Thursday, November 27, 2025

Art Collection of Irvington Historical Society

Self Portrait by William F. Kaeser

Exhibit of Artworks from the Irvington Historical Society Collection

Currently at the Bona Thompson Center, is the exhibit An Artistic Legacy: Selections from the Irvington Historical Society Collection.  The show presents a selection of artworks from its permanent collection or on loan. 

The show coincides with the concurrent exhibit The Lost Photographs of Osbert Sumner, which continues at the same location.

Works include historic examples by members of the Irvington Group which was active from 1928 through 1937, and noteworthy pieces by more recent and contemporary artists, most with strong ties to Irvington.


Installation view detail from An Artistic Legacy show,
including Dorothy Morlan's Grey Landscape, far left


A wonderful Dorothy Morlan painting, of what may be a bend of the Ohio River, shows a bluff above a couple of cottage roofs, covered in snow, looking down over a vast river valley. The picture, Grey Landscape in this hanging, is called In the Valley (Harmony in Gray), 1933, in the book Skirting the Issue by Newton and Weiss. It is indeed musical in its interplay of varying shades of blue and gray, from very light in the skies and on the water, to more medium gray in the distant river banks, and finally a turquoise in the foreground that hosts a few thin trees that cling to a few leaves on the uppermost tips of their branches. The artist was painting near the Ohio in this period, as her Through the Trees Near Hanover appeared in the 36th Annual Indiana Artists exhibit at the Richmond (IN) Art Museum in 1934.

There are two portraits of Irvington Group painter William Kaeser. One is his own Self Portrait, c. 1960, showing him at middle age, graying hair, smoking a pipe wearing a gray cardigan sweater. The canvas is brightened and its mood enlivened by the bright orange shirt he wears, and the way it plays off the small painting's teal background. Most known for his early social realistic landscapes and circus motifs, the portrait displays his sure and fluid handling of paint, where his transitions from light to shade appear skillfully executed by his touch.


Portrait of William Kaeser by Cecil Head


The second Portrait of William Kaeser, c. 1940. is by Cecil Head. Although Head did not exhibit in the Irvington Group shows, the Whiteland artist had a long association with Kaeser. They shared studio space, along with Indianapolis artist Floyd Hopper, in downtown Indianapolis on Market Street in their early days in the 1930s, and continued to exhibit together in their final years some forty years later, in a group they called The Five

Head's portrait shows Kaeser nearly life-size, as a young artist smoking a pipe. The play of light and shadow seems the primary study of the painting, with Kaeser's white shirt collar, the side of his neck and face and the glint off the stem of the pipe catching the brightest attention of the artist's brush. Kaeser's face, turned away, is lost in the shadow of the dark surrounding background. The portrait is similar to a self portrait by Head, and a portrait of he did of Hopper, from the same period, both exhibited decades later at the Southside Art League.


Sycamores on West Farm by Frederick Polley


Another Irvington Group artist, Frederick Polley, is well represented in the show, with three works of three varying media; painting, etching and drawing. The artist revealed his own art origins in a 1920s newspaper article that was profusely illustrated with many of his etchings. Working as a telegraph operator in a small Illinois town, he observed an artist, new to town, sketching various buildings for a feature in the newspaper. He was inspired to try his hand at sketching and found that he had talent for drawing buildings. It was a discovery and a passion that would lead to his own career in future years, when he provided etchings and drawings to be published in the Indianapolis Sunday Star across from the editorial page, for years.

In this exhibit, his colorful oil painting, Sycamores on West Farm, is first to capture one's attention with its color. The autumn scene is of a rolling slope of foreground, so often seen with him, and in this picture, a retreating row of sycamores. The gleaming white bark is bright in sunshine, amid an otherwise warm study of the fading colors as summer turns to winter. Tan and beige ground, some final yellow leaves, brown shadows and dark orange treelines in the hazy gray distance.

Polley's etching, Getting Out in the Country, c. 1927, was one his works that appeared in the Sunday Star.  There is a poetry to his composition of a towering, almost foreboding, tree on one side, mirrored by its diminutive twin on the other, in the deep, receding perspective. Between the two, the tiny hamlet of a farm –  house, barn, shade tree and split rail fence –  that huddles beneath the open expanse of open sky.  The etching portrays the same rolling topography that is familiar in many Polleys, with the massive foreground tree atop a grassy rise that plunges the eye toward the more distant and detailed narrative of the homestead at the center the piece. 

 

The Ice House, Irvington by William Lawson


A current view of Irvington, by a current resident artist, is seen in the oil painting The Ice House, Irvington, 2019, by William Lawson.  Born in Indianapolis, he studied at Herron, and currently maintains a studio on an upper floor of the historic drug store building at the intersection of Bonna and Audubon. Lawson has been painting in Irvington since his return to Indiana in 2018 after living and painting in Seattle, Washington for a number of years.

Lawson paints his Ice House, not from Ritter Avenue facing the street, but from the other side, along the railroad tracks behind the building. He often finds points of interest off the beaten track as his many paintings of the city's alleyways attest.  Views aside railroad tracks are also recur in works by this artist over the years. The light of early spring is captured as it shines on the simple, harmonious color of the scene.  The red block tower contrasts with the emerging grass. The precise stiffness of the telephone poles and roof-lines is softened by the thin billow of clouds, the fuzzy treeline in the distance and the dusty gravel along the tracks.  An old tire and other litter are not unsightly, but noteworthy to his brush. The railroad tracks do not escape, but run through. They seem to summon somewhere. Either direction, come or go, something else to see.


North Arlington Avenue at Pleasant Run by Rachel May Blount Conner


Perhaps the oldest painting of the neighborhood in the collection is Rachel May Blount Conner's North Arlington Avenue Bridge at Pleasant Run, 1885. The rustic scene, painted in a self-taught folk art style, may first appear alien to any current views at that location.  But walks along the creek in the area of Pleasant Run Golf Course do show the similar details of exposed tree roots along the washed away creek-side and eroded walls on steep inclines beside the water. The open green surrounded by trees like in her painting still exist in the southern edge of the golf course today.  The main interest in the painting is its capture of the rudimentary bridge and its stone block abutments at either end that traversed the creek at that time.



The Bona Thompson Center
 by Ginny Taylor Rosner

The Bona Thompson Center, 2007, a gum bichromate photograph on Lanaquarelle paper by Ginny Taylor Rosner was part of a series of works created of Irvington landmarks for the former Legends Restaurant. The work, abstracted by its extreme close up presentation, shows vines growing up the side of the building and is a study in cream yellow and green.  

Robert Selby's 1929, The Forsyth's Backyard is wildly painted with expressive slashing strokes. The picture captures the spring season with pink blossoming trees and bright new leaves. Selby exhibited with the Irvington Group, and was son-in-law to William Forsyth and brother-in-law to Constance Forsyth, both of whom are also represented in this show. The Backyard is of the Forsyth home at the corner of Washington Street and Emerson Avenue, which is the location of a gas station today.

The exhibit also contains work by three other Irvington Group members, all watercolor landscapes. Clifton Wheeler's Hillside with Cabin, Hilah Drake Wheeler's Devil's Gultch – Estes Park,  and Charles George Yeager's Untitled view of a village beside a lake surrounded by rocky hills.


Benton House by Kathleen Biale

The exhibited collection also includes works by Harry Davis, John Wesley Hardrick, Florence Bartley Smithburn, Patte Owings, James Lynch, E. Roger Frey, Kathleen Biale, Phyllis Zimmerman, and Carl Zimmerman. and continues through the end of the year.  


Mark Diekhoff, November 2025



The material used in this article is being used under the fair use provisions of copyright law. The content is being used for educational purposes only, and all rights to the original content are held by their respective copyright owners. We do not claim ownership of any copyrighted material used in this work.

Friday, November 21, 2025

'Irvington Group' Artists at Auction 2025

Gemini AI generated for illustrative purposes only

Historic Irvington Group Artists at Auction –  Autumn, 2025 

Several fine art auctions in central Indiana held in the summer and fall of this year were to feature a number of beautiful works by artists of local interest, now known as the Irvington Group. A series of annual exhibitions by artists living in or near historic Irvington were held from 1928 to 1937, sponsored by the neighborhood's Union of Clubs. A total of seventeen different artists from that era were to participate in the shows over the years.



Frederick Polley, a painter, etcher, lithographer and art instructor, and longtime Indianapolis Star contributor, lived on South Emerson Avenue in those days. He was recently represented by his oil painting, Farm Workers, in the Jacksons Auction & Real Estate Company sale in June of Outstanding Indiana, American & European Art.

Farm Workers depicts the laborers, two each, both man and beast, standing together atop a pink clay mound of bare earth at the forefront of the picture. A single tree in the green of high summer provides scant shade for the men and their plow horses. The locale could be Brown County with its gently rolling slopes of yellow grain and distant blue forested hills. The figures and animals are painted with thin dark outlines which serve to emphasize their placement in a painting otherwise dreamy and sketchy and colored in soft hazy hues.




A small watercolor  by Clifton Wheeler called Smokey Mountains  Landscape was offered at the same sale. The artist lived on Lowell Avenue with wife Hilah Drake Wheeler, also an artist. 

The watercolor is typical of Wheeler's main oeuvre of hilly and forested views of the eastern United States.  His landscapes usually pack the entirety of the realistic detail before his eyes into the picture. As a painter of summer, he mastered all shades of green and all shapes of trees.  A white homestead seems tiny, dwarfed by towering trees that roll slightly with the land before the green peak of a mountain, central to the composition.

A lovely contrast in color, technique and subject is seen in the small watercolor by Constance Forsyth painted in 1928, Industrial Scene. Forsyth, daughter of William Forsyth, lived at the family home on South Emerson Avenue (at Washington Street).

The colors in Industrial Scene are mainly two – a green for the tree and some grass, and a brick red for the linear mesh of the complex industrial building and its works. The organic features are brushed in soft, curving strokes whereas the complex, woven hodgepodge of the building is jabbed and jotted in a series of tightly intersecting marks. 

An auction, also by Jacksons, Fall 2025 Sale of Historic Indiana Art, was held on November 1, and included works of the Irvington Group. Again, in this sale, are works by Clifton Wheeler, but also paintings by William Forsyth and by Robert Selby, who married Forsyth's youngest daughter, Evelyn.

Selby's Floral Still Life, 1939, is an oil painting distinctive for the pure black of the background behind a tall silver tea pot holding a multi color of gladiolas and yellow daisies. Three green apples, one seriously overripe, complete the composition atop a brown wooden table. The mood is somber in the picture, almost funereal, due to the bleak darkness of the background and the strange gaping brown spot on the bad apple almost screaming in the shape of its blemish.

Clifton Wheeler's painting Little River, 1951, depicts a winding roadway view alongside a stream in what must be the Smoky Mountains in Tennessee. The sunny roadway and its precise post and wire fence snake from front to middle of the painting which is also composed of carefully noted cedars and other bright foliage. Increasingly hazy blue mountains cascade in the distance.  Some rapids in the water and a hillside farm are the whitest bits to center the eye.


Forsyth Home (Irvington)
, painted in oil by William Forsyth, shows a gray autumn day, at that moment when the trees are changing to yellow, but the lower bushes still retain their green. A carpet of leaves fallen and orange cover the ground of what may be a piece of Forsyth's yard. The home is just a a slender bit of the corner of the building in deep perspective – windows, a door, some steps below and what may be a balcony rail above. The artist plays with the few colors before him, yellow, orange and brown, gray-blue and green. The stucco white wall mutely reflecting some of the color back on the overcast day, with a sky like a gray sun in a large circle formed by the curving boughs of the tree.

Another William Forsyth painting, In the Spring, 1917,  may show a small patch of garden or lawn, strewn with the decaying purple brown leaves of the prior season. It being spring, new green shoots emerge and a couple of sprigs of early season flowers, purple crocus and yellow daffodil dominate the canvas in the foreground.

Finally, Jackson's Hoosier Salon Endowment Art Auction occurred November 7. Clifton Wheeler, Frederick Polley and William Forsyth all had works represented in this sale.


William Forsyth as a srudent

A watercolor by William Forsyth, Autumn Landscape, 1896, seems impossibly modern in color given the date of its creation.  The diffuse brightness of its hues appear symbolic and abstract. Perhaps just darker paint that has faded over time. A few trees dominate the vertical painting, back-lit with yellow leaves, casting pink milky shadows toward the viewer.

A relatively rare, almost treeless, landscape by Clifton Wheeler is aptly titled A Lone Tree. The  sunny stone mountainside of the fir tree would suggest a location in the west. But the hills behind are rolling and green so it may be somewhere rocky in the east. The high drama of the trees footing amid the shadowed crags of a steep cliff-side dominate the right side of the picture, with clouds and sky and distant mountains on the left. 

 A small but elegant etching by Frederick Polley, Landscape with Trees, may show a winter scene of a few trees atop a grassy slope, as some trees appear evergreen cedars, whereas others shadow them with skeletal and lace-like bareness. His fine touch of minimal impression registers as a few delicate, thin lines sketch in the hilly countryside beyond the trees.

A companion painting by Polley, Indiana Hillside Landscape, contains a dream-like effect as its color could almost be moonlight upon the hills.  Some trees are burnt orange as if autumn, and one is spring green, although the treeline in the distance gives the impression of early winter. It is a mysterious little masterpiece in mainly shades of brown. 


Mark Diekhoff, November 2025



The material used in this article is being used under the fair use provisions of copyright law. The content is being used for educational purposes only, and all rights to the original content are held by their respective copyright owners. We do not claim ownership of any copyrighted material used in this work.

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

'Comfort' by Philip Campbell at Harrison Center

Comfort by Philip Campbell, Harrison Center, Indianapolis


Audience Participation Overdose Trauma.

Longtime Indianapolis artist Philip Campbell, most known for his wood carvings, exhibited his interactive installation, Comfort, at Harrison Center in October. The artwork consisted of a fabric-clad hospital bed surrounded by a similar colorful quilt that curtained the space around the bed. The familiar appearing patchwork design evokes the ambiance of grandma's house, antique malls, rocking chairs and prayer.

The fiber art in both components was composed of sewn together rectangular fragments from common clothing items such as denim jeans. The jeans were key, as they retained their pockets. The pockets were for the audience participation part of the post modern artwork, evoking social themes related to drug addiction such as overdose, rehab and recovery.

Inspired by hospital emergency rooms overwhelmed by opioid cases, Campbell has softened the anguish of the all too often endpoint of addiction by clothing the sterile environment in the well worn comfort clothes of people who were once patients or in narcotic withdrawal recovery. The use of quilted fabric echoes an earlier epidemic of suffering by evoking memory of the world's largest community folk art project, the AIDS memorial quilt.


Comfort in a Name.

Comfort is a metaphor for the very real phenomenon of something the artist refers to as the 'pink cloud' effect of early drug addiction recovery, where there is a feeling of euphoric well-being as the patient, surrounded by a recovery team, and perhaps hopeful family and friends, begins to shed the outer layers of destructive addictive behaviors and self-destructive rationalizations in an effort to begin the healing process. Pink clouds, like all clouds, are transitory though. The patient must be braced for the long haul and difficult times ahead.

The interactive feature invited gallery viewers to fill out memorial cards with the names of personal lives lost to addiction. Then to exchange the cards with the ephemera and paraphernalia, all too familiar to the addict, in the pockets. A 12-step plan outline or a Narcan nasal spray swapped for the name of one who has no use for such things anymore.

The comfort, then, for the many people affected by the loss of those who did not survive the pink cloud and its aftermath, is the relic of their name on paper and some old clothes. With an American epidemic as common and widespread as apple pie, no matter how you slice it, or dress it up, especially since fentanyl, they are gone.

Comfort here, is both beautiful and sad – like graveyards and memories can be, but hospital rooms seldom are.


Comfort by Philip Campbell



Mark Diekhoff, November 2025 



The material used in this article is being used under the fair use provisions of copyright law. The content is being used for educational purposes only, and all rights to the original content are held by their respective copyright owners. We do not claim ownership of any copyrighted material used in this work.

Saturday, November 15, 2025

101st Hoosier Salon at the Indiana State Museum

101st Hoosier Art Salon, Indiana State Museum


101st Annual Hoosier Art Salon – Tradition and Variety.


The start of the second century of the annual Hoosier Salon exhibit has closed at the end of last month at the Indiana State Museum. Displayed in a large gallery of four long walls separated by central display section to break up the space and add hanging for the numerous works included in the show. As in prior shows, the prize winning categories for works in all media included Landscape, Portrait, Still Life, Figurative, Animal and Abstract. There was also a 3-Dimensional category for sculpture and related works. 

Jurors Anne Blair Brown and Hector Acuna curated the exhibit that included 145 works by 129 artists.

The works were arranged randomly around the gallery as opposed to gathered in groups of like subject or style. It produced the atomizing overall effect that is expected in large group shows with many artworks that can be a bit overwhelming due to the multitude of genres, techniques and colors. The two-dimensional works were hung in a modified salon-style, just two deep, that provided for uncluttered viewing when observing an artwork at close distance.

The exhibit was well attended on its last Saturday with many visitors, in small groups or alone with the art, making their way among the works, and spending time before their favorites.


Landscapes – including Best of Show.

Carol Strock-Wasson's Blue Gray Winter Light was awarded Best of Show. The large oil landscape of a snowy, winter scene delivers its title in cool to cold tones. The desolate expanse of its gray winter sky envelopes a large snow covered field that dominates the picture with a blueish hue that chills to the bone. Further cold tones of a deep evergreen tree that frames the right foreground, and a distant skeletal treeline of brown/purple, continue the somber mood. Only the barely registering orange/brown of the  scant fall foliage remaining on a few trees, and of the dormant summer grass peaking through wheel ruts in the snow, contain a hint of fading warmth. The path leads diagonally from the picture's foreground center back into the depth of the picture, to one bright spot of whitest gray in distant snow. 

The artist has another exceptional piece in the show, also a landscape, but executed in pastel, Water in the Ditch

As cool is her painting, warm is her pastel. Shades of bright orange and yellow color the foliage of brush and spent wildflowers that line a reflective, brightened creek in in the slanting soft sunlight of a muted harvest sky. Only the purple-appearing shadow of a treeline in the distance of the picture cools the mellow glow.

Although this artist's work does not break new ground, indeed her winter scene is reminiscent of the solemn winter works of Indianapolis artist Dorothy Morlan, who created similar paintings a century ago, Strock-Wasson's pictures indicate a mature perfection of handling and a dexterity of mood creation through her virtuoso use of color.

The winter painting can be compared with another entry, Chilled Awakening, by Curt Stanfield, also a blue and snowy winter scene.  Other than the season and the overall color, Stanfield's work shares little  in common with the Strock-Wasson piece. Stanfield achieves the shock of cold temperature through the use of a luminous pure blue to paint shadowed light on the snow which dominates two-thirds of the picture. A mere three colors, white, brown and blue, build the expressionist composition of bare, needle-like trees and the corresponding zigzag of their shadows. The paintings jarring effect is quite distinct from Strock-Wasson's more subtle use of muted cool colors. 

Another artist with two entries in the exhibit was David M. Seward, whose Aqua House won a 3rd Place in the Landscape/Cityscape category.  Experiencing the large oil painting in person, has an interesting effect. A combination of the unique close perspective of the house on the left side of the painting which angles the eye to the pictures center with its color-field wedges of sunny roof, and sun and shaded siding. Centering the eye to the same sweet spot is the arc of the bending grass, a bit blurry as if from a strong breeze in the pictures foreground. The center of interest is the aqua porch and a single pink and puny flowering plant, perhaps peony or rosebush, and the red interior front room seen in an open window between blue shutters. A spring tree, brightly lit by noonday sun, and more sketchily in the distance are a fence, a neighboring building, a rolling hillside and bit of blue sky that complete the scene.

Bridge to Heaven, David M. Seward, 101st Hoosier Salon


Seward's other entry, also an oil painting, Bridge to Heaven,  has a similar off-kilter feel.  Again the artist paints a scene whose novel composition creates a visceral sensation. The slight vortex of Aqua House is replaced in this painting by a subliminal spiral. The picture is of a bridge over a stream. The viewer stands in the painter's shoes in cool shade aside a massive concrete pier supporting one end of a steel truss bridge on the picture's left. This spot, amid a wildly corkscrewing composition made up of the alternating stripes of the bridge's shadow on the shoreline, and the steel work of the bridge itself. The spiral concludes across the river where the bridge and its shadow, reflected on the water, meet in a pincer point of blackness offset by the brightest glow of green leaves that curtain the right side of the view.

In both paintings, the artist's builds interesting pictures with idiosyncratic points of view that create drama and eye movement by observing severely receding lines of perspective.    

Perhaps the show's most surprising landscape, upon close inspection, is Adagio by Stephen B. Moss. The musical meaning of the title is 'slow moving', which may refer to the movement of time across the seasons over the course of a year, or the movement of the sun from dawn to dusk. The picture's subject is a field of brambles in familiar fall colors under a thinly cloud-veiled sky. But 'slow' may also refer to the painstaking  manner of the acrylic painting's creation. Like a gem cutter, Moss has a amassed his scene through the application of thousands of precision-edged facets of layered colors. Not strokes of paint, but micro-shards of irregular geometries;  rectangles, triangles and dashed lines. The carefully painted shapes operate like brushstrokes, with their haphazard arrangement of pixels resulting in an amazingly organic simulacrum of the nature of nature itself.


Rockport Shoppers, Jerry Smith, 101st Hoosier Salon


Other more tradition landscapes in the show include Justin Vining's Carb Day 2025, which was a 2nd Place winner in the category, Jerry Smith's two oils, Autumn Passage and Rockport Shoppers, and Summer Day, a pastel by Mary Ann Davis. The Vining painting and Smith's small town street scene each show the decisive and rapid application of colorful brushstrokes by their painters. Vining paints with a varied vocabulary of strokes, each to a distinct purpose such as linear marks for architecture and pointillist crowds. Smith's vibrant, sunny street is composed mostly of a chaotic mix of thick, brave dabs of paint applied every which way, to pleasing effect.


Calle 12 barrio San Carlos, Mary E, Mindiola, 101st Hoosier Salon

A vibrant and colorful street scene of primary and complimentary colors is the subject of Mary E. Mindiola's Calle 12 barrio San Carlos. The large collage presents a red car in the foreground offset by rolling and verdant fields, a purple street contrasting with nearby sunny walls, and the blue shadows of distance and sky as opposed to the orange roofs of houses.  

An offbeat landscape is seen in the John Hrehov oil, Neighbor Flowers. Back-lit limelight hydrangeas and a colorful bed of mixed zinnias dominate the foreground of the painting that retreats in a blurry distance, perhaps true to a photographic source. Between the retreating perspective of  two gray buildings, a bit of fuzzy tree and sky, and an out of focus figure watering with a garden hose making a bright spray of white and blue at the center of the picture. 


Music City Liquors, Brian Burt, 101st Hoosier Salon


Two works that stretch the landscape category are Brian Burt's Music City Liquors and Samuel Leopold's Cross-Connect. Burt's meticulous oil of a road sign melds the influences of pop, photo-realism, trompe l'oeil and landscape. Leopold's landscape, if it is that, is a symmetric view from above a city intersection of high-rise buildings converging. From the bird's eye vantage, the picture looks to be a hard-edge abstraction at first glance.  But a second look, and upon further review, Leopold's painting may just be a homage to the 2D universe of early video games.


Ctoss-Connect, Samuel Leopold, 101st Hoosier Salon


Portraits and Figures.

The glassy shine seen across the gallery room makes one think that Sue P. Gillock's Reflections of a Celebration is perhaps a large, colorful watercolor under glass. Actually, it is a portrait of a woman in an oil painting dominated by the natural light reflection of numerous windows around the curving surfaces of two wine glasses, toasted and tapping, from the close perspective of an unseen celebrant. Reds, Merlot and flesh tones otherwise prevail in the canvas which oozes of a warm, coziness.


Reflections of a Celebration, Sue P. Gillock, 101st Hoosier Salon


Russell Recchion's Tie-Dye Muse is a traditional seated portrait, with its female subject facing the painter, but looking away toward the natural light of a window. The light reminds one of Vermeer, as does the sitter's antique wood carved chair. But she is not distant, as the Dutch master portrayed, but rather intimate and close to the painter. Her face reveals no clear emotion, but her slightly upraised eyes present a slight yearning to her otherwise tranquil state. Beautifully and expertly painted and composed, with a small circular religious painting crowning the top background above the woman's head.


Tie-Dye Muse, Russell Recchion, 101st Hoosier Salon

She wears a tie-dye T-shirt, in well worn rainbow colors. The liveliest light is glinted from the woman's earring, a medallion necklace, and her eyes.

Inspired by Adventure by Debra Huse presents a sunny nautical theme, not unlike last year's Best of Show watercolor and gouache, Pop's Straw Hat, by Diane Wunderlich. In a typical contemporary impressionist manner, Huse has painted a photograph in oil of two children captaining a speedboat with a flag in the background. 


Me, Myself and I - I, Sepideh Motevasel, 101st Hoosier Salon


The triple abstract mixed media collage portrait, Me, Myself and I – I, by Sepideh Motevasel, presents  a three-faced contemplative figure amid a busy and colorful abstract design of various harshly contrasting textures. Head-like and animal-like forms swirl about the main subject gowned in green. The creatures could be menacing, but are rendered as dreamy apparitions, more pretty that they are scary.   

Winning 2nd Place Figure, was Jeanette Hammerstein and her oil, Are you there God, it's me. The meaning of the title is elusive in the study of a woman pouring water into a teacup. The woman wears a red puffy coat in the picture set in somber shades of dark aqua and green. It may just be an exercise in contrasting color. Ghostly figures sit at a table in the background. A more visible man, just over her shoulder, gives an impression of a white bearded wisdom. But it's only his non-shaded face beneath the bill of his trucker cap. The woman's side glance adds to the unknowing.  But there is nothing there to be nervous about that can be seen in the picture, other than sliced lemons that seem harmless enough.

John Carter's 3rd Place Figure, Santa Fe Shawl, is pure impressionism with a style influenced by Renoir and a mirrored double portrait that reminds of Manet. It takes a busy brushwork of glittering strokes to subdue the fire of Santa Fe color and pattern, and only the woman's finely painted profile and a small dish of oranges in the background can survive the opulent shimmer.


Snow Queen, India Cruse-Griffin, 101st Hoosier Salon


A colorful shawl that holds its own is seen in Snow Queen, a large full-length seated portrait by India Cruse-Griffin.  The cubist mixed media work of an ambitious scale won an award for the artist as a First-Time Exhibitor. The eyes of the viewer alternate among the face, robe and hands of the queen amid a surreal foreground of draping blankets and background of ice and bare trees.


Held, Stephanie Spay, 101st Hoosier Salon


Stephanie Spay's Held, is another portrait of a sitter with a cup of tea. However, in this picture the beverage cup, the entire scene, is from a perspective of directly above. The circular tea is at the epicenter of the oil painting, and is surrounded by the sipping subject, who, due to the strange viewpoint, is reduced to an abstraction of muted and harmonious colors of clothing, hair, flesh and carpet, all dappled variously in light from a window out of frame.

1st Place Figure was Kyle Ragsdale's The Kids Are Alright. The multi-figurative composition plays out in two rooms of a house party. The front room is a spectacle of black light neon '80s, in flaming  pink and purple. A couple of musicians play violin and guitar for a dog who sits like an Egyptian statue and a young man standing like a caryatid, melding into the wall.  Beyond the lava light of the front room, the real action takes place in the harsh yellow light of a back room, where couples form and dance and chat, oblivious to the druggy scene out front. 


The Kids Are Alright, Kyle Ragsdale, 101st Hoosier Salon


Contemporary Abstract Expressionism.   

Many of  the abstract works, including the big winner, are in the style of contemporary abstract expressionism that prefers decorative colors and carefully balanced compositions. Whereas the originators of the genre, created often unbalanced, and at times unhinged works, arguable ugly and anti-decorative to the eyes of their times, (think of Robert Motherwell, Franz Kline and Willem de Kooning), the modern ab ex artists in this show have settled on large, colorful and pleasingly predictable living room pieces that would seem well suited for display amid Ikea sofas and chairs.

Winning 3rd Place Abstraction was an oil painting, Willy-Nilly, by April Willy. The work presents an abstracted clump of flowers whose globular, candy-colored petals rise from a bit a green leaves, again globular, and a few gracefully arcing brown stems. Floating flowers protrude in a raised relief of cut circles of painted canvas adhered to the face of the picture. Other fuzzier more distant blooms fade into a background, muted and dissolving but still colorful.   


Trying to Get All My Ducks in a Row, Brenda Stichter, 101st Hoosier Salon


The 1st Place winner, Trying to Get All My Ducks in a Row by Brenda Stichter, is an acrylic that pays homage to Hans Hoffman's squares by marching bright pink 'ducks' (here an artist used globules again) from top left, across the center and to the right right bottom of the picture. The effect is something not altogether pleasing or unpleasing, but something in between.

2nd Place in the category went to the fiber art piece Someplace Else I'd Rather Be, by Carrie L. Wright. Whether composed of dyed or found fabric, or a combination of both, the result is an exuberant overload of bright colors in a complex, almost paisley, design. It may vaguely represent a landscape viewed through an exploding or enlightened vision, as there seems a sky-like area at top, with a more blue and white openness as opposed to cramped cacophony of clashing color below.

Altogether different, and perhaps not an abstract at all, but rather a strange still life, is Cindy Wingo's Life's Balance VIII.  It would be no surprise to see this large acrylic picture in a flip house staging above a millennial-gray couch, but it's more than a mere bit of monochrome décor. The artist won a prize with a picture from the same series in last year's 100th Hoosier Salon. And she was exploring a similar color vein in her show Black and White at the Greater Lafayette Museum of Art of a couple years back. Hers is a careful study of hue and tone, surface, subject and composition, even if the painting is just the captured likeness of a pocketful of stones.

A piece in the style of the late abstract movement, Op Art or neo geo, is John DeCosta's acrylic TRI-Plex. Three pyramidal squares seemed to pulsate in a glowing, fluorescent, rectangular footprint amid a bed of magenta. The somewhat simple and minimal hard-edge design is softened by the wax and wane of the optical effects the artist has achieved through his painting of color diffused.     

  

A Final Three.

A First-Time Exhibitor award was given to Arkady Roytman for the small oil portrait, Katie. The unpretentious work shows a young red-headed woman in a colorscape room to match of rose, salmon, and warm flesh-tone. The deft brushwork contributes to the casual and spontaneous feel of the picture which captures the alluring likeness of a meditative calm and trust.


View Out Back - Hammond, IN, Tony Bianco, 101st Hoosier Salon


A Juror's Special Award was given to Tony Bianco and his acrylic painting, View Out Back – Hammond, IN. Bianco's painting serves as a metaphor of why art will always exist. Why drawings and paintings will always be made. The artist's eyes notice things that demand acknowledgment and preservation. A preservation beyond personal memory or words, but something more concrete, tangible, and existential, a thing to be shared. Bianco's eyes saw a washroom symphony in yellow and white. An unlikely urban oasis. He saw patina instead of grime. A momentary vision, an epiphany, acknowledge by his eyes, preserved by his paint.    

And finally, near the door, aside the People's Choice fan favorite voting box, is a watercolor by Alyssa Wolber, Onward.  It is the uncomplicated image of a child, hanging on to a challenge ladder monkey bars. The picture appears as a photograph or a magazine illustration as much as a fine art piece, as it is bereft of background detail or any painterly contrivance. But it is well and believably rendered. 

Onward, Alyssa Wolber, 101st Hoosier Salon


The child becomes an 'everykid,' as his face is obscured almost entirely by his arm hanging on the bar above.

Hang on kid, you can do it. And if you are not a People's Choice, you were almost there.


Mark Diekhoff, November 2025 



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