EXHIBITIONS
DOZIER BELL
Genius loci
August 10th - September 15th, 2024
Sarah Bouchard Gallery is honored to present Dozier Bell’s second solo exhibition with the gallery. Genius loci features new work created over the past three years, inspired primarily by three stays on Monhegan.
This exhibit embodies a reckoning with the unseen forces that shape and transform our lives.
EXHIBITION IMAGES
ARTIST STATEMENT
“For the truths that the intelligence grasps directly and openly in the full-lighted world are somehow less profound, less indispensable than those which life has communicated to us without our knowledge through the form of impressions, material because they have come to us through our senses, but the inner meaning of which we can discern.”
~ Proust
The work in this show was done during a time of transitions. From my first stay on Monhegan in 2019, to the Covid years, to moving house last year on the basis of an intuitive prompting that couldn’t be quieted, I have become increasingly aware of the strength and tenacity of the forces that shape our lives behind scenes in which we believe we are the active agents.
Much of the work here documents three stays on Monhegan. The stillness and the quality of light made such deep impressions on me the first time, in particular, that I have continued to work from some of those initial images. Manana, twilight, done from a small watercolor and a slightly larger oil study, is one of them.
Other pieces - Settlement; Cloudburst; April; Equinox moon - are extrapolations of impressions that were felt as much as seen. Still others are scenes from everyday life that have become interiorized: Pines near the river; Wheeling, cloud cover; Winter window; Bowman Island.
Vernal pool was the first painting to be done in the new home and studio, where high water in early spring created an endlessly mysterious play of moonlight in trapped pools of water on the banks of the river below. As I worked on it, the demands of the past few years’ transitions fell into perspective as necessary changes in the service of the genius loci, the very particular spirit of place that neither explains nor justifies itself.
- Dozier Bell, 2024
PRESS
Smaller shows at a trio of Maine galleries help usher in autumn
By Jorge Arango
September 1st, 2024
Portland Press Herald
“Bell is after a lot more than just photographic verisimilitude. She is an artist acutely interested in the dying of the light, and the many effects created in that liminal hour between day and night, when details become difficult to discern and contours blur and dissolve into darkness and shadow. The dexterity with which she portrays the physical qualities of the gloaming are breathtaking. Yet the reason they pack such a visceral punch is because what she gets right, beyond these objective elements, is the actual emotional affect of this hour.
The sense of a cycle ending, along with its attendant melancholy, is here. The wooziness we experience as we try to continue focusing on particulars even as we are defeated by the tenebrous light is here. The sense of the sky’s weight above us, the fuzzy glow of a moon behind mist, the silence that falls as birds cease their chirping and cooing, the awakening of night peepers and crickets … it’s all here. Just look at “Vernal Pool,” an acrylic on linen, and try to dispel any of the sensations mentioned above.”
- Jorge Arango, 2024
DOZIER BELL. Vernal pool. 40” x 32”. Acrylic on linen. 2024.
PHOTO CREDIT: David Clough
On Saturday, May 21st, Sarah Bouchard Gallery opened the first solo exhibition by Dozier Bell in Maine since 2016. Bell is a seventh generation Maine native who studied with Neil Welliver at the University of Pennsylvania MFA program and at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture.
Bell is one of the most masterful artists working in Maine today. Her fusion of the real and imagined reveals how a deeply engaged artist sees and feels the land, water and sky. Bell’s landscapes only occasionally depict a real place and consistently demand inward exploration. Her works rely heavily on the interplay of dark and light. They command attention. And space.
Since her first solo show in 1987, Bell has appeared in thirty solo and two-person exhibits in New York City and across the country. She is the recipient of numerous awards, including an American Academy of Arts and Letters Purchase Prize, a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, a Fulbright Fellowship as artist-in-residence at the Bauhaus University in Weimar, Germany; two Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grants, and the Adolf and Esther Gottlieb Foundation Grant. Residencies include the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, the Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Center, and the MacDowell Colony, among others. Her work is included in a number of museum and corporate collections.
EXHIBITION IMAGES
DOZIER BELL
May 21st - June 26th, 2022
ARTIST STATEMENT
When I began painting forty-five years ago, I was drawn to the restrained spirituality of northern European painters of the Reformation era - Memling, Holbein, van der Weyden - as it was expressed in the balance of light and dark, the real and the fantastic, and a religiosity that neither amplified nor questioned itself. The world of rural Maine in which I grew up could hardly have been more removed in time and culture, and yet as I began to paint the landscape, the ethos conveyed by those early painters found an echo in the mute sanctity of the natural world.
I value the filtering function of memory. When I work from it (as I usually do), aspects of a scene that were incidental fall away, while some that were deeply sensed but not seen have an opportunity to manifest themselves in the painted image. “Participating consciousness,” said cultural historian Morris Berman, “involves merger, or identification, with one's surroundings, and bespeaks a psychic wholeness that has long since passed from the scene.” Holding the image of a place in memory, allowing it to gather to itself everything in my own consciousness with which it resonates, feels like a form of what Berman describes. It removes the illusion of separateness that is such a prominent feature of contemporary life.
Another concept that has long engaged me is expressed in the German term Heimsuchung, which has no precise equivalent in English. Its original meaning of visitation by God, of God knowing exactly where one is at every moment of one’s life, gradually gave way to its use as a term for the visitation of disasters such as plague, famine and war; and yet the term still encompasses these two extremes: everyday union with the divine, and the devastation and annihilation of the physical self and/or its environment. Between these two poles is implied an omniscient being, such as the God described by the Psalmist of the 139th Psalm: one who discerns our thoughts from afar, in whose book "were written all the days that were formed for us, when none of them as yet existed," and to whom "darkness is as light."
My original impetus to paint remains essentially unchanged - to create, from the images in my own life, an armature for the numinous as I have experienced it.
DOZIER BELL
9 May 2022
PRESS
Art Review: Dozier Bell exhibit makes for a mystical experience
By Jorge S. Arango
June 5th, 2022
Portland Press Herald