Two menâone with a rainbow button pinned to his denim shirtâstand in an unusual pose, set before a blindingly bright background. The man on the right rests his chin on his left fist, almost a dead ringer for Rodinâs âThinker,â although his fist rests on the other manâs left shoulder. The latter, who wears his long hair in a beaded braid, dangles his left arm at his side, while his right cradles his black bag. The two are clearly a couple, although their posture suggests the kind of informality and unsmiling expression that rarely is the stuff of posed selfies these days.
That, said artist , is the point. His large watercolor-on-paper painting ââ (2019) won the presidentâs Best in Show award at the â4th Biennial Maryland Regional Juried Art Exhibition,â known as the BMRE, on display through March 15 at University of Maryland Global Campus. Ponemone on hand for the exhibitâs opening reception was interviewed while standing beside his winning work.
âI watch people for a little bit to see how they work as a couple. The whole series involves couples,â said Ponemone, who finds his subjects in the street and at art museums, photographs them, then uses those images as the basis for his paintings. Â He captured the image of Charlie and Tim â after the gay pride parade in Baltimore this past summer.â
Ponemone said he often shows would-be subjects photos stored on his phone of prior works from his couples series when he explains his artistic process. âSometimes, the first time people pose theyâre stiff and they smile, and then I say, âDonât smile.â I want to see the contact in the face, and how you work. I say, âI saw you guys. You know each other.ââ
Charlie and Tim were unposed, and their second take was the one that Ponemone captured in the painting. âI only take two or three pictures at a time,â he said. âThis is what happened.â
Ponemoneâs painting is one of 67 works in the exhibit that were culledâwith great difficulty by the judges, said Eric Key, arts program director at Íűșì±ŹÁÏâfrom 567 submissions by more than 200 artists. In his commentary in the exhibition catalog, Key wrote that he was happy he didnât have to be involved in deciding which submissions made the show, given that they were âextremely strong.â He added that the show was initially intended to display 55 works, but given the quality of entries, an extra dozen was added.
âThis is probably the first year that we had such strong work,â Key said.
Ponemone explained that he intentionally leaves out the backgrounds in his paintings because including them âfixes people in that rectangle. I want people to come forward.â He added, âI try to show an individualâs dignity.â Those statements also articulate the broader exhibitâs approach.
In his remarks in the exhibit catalog, Íűșì±ŹÁÏ President Javier Miyares wrote that the BRME rewards âthe creativity and vision of artists in Maryland, Northern Virginia, and the District of Columbiaâ and introduces those works âto broader and more diverse audiences, both locally and regionally.â In the catalog, Key noted as well that the show is particularly exciting because it âprovides the Íűșì±ŹÁÏ Arts Program with an opportunity to learn about artists from all over our communityâmany of whom are new to us.â
won an award of merit for ââ (2019), a mixed media on canvas work involving collaged t-shirts and a silkscreen print.
âThe work always evolves as Iâm working on it,â he said. âBut it usually starts with an impetus of an idea.
Like Ponemone, he gave the interview in front of his painting to better point out aspects of his work. âIn this case, I had started to do the shapes at the top, which sort of looked like a carnival.â The yellow humps, not quite McDonaldâs golden arches, evoke, perhaps, circus tents. Elsewhere is a studio rag, a t-shirt that says Marino 07 from his brother-in-lawâs bachelor party.
âI like the type, so I had torn it up for a rag. As I was using it, I just kind of liked the patina and the look of it,â he said. âThe concept started coming from that. On the front of the t-shirt, it said, âMan of the Year.â He was like the man of the year because it was his bachelor party.â
Bohlander revealed that the painting covers up an older picture of a figure that he made in high school. That kind of rebirth or repurposing is also at play in another gripping work in the exhibit, âs sculpture âPhoenixâ (2019), made of laminated Baltic birch plywood.
Knopp started creating these types of sculptures back in the late 1970s when he picked up a book about making modern furniture and he found artists making stack lamination and carving. âI thought, âI can do that,ââ he said. ââIâll give that a try.ââ The technique involves stacking individual pieces of wood and then smoothing out the surface. The works arenât hollow on the inside, and âPhoenixâ weighs over 100 pounds.
âEverybody wants a piece in the family,â he said of his work, which has an elegant softness to it.
The title âPhoenixâ came to him after he completed the work. âI usually donât name them, but it helps when youâre submitting to shows,â he said. The sculpture appears to emerge from the ground and has an organic feel to it, evoking the mythical phoenix, a regenerating fiery bird.
LED lights, nearly hidden beneath upper âlipsâ on the sculpture, bathe the work in soft light. And, like the mythical bird, this sculptural âPhoenixâ appears to emanate its own light. That ties it in with the exhibit at large, which encompasses a wide range of works diverse in type, medium and style. Many, upon close inspection, appear to shine brightly and mysteriously from within.
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