Monday, April 22, 2013

MY NEW BLOG ADDRESS :-)







Hello everyone,

 I will no longer be using this blog page as I have recently revamped and updated my website,

where I am fortunate enough to have my blog and website happily merged together  :-)


I invite you to follow my New Blog Posts at:


http://www.alisonwells.com/blog.html



and my website address is the same:


www.alisonwells.com



Thank you for your continued interest and support.

Alison Wells

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Check out the review on my solo show Collage 02740 in The standard Times by Don Wilkinson

May 10, 2012 2:35 PM

Many people think that collage is an easy art form to master. With nostalgic kindergarten memories of construction paper, blunt-tipped scissors, and edible paste, it is deceptively simple to adapt a "my kid could do that" attitude about collage, and dismiss it as a lightweight craft hobby, akin to scrapbooking.
The reality is that a successful collagist has to have a particular and refined skill set: a strong sense of composition, the ability to use layering as a drawing and/or painting tool, the patience of a saint, and the manual dexterity of a surgeon.
"Collage 02740," an exhibition of work by Trinidad-born artist Alison Wells, currently on display at the Colo Colo Gallery, is a showcase on how to do collage right. Wells, who has lived in the United States for eight years, is an accomplished painter and art educator. The theme of the exhibition, as is referenced by the postal zip code in the show's title, is a select section of downtown New Bedford, primarily the area east of Sixth Street, down to the waterfront.
"Rooftop Gazing" is a particularly sweet and beguiling work. Shards of torn paper, in shades of aqua, teal and cream, define a fanciful sky, delineated by fine slivers of paper, representing boat masts, projecting upward from the harbor below. Elements of the elevated view of rooftops and waterfront include materials as diverse as shimmery copper foil, graph paper, green foliage torn from a magazine photo, and miniscule snippets of text, far removed from their original sources.
Vibrant pink blossoms bring lusciousness to Wells' image of New Bedford City Hall, a study in terra cotta red and deep gray. The steeple of the First Baptist Church, farther up the hill on William Street, is clearly visible in the background of "City Hall in Bloom." Another work, "Red Sky at Morning ... Sailor Warning," features three brilliant red boats, afloat on choppy, deep blue water. A sky of rich yellows, speckled with greens and crimsons, envelop all.
"Star Store" is an elegant representation of the old department store, now home to both the UMass Dartmouth College of Visual and Performing Arts, and a number of classrooms of Bristol Community College. Slate gray dominates the color scheme, and a weave of paper alludes to cross-hatching technique.
With a few exceptions, Wells' downtown New Bedford is devoid of people. In "Ollie Over Cummings," a young skateboarder in a bright red wool cap hovers mid-flight over the street. The sky is as pastel as a roll of Necco Wafers, and the rich velvety blue rectangular windows of the Cummings Building solidly anchor the piece.
Wells make visual reference to the great abolitionist Frederick Douglass in several works, including a collage of his Seventh Street home, but most notably in "I had little to Fear in New Bedford"¦they stood aside and let me pass." The image is decidedly more illustrative and less loose than much of the other work, and it is a dignified and effective portrait.
Wells' exhibition is strong, but a bit too safe. Her downtown New Bedford is beautiful, highlighting bethels and cupolas and statues and scenic vistas, but there is none of the underbelly that most New Bedford residents know. There are no abandoned storefronts, no smokers outside the National Club, no idling buses billowing exhaust. Perhaps that will be the subject for another show.
"Collage 02740" will be on exhibit at the Colo Colo Gallery, 19 Centre St., until May 21.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Ad for "Collage 02740"


Wells shows off recent collages in "Collage 02740"


Trinidad born, New Bedford Artist Alison Wells, captures the essence of Downtown New Bedford in her solo exhibition “COLLAGE 02740”. Her recent offerings of paper collages will be on view at Colo Colo Art Gallery, 29 Centre St. from May 3 – May 21

Wells depicts a side of Downtown New Bedford life and history that is tactile, memorable and alluring through the medium of paper collage. “Downtown New Bedford has been my home away from home for the past 7 and a half years” says Wells who came to the city from Trinidad to pursue a MFA in painting at The University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth in 2004.
“I wanted to depict downtown in a way that expressed the sweet and sometimes bittersweet facets of the things that make this quaint and quirky part of the city what it was yesterday and is today.”
Wells examines how downtown New Bedford serves as a source of inspiration throughout her career in the United States, at first subconsciously and now quite consciously. She is influenced greatly by its rich architecture, its fascinating hidden histories, its multicultural and ethnic backbone and of course the rich artistic veins that pumps the city with life and vitality.

Wells manipulates this versatile medium of collage to transform her works into mesmerizing shifts in color, value and dimension by incorporating a wide variety of cut and torn papers to her palette. Each collage forms a bridge across time and culture to express her unique artistic vision and narrative.

Alison’s paintings have been exhibited in solo and group exhibitions in galleries and museums in the United States, the Caribbean and Europe. Wells was selected to exhibit her work at the 2010 World Exposition in Shanghai, China and in 2011 she was awarded an artist grant from the Brookline Commission for the Arts, (under the Massachusetts Cultural Council). Some of her most recent shows have been at The Narrows Center for the Arts, Fall River, Massachusetts, The Brookline Art Center Gallery, Brookline, Massachusetts and Clover Fine art Gallery, Brooklyn New York.  

Wells is also an Adjunct Art Professor at Bristol Community College and she teaches after school programs in downtown New Bedford to kids and teens. Some of these include the Historical Society’s “Hidden History” programs; The Friends of the New Bedford Free Public Library together with the New Bedford Art Museum’s “Art in Words” program and Artworks’ Cool Kids summer programs along with Art therapy classes with war Veterans at the Veterans Transitional House.  Alison gives private lessons at her studio located in the Cummings Building, 96 William St., Studio #3, New Bedford. Wells is also a Board Member of the New Bedford Historical Society.

Collage  02740  runs from May 3 - May 21 2012.
Opening Reception: Saturday May 5, 2012 5:00pm - 8:00pm.
Meet the Artist - Aha Night May 10, 7:00 - 9:00pm.

For further information please contact:
Luis Villanueva, owner, Colo Colo Gallery colocologallery@gmail.com or (508) 642-6026
Alison Wells at alisonwe@gmail.com  or 774-526-6550
Alison’s work can be viewed at www.alisonwells.com



Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Home is Memory, Memory is Now



Caribbean Artist Alison Wells talks of home and place in her recent paintings at the Brookline Art Center Gallery

“Home is Memory, Memory is Now” which opens at the Brookline Art Center Gallery on August 29, 2011 through October 7, 2011, offers compelling insights into group relationships and cultural bonds that transcend geographic and historic differences. In her recent body of work Trinidadian Artist Alison Wells discusses ideas of culture, identity and the shifting concepts of home and place.

“The vital role we all play within our communities conveys a universal message of home being an instrument of culture and Power. It can be interpreted literally when we are inspired by different landscapes and sceneries but also we can be inspired by a certain identity associated with specific places we call home” says Wells.

In Alison’s acrylic and mixed media works on paper and canvas, paint melts in and out of ambiguous space throughout the picture plane reminiscent to fragments of memories, constantly soaring in and out of the conscious and subconscious mind.

Wells’s paintings have been exhibited in solo and group exhibitions in galleries and museums in the United States, the Caribbean and Europe, and her work was selected to represent her country at the 2010 World Exposition in Shanghai, China.
Opening Reception for “Home is Memory, Memory is Now” is Saturday, September 10, 2011, 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. and it is supported in part by the Brookline Commission for the Arts, a local group which is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency. The exhibition will culminate with a mixed media collage workshop for kids and teens on theme of home and place. 


 Blue Moon Eclipse, Acrylic on paper, 9"x12" 2011

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Cirque de Palette!

My contribution to Cirque de Palette! - A celebration to raise money for scholarships and low-income Art programs at the Brookline Art Center. It is a month-long exhibition and silent auction of donated decorated artists' palettes.

Totems de Palette by Alison Wells