Congrats to Kristin Texeira, whose painting Lovely High Cheekbones was featured in the Boston Globe today. Give a gift of art this Valentine's Day!
Romancing the Square: Cocktail Hour at 13FOREST
Above: Mike Ryczek, Peony Landscape, oil on canvas
Looking for a creative Valentine's Day date? Join us at 13FOREST Gallery on Saturday, February 11 for our Romancing the Square cocktail party from 4-6pm. Try a Bloodhound (gin cocktail with vermouth and crushed strawberries) while enjoying good company and our excellent selection of fine art and craft.
Romancing the Square is hosted by Capitol Square businesses, and features art happenings, music, and refreshments to celebrate the inclusive spirit of Valentine's Day.
Check it out: 13FOREST featured in Boston University's Daily Free Press
Visitors brought the energy and excitement from the Boston Women's March for America to the opening reception of Transition of Power: 2017 last Saturday.
Included in the crowd were staff from Boston University's Daily Free Press, who published the following report about the exhibition and co-owners Marc Gurton and Jim Kiely's motivations behind organizing this politically engaged show.
Click here to read the full article.
Holiday Gift Guide 2016
Holiday shopping just got easier, with top picks from our carefully curated collection now available online! Find something for all the special someones on your list. 'Tis the season, after all!
Read More13FOREST Gallery celebrates ten years with current exhibition TENFOLD.
As seen in Big Red & Shiny: Interview with Marc Gurton and Jim Kiely
Walking along the improved stretch of Mass Ave in Arlington, I saw a couple coming out of the 13FOREST Gallery. They pointed at Mia Cross's painting Agnes and Avi in the front window. They seemed enamored of the sensitive, experimental portrait and talked excitedly about it and other work they'd just seen in the gallery. Inside, I overheard Marc Gurton talking with a guest about the layaway plan they offer. TENFOLD, 13FOREST's ten-year anniversary exhibition, which opened the night before is on view. Gurton said it represents the past, present and future of 13FOREST and its mission: to make art accessible to all.
Read MoreArt critic Rebecca Nemser (left) and gallery director Jillian Wertheim (right) discuss Jon Imber's life and work at 13FOREST Gallery's post-screening reception of Imber's Left Hand.
Rebecca Nemser on Jon Imber
Near the end of Imber’s Left Hand, the 2014 film about artist Jon Imber’s struggle to keep on painting as he was dying from ALS, there is a beautiful scene of a show of the hundreds of portraits that Jon painted, in the last year of his life, of friends in Boston and Maine who came by to keep him company and to help. Some of those friends, and others who had never met Jon, gathered together, teary-eyed, at 13FOREST Gallery after watching the Arlington International Film Festival’s screening of the film.
Read MoreDía de los Muertos at 13FOREST
Join us at 13FOREST on Sunday, October 30, from 4-6 pm as we take part in Capitol Square's annual Day of the Dead festivities.
Read MoreDirector's Cut: 'Imber's Left Hand' Post-Screening Reception
Join us at 13FOREST Gallery on Saturday, October 29, from 5:30 to 7 pm for a post-screening reception of Arlington International Film Festival's acclaimed film, Imber's Left Hand (62 mins).
We will be joined by director/producer Richard Kane, co-producer Melody Lewis-Kane and art critic Rebecca Nemser who will collectively discuss the film as well as the incredible life and work of Somerville artist Jon Imber (1950-2014).
Imber's Left Hand will be screened at 4 pm as part of the Arlington International Film Festival (AIFF) at the historic Capitol Theatre in East Arlington. Tickets available here.
After the film, stroll down to 13FOREST Gallery for refreshments, Q&A with the film's makers and the opportunity to view Jon Imber's paintings up close. We have partnered with Imber's Boston representatives, Alpha Gallery, who are loaning us a selection of Imber's later paintings for the event, so that the public may personally experience the paintings and themes of the film.
Reception will begin at 5:30 pm, discussion at 6 pm. This event is free and open to the public, and is not limited to AIFF ticket holders.
Film Synopsis: A bittersweet and deeply moving document of Jon Imber, a local artist who lived and painted among us and his courageous and darkly humorous response to a diagnosis of ALS. The film traces Imber's life, career and adaptations, switching from painting with his right hand to his left, then to both as the degenerative condition progresses.
"A masterpiece of intimacy in the face of tragedy, "Imber’s Left Hand” is an extraordinary accomplishment in film. It is the eulogizing of the creative force and artistic life of one of America’s leading painters – in his own vibrant voice," -Daniel Kany, Maine Sunday Telegram.
Better-Than-Tax-Free Weekend Sale
Susan Jaworski-Stranc, Appleton's Bouquet (edition of 13), reduction linoleum print on paper
Our friends at the State House may have cancelled Tax-Free Weekend, but we've decided to do the lawmakers one better...
13FOREST Gallery is happy to announce our Better-Than-Tax-Free Weekend Sale, now through Sun 8/21! During this special event, we are pleased to offer our customers 10% off purchases of items $100 and over.
Read more about how Massachusetts businesses are responding to the cancelled Tax-Free Weekend in the Arlington Advocate.
Our business hours for the coming days are as follows:
Thu 8/18: 11-8 pm
Fri 8/19: 11-6 pm
Sat 8/20: 11-6 pm (Join us from 3-6 pm for our summer party, Beers Out Back)
Sun 8/21: 12-4 pm
A Beach Read from Big Red & Shiny: Painter Wilhelm Neusser Speaks with Jim Kiely
Earlier this week, New England art magazine Big Red & Shiny published Intentional Landscape: An Interview with Painter Wilhelm Neusser. Written by gallery co-owner Jim Kiely, Intentional Landscape is an insightful look into Neusser's most recent self-reflective and historically sensitive body of work.
Here's an excerpt from the interview:
"I think some of what I grew up with is coming back more and more now that I’ve relocated to the U.S., and I wonder if it’s part of an adjustment process. What I paint now is a very specific type of landscape – a not necessarily super-attractive land that has been industrialized mostly by coal mining.... [T]his is my family’s history.... [A]nd then there’s the historical German landscape, which is not personal but more a play on stereotypes and clichés. The third element I focus on is creating topographies on the canvas – crusts of paint – so that my material itself becomes a landscape. These days I’m aiming for moments when the three ingredients come together and become as tasty as possible." - Wilhelm Neusser
Read the full interview here.
See Neusser's work at the gallery here.
Wilhelm Neusser, Bright Horizon, oil on canvas, 20" x 24"