The Sun (Lowell)

THE MANY FACES OF GLENN SZEGEDY

Painter’s ‘Power of One’ portraits seek to show ‘we’re all human beings’

- Cy Nicole Leoeudis ndefeudis@lowellsun.com

Glenn Szegedy marvels at his faces — all 26 of them, each with their own story.

One is a chef, another a dental hygienist. One was a teenage mother and now manages a catering business. Another is an artist.

Szegedy painted real, “everyday” community members in a new light in his latest exhibit, titled, “The Power of One.” The portraits will be displayed at The Brush Art Gallery & Studios through Feb. 22.

“You don’t have to be a multibilli­onaire or movie star to be important,” Szegedy said. His goal was to highlight the value of each of his subjects.

“These people all have mothers … they have dreams and aspiration­s,” he said. “To put them in an oil painting makes them important.”

About three years ago, the Dracut sculptor tried his hand at painting people. He looked to Google stock images for inspiratio­n, but quickly grew bored. He needed real muses.

That’s when Szegedy began photograph­ing acquaintan­ces and other community mem

bers. He collected over 60 photos and painted the ones that stood out to him. Twelve of the 26 portraits are of students in a YouthBuild student art class he teaches once a week.

Youthbuild provides GED preparatio­n and vocational training to young adults ages 16 to 24 who have not completed high school. The art program serves as a safe space for the students to express themselves, Szegedy said.

“A lot of these kids have never been exposed to art,” he said. “They (often) go back to neighborho­ods that aren’t the best. There’s a lot of pressure. … It just gives them a downtime.”

During the weekly art class, Szegedy guides the students in whatever they choose to work on. This past holiday season, they constructe­d a manger and repaired figures in the city’s nativity scene downtown.

Szegedy pointed around the gallery to several of his former students’ faces, many of whom now have jobs.

“They say painting is three hours of looking and 10 minutes of painting,” Szegedy said. For this project, Szegedy did a lot of looking.

Szegedy painted each of his subjects with a serious demeanor. Some smile just slightly. “I wanted the person without a lot of emotion,” Szegedy said. “But some people are just so happy, you can’t not paint them smiling.”

When Szegedy started the project in 2017 from his home studio, he wasn’t quite sure of his goal or the message. About midway through, he realized it was about celebratin­g individual­s, while also recognizin­g our similariti­es.

“We’re all human beings,” he said.

“We’ve had a lot of nice responses,” James Dyment, executive director of the gallery, said of Szegedy’s installati­on. Passersby have said the large portraits, which can be seen from the gallery’s plate glass windows, are compelling, he said.

“He (Szegedy) has been like a friend of The Brush for a while and I was excited when he told me he had this body of work,” Dyment said.

While an artist’s work is never complete, Szegedy said he’s happy with the exhibit. He’s proud of sticking with it, he said as he pointed out a dark spot in one of the portraits that would only be visible to its creator. “I find great comfort in just creating something,” he said.

“The paintings kind of take over and you stop thinking about what you’re doing,” he said.

The exhibit’s opening reception will take place Feb. 1 from 2 to 4 p.m. The gallery is free to attend from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday and from noon to 4 p.m. on Sundays.

“Being free and part of the National Park, it’s a godsend,” Szegedy said of The Brush. He invited all of his Youthbuild students to see their portraits at the gallery.

Szegedy hopes to take the installati­on elsewhere after Feb. 22. “I would love to see it out and about and somewhere else,” he said.

But in the meantime, it’s on to the next project — whatever that may be. “

It gives me a little sanity in an insane world,” Szegedy said of making art.

 ?? JULIA MALAKIE / LOWELL SUN ?? Artist Glenn Szegedy talks about the portraits he painted of Youthbuild students and other people he knows, for his exhibit at the Brush Art Gallery, ‘The Power of One.’ Portraits from left, students Luka, Zha and Benyialise, artist JJ Long, and students Yiangelo and Amanda.
JULIA MALAKIE / LOWELL SUN Artist Glenn Szegedy talks about the portraits he painted of Youthbuild students and other people he knows, for his exhibit at the Brush Art Gallery, ‘The Power of One.’ Portraits from left, students Luka, Zha and Benyialise, artist JJ Long, and students Yiangelo and Amanda.
 ?? PHOTOS BY JULIA MALAKIE / LOWELL SUN ?? From left, Glenn Szegedy’s portraits of Yiangelo, Amanda, and Jesus.
PHOTOS BY JULIA MALAKIE / LOWELL SUN From left, Glenn Szegedy’s portraits of Yiangelo, Amanda, and Jesus.
 ??  ?? Artist Glenn Szegedy with his portrait of Anna Jabar-omoyeni, culinary teacher at Youthbuild Lowell.
Artist Glenn Szegedy with his portrait of Anna Jabar-omoyeni, culinary teacher at Youthbuild Lowell.

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