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Connection—Gratitude for New Relationships

A couple of weeks ago I completed one of those puzzles on Instagram where actual words were embedded into random letters across and down to form a large square. The game was that the first four words you “see” are what defines your current attitude towards life. My four words were connection, gratitude, strength and care.

As I reflect on this past year, and imagine my direction for 2023, what I deeply feel is gratitude. Since November of 2021 I have picked up four new galleries that are reshaping and reinforcing my art practice in unexpected ways. Each new gallery connection has upheld my belief that there is real substance in the new directions I have taken with my Urban Series. Over the last several years I have recognized and refined interpretations of urban life here in Chattanooga through a birds-eye-view of city streets and structures in conflict with nature. This new work reflects the strength and determination of both humanity and Gaia in a push/pull dance for the dominance of Earth. The emergence of this body of work is getting a lot of interest and appreciation not only by the public but the purveyors of art as well.

Urban Botanical #287 is now available @ Craighead Green Gallery

The newest association is with Craighead Green Gallery located in the heart of the Dallas Texas design district. Kenneth Craighead saw an ad in Asheville Made Magazine with Citron Gallery where Rand Kramer featured my Urban Botanicals—Citron was the first of these four new galleries to represent me in this latest web of connections (the cover of that magazine issue highlighted one of Craighead Green’s artists). Kenneth immediately contacted me and we began a dialogue that lead to a mutual understanding of representation.

Craighead Green Gallery’s Showroom Entrance

One of the many things that I love about Craighead Green is their long-standing reputation both locally and nationally of providing outstanding representation for creators they value. They also showcase a wide variety of contemporary art that reflects all manner of theory mixed with creative form within a large 6,000 square foot space. Craighead Green has been in operation since 1992 which shows not only a true dedication to art but also the business acumen to weather the ups-and-downs of the crazy art market. I couldn’t be in better hands moving forward into the future.

Urban Botanical #288 now available @ Craighead Green Gallery

As this current journey continues to unfold, I would like give some credit to my Instagram profile that I have meticulously built over the last seven years—never underestimate the power of social media. This endeavor has finally paid off with lots of exposure and also gives me the opportunity to keep fellow artists, collectors and galleries up to date on my studio happenings. Yet another form of connection (whether dubious or not) in the art of building an online community. For me, connection = growth not only personally but professionally.

For more information on Craighead Green Gallery check out their website @ www.craigheadgreen.com.

View my Instagram profile @annacarllart

What Remains: an exploration of the Erosion Series

As I quietly paint, I have both decisive moments and an earnest, listening eye. In the midst of this what occurs is nuance, serendipity, intuitive associations, chaos, and reduction. Working with abstraction allows me to explore the boundaries between positive and negative space, the use of unusual textures and the mixing of different media. I begin this work flat while adding and subtracting subtle and intense color as well as exploring various types of heavy texture. I allow the water based media to flow and puddle in the valley’s of marks and textures that were first laid down, enhancing the interaction with paint, inks or collaged hand-made papers, gradually adding multiple layers that begin to form the foundation of the urban grids, urban botanicals, character botanicals or weavings. Once color and chaos is achieved across the surface, the pieces then go up on my painting wall where I begin the reduction process.

ES-UG process shot 1.png

Studio process shots of Erosion Series: Urban Grid #78

Reduction—the Erosion Series is about seeing the beauty in the natural event of decay and building an aesthetic around it. Like the Japanese wabi-sabi; the acceptance of transience and imperfection, I repurpose and create new life out of past work or begin anew on fresh panels or paper. Inside the studio and out, observing the natural decay of the life cycle has made me appreciate that within reduction the more possibility there will be.

I am fascinated with the push/pull of creating civilizations and nature taking them back. For the grid paintings I begin by taping off the areas of the surface that interest me to begin the formation of the urban street grid as I build the composition between positive and negative space. The urban botanicals focus more on the relationship between nature’s relentless botanical growth in the nooks and crannies of urban architecture. The weavings explore botanical shapes that are either on Arches 300lb watercolor paper or abstracts of sandpaper remnants from my reduction process. These begin with the warp image (the vertical strips) and are then woven with the weft (horizontal strips) to enhance the color or patterns of the piece. The final step is to stitch them together with waxed linen thread. The character botanicals explore eroded botanical shapes seen through the window of letterforms that make a hidden word. Making these paintings is as much a physical experience as a psychological one. I embrace and process the nuances of this work and use the outcome as a vehicle to communicate a narrative about humanity and the natural world around me that exists outside of language. What remains of this process comes together to form all aspects of the Erosion Series.

Gallery 111 @ the Creative Arts Guild in Dalton GA

Gallery 111 @ the Creative Arts Guild in Dalton GA

The Creative Arts Guild in Dalton GA is a fabulous venue to house and showcase these pieces with their commitment to raising awareness of all the artistic disciplines in the community. Join us this Friday, May 3rd, from 5:30-7:30pm for the opening of several shows at CAG.