The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)
Summer Sculpture Showcase opens Saturday
OLD LYME — Gilbert Boro, owner and curator of the Sculpture Grounds in Old Lyme, presents Summer Sculpture Showcase 2018: An Exhibit of Unique Landscape Sculptures. Featuring 20 works by both established, nationally renowned sculptors, as well as fresh new faces, the summer-long show opened June 4. A meet-the-artist opening reception will be held on Saturday, June 9 from 5-7 p.m. The reception will feature a live jazz band, a performance by David Dorfman Dance, and is open to the public.
Competition to exhibit was keen, with 120 submissions from around the country, according to event organizers. Entries were evaluated for concept, execution, creative process, artistry, and how it would fit in the landscape. Boro, a nationally acclaimed sculptor in his own right, hosts this annual show to provide a venue for both young and mid-career sculptors to showcase their work to a diverse audience.
“Boro also holds a firm conviction that art and viewer should be interactive,” the release states. “Sculpture Grounds are an environment where viewers are not only permitted — but are encouraged — to touch sculptures.”
“I really think that threedimensional art should be handled, touched, pushed, and experienced in three dimensions,” Boro said in a statement. “It's the only way you can understand it.”
The exhibitors accepted for the Summer Showcase embrace this concept. New York sculptor Sarah Haviland, who received a Fulbright Award to study in Taiwan this fall, had two pieces selected: Lustration, a contemplative female figure of aqua resin and mirrors, and Seraphim Mirror, a butterfly-shaped wall hanging created with galvanized mesh, resin and a mirror. Haviland’s abstract work explores female identity and is exhibited both nationally and internationally.
Miguel Castillo Hernao, a native of Colombia, evolved to sculpting after university studies in literature and philosophy. Hernao explores geometry, color and repetitive forms in his works composed of stone, wood, metal and plexiglass. His seven-foot tall entry, Composition No. 28, is formed of painted riveted aluminum.
Chicago artist Ruth Aizuss Migdal’s bold and striking Radiate, standing more than eight feet tall, also plays with female forms and is composed of patinated bronze gilded with gold leaf.
Connecticut-based artists include Deborah Hornbake, whose Running Man is a fusion of wood, pipe, copper tubing, wire and stones; Eric Camiel, who has works in thepermanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art and the Library of Congress, and whose film work has received numerous Emmy and Academy Award nominations, will have his aluminum sculpture, Sail Dream, on display; and Denis Folz’s monumental 11-foot steel sculpture, Feathered Resting Spot.
Boro is committed to supporting and exhibiting promising new artists. This year he presents Shelli Weiler as the featured indoor artist, with her photography exhibit, “Intimate Exchange.” Weiler, a native of Scarsdale, N.Y., is studying photography.
Christina Goldberg is studying at Wesleyan University in Middletown. Her photography explores the deep hidden character of people through ground breaking and provocative poses and settings. Boro is presenting her work in the small, freestanding ESB Gallery, created in honor of his late wife, Emily.
Situated halfway between Boston and New York, Summer Sculpture Showcase 2018 is set on Boro’s four-and-a-half acre estate in the heart of Old Lyme’s historic village. In addition to special exhibits, the permanent display consists of approximately 100 works strategically placed around the park-like grounds. Now in its 14th year, the Sculpture Grounds host more than 5,000 visitors a year. Visitors are welcome to bring their own picnic to the cafe. The grounds are open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, yearround. Admission is free, and touching the sculptures is encouraged. For more information visit www.sculpturegrounds.com.