Turkey Hangover – A Remedy and a Gift Guide!

It’s the day after Thanksgiving, and I’m feeling slightly hungover and I don’t even drink. I’ll blame that second plate of food I served myself even though I was full.

We all know the best remedy is spending some time moving your body outside getting some fresh air and sunlight in your eyes. Assuming you’ve already done that or are planning to later today, what’s the next best thing? Art of course! In that vein, here’s a guide for gifting art for everyone on your list:

For the plant lover

A pack of 10 greeting cards, each featuring a different botanical watercolor of plants I found on walks near my home.

For the one seeking peace and calm

A book featuring 100 watercolors inspired by the poetry of nature: color and light in the landscape, seasons, and the passing of time. Each watercolor was made as a kind of meditation and as a love letter to life and painting.

For the cyclist

A print of my painting “The Cyclists” available in a standard and easy to frame size: 11×14 inches. All my prints are archival pigment prints on heavy weight matte fine art paper and I sign each one.

For the mystery lover

Midday wander, oil on canvas, 40 x 30 inches

An oil painting of people exploring a mysterious landscape…

For the Dog Lover

Land With Dog, oil and acrylic on canvas, 24 x 24 inches

When I made this, I didn’t mean to paint a dog. When I finished, it was just there. It happens.

For the backyard lover

Petals Fall In The Pond 2, oil on panel, 14 x 11 inches

A  contemplative painting playing with the colors and shapes of chairs and table and trees, creating a space for conversation.

For the person who has everything

Of Stones and Earth and Air, oil on canvas, 60 x 72 inches

A painting so big it will fill a wall. This painting is 5 feet tall x 6 feet wide. It’s so big, when you put it in a room, you don’t even need furniture.

And after you’ve chosen your perfect art gifts, I recommend another walk out in the sun, listening to birds singing and hearing leaves crackling under foot. Cheers!

Solo exhibit at Elder Gallery of Contemporary Art

Jessica Singerman - hold us in the light

On November 6th 2020, my newest solo show “Hold us in the light” opens at Elder Gallery of Contemporary Art in Charlotte, NC. Read on to find out about the work in this exhibition.

There will be free timed entry for this opening. Reserve your time slot here.
Note, my exhibit coincides with the “Home” exhibit, so the reservation link will take you to that show’s reservation page.  

From Elder Gallery of Contemporary Art:

Join us for an exhibition of intimate, responsive work by Jessica Singerman. In a significant departure from her work that celebrates nature, color and light in the landscape and the passing of time, Singerman embraces personal questions around her work and how it relates to the pressing societal issues of today.

Artist Statement:

At the end of spring 2020 when there was a swelling of anger and sadness amidst protests in the US, I wondered what – as an artist – I should be doing in response to what was happening around me. In times of turmoil, I have often questioned the validity of my work, and with practice I’ve learned that it is in those challenging times that the work of an artist becomes especially important, both for the artist and for the audience. However as a white artist, I was unsure of what was appropriate for the direction of my work. It seemed disingenuous to make politically charged paintings when my current body of work dealt with an entirely different subject matter. How could I make work that was culturally relevant yet stayed true to the artistic concerns I’ve pursued for years?

The morning of June 1st I made drawings of a table and chairs in our screened-in porch, a nod to some Richard Diebenkorn paintings of a single chair in an interior. Later that day in the studio, I decided to make a painting using one of those drawings as a reference. This painting was quiet and contemplative. I made another painting and another, all evocative of human presence, and each one a play of color and geometry and composition. In these paintings, through the careful arrangement of shapes and color, I envision creating space for conversations – hopefully the kind of exchanges that bring real profound understanding. Is this too much to want for my work? Maybe, but making art is in itself a hopeful act, and so it helps me feel optimistic.

Get a preview of the work in this studio visit.

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