Feast Your Eyes

MCAsaraprince-2.jpg

A plethora of not-to-miss museum and gallery reopenings and shows

Written by L.D. Porter

If you’re wandering downtown, be sure to stop by Sullivan Goss: An American Gallery (sullivangoss.com) to experience Organic, a dynamic group show by local artists whose work combines traditional craftmanship with natural materials. At Colette Cosentino Atelier + Gallery (colettecosentino.com) you can soak up the talents of its namesake owner, a decorative painter whose bespoke murals are coveted. Nearby, at the top of Paseo Nuevo mall, the Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara (mcasantabarbara.org) is ground zero for what’s happening now in the art world. Artist Shana Moulton’s The Invisible Seventh is the Mystic Column multimedia exhibition is on view until August. Closer to the beach, REH GraySpace Art (grayspaceart.com) in the Funk Zone celebrates summer with Accession, a group show of women abstractionists curated by MOAH Lancaster’s Andi Campognone. The Atkinson Gallery at Santa Barbara City College (gallery.sbcc.edu) is known for its innovative exhibitions. Although the space is shuttered during the summer, artist Muna Malik’s spectacular mirrored boat sculpture remains visible to campus-goers from the gallery’s outside terrace. Home to one of the most important architecture and design archives in North America, UC Santa Barbara’s Art, Design & Architecture Museum (museum.ucsb.edu) is a resource for students and the wider Santa Barbara community.

Summer exhibitions are viewable online; in-person programming will resume this fall. Starting in July, Westmont College’s Ridley-Tree Museum of Art (westmont.edu/museum) will be highlighting Towards a 21st Century Abstraction, the work of eight painters who push abstraction into new territory. Coast Village Road is paradise for art lovers. Visit Caldwell Snyder Gallery (caldwellsnyder.com), for artist Kenton Nelson’s show, A Day at the Beach. At Cassandria Blackmore Gallery (cassandriablackmore.com) you can meet the artist in person and enjoy her luminous shattered-glass paintings (known as verre églomisé) in a pristine white setting. A few steps farther, at Heather James Fine Art (heatherjames.com), a tempting blue-chip selection of artworks awaits. Feast your eyes on works by Monet, van Gogh, Calder, Frankenthaler, Warhol, and many more. While perusing Peregrine Galleries (peregrine.shop) and its offerings of vintage California plein-air paintings, you’ll be tempted to try on some fabulous vintage Chanel, Bakelite, Native American, early Taxco, and Georg Jensen jewelry. Montecito’s Upper Village is home to Stewart Fine Art (diane-stewart.squarespace.com), an inviting gallery full of summer offerings includes landscapes by early California artists who worked in Europe, alongside rare works by acclaimed artist Roger Kuntz (1926-1975) from his Goodyear blimp series, circa 1970. The Ojai Valley is a haven for art, and a great place to experience it is at Porch Gallery (porchgalleryojai.com), a converted historic home in downtown Ojai. A joint show, Molly Larkey and Brian Wills: Selected Works, pairs colorful work by two Los Angeles-based artists. Starting July 22 works on paper by artist John Millei will take center stage. Don’t miss canvas and paper (canvasandpaper.org), a serene nonprofit exhibition space where paintings from the early 20th century by French cubist Jean Metzinger are on view through July, followed by a group show of paintings by Milton Avery, Jean Lurçat, and Ángel Zárraga. Always on the cutting edge, Ojai’s Carolyn Glasoe Bailey Foundation (carolynglasoebaileyfoundation.org) celebrates California-based Zapotec textile artist Porfirio Gutiérrez with a solo exhibition, Continuous Line, Linea Continua. Rare etchings by Dutch Master Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn (1606-1669) are on view this summer at the Elverhøj Museum (elverhoj.org) in Solvang, part of Legacy of Decency: Rembrandt, Jews & Danes, an exhibition combining the painter’s work with displays about the Danish resistance during World War II. Solvang’s Wilding Museum (wildingmuseum.org) is a dynamic arts destination whose summer exhibitions include Bio/Mass: Contemporary Meditations on Nature, featuring artists who create work in series.

Photographs by Sara Prince, Carolyn Glasoe Bailey Foundation, Liz Fish; Cassandria Blackmore, Sam Frost

Previous
Previous

Music to Our Ears

Next
Next

Unveiling the Muse