Monday, December 22, 2025

CHRISTMAS 2025

 

CHRISTMAS 2025 - painting by Tom Wachunas


John 1:14




 

Christmas Greetings to all of you!

BE BLESSED!

 

The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us.

We have seen his glory,

The glory of the One and Only,

who came from the Father,

full of grace and truth.

 

JOHN 1:14

Thursday, December 18, 2025

The Stunning Legacy of Her Extraordinary Odyssey

 

The Stunning Legacy of Her Extraordinary Odyssey 


People in My Family (1999)



The Windmills of My Mind (2024)



The School of Art (2018)



In Search of Aliens (2024)


Sailor (2012)

 


The Blue T-Square (2015)


Naughty but Nice (2022)

 


Directions to My House #2 (2022)


Do You not Know I am Woman (1999)

By Tom Wachunas

"The act of drawing is intrinsic to all visual art disciplines, and to  express oneself through the basic mediums of paper and pencil or paint and canvas is to penetrate an interior, subconscious  existence - one that is uncharted, yet rich in creative discovery."   - Patricia Zinsmeister Parker

“… Tapping into the “subconscious’’ (which using my untrained hand facilitates) allows me to make work that relies on intuition, a mixture of art-historical and non-art resources in order to create funny, sometimes irreverent yet moving imagery.” - Patricia Zinsmeister Parker

“I began to draw with my untrained left hand. What prompted this departure was a boredom with rendering objects realistically and a subconscious need to find a means of expression outside of formal artistic constraints.”  - Patricia Zinsmeister Parker

EXHIBIT: Left-Handed Compliment – Celebrating The Life and Work of Beloved Artist Patricia Zinsmeister Parker / at Strauss Studios Gallery/ 236 Walnut Avenue NE, downtown Canton, Ohio / SEPTEMBER 13- DECEMBER 20, 2025 / viewing hours Wed.-Fri. 11-6, Sat 12-5,

 CLOSING RECEPTION ON SATURDAY DECEMBER 20, 5 – 9pm.

 

https://www.pzparker.net/

From Strauss Studios: “Join us at Strauss Studios for the closing reception of Left-Handed Compliment, the first solo exhibition of Patricia Zinsmeister Parker’s work since her passing in 2024. This show features an extensive collection of her paintings, ranging from her early works of the 1970s to her final completed pieces in 2024. In addition to the artwork, guests can explore a visual timeline highlighting key milestones in her artistic journey. The exhibition’s title is inspired by the transformative period when Patricia began painting with her left, non-dominant hand—an unexpected shift that led her to the distinctive style for which she became known.”

 

   Here’s an 11th-hour THANK YOU to John Strauss for the very important gift of his collaboration with the family of the late Patricia Zinsmeister Parker in gathering and  offering this astonishingly comprehensive exhibit of 36 works dating from the 1970s through some final pieces from 2024.

    Equal parts dream weaver and reality shaper, my friend Pat Parker was a vivacious deconstructor in articulating the familiar juxtaposed with the enigmatic. Insightful and inciteful, her uniquely refined unrefinement could unsettle your aesthetic comfort zones.  She was a thoroughly prolific and compelling artist, often investing her paintings with the unfettered energy of that proverbial kid who refuses to color inside the lines. A Parker painting was always potent evidence of her inexhaustible exuberance at uninhibited mark-making. She was seriously engaged with mindful play, making art that could wag a sassy finger in your face and rattle your sense of “finished” aesthetic decorum.   

     There be ghosts in a Parker picture. Some shout and laugh. Some whisper. Some sing and dance. Here are actions, moods, remnants, echoes. Attitudes. Essences. Riddles and rumbles, chortles and challenges, shaking shapes and loose lines lurking amidst clusters of colors both muted and wildly electric. A brush with memory. Life that’s anything but still. Unencumbered by laborious renderings of merely prosaic illusions, Parker painted a larger, deeper reality. Hers was a gripping and intrepid personal odyssey into unmitigated looking. And seeing.

  In that spirit, come to the closing reception. Look long enough at these confluences of the mundane and mysterious, these visceral joinings of memories past to moments wholly new and forever present. Look long enough. And see, please. Feel the push-pull - indeed the ineffable poetry - of purely painted possibility.

Friday, October 24, 2025

Repsycheled Combobulations

 

  Repsycheled Combobulations 


Bullseye: The Arms Race, by Lou Camerato


Plain Sailing Weather, by Gwen Waight


Circus Pony, by Susan Kurtz


Meristem 4, by Jonah Jacobs


Strombus 3, by Jonah Jacobs


Bigger Boat, by Gwen Waight

By Tom Wachunas

“The object of art is not to reproduce reality, but to produce a reality of the same intensity.”  - Alberto Giacometti

“Can works be made which are not 'of art'?”  - Marcel Duchamp

“Found objects, chance creations, ready-mades (mass-produced items promoted into art objects…) abolish the separation between art and life. The commonplace is miraculous if rightly seen.” – Charles Simic

“"Look at everything as though you are seeing it for the first time, with eyes of a child, fresh with wonder." -Joseph Cornell

 EXHIBIT: REPURPOSED, at Malone Art Gallery, 2600 Cleveland Ave. NW. on the Malone University campus, 2nd floor of Johnson Center/ featured artists: Lou Camerato, Jonah Jacobs, Susan Kurtz, Gwen Waight

 From Malone Gallery exhibit curator, Kat Francis Keomany: “REPURPOSED  showcases a blend of two-dimensional and three-dimensional artworks, delving into the creative possibilities that arise from discarded items. This exhibition revitalizes forgotten objects and overlooked materials, transforming them into something extraordinary.”

    Word nerd here, chronically waylated in saying THANK YOU, both to local artist Kat Francis Keomany for her important work as curator of Malone University Gallery, and to the remarkable artists she consistently brings to our attention. The exhibits there have been, and continue to be, a dynamic enrichment of Canton’s art gallery milieu. And that would certainly include the recently ended exhibit, REPURPOSED. It was a thoughtful and tantalizing show of what I’ll very loosely call portmanteaux. (Just so you know, portmanteau (pȯrt-ˈman-(ˌ)tō) - a word or part of a word made by combining the spellings and meanings of two or more other words or word parts (such as smog from smoke and fog); a collection of variable aspects packed together (as in a suitcase), combining more than one element, use, or quality; or, an unlikely composite.)

    So simple, so complex, how art can both tease and perplex. Sometimes with mere knick-knacks, trinkets, toys or bric-a-bracs. Thoughtful and tantalizing, this particular exhibit was a genuine seriosity of curiosities – symbolicons, if you will -  all of which thoroughly revitalized my own appreciation of so-called found object assemblage art (a practice, btw, I often engage in my own work).

   Here was a zany miscellany of physical ingredients and nostalgic mementos. Where the commonplace acquired new breathing space. Where personal reflections invited deeper inspections. Art is where the oft-understated can get well-reinflated. Where memories and material things, maybe once lost or tossed, can be found and rebound, juxtaposed to justsuppose. Resurrections and reconnections. What the heck, hunt and peck. Guard the discarded. The artists in this show opened their suitcases to more than simply tarry in the ordinary. Their transmutations of everyday fluff made for some truly fascinating stuff.

Friday, September 26, 2025

Navigating Vicissitudes: Memento Omnia Mutari

 

 Navigating Vicissitudes: Memento Omnia Mutari 



Shall I Grow No More Than I Am Bound


One Song Among Us All


Soar The Bridges That I Burnt Before (detail)



Soar The Bridges That I Burnt Before


I've Lived A Life For Wealth To Bring


(l to r) And Here I Lay/ Born On The April Tide/ 
I've Lived A Life For Wealth To Bring


(left) Glowing In The Wonder / Immerse In That One Moment


By Tom Wachunas

“…The raw materials used in these artworks all have direct physical connections to the changes and loss that I have experienced. They come from the process of collection and curation: sticks and bones gathered from the property around my old home, flowers given out of grief, feathers given out of love, photos taken during long reflective walks from times with those no longer here. These are the raw materials of the heart of this artwork. Artwork that at once is about control and lack of control. Holding on and letting go. Remember everything changes…” – excerpt from the artist statement by Greg Martin

   “…And the dangling conversation, And the superficial sighs, Are the borders of our lives…”  lyrics from Paul Simon’s “Dangling Conversation”

Vicissitude -  the quality or state of being changeable / mutability / natural change or mutation visible in nature or in human affairs / a favorable or unfavorable event or situation that occurs by chance : a fluctuation of state or condition /a difficulty or hardship attendant on a way of life, a career, or a course of action and usually beyond one's control

 

EXHIBIT: Memento Moriwork by Greg Martin/ at Massillon Museum Studio M / 121 Lincoln Way East in downtown Massillon, Ohio / ON VIEW THROUGH SEPTEMBER 28, 2025 /330.833.4061 / viewing hours: Tuesday through Saturday 9:30am - 5:00pm and Sunday 2:00pm - 5:00pm

https://www.massillonmuseum.org/

MassMusings podcast with Greg Martin:   https://www.massillonmuseum.org/home/programs/massmusings-musem-podcast

 

   In his artist statement, Cleveland-based Greg Martin tells us that a literal translation of the Latin phrase, memento mori – the name given to this exhibit - is, “remember you must die.”  Historically, the words have been applied to a genre of art that has been practiced across many centuries and  cultures: iconography symbolizing the transitory nature of being alive. Human mortality. Art about the inevitable arrival of our ultimate departure. OK, death.

   But wait. There’s more. Martin also tells us that his own artful mementos represent a deeper dive into the genre. Latin geek that I am from a lifetime ago, I imagined an alternative title for this profoundly arresting mixed media gallery installation: Memento Omnia Mutari. “Remember everything changes,” as the artist re-minds us.

    Looking at the material manifestations of Martin’s intriguing ideations, my sense of the sacrosanct was awakened. Here I was, in a chamber of reliquaries. Yet it certainly wasn’t a dreadful experience of histrionic morbidity or absolute finality. Martin’s assemblages are exquisitely crafted metaphors of – and dangling conversations with – existential vicissitudes. Solemn meditations on the fleeting conditions and circumstances of being alive.

    So death, per se, certainly isn’t the whole story being told in Martin’s objects. Even their titles articulate a narrative spirit, infused with poetic lyricism. I imagined chanting some of those titles, stringing them together as if they were lines in a song.

And here I lay. Born on the April tide. I’ve lived a life for wealth to bring. Glowing in the wonder. Immerse in that one moment. Soar the bridges that I burnt before. Forget our fate. Shall I grow no more than I am bound. One song among us all.

   One song among us all indeed. An eloquent confession of life’s evanescence.

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Destination Dynamic, Group Galvanic

 

Destination Dynamic, Group Galvanic 


A.I. Brainbleed, by Tom Wachunas


Phoenix (l), Harmony (r), by Phoenix Keane


Travel, by Sherri Hornbrook


Why (l), Because (r), by Samuel Gentile


Don't Move, by Jessica Morton


I Keep Changing (l), Maybe I'm Changing, by
Stephanie Piscitello

 


Over and Over, by Stephen Tornero


Junctures, by Jeff Leadbetter


But Now It's Done, by Aaron Foster

By Tom Wachunas

EXHIBIT: Annual Kent- Stark Art Alumni Exhibition, at the William J. & Pearl F. Lemmon Visiting Artist Gallery, located in the Fine Arts building, Kent State University Stark Campus – 6000 Frank Avenue NW, North Canton, Ohio / through October 10, 2025/ viewing hours Monday-Thursday 8a.m. to 6p.m., Fridays 8a.m. to 3p.m

   Heads up! This gathering of 37 works from 22 artists – either former Kent Stark art class students, or current or former Stark art department faculty members (regardless of discipline) – is certainly one of the most exciting local group shows I’ve seen this year.

   Here’s a veritable contemporary wellspring of remarkably diverse content, styles, skills and materials: painting, drawing, printmaking, digital, stoneware, mixed media assemblage.

    OK yeah, I’m in it too. Don’t let that stop you. Just know I’m genuinely grateful for the invitation to join such impressive art makers as these. So if you’re looking for really good reasons to come and look at this immersive treasure of an exhibit, I’ll give you 22: Emily Bartolone, Phillip Buntin, Noah DiRuzza, Faith Emerson, Andrew Foradas, Aaron Foster, Samuel Gentile, Bill Govan, Sheri Hornbrook, Christine Janson, Phoenix Keane, Erin Kelly, Eleanor Dillon Kuder, Jeff Leadbetter, Mary Mazzer, Maria McDonald, Jessica Morton, Julianne Nipple, Stephanie Piscitello, Stephen Tornero, Tom Wachunas, David Whiteman.

   Happy hunting.

Thursday, August 28, 2025

Talking Tin and other Rustbelt Ruminations

 

Talking Tin and other Rustbelt Ruminations 

Tilted House


The Laughing West Virginian

Produce Man



Just Smile


Dog Faced Man


Man in Yellow


Mill


By Tom Wachunas

“Found objects, chance creations, ready-mades… abolish the separation between art and life. The commonplace is miraculous if rightly seen.”  - Charles Simic

“Every normal human being (and not merely the 'artist') has an inexhaustible store of buried images in his subconscious, it is merely a matter of courage or liberating procedures ... of voyages into the unconscious, to bring pure and unadulterated found objects to light.”  - Max Ernst

“It’s not where you take things from—it’s where you take them to.”— Jean-Luc Godard

 And this, from artist  Robert Villamagna: “I am very passionate about working with found materials, especially those items that show use, wear, and rust. I love stuff with character…I’m giving that discarded piece of metal, or that old object, a new life, a different life…For me, walking through a flea market is like walking through a well-stocked art materials store. The flea market is my palette.

 

EXHIBIT: Mixed-media assemblages, found objects/metal collages by Robert Villamagna, at THE GALLERY SPACEon view to August 30, 2025 / curated by Priscilla Roggenkamp / located in two retail spaces, NEST (open Mon.- Sat. 10-6 and Sun. 11-4) and FRANCIS JEWELERS (open Mon.-Fri. 9-5), in ‘The Market Place’ shopping center, 1800 West State Street, ALLIANCE, Ohio

https://robertvillamagna.com/

 

   And here’s yet another sniveling apology for a late art report from this  wandering wordnerd. Anyway, first order of business: a laudacious THANK YOU to the highly accomplished textile artist and musician, Priscilla Roggenkamp, for curating a new art exhibit venue called The Gallery Space, located in Alliance.

   Featured in this soon to be concluded exhibit is the prolific mixed media artist, Robert Villamagna, who grew up in the Ohio River rustbelt. The  artworks that he creates in his West Virginia studio are delightfully vibrant constructions utilizing, among other elements, repurposed lithographed metals (‘tins’), found objects, and vintage photographs.

   His “stuff with character” exudes a distinctly narrative spirit in the form of collaged emblems, labels, logos and insignias, often accompanied by symbolic faces and caricatures that seem to pop out of printed texts. Villamagna’s mementos are much more than random juxtapositions of flea market flotsam or found vintage junk. These souvenirs are truly scintillating and otherwise intriguing evocations of bygone blue collar days in the rustbelt, before it became… well, too rusty to remember.

   Next up at The Gallery Space: Paintings by Christopher Triner, with opening reception on Thursday, September 4, 5 – 7pm.

Thursday, August 14, 2025

Shall We Continue?

 

 Shall We Continue? 

We're Finally Landing


Mother Tree



I Go to See the Place Once More


Interloper


Torchlight

By Tom Wachunas  

Contemplation is at once the existential appreciation of our own ‘nothingness’ and of the divine reality, perceived by ineffable spiritual contact within the depths of our own being.” – Thomas Merton

We leave something of ourselves behind when we leave a place, we stay there, even though we go away. And there are things in us that we can find again only by going back there.” – Pascal Mercier

EXHIBIT: Both Sides of the Brain – Paintings by Kit Palencar, at Strauss Studios Gallery/ 236 Walnut Avenue NE, downtown Canton, Ohio / THROUGH AUGUST 23, 2025 / viewing hours Wed.-Fri. 11-6, Sat 12-5, CLOSING RECEPTION ON AUGUST 23, 5 – 9pm

 

https://artwach.blogspot.com/2025/02/life-at-corner-of-now-and-not-yet.html

   He’s baaack…For the second time this year, Canton viewers can embrace the art of Kit Palencar. In February, I saw his marvelous solo exhibit at Canton Museum of Art (CMA). You can click on the above hyperlink in case you want to read my thoughts about that experience. While this collection at Straus Studios Gallery does include several pieces from the CMA exhibit, the majority are other and newer works, though certainly no less compelling infatuating. What I wrote in February remains apropos here: Palencar’s paintings are profoundly soul-probing visions.  Constituting an eloquent object lesson in contemplation, they are poignant, mystifying and illuminating all at once.

   Contemplating what? Palencar tells us, "The left and right sides of the brain—often accepted as separate domains—merge in these works to form a unified, complex narrative about our existence and inevitable mortality…I encourage viewers to confront the tension of our human nature against the scientific definitions of what nature is. Nature does not resist its cycles… Through these paintings and drawings, I aim to question how we, as conscious beings, engage with our own impermanence. Can the cerebral and the organic find harmony? This exhibition invites viewers to witness that tension, and perhaps, to feel at home in it."

    There’s a painting in this exhibit which reminds me of doing what I do with much of my time, why I do it, and where I often do it. The painting is titled, interestingly enough, I Go To See the Place Once More.

    And so I’m baaack, in an art gallery. Seeing once more. I’m riveted by that guy immersed in an eerie glow of greenish light looking at what might be a smart screen (or a smart SCREAM?). With his mouth slightly agape, he appears gripped, surprised. Maybe even a bit alarmed. Might this be an OMG moment? A reveille? Is it a call to tension, or simply whole-minded attention?   

     Palencar’s paintings ask us to think about thinking by bridging the gap between our cerebral hemispheres. A marriage of left to right, as it were. The left hemisphere of my brain, where logic and reason supposedly reign supreme, accepts that the artist is embracing the inevitability of natural life’s impermanence. Mortality. Ok, death. However, that ever-present interloper - the right hemisphere of my brain - breaks in and incites an emotional dialogue with all sorts of suggestions and questions, including a memory of God’s somber words to Adam in Genesis 3:19 (which Palencar cites in his statement), “…for dust you are and to dust you will return.” If that’s all there is to our story, such a promise could conceivably create an inconsolable existential angst. Tension, to be sure.

   Yet as long as we’re on the subject of conversing with God about nature and death, what do we think about these words (from Romans 8:22-23)? “We know that the whole creation has been groaning, as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time. Not only so, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies.”

   Another promise, another truth. For relief, for release. Can we think of death, then, as not a meaningless dreadful end, but a necessary portal to glorious eternal life? From dust to divine destiny. It’s…inevitable. And with that, I feel perfectly at home.

   Thank you again, Kit Palencar. Your art is an exquisitely epiphanic conversation starter.