Solo Gallery
Solo Gallery exhibits work by top artists from St. Louis and the Midwest. See the work of both established favorites and rising stars in the Solo Gallery at the St. Louis Artists' Guild.
Solo Gallery: Keyholder Artist-in-Residence
Solo exhibition of work by one of the St. Louis Artists' Guild's Fall 2012 Keyholder Artists-in-Residence.
Solo Gallery: Debbie Dirckx-Norris
Works on paper by Debbie Dirckx-Norris.
Solo Gallery: Photography Exhibition curated by Russ Rosener
A photography exhibition curated by Russ Rosener. More details TBA.
Art Journals
Mixed media art journals created by artists in the St. Louis Artists' Guild's Art Journaling classes taught by Kathleen Barnes.
Solo Gallery: Keyholder Artist-in-Residence
Solo exhibition of work created by one of the St. Louis Artists' Guild's Spring 2012 Keyholder Artists-in-Residence.
Solo Gallery: Heather Woodson
A St. Louis area native, Heather Woodson is a ceramic sculpture artist currently living and working in Wentzville, Missouri. Heather studied Ceramics at St. Charles Community College where she won several awards for her work at student exhibitions. In 2009, she received a Presidential Scholarship Award to Anderson Ranch Arts Center in Snowmass, Colorado. Heather has participated in many local and national art show and fairs, including the ‘Natiaonal Cup Show’ at Kent State University in Kent, Ohio. Currently her work can be found at Schon in Brentwood, MO, Mind Works Gallery in Chesterfield, MO and Soulard Art Market and Contemporary Gallery in St. Louis, MO.
Heather Woodson's website: http://www.heatherwoodson.webs.com/
Solo Gallery: The Austerity Plan
The St. Louis Artists' Guild's Solo Gallery presents The Austerity Plan, an exhibition of new work by Robert Goetz, our Fall 2011 Keyholder Artist-in-Residence (Printmaking).
Artist's Statement
The Austerity Plan takes its name from a song I penned in response to a small art review segment Jessica Baran wrote regarding a piece I have at the Sheldon. Two words from the write up, austerity and nostalgia, form the nucleus of the song. At first I found them to be a negative, but I do feel these words describe the work in a sense and have since changed my opinion about their face value. Nostalgia is the keeper of self worth and Austerity primes animal logic. From the song intrepretation of The Austerity Plan I began to cull images from my creative past.
My residency has been fruitful. I have moved through three bodies of work. The first and last are presented here. The beginning phase was about color and form. Color as a response to sound through the ideas of synaethesis. The forms come from the guitars I use to write songs. I needed a flat printing matrix to work through the ideas contained within synaesthesis (in plain English the color/sound relationship). Guitar "scratchplates" offered this along with the implication of song writing. Song writing is not all that different from building images.
In the final body of work, I am allowing the sound and image an equal place in creating an outcome. As I work through I can't help bt think these images and songs might co-author a larger project. The images have a still frame quality and even act as a screenplay, further implying a layering with their audio siblings as possible action sequences. The scences depicted in these etchings are in some part lifted from past work and relay an archive. Nostalgia is seeping in and austerity is contained within the rigid practice of etching.
I should thank Gina Alvarez for the opportunity to take a long look at my work through the print medium. Gina has been kind and generous with her thoughts on my progress. And she has shown that being a respected artist doesn't always mean that you are selfish. Doctor Michael Hunt has also poked his head into the studio and I will always foundly remember the idea of sharing ideas in sound. One of our discussions about synaesthesis or "color hearing" formed a huge impact on the work at the St. Louis Artists' Guild. Of I course I shouldn't leave out the incredibly friendly staff of the St. Louis Artists' Guild and the fellow artists that share the space.
— Robert Goetz

