figures so pervasive as to become iconic and universally understood, allowing cultures to communicate across time. Angela Passalacqua draws upon such iconography, creating paintings whose stories we recognize, even as we puzzle out their specifics. The technological world vies with nature in ‘The Sextant and the Apple;’ the implacable Oracle speaks, Hermes delivers her message; the Zodiac tells its tale of human and cosmic evolution; the calm innocence of the cherub reminds us of the need for simplicity in a complex world and, always, dreams—our own, private oracles—thrust themselves into our consciousness. There is much more to life than what we experience awake, and more to know than what we can deliberately learn.

Painting with oils on wood, Angela creates surfaces that are textured, fresco-like. They feel old, their colors glowing softly as though mellowed with time. Birds, maidens, moons, ships, clouds, musical instruments, float through these images that are both Classical and entirely contemporary and original. The multiplicity of these images reflects the depths of understanding available to us; they tell stories we already know, yet need to hear again and again.

 

Vintage Colgate Baby Talc tin, courtesy of D. Vonderlin

Certainly no world has so thoroughly understood and harnessed the power of storytelling through iconography as the world of advertising. Images that bypass the analytical process to speak directly to, and manipulate, human needs and desires is the goal of advertising, and these images work to great effect, as we often know to our cost! But through the lens of nostalgia, and with admiration for the imagination and talent of the artists of yesterday, we can appreciate this collection of vintage tins, shared by Dawn Vonderlin. Look beyond the surfaces to find the hidden treasures here: take note of the surrealistic image on a can of Colgate’s Baby Talc: the baby holds a can of talc, which baby holds a can of talc, and so on and so on, presumably to infinity. The charm of this collection lies in such cleverness, as well as the callback to that impossibly perfect place where we never lived, the past.