Heidi McGurrin: Paintings Exhibition

Heidi McGurrin: Paintings Exhibition

We are thrilled to present a new exhibition of striking abstract paintings by local artist, poet, and photographer Heidi McGurrin. With a lifelong curiosity and an adventurous spirit, McGurrin’s work dives into themes of indigenous beauty, social injustice, and the profound connection between nature and human emotion. Her art reflects a life richly lived, shaped by her travels through Cuba, Haiti, Brazil, and the Incan lands of Peru, as well as her deep ties to the landscapes and culture of California.

McGurrin’s journey as an artist began in a world of vivid, wild imaginings, and she began sharing her inner landscapes with the public through poetry in 2017. Today, her visual work stands alongside her literary endeavors, offering viewers an immersive experience that blends abstraction with deeply personal reflection. Her pieces evoke the colors, textures, and rhythms of the natural world and indigenous cultures she so reveres, and they call us to look more deeply into our own stories and connections.

This exhibition invites you into McGurrin’s world—a space where poetry and paint flow together, where the spirit of the earth and the whispers of history are palpable in each brushstroke. With works that are at once energetic and contemplative, McGurrin encourages us to pause, reflect, and embrace the beauty of imperfection, the wildness of creation, and the endless potential of the imagination.

Please join us in celebrating this remarkable collection of abstract works as thoughtful and poetic as the artist herself.

Watch her interview for Big Sur Stories.

The Eloquent Suri of Ethiopia: People, Art, Culture, and LanguageMark Overgaard, Image Maker

The Eloquent Suri of Ethiopia: People, Art, Culture, and LanguageMark Overgaard, Image Maker

The Eloquent Suri of Ethiopia: People, Art, Culture, and Language
Mark Overgaard, Image Maker

Welcome to the Atrium Gallery, where we are honored to present an extraordinary exhibition transcending mere photography. We are proud to offer captivating portraits of the Suri people, captured through the lens of the acclaimed photographer, Mark Overgaard.

This collection is a profound exploration of not just visual aesthetics, but of the essence of humanity, culture, and tradition. Nestled in the remote corners of Ethiopia, the Suri people have long fascinated anthropologists, historians, and artists alike with their rich cultural tapestry, their unwavering pride, and their vibrant traditions.

Through the masterful craftsmanship of Mark Overgaard’s lens, we are transported into the heart of Suri life. Each portrait is a testament to the resilience and beauty of a people deeply rooted in their ancestral heritage. With meticulous attention to detail, Overgaard captures not only the intricate patterns adorning their faces but also the raw emotions and untold stories hidden within their eyes.

This exhibition is more than just a visual feast. It is a celebration of diversity and preservation of language, culture, and customs at risk of being lost in the tide of modernity. For the Suri people, painting their faces is not just a form of adornment but a language of expression that speaks volumes about their identity, their beliefs, and their place in the world.

As you wander through the gallery, allow yourself to be immersed in the richness of Suri culture. Let each portrait serve as a portal, a window into a world that is at once ancient and timeless. And as you marvel at the intricate patterns, the vibrant colors, and the soul-stirring gazes, remember that behind each image lies a story waiting to be told, a story of resilience, pride, and the enduring spirit of humanity.

We invite you to embark on this journey of discovery, as we pay homage to the indomitable spirit of the Suri people and the visionary artistry of Mark Overgaard. Enjoy the exhibition, and may it inspire you to see the world with fresh eyes and an open heart.

The exhibition is currently on display at the Atrium Gallery at the McCone Building, 499 Pierce Street, Monterey, CA for the fall/2023 and spring/2024 (Oct 8, 2023 – August 16, 2024)

Growing up in Southeast Asia within missionary communities, I was infused with reverence and with empathy for cultures and communities not my own. Born in Thailand, I spoke Thai before English. By the time I graduated from high school, I had attended fifteen different schools in five countries.
Over the past decade or so, I have resumed traveling the world, including visits in 2019 and 2021 to remote areas in southern Ethiopia’s lower Omo Valley. Through those visits and intensive remote study since 2020, I developed a deep respect – even awe – for the small, but proud, Suri ethnic group and their eloquent adornments based on local natural materials. With these portraits, I celebrate the beauty and strength of these people and affirm our shared humanity.
The Suri paint their bodies in intricate patterns, using natural pigments ground from local rocks and mixed with water. Clay or wooden earlobe discs and lip plates extend the Suri body canvas. Carefully sculpted scar patterns are another popular adornment for Suri people. Beyond providing opportunities for play and creativity, this body art fulfills other social functions, such as attracting a partner. Body painting with clay, chalk, ochre, or ash can even have medicinal or protective benefits. These longstanding traditions, still practiced with whimsy and freedom, are an integral part of Suri life.
Suri parents name their children with a word or phrase triggered by the circumstances at or soon after birth. These name choices can provide fascinating glimpses into the local culture. The names usually begin with a special prefix: “Nga…” for girls, “Bar…” for boys.

Setting the Scene

The lower Omo Valley of Ethiopia hosts a vibrant cultural tapestry, including numerous small ethnic groups with a wide range of languages and traditions. Suri territory is west of the Omo River and spans the Kibish River in the east.
The valley’s prehistory is rich, earning its designation as a World Heritage Site. Fossils found at the Omo I and II sites on each bank of the river have been dated to about 195,000 years ago and are the earliest known evidence world-wide of our Homo sapiens species.
Historically, the Omo Valley and its inhabitants were largely self-sufficient and isolated from the rest of the country and the world. In recent decades, however, the Ethiopian central government has increased its presence in the area, including by promoting development measures, like internationally owned industrial-scale plantations along the river and a major dam. The Gibe III dam, when fully commissioned, will be the third largest hydroelectric plant in Africa. The Gibe IV dam is under construction downstream, with Gibe V planned, as well. The Gibe dams and the intensively irrigated plantations are substantially impacting the lives of lower valley ethnic groups.
The eastern side of the Omo Valley has a longer history of accessibility resulting in outside visitors and influence. One of the most visible ethnic groups there, the Mursi, has much in common with the Suri, both in language and traditions. The Kara and Hamar ethnic groups, further south, share language and cultural heritages. The Kara, however, are a much smaller group than the others. Also, their livestock emphasis is almost entirely on sheep and goats, versus cattle.

The Kibish and the Future

The small Kibish River is a critical water source for nearby Suri. On the right bank at this point is a massive stone pier for a future bridge over the river. So far, there is no corresponding pier on the left bank and no comparably sized connecting road on either side of the river.
But this pier is a harbinger of coming development encroachment challenges for the Suri people in this area. Ngamɔri, the Suri youngster crouched on top of the pier, will likely experience those challenges in her lifetime. Kibish, Ethiopia, 2019.

The exhibition is currently on display at the Atrium Gallery at the McCone Building, 499 Pierce Street, Monterey, CA for the fall/2023 and spring/2024 (Oct 8, 2023 – Aug 16, 2024).

For more of Mark Overgaard’s photography, visit the Cultural Portraits and About the Project on his website.

CELEBRATING WOMEN ARTISTS WITH SALON JANE

CELEBRATING WOMEN ARTISTS WITH SALON JANE

The Middlebury Institute celebrated 2020 Women’s Day with a photography exhibition showcasing the work of Salon Jane, an artist collective of six women photographers—Martha Casanave (MIIS alumna), Susan Hyde Greene, Jane Olin, Anna Rheim, Robin V. Robinson, and Robin Ward—who all work outside the traditional sense of straight photography, experimenting and expanding their creativity with the support and honest feedback of the rest of the group. The Institute held a reception on March 6, 2020 between 5:30 and 7:30 pm at the prestigious McCone Atrium Gallery.


CULTURES IN TRANSITION — Oliver Klink

CULTURES IN TRANSITION — Oliver Klink
McCone Atrium Gallery

Cultures in Transition explores the changes that people go through, the subtleties that make their life evolve, their spiritual guiding light. As a boy in Switzerland, Klink had dreams of becoming an explorer, to follow his deep curiosity and hunger to understand what makes people who they are. In 2001, he made his first trip to China with his wife and in-laws, who had left their country in the 1970s.

Their stories were riveting and became the catalyst for Klink 30 trips in the next 15 years to five Asian Countries (Bhutan, China, India, Mongolia, Myanmar). He photographed environmental portraits of the continuity between family, work, and spirituality. There was no separation, but peoples’ concerns about how ‘progress’ can create disconnection and alienation between themselves and their communities became more evident. This fluidity of life is at the core of Cultures in Transition.

EXPLORATIONS ALONG AN IMAGINARY COASTLINE — Martha Casanave

EXPLORATIONS ALONG AN IMAGINARY COASTLINE — Martha Casanave

Samson Reading Room
Martha Casanave and Jack F. Matlock Jr., former US ambassador to the Soviet Union
Martha Casanave and Jack F. Matlock Jr., former US ambassador to the Soviet Union

I was required to memorize Mikhail Lermontov’s “The Sail” (1832) in my first Russian class when I was still a teenager. I never forgot the poem, but it took many years to re-surface visually, in my photography.

Loosely translated, the poem says: “A lonely sail whitens in the deep ocean fog. What is [he] looking for in a faraway country? What did he abandon in his homeland?” Further on, the poem says: “And he, rebellious, seeks out storms as if in storms there is peace.”

I photographed only on cloudy, windy and stormy days. The other-worldly effect provided by the pinhole results from the wide-angle distortion, the fuzziness from lack of lens, the “crab’s eye” vantage point, the near-infinite depth of field, and the long-time exposures necessitated by the tiny aperture. Pinhole photography is slow, silent and meditative. No “shooting” for pinhole photographers! No, we uncover the aperture and allow the light to accumulate. We don’t use viewfinder, batteries, or shutter. A box with a tiny hole: a simpler, more primitive picture-making apparatus doesn’t exist.

I have never been particularly drawn to landscape photography, but the pinhole camera, with its short focal length and placement directly on rocks or the ground, doesn’t produce anything like a “natural scene.” I allowed myself to move things around: seaweed, shells, rocks, etc. and brought props of my own. Then I introduced the 19th-century man, a mysterious and restless figure who came from Lermontov’s poem and gave the work the narrative quality I was seeking.

This body of work is laden with surreal, dreamlike views, meditations on time, history and narrative mysteries. Only a pinhole camera could do it.
Camera: Box pinhole
Film: 4 x 5 Tri-X
Prints: Toned silver gelatin