Albuquerque Museum Exhibit

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The 25th Anniversary Miniatures & More Exhibit benefiting the Albuquerque Art Museum on Saturday, October 24th, 2015 was, once again, a huge success. Over one hundred artists entered miniature paintings and sculptures and twelve artists were invited to exhibit one large piece each. The jury committee chose Martha Rea Baker’s oil and cold wax painting, Dusk.

The following artist statement accompanied Baker’s painting installed in the museum:

“The concept of  “Time” has been an ongoing theme in my work for many years–the passage of time and its effects on our natural world. Whether depicting chronological time, marking passage of hours days and seasons or an ancient age glimpsed through excavation, the painting process of adding, subtracting and careful editing is a metaphor for life’s timeline.

The painting, Dusk references that hour at the end of the day when activities are winding down. Through many layers of oil paint mixed with cold wax medium, scraped back and incised to discover what lies beneath, glimpses of the day are revealed.”

Dusk 60

Dusk 60″ x 36″ Oil/Cold Wax

We are pleased to to announce that Dusk sold at auction with 40% of the proceeds benefiting programs of the Albuquerque Art Museum in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

New Work for Brown’s Fine Art

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Two new acrylic paintings have recently been shipped to Brown’s Fine Art in Jackson, MS, Martha Rea Baker’s long time gallery.

Chocolate Shop----63

Chocolate Shop—-63″ x 48″—-Acrylic on Canvas

Perhaps the colors of Autumn inspired these two new paintings.

Coffee Break----36

Coffee Break—-36″ x 60″—-Acrylic on Canvas

Conversations on Color and Abstraction

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Martha Rea Baker has delivered the final two paintings for the upcoming exhibit at Karan Ruhlen Gallery which opens Friday, September 25, 2015 with an artist reception from 5-7 pm.

                       “Conversations on Color and Abstraction” 

Like the previous paintings, Dordogne I, II, and III, these abstracts posted below were inspired by travels to the French Dordogne.  The artist first visited this region in 2000 on an art travel trip and returned in April of 2014 with her husband to celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary. This area of France is rich with history, gourmet food and wine, chateau-studded limestone cliffs and most importantly, prehistoric cave art. In the paintings posted below, Martha has captured the essence of the landscape with abstract references to the blue of the Dordogne River, grey and white limestone cliffs and shapes and symbols found in the region.

Dordogne Revisited I 60

Dordogne Revisited I———-60″ x 48″———-Oil/Cold Wax on Panel

Dordogne Revisited II--------60

Dordogne Revisited II———-60″ x 48″———-Oil/Cold Wax on Panel 

miniatures & MORE

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Now in its 25th year, Miniatures & More is an exhibition fundraiser that provides valuable funding to The Albuquerque Museum in New Mexico while benefiting the artists whose work it features. The only “sell” exhibition at the Albuquerque Museum, Miniatures was created by – and is a program of – The Albuquerque Museum Foundation.  

A range of artists producing traditional and contemporary paintings, photographs and sculptures are selected each year through a juried process in order to provide an exceptional collection for consideration. The “& More” was added to the 2007 Miniatures exhibition. Miniatures & More 2015 features one painting each from twelve outstanding New Mexico artists.

Dusk 60

Dusk                                                    60″ x 36″                                            Oil/Cold Wax

We are pleased to announce that Martha Rea Baker has been selected to exhibit in the “& More” section of Miniatures & More 2015 25 Year Anniversary. A committee from The Museum traveled to Santa Fe, NM to visit Martha’s studio and Karan Ruhlen Gallery to make the selection shown above. This painting will be auctioned at the gala reception on Saturday, October 24, 2015 at The Albuquerque Museum.

New Work for Karan Ruhlen Gallery’s Summer of Color

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Martha Rea Baker has delivered new oil/cold wax paintings to Karan Ruhlen Gallery for the SUMMER OF COLOR being celebrated all around Santa Fe.

SANTA FE, NM. Karan Ruhlen Gallery presents a group exhibition The Nature of Color in conjunction with Santa Fe 2015 “Summer of Color”. Opening August 21 at Karan Ruhlen Gallery. The artists of Karan Ruhlen Gallery are known for their color sensibility and its relationship to nature. Each is diverse in their approach and interpretation of color. The artists have their own unique signature and surface quality.

Cliffhanger diptych

Cliffhanger Diptych   72″ x 60″

Dordogne III   48

Dordogne III   48″ x 36″

Red Mesa    40

Red Mesa   40″ x 30″

Conversations on Color and Abstraction at Karan Ruhlen Gallery

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Conversations on Color and Abstraction —  September 25, 2015

Martha Rea Baker—–Mary Long—-Daniel Phill

SANTA FE, NM. Abstract art uses a visual language of form, color and line to create a composition which exists with a degree of independence. Abstraction indicates a departure from reality in depiction of imagery in art.
Who: Martha Rea Baker, Mary Long, Daniel Phill What: Exhibition of paintings When: Sept. 25 – Oct 9, 2015 Opening Reception: Friday, Sept 25th, 5-7 pm. Where: Karan Ruhlen Gallery, 225 Canyon Road, Santa Fe, NM 87501. Visuals & Curriculum Vitae online at www.karanruhlen.com
Karan Ruhlen Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of recent work by three well-established abstract artists from across the country. The exhibition features New Mexico abstract painter Martha Rea Baker, Tennessee artist Mary Long and California painter Daniel Phill. The group of artists is diverse in their approach to abstraction.

ConversationsonAbstraction

Santa Fean, Martha Rea Baker’s underlying theme in her work is time. “Its passage and its effect on nature,” she says. “I seek a time-worn look—the results of erosion, weather, and the marks of previous civilizations.” Whether depicting chronological time, marking the sequential passage of hours, days, seasons or an ancient age glimpsed through excavation, the painting process of adding, subtracting and thoughtful editing is a metaphor for life’s timeline in creating these elegant abstractions. “I’m inspired by the strata of geology exposed in canyon walls and distant vistas of the Southwest.”
In her current series Baker uses cold-wax on gessoed board, mixing pliable Dorland’s wax medium with oil pigments to create a rich and lustrous surface.

Quiet Conversation Diptych    40

Quiet Conversation Diptych   40″ x 60″   Baker

Mary Long was born in Ohio and has lived in Tennessee since the mid-1990s. Following studies in graphic design and painting, she began working in encaustic in 2001. “I grew up near Canton, where there is a crazy-quilt patchwork of rural farms and factories. It’s a juxtaposition of architectural grayness against expanses of happy saturated colors that inspires my work to this day,” she says. Long often begins her paintings with marks drawn in oil stick, over which she applies many layers of wax combined with oil paints. In the latest work I am decompressing, exploring more of the spaces in between. They don’t simply represent topographical maps but also time and space, the painting acts as a ‘slice’ or a ‘snapshot’ of something continuous,” says Long.

Daniel Phill attended Washington State University, Pullman, and received his BFA in 1978 from the San Francisco Art Institute. He received his MFA in 1983 from Stanford University and currently lives in San Francisco. He begins each painting jumping in “with a leap of faith,” he says, that something will develop from his spontaneous application of color and texture. Phill identifies with many of the principles and techniques of Abstract Expressionism, but also relishes the ambiguity between abstraction, figuration and the illusion of space in his paintings suggest light, atmosphere and depth—a combination that makes visible Hans Hofmann’s assertion that “shapes, colors, lines, calligraphic squiggles and use of space always echo the reality found in nature—its structure rather than appearance.” He eschews the neat and formal, preferring a responsive approach.

“The gallery will be truly transformed with the energy of these three dynamic artists,” says Ruhlen.

Rhythm and Hues

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Rhythm and Hues
Group Exhibition

Who: Gallery Artists

What: Exhibition of painting and sculpture

When: May 22nd 2015—Opening Reception: Friday, 22 May, 5-7 pm.

Where: Karan Ruhlen Gallery, 225 Canyon Road, Santa Fe, NM 87501

SANTA FE, NM. Karan Ruhlen Gallery presents a group exhibition Rhythm and Hues in conjunction with Santa Fe 2015 “Summer of Color”.

Upon entering Karan Ruhlen Gallery visitors are instantly enveloped in color with a harmonic rhythm of hues and tones that visually guide you through the sunlit space.

The artists of Karan Ruhlen Gallery are known for their color sensibility and its relationship to nature. Each is diverse in their approach and interpretation of color. The artists have their own unique signature and surface quality.

RhythmandHuesExhibtionWeb

Martha Rea Baker—-upper left—-White Village, Costa del Sol (detail)

“The viewer’s imagination is consistently stimulated by the mixed-media abstracts of Martha Rea Baker created by the painting process of addition, subtraction and careful editing.”

THE BUTTERFLY EFFECT in ABSTRACT PAINTING

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MARTHA REA BAKER has delivered two new canvases to  KARAN RUHLEN GALLERY on Canyon road in Santa Fe, NM.

In chaos theory, the butterfly effect is the sensitive dependence on initial conditions in which a small change in one state of a deterministic nonlinear system can result in large differences in a later state. The name of the effect, coined by Edward Lorenz, is derived from the metaphorical example of the details of a hurricane (exact time of formation, exact path taken) being influenced by minor perturbations such as the flapping of the wings of a distant butterfly several weeks earlier.

The phrase refers to the idea that a butterfly’s wings might create tiny changes in the atmosphere that may ultimately alter the path of a tornado or delay, accelerate or even prevent the occurrence of a tornado in another location. Note that the butterfly does not power or directly create the tornado. The butterfly effect does not convey the notion—as is often misconstrued—that the flap of the butterfly’s wings causes the tornado. The flap of the wings is a part of the initial conditions; one set of conditions leads to a tornado while the other set of conditions doesn’t. The flapping wing represents a small change in the initial condition of the system, which causes a chain of events leading to large-scale alterations of events (compare: domino effect). Had the butterfly not flapped its wings, the trajectory of the system might have been vastly different—it’s possible that the set of conditions without the butterfly flapping its wings is the set that leads to a tornado.  Wikipedia

In the same way, minor and almost sub-conscious actions in everyday life can be seen to have gross and widespread effects upon the future. As such, seemingly inconsequential actions can be seen to have drastic long-term results.

This is easily seen in creative endeavors of all kinds and especially in abstract painting. If the artist makes the slightest adjustment, alters one delicate line or shifts a color value it produces a chain reaction that transforms the entire work. Each shape, color, line, value and texture is related to the adjacent element, and more importantly, to the unified painting in a  nonlinear way.

The Butterfly Effect ---- 60" x 48" ---- Oil/Cold Wax on Canvas

The Butterfly Effect —- 60″ x 48″ —- Oil/Cold Wax on Canvas

Barranca IV ---- 48" x 48"---- Oil/ Cold wax on canvas

Barranca IV —- 48″ x 48″—- Oil/Cold wax on Canvas

Acrylic Abstracts shipped to Brown’s Fine Art

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Two new acrylic abstract paintings were recently shipped to Martha’s longtime gallery, Brown’s Fine Art in Jackson, MS.

A Stitch in Time----48" x 48"----Acrylic

A Stitch in Time—-48″ x 48″—-Acrylic

The theme of Time has been an ongoing concept inviting exploration by Martha Rea Baker for over two decades.

Dordogne----60" x 48"----Acrylic

Dordogne—-60″ x 48″—-Acrylic

Dordogne was inspired by Martha’s travels in the southwestern section of France last year. A village at the base of white limestone cliffs, river reflections below and chateaux perched on top are abstractly rendered.

Kerrville Acrylics Completed

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Martha Rea Baker has completed three of the paintings started during the 2015 Hill Country Arts Foundation retreat. These have been delivered to Karan Ruhlen Gallery on Canyon Road in Santa Fe, NM.

The finished pieces, inspired by Martha’s October travels to Spain, are posted below. A charming white village along the Costa del Sol and the vibrant colors and sounds of Malaga are abstractly rendered.

Pequeno Pueble Blanco----40" x 30"----Acrylic on Panel

Pequeno Pueblo Blanco—-40″ x 30″—-Acrylic on Panel

Colores de Malaga V----30" x 30"----Acrylic on Panel

Colores de Malaga V—-30″ x 30″—-Acrylic on Panel

Colores de Malaga VI----30"x 30"----Acrylic on Panel

Colores de Malaga VI—-30″x 30″—-Acrylic on Panel