Wednesday, October 13, 2010
The Westchester Craft Show
I will be showing my work at the Westchester Craft Show in White Plains, NY this Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, October 15,16, and 17. You can find more information and directions by clicking here. Come see me in Booth 27 (please check the show program in case there are booth assignment changes).
Here's a brief description from the show website: Celebrating its seventeenth anniversary, the Westchester Craft Show is a leader among juried contemporary American craft shows. The show offers its sophisticated New York and Connecticut audience a highly-selective showcase of exceptional work and the opportunity to meet the artists who come from all over the United States. The 115 outstanding artists will be presenting a rich diversity of craft: basketry, ceramics, glass, fiber decorative and wearable, furniture, jewelry, leather, metal, mixed media, and wood.
I'm looking forward to a great show. I hope to see you there!
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Artwalk Tonight!
My work will be featured at the JC Leacock Photography Gallery tonight during Artwalk. Come to the gallery at 327 Elk Avenue in Crested Butte between 5 and 8 for some refreshments and good conversation, and check out some cool furniture and photography.
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
New Work


Sunday, August 22, 2010
Hey, where is everybody?
Thursday, August 5, 2010
My Other Job
This weekend, in between the Crested Butte Arts Festival and the Telluride Festival of the Arts, I'll be working at my other job. Plenty of people have two jobs, but I don't know many who like their other job as much as I do. Mine is working for Alison White Photography, my wife's company. Not only do I get to work with my lovely wife, I get to figure out lighting problems and sometimes get behind a camera. I find photography to be a good counterpoint to furniture design and making...a creative cross pollination of sorts. Both deal with light in their own interesting ways- one using surfaces and textures to shape and direct light, and the other using light on an object or person to create or evoke a mood or feeling. I'm lucky to have the opportunity to work with Alison, who's work continually amazes me, and also to have a bunch of friends who are also really good photographers. You can see some of Alison's work here or here.
Thursday, July 22, 2010
Found Objects

Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Recycled Concrete part 1


Monday, May 10, 2010
Studio Sale at Spellbound Furniture Works Store!

Thursday, April 15, 2010
Greetings from St. Paul

I didn't get to walk around too much today, but the work I saw looked really good. You can browse the show by clicking here and selecting a category from the menu on the website. I'll be posting some updates during the show on my facebook page: facebook.com/twfurniture
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
So long, old friend.
Friday, February 26, 2010
Got my mojo workin'

Mojo table
MOJO n., pl., -jos, or -joes.
1.A magic charm or spell.
2.An amulet, often a small flannel bag containing one or more magic items, worn by adherents of hoodoo or voodoo.
3.Personal magnetism; charm
As Muddy Waters used to sing "I got my mojo workin'" As the Palm Beach Fine Craft Show quickly approaches, I'm workin' all the mojo I can come up with! Darrell Hofheinz of The Palm Beach Daily News wrote a story about me and my work, which ran today. You can see the online version by clicking here.
I'll be workin' my mojo in Palm Beach from March 5 through March 7 in booth 710. There's a preview event Thursday, March 4. See the website for ticket info.
Friday, February 5, 2010
Profile: Richard C. Harrington

A few days ago I had the chance to talk to the painter Richard C. Harrington about his work in general and about the new work in his show, “The Artifact of Landscape”, which opens this week at the Lockhart Gallery at SUNY Geneseo. I have known Rick for about 20 years, and in addition to sharing many great times with him, I’ve had the pleasure of watching him evolve from a good painter to a great painter. Yeah, I know, “great” is a big word that gets thrown around a bit too freely sometimes, but in this case it is absolutely appropriate.
A painter for the past 31 years, Rick’s work has evolved over time from representational work to something more abstract that, for him, digs deeper into the answer to the question “why paint?” Early on in his career, while supporting himself working as an art director and designer at an ad agency and then later as an illustrator, Rick was spending a lot of time painting. He studied portraiture with Peter Berg of Rochester, NY, and honed his skills making plein air paintings. Rick was influenced early on by the work of Winslow Homer and John Singer Sargent, particularly their brush strokes which combined precision and flourish. Always drawn to the outdoors, he naturally gravitated to painting landscapes.
About 10 years ago, Rick received a grant to paddle the Genesee River from Pennsylvania to Lake Ontario and produce a sketchbook of the trip. It proved to be a pivotal trip for the direction his painting would take. Although the paddling part of the trip was great, the sketchbook brought him to the realization that he didn’t really care about what he was doing. The sketchbook had become “…something destined for a drawer somewhere, not to be seen until my kids settled my estate… so what?” Why paint?
To help him find the answer, Rick turned to two things that always helped clear his head: reading and the outdoors. Reexamining the work of authors Barry Lopez, Richard Nielson and Hugh Brody and spending plenty of time out in nature led him to the belief that ”we hold remnants of landscape in our minds as a way of navigating our world pre-map, compass, and gps.” This prompted an exploration of our primitive connection to the land through a contemporary mindset, in a society increasingly removed from nature.
Some of my favorite work resulting from this exploration is a series of non-representational barn paintings, including this one, ”old woman’s barn”. As Rick says, “the memories of simple forms and shapes in the land orient us, locate us in place.” By blending the influence of Mark Rothko in seeking an emotional response to color and form with the iconic image of a barn, Rick has created a monument to people who do physical work, and an homage to his ancestors who were (and are) ranchers in Oregon and Washington. Even without knowing this, it is impossible to look past this painting and others in the series. They draw you in and keep you there for a while.
Rick’s latest body of work, “The Artifact of Landscape”, continues the exploration. He posits that “When you are out in nature, assuming you are physically comfortable, you are peaceful. Its ability to provide a mechanism for stepping back from the stresses that our society manufactures for us to a place of peace is the value of nature in the modern world, and we need to keep some of it intact” To that end, Rick’s new work seeks to bring nature indoors to reengage those who’ve become disconnected. These large canvases- 4’ x 5’ and larger, sometimes combined as diptychs and triptychs- are somewhat representational from a distance, but up close reveal an abstract impressionistic surface texture (think Franz Kline and Jackson Pollock). They are often combined with a shadow box/ curio cabinet containing found objects, photographs and sketches.

These items along with the scale of the work and the bold, aggressive surface texture are meant to evoke the feeling of being in the place and give a sense of its inhabitants, to feel “not just the wind in your face, but the breeze between your fingers”
Friday, January 22, 2010
Showtime!



