CURRENT GALLERY SHOW AT FIREWORKS RESTAURANT
Copyright for all art images are retained by the artists.

 

 

 

Sunday, April 20, 2-4pm
Reception and Opening for Alan Kapuler

FireWorks is excited to exhibit the work of Alan Kapuler, cultural visionary and icon of the organic movement. On display from April 1 to Mid-May 2008, Kapuler's works in acrylic provide a fascinating journey into architypal symbology drawn in great part from his immersion in the local Corvallis community. Many works include Kapuler's family, musicians and friends.

Th reception will feature live music and finger foods by Chef Intaba. Kapuler will discuss his work. House-infused cocktails, local wines and craft ales will be available from FireWorks bar.

Thomas Kramer has been described as smooth folk and blues guitar with hints of country twang, heavily influenced by the likes of Eric Clapton, Johnny Cash's American albums, and Creedence Clearwater Revival. This is complimented by a


PAST GALLERY SHOWS AT FireWorks RESTAURANT

 


Ede Schenkel Wolfe

The recent drawings of Schenkel Wolfe record an inner journey of experience in visual narrative. Her current gallery show at FireWorks entitled "Redeeming the Child: Visual Images of Growing Awareness" represents retrospective to present. The Jungian paradigm provides Schenkel Wolfe with an interpretive basis for her symbolic images. Giclee prints are available for purchase.

A reception for the artist will feature complementary finger foods and cocktails for purchase.  For more information call 541-754-6958. 

 

 

 

Frances Stilwell

Frances' show featured pastels and oils of Oregon native plants, with a special focus on Benton County flora. The show includes many works from "Come Walk Through Spring with Bessie Gragg Murphy and her Willamette Valley Wildflowers", illustrated and written by Frances Stilwell in 2001.



 


The Work of Dorothea Fransoza


FireWorks is excited to welcome the return of Fransoza's exquisite works in watercolor and collage. Her style ranges from mystical landscapes to abstract pieces.



 

 


"La Vida Nueva" Zapotec Women's Weaving Collective

Weavings will return to FireWorks in May 2008

"La Vida Nueva" is a women's weaving cooperative from the Zapotec community of Teotitlan del Valle, in Mexico's southern state of Oaxaca. This traditional indigenous community is known world wide for its long line of weavers. Patterns, techniques, tools and the "habit" of weaving have been passed down through the generations...click to see gallery and full article

(*** 100% of purchase amount directly benefits the Zapotec women artists)


 

"Redeeming the Child: Visual Images of Growing Awareness"
The Art of Ede Schenkel Wolfe

The recent drawings of Schenkel Wolfe record an inner journey of experience in visual narrative. Her current gallery show at FireWorks entitled "Redeeming the Child: Visual Images of Growing Awareness" combines paintings, etchings, drawings and masks and represents retrospective to present. The Jungian paradigm provides Schenkel Wolfe with an interpretive basis for her symbolic images.

A reception for the artist will feature tasting of fine organic wines by Chateau Lorane. FireWorks will provide finger foods to sample from their newly expanded menu. Schenkel Wolfe's daughter, Abigail Rose, will perform original songs with her own accompaniment on cello and guitar. Mother and daughter share an intent to explore the unconscious, providing a window into a deeply personal space through their respective media.

For more information call 541-754-6958.



"Earth Art and Natural Building": the Sculpture of Kiko Denzer

"Earth is a natural material for sculpting and the combination of earth with sand and straw provides an extraordinary structural flexibility that dissolves the division between sculpture and architecture. The work with patterns has been an inspiration reinforced from many corners. The garden is full of pattern, rhythm, form, and endless variety..."
(click here to see Kiko's online gallery)



The Art of Pamela Hough

Pam's work explores an ever-unfolding world of texture and color. Pam favors oil but also works in colored pencil and graphite in her realistic renderings of flora, fauna, and human figures in a fascinating variety of activities and expressions.



 

Illustration & Design by Seth Deutchman
works in a diversity of media: oil, pastel, ink & watercolor

Left: Snow Queen in Pastel, Seth Deutchman, 2005



 

Serigraphs by Bonnie Hall, 1931-2004
"Some people, like flowers, give pleasure just by being" - anonymous

Bonnie Hall was born an artist. Though never formally trained, from her earliest school days she showed an innate talent for capturing life and transmitting it to paper. Through a nearly 40-year career as a scientific illustrator she regretted that her intensely detailed black-and-white drawings, though essential to the science, were shut away in scientific journals "very badly needed by very few people". When she discovered color serigraphy, she found her life's mission.


Bonnie's screenprints of native wildflowers and a few butterflies were immensely popular in the region. She was anxious that a larger public come to appreciate "the overlooked, the undervalued, or the threatened wild things native to our Pacific Northwest landscape". Bonnie died of cancer, too young, at 72. She was at the height of her game, having almost mastered screenprinting after 12 years of struggle. Of the 32 large prints she produced, 14 are now out of print, and others are nearly sold out. This book is dedicated to her life and talent, in the hope that through this medium many more people will come to appreciate the natural world in the way that she did.


In her own words: "A native Oregonian, I grew up charmed by the ambient wildflowers of the region. There followed academic degrees in biology and a 40-year career as a scientific illustrator. I retired with a will to share the privileged close scrutiny of nature that I had enjoyed. In embracing screenprinting, I have discovered the means. I love the construction of screenprinting, building an image one layer of color at a time. And I love the communication of it, creating multiple originals to entice a broader audience." 

"My subjects are native wildflowers and the occasional butterfly. In the tradition of natural-history portraiture, each rendition is faithful to form, color, and defining characteristics of the species. The ideal is an artful composition, rather like a family portrait that reveals personality, life stages, and the very essence of the subject. Motivation for my work stems from a desire to celebrate the overlooked, undervalued, or threatened little natural treasures in our Pacific Northwest landscape. May it both delight and inform."


 


Dun Munro to Dun Hallin

The painting philosophy of Diane Hoff-Rome and Gordon Dobbie is best described in a quote from the late English writer Kathleen Raine's essay in Towards a New Landscape: "The work of the artist is not to reproduce what everybody sees, but to heal the soul; to remind us, as it were, of our native country - the world of the spirit - and tell us that it is there all the time." These paintings span a period of 2 years at work int he dramatic landscapes of Scotland and Oregon and at their studios at Dun Hallin on the Isle of Skye, Scotland and in their new studio on Dun Monro, in Monroe Oregon





Wood Fired Pottery and Asian Brushwork by Lee Kitzman
Philomath, Oregon

Philomath artist Lee Kitzman's work reflects a deep inspiration and appreciation of the cultures and artwork of China, Korea and Japan. A self-taught potter of 32 years, Mr. Kitzman has traveled to Japan to study a variety of pottery techniques in the famous potter region of Mashiko. Travels to Europe and the Middle East have further enhanced his understanding of art and its relationship to pottery world wide.

The classic Asian form which utililzes grace and simplicity is a dominant style in Mr. Kitzman's pottery. Raku has been a long-time specialty and trademark in which Mr. Kitzman incorporates his unique glazing technique and Sumi brushwork with the process. His pieces are individually fired and decorated with hand-painted scenes of bamboo, chrysanthemum, cherry blossoms and geometric patterns. Crazing of the glaze serendipitiously balances his controlled hand-painted designs.

Ocean and Intaba are honored to host Mr. Kitzman's exhibit, over a dozen pottery pieces which beautifully adorn the hand painted Lazure walls of FireWorks dining room, as well as complementing the restaurant's natural clay sculptural features and earthen wood fired oven. Ocean chose the restaurant's earthen patio bench as an ideal backdrop when he photographed the pieces for this website. To inquire regarding purchase please contact Lee Kitzman: (541)929-5507


 


"Sanctuary Series" by Eugene Artist Tricia Clark-McDowell
Tricia's works have been described as "textural, luminous, mystical, watercolors of the soul peering into the evocative beauty and mystery of nature."



 


Watercolor Collage by Dorothea Fransoza
These works are a small sample of Dorothea's works in watercolor and paper collage. Her style ranges from mystical landscapes to abstract pieces, and we are blessed to initiate our gallery shows with Dorothea's talent!