PRESS RELEASE: ArtCenter Manatee Presents: Port Side

Port Side features the paintings of Laura Waller.

By: Carla Nierman, [email protected]

BRADENTON, Fla. Sept 20, 2017 – We bring Laura Waller’s Port Side paintings to ArtCenter Manatee October 3 to November 3, 2017.As a full-time artist, Laura Waller works out of her two studios in Maine and Florida. Her Working Waterfront: Port Tampa Bay paintings were featured in a solo exhibition at the Clayton Galleries in Tampa.

Porto No. 1
Oil on linen
36 x 48 x 1.5 inches
2017

Her Working Waterfront: New Work paintings were featured in a solo exhibition at Elizabeth Moss Galleries in Maine. New paintings from the Port Side series were featured in a solo exhibition at Clayton Galleries in Tampa.Waller was awarded the Arts Council of Hillsborough County 2016 Individual Artist Grant in 2016. Her paintings are collected by individuals and corporations nationwide.

Born in Brooklyn, New York, Laura Waller received her undergraduate and master’s degrees from Newcomb College and Tulane University in New Orleans, LA. Concurrent with studies in sociology, psychology and social work, she developed a passion for art and art history.

There will be an opening reception for the show on Thursday, October 5, 2017 from 5-7 p.m. The reception and exhibits are free and open to the public.


About ArtCenter Manatee

Founded in 1937, ArtCenter Manatee celebrates its 80th Anniversary this year. Located in downtown Bradenton, Florida, ArtCenter Manatee is the premier center for art, art education and unique gifts in Manatee County. The nearly 10,000 sq. ft. building features three galleries, five classrooms, an Artists’ Market gift shop and an art library featuring over 3,000 art volumes.

Day, evening and weekend art classes for adults and children are offered year round in painting, drawing, pastels, pottery, jewelry, photography and more.

The Artists’ Market features unique, affordable gifts by local, regional and national artists. Exhibitions in the galleries change monthly and showcase local, regional and national artists. Meet the exhibiting artists at the monthly evening opening receptions.

For more information please call 941-746-2862 or visit http://www.artcentermanatee.org. ArtCenter Manatee is located at 209 9th St W, Bradenton, FL, 34205. Hours are M/F/S 9 a.m – 5 p.m. and T/W/Th 9 a.m. – 6 p.m. Closed Sunday.

PRESS RELEASE: Port Side: New Paintings by Laura Waller

Laura Waller
OIG Giant II No. 15, 2016
Oil on linen
36 x 48 x 1.5 inches

PRESS RELEASE: January 4, 2017, Tampa, Florida:

Clayton Galleries, 4105 South MacDill Avenue, will open its 2017 season with a one-person exhibition: “Port Side: Paintings by Laura Waller.” The show opens on January 27, and runs through March 11th, 2017.

There will be an opening reception for the artist on Friday, January 27, from 7- 9 p.m. Waller, a Tampa-based artist and Florida resident since childhood, has focused on working waterfronts in Florida and Maine for the past ten years. Port Tampa Bay has been of specific interest to her because of the massive scale of the freighters, cranes, docks and forklifts.

“The landscape at industrial marine ports, with its rust and grit and the worn, aged sur­faces of the ships docked at port are of primary interest.” Waller explains in her artist statement for her current show. “Vessels serve as a metaphor and provide the narrative for my paintings which have recently become large in scale, with cropped images of sections of ships merging into abstraction.”

Waller works out of her two studios in Maine and Florida. Her paintings can be found in the permanent collections of: American Victory Museum, Tampa, FL; Eli Lily and Company, New York, NY; Raymond James Financial, St. Petersburg, FL; and Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.

Gallery Hours are: Tuesday though Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Femme Visuale: Laura Waller

Oh, ship! When painting leads to jumping from boats.

CAITLIN ALBRITTON
JUNE 16, 2016 8:31 A.M.

Creative Loafing – Tampa Bay

Laura Waller, OIG Giant II No.1, 36 x 48 in., oil on linen, 2015

“She said all you have to do is turn around and hold on to the rope ladder and climb down one step at a time. ‘Don’t fall because it’s a lot of paperwork,’ the harbor pilot joked.” Laura Waller explains how she exited a freighter ship onto a pilot boat when both were traveling at 11 knots. (I’m imagining “Bon voyage!” may have been shouted as she leaped from one vessel to the next.)

Who knew painting could be so adventurous? Waller is a regular at the Port of Tampa — one of the few women seen there— to take as many photos as she can for her large paintings of the freighters that come through our town. On this particular excursion with harbor pilot Captain Carolyn Kurtz, the only way to get back to land is to jump: no safety rails included. She jokes, “I told my husband if I had died, it would have been the best obituary.”

I managed to catch Waller at her home studio just a few days before she left Tampa to go to north for the summer, where she will finish prepping for her seven-week solo show. The show opened June 9 at Elizabeth Moss Galleries in Falmouth, Maine and featured 15 new paintings.

Waller caught snapping reference photos for her paintings.

“I just finished this one, it’s my biggest painting. It’s five by seven feet; it will be in the solo exhibition at Clayton Galleries in Tampa opening January 27, 2017,” she says. “I go into the port to take pictures, because they won’t let you set up to do plein air due to security issues. My real love is the ships: the tugboats and the big freighters that come through our port. Going out with the harbor pilot for a day was quite an experience, and it was really fun. So from that trip, these are resulting.” She points to new canvases lined against the wall.

Though she paints from photos, they look nothing like the picture, which is actually a good thing. The snapshots are sterile in comparison. Her honest representation does the ships more justice because of their emotive appeal to the senses. A palette of reds, orange cadmiums, Naples yellow, and a bit of cobalt violet brings intense glow and radiance to her paintings.

“I’ve always lived on the water, either in Florida or Maine, and even when I was in New Orleans for undergraduate and graduate school at Tulane, so I like the water. I started painting boats — not the freighters — in Maine and I liked it, but everyone paints them. People asked, ‘Why don’t you paint Florida?’ Everybody who paints Florida paints the beaches and the palm fronds. I was asked, ‘Well, what about the ports?’ I didn’t think I would be able to get in the port, but a friend sponsored me, and thus began my love affair with the working port.”

In previous paintings, more of the freighter is included in the overall composition, but now she is interested in pulling the viewer in with close-ups.

Laura Waller, Gallant Lady No.1, 48 x 36 in., oil on linen, 2016

“You can see I’m getting more abstract with these,” she says, looking around her studio. “Close up, it’s a totally different view. When you get close, the shapes, colors, and the rust reveal themselves. For me, the rust makes them beautiful. It’s like the Japanese concept of wabi-sabi where beauty is found in things that are humble and ordinary.”

With the close-up views, she places focus more on the shapes of different ships’ parts, abstracting it from easy recognition. This nearsighted positioning, paired with the scale of these large-format canvases, pushes the viewer right into the scene, making one feel that they may be in the midst of these large vessels.

Waller started her first large paintings at her residency at Vermont Studio Center (where she has been three times) and realized the large scale is demanded by the size of the cargo ships.

She always manages to capture a sense of mood in her paintings. Some have a more mysterious fog hanging over them, while others carry a luminosity of painted layers. Taking in the overall size of the pieces, you slowly start to notice the small details that tend to get lost if you become awestruck by these behemoths.

“Early one Sunday morning, my son drove us in his power boat through the port. It was quiet. To me, it felt like I was in primordial times surrounded by massive giants tethered to the shore, ready to wake,” she says.

“This is the last one I’m painting before I leave for Maine; [it’s] called the Tanja Kosan. Let me tell you, this tanker is huge (over 350 feet long) and the pilot is my height. She takes these huge ships in and out of our port. I told her that I’ve painted this yellow ship many times, and she told me that compared to many of the other ships that come in and out of our port, this one is on the small size. The pilots had renamed it the ‘Petite Flower,’” Waller says.

Laura Waller, Tanja Kosan No.5, 36 x 48 in., oil on linen, 2016

She writes down the names of the ships she paints; an app called Vesseltracker tracks the ship’s progress across the ocean. With one boat, once it gets to the Straits of Malacca, a message pops up, “Armed Guards on Board,” meaning that they’ve taken on men with rifles because it is a dangerous place known for pirates.

Waller says, “You think about the risks these people take,” and not only with heavy machinery and piracy, but also natural disasters.

She shows me a painting of a boat that washed up in a friend’s backyard. “You can see it’s just being eaten up by the sea. Eventually it won’t be there, and it will return to the sea,” she says poetically.

In a way, these close-up paintings are portrait-like: the boat’s details are moody and emotive, not unlike a human face. Boats constantly flow in and out of the port, as temporal, silent nomads without a true home.

Laura Waller, Tanja Kosan No.2, 36 x 48 in., oil on linen, 2016

“There are only about two paintings I’ve put people in because the ships are really the ‘narrators.’ They kind of talk about what they are doing. Even the anchor over there: Just look at the force of it, like it’s biting the part where they pull it into the ship. It’s almost sensual, that particular painting. She’s my Georgia O’Keeffe painting,” she jokes about her interlocking forms.

Another painting she calls her “Drama Queen” with the way the ship is draped in ropes, as if bedecked by strands of necklaces. Waller brings sensuality to the masculinity of the port through the freighter’s curves, softness of edges, and inviting color palette.

Waller worked as a financial planner for 33 years; she took watercolor classes to escape thoughts of work. Eventually, she decided to sell her practice to her son to paint full-time with a focus on water-mixable oil paints.

“I came up through the workshop route where we learned about technique, such as making sure you have a center of interest. That has changed for me as I think you should be able to take any small section in a painting, and it could stand alone and be a painting in itself,” she says, elaborating that there should be a mix of other areas of interest (as well as places for the eye to rest) in addition to the focal point.

Laura Waller, Top Island No. 7 Anchor 2, 36 x 48 in., oil on linen, 2016

Her residencies at Vermont changed her outlook on art-making. Instead of focusing mainly on technique and skill, she started questioning what she was trying to say in her pieces.

“I feel like my role as an artist is to record this period of Tampa’s history because really, Tampa exists because of the port. All of the great cities were founded because they were port cities, and that’s where the immigrants came in,” she says. “The port also produces a huge amount of revenue for the city, yet people look at the ports and just think of the cruise ships. I want the country to see how much these workhorses of the sea create for us, and we’re not even aware of it.”

As a recent recipient of an Individual Artist Grant this year from the Arts Council of Hillsborough County, as well as the Carolyn Heller Visual Arts Award (given to the highest scoring visual artist), Waller plans to use these funds for a brochure for her solo show at Clayton Galleries (Jan. 27- Mar. 11, 2017) which will feature 23 new paintings.

Waller says, “There’s this wonderful video Helen Mirren did where she talks about going into galleries. She said that she first likes to put her chair this close [indicating with her hands a small space] to the painting, because that’s where the artist is. So she gets our view before she steps back. Most people wouldn’t think to look at a work of art like artists do.”

Laura Waller, C-Enforcer No.2, 36 x 48 in., oil on linen, 2016

Standing about a foot from her linen-stretched painting, my eye catches the shadowing under a brush stroke, highlighting the varying thickness in paint handling. The mark separates the paint, leaving thick waves of oil paint on either side of the line made on the canvas, mimicking the wake trailing from a slow-moving boat.

“Laura, you paint the grit that starts the pearl,” an artist once told her.

I couldn’t explain her work any better myself.

To see more of Laura Waller’s work, visit her website.

Urban Dictionary defines Femme Fatale as “a woman with both intelligence and sex appeal that uses these skills to manipulate poor helpless men into doing what she wants. May cause death.” Keeping in line with this concept, the women highlighted in Caitlin Albritton’s “Femme Visuale” series aims to highlight local women artists and show off some lesser-known talent that’s been hiding in the shadows. In the art world, if it ain’t big and loud, it ain’t being seen (looking at you, Koons). Art as a grand spectacle leaves little room for modest, sincere, or quiet voices, especially women’s voices. And I promise, we won’t bite.

Focus Artist of the Week: Laura Waller

June 15, 2016 – Elizabeth Moss Galleries

This week our focus artist is Laura Waller. Laura is currently on exhibit here at the gallery with her solo show “Working Port” which will be on display until July 30th. Laura divides her time between Maine and Florida where she paints full time. We recently gave her a list of interview questions and she graciously took the time to thoughtfully answer them which gives us a chance to understand her process better as well as gives us an exclusive look into her work. Enjoy!

Can you tell us about your interest in Florida-based tugboats? 

I tend to “anthropomorphize” my subjects. I see the bones in my ships and see the muscles in the tugs. Rhea I Bouchard No.1 almost has an exoskeleton wrapping around her side while the Sheila Moran is puffed up with muscular rubber draped in rows across her bow. OIG Giant II No. 5 presents a classic view through the ship to the strong bones that hold her decks together.

On my first trip into the Port where I toured in a golf cart with a security guard , we talked of the taut stretching of the lines that secure the ships to the dock. He told me of the near disaster when a large freighter’s lines snapped during a howling wind storm that went through the harbor. The ship began to swing to the other side of the channel where it would have wrecked havoc. Not to worry for a small tug rushed over and pushed the behemoth back to its sea wall. Pure and simple strength in a small form.

Tugs link my Maine home to my Tampa home. I went out on the Patriot tug in Port Tampa Bay – built in East Boothbay by Washburn and Doughty, a shipyard I have visited. I have painted the Capt. MacIntire No. 1 which is up in dry dock in Belfast Maine.

Your tugboat pieces started out as more detailed and realistic but has progressed toward close-up views verging on abstract. Will abstraction continue to take over your interest, or will we see you go back and forth from abstraction to representational?

Probably go back and forth between the two even though the representational pieces, if you look at segments of them, are abstract.

While you are here in Maine for the summer, what will you paint if anything?

Just finished a smaller canvas (20×24 inches) as I had some left over. The size of the ships almost demands a larger canvas so these smaller canvases portray closer up details of the larger ships. I just purchased two 5×7 feet linen canvases to paint. That is about the maximum a 5’x3” person can reach to paint. I’ll probably continue painting what I’d like others to see – the absolute beauty of the patterns created by weathered surfaces and rusty drips in the port.

What is your studio practice? Photos on site, and then all work in the studio, or sketches and photos on site?

I take many photos either on land if accompanied by a security guard or from my son’s powerboat going through the channels. There is not an opportunity to paint plain air because of Homeland Security. I print the chosen photos out at 8″x10” to paint from. Sometimes I project the image onto the canvas to get the initial drawing accurate. I tone my canvases with raw Sienna to give a harmonious luminescence to the work. I paint with water-mixable oils sometimes accenting with oil bars.

Do you have any favorite pieces that are in your current show?

Hard to say as each is a part of me.

C-Enforcer No. 2 demonstrates the concept of Wabi-Sabi in my work. I hope it shows the beauty in the humble, the common, the unfinished. I find joy in the elegance of the lines (meaning the ropes) and the lovely shadows they create; the simple shape of the superstructure; the reflected glow of the light in the port.

K. Brave No.1: The Rudder, was originally this was called an anchor. My wonderful Naval scientist friend explained that it is a rudder. While I was painting I became more and more disturbed by the process as it seemed to not fit with the others in the series – different colors, temperature, clarity, etc. It felt uncomfortable. With help from a friend, I realized that something may be naturally occurring – perhaps a morphing into something else. A transitioning. Just go with it. It seems to stand alone to me.

Who are your favorite artists and did they inspire your eye in this series?

I learned oil painting from Tina Ingraham of Bath, a master of color mixing and observing planes and values which are among among her many talents. She introduced me to Giorgio Morandi who never tired of painting his exquisite still-life paintings of bottles and vases. I too have not tired of painting my ships.

The Tampa Museum of Art, a few years ago, had an exhibition of the American paintings in the Phillips Collection. It felt to me a bit like how viewers must have felt seeing the Armory Exhibition of 1913. I believe those paintings will be with me in my studio for the rest of my life. For example, a painting I just did after the opening of the Elizabeth Moss Exhibition of the Tanja Kosan incorporates the cadmium orange and black of a Clyfford Still. My night scenes lit by the glow from within a freighter harken back to the darkened paintings of Albert Pinkham Ryder.

In conclusion, I want to record the port at this moment in time. To raise awareness of the port. It is a place vital to commerce and growth, but yet largely unavailable to residents because of homeland security. I see these cargo ships as the true international citizens of the world; my nomads of the sea. 

I have always enjoyed what I call “drop-ins” like a movie or novel that drops you into a town where you get immersed in its culture that is often unknown and different from my own. I found life in the port to be a new world. Very few women are in the port although the tugboat Patriot had a female deckhand who was very proficient at the many varied tasks required of her. Researching the Port has meant many hours exploring this world. They were highlighted perhaps by the two days I spent on ships. Taking a 500 foot freighter, the Clipper Newhaven, from the docks, turning it around, and then heading out of the harbor and under the Sunshine Skyway Bridge was one of the most memorable days of my life. Capt. Kurtz, my harbor pilot friend who arranged for me to join her on the ship, is one of only two female pilots in Florida, and one of only 30 or so in the country. Her competence and calm nature were reassuring especially when we had to climb down the side of the ship and step onto the pilot boat while both the freighter and the pilot boat were cruising at 11 knots. Many thanks to the Ukrainian crew who then took the ship to Japan.

Thank you so much to Laura Waller for taking the time to answer our questions and for giving us such a personal look into her work. Please be sure to stop in the gallery to see these beautiful pieces for yourself or email us at [email protected] to inquire about her work. Also, continue to follow our social media channels for more about Laura’s current exhibit, and work and for a full list of available pieces at the gallery please click here.

New Solo Exhibition: The Working Waterfront

Exhibition of New Work by Laura Waller

OIG Giant II No. 5, 2015
Oil on linen
36 x 48 x 1.5 inches

OPENING RECEPTION
June 9, 2016
5 p.m. to 7 p.m.

EXHIBITION
June 9 – July 30, 2016

Named one of the top 500 galleries in North America by Artinfo.

251 U.S. 1 • Falmouth, ME 04105

207-781-2620

2015 Laura Waller Essay by Christy Paris

Local artist Laura Waller’s exhibition, The Working Waterfront: Port Tampa Bay, explores one of Florida’s major marine hubs and provides visual documentation of America’s global industry. This series evokes the 19th-century Romantic painters’ interest in the sublime, presenting each ship, in its monumental and overwhelming size, with a narrative: carriers that navigate the world, cross boundaries, and, through her presentation, demonstrate their grandeur.  Using angles, ephemeral lighting, and dramatic architecture, Waller pulls the viewer in and demands their interaction and acknowledgment of, as she calls them, “true international citizens.”

Exploring the port by land and boat, Waller investigated the tethered lines, the architectural formations, the shadows, and colors in her surroundings.  From her perspective at water level, Waller documented the massive projections of the hulls, the bulbous bows, the bumpers, anchor chains, and tugboats. Waller’s interest in these ships and industry goes well beyond the physical attributes – she researches shipping terms and the functionality of each element, and she reads literature and documentaries on the U.S. Merchant Marine.  Waller also uses online databases to track the ships as they navigate the world, performing their duties through waters often made treacherous by both man and nature.  Her excitement and passion for this series permeates each painting and allows the viewer to transcend the traditional disconnect between consuming and having access to goods with the knowledge of how these items arrived on our shores – the life and essence of this industry.

Bursting into the viewer’s space, the hull in Thorco Tribute No. 2 (2014) juts forth, evoking feelings of power, solidity, and magnificence.  Waller’s use of color blocking and the juxtaposition of complimentary hues call attention to the form and structural essence of this mighty ship.  The cropped image heightens the importance of the lines and geometric construction of the vessel, unifying individual elements into a cohesive mass of forms.  Water, the conduit on which this ship relies, is absent, forcing the viewer’s attention to be focused on the ominous façade of this rugged hull.

To imbue her paintings with the character and pulsing vibrancy one experiences when viewing her work, Waller captures the rust and grittiness of each ship through her process.  Using an undercoat of raw sienna, sometimes emerging behind the impasto made by rough brushstrokes and the visible marks of a palette knife, Waller’s series is united by the harmonious warm colors and earth tones.  Wrapping around the sides of each canvas, the images appear to continue indefinitely and allude to the incredible size and magnitude of the subject matter, despite the cropped and foreshortened presentation that fills the visual field.   Her work recalls the exploration of form and architecture in early photographers like Alfred Stieglitz and Berenice Abbott, conveying the potential for movement in a single moment.  Other influences seen in her paintings include the Post-Impressionists and early abstract painters’ interest in the emotive power of color and form, yet Waller presents a unique style and quality in her work, an examination past the formal elements into the ships as vessels capable of telling their own personal story.

Devoid of human figures, Waller’s paintings nonetheless document the implication of human activity and explore the humble beauty found in the commonplace.  Waller’s goal was to allow the ships to speak to the person engaging with her work, to allow the viewer the opportunity to investigate past the surface presentation, and to leave visible documentation of these giant nomads, a goal she has not only reached, but exceeded.

– Christy Paris has a Masters in Interdisciplinary Humanities from Florida State University and a Masters in Art History from University of South Florida. Her research includes gender and identity, specifically in the works of 20th-century female painters like Grace Hartigan, at Pet Steir, and Sherrie Levine.

A certified teacher in the state of Florida, Christy has been teaching for over 10 years in both secondary and post-secondary levels. Earning her Museum Studies Certificate from FSU, Christie has also interned and worked at the Museum of Fine Arts in Tallahassee and the Museum of Fine Arts in St. Petersburg, Florida. Christy is currently an art history Adjunct Professor at the University of South Florida, St. Petersburg campus. 

Artists Receive Grants from Arts Council

Posted on March 9, 2016 – The Tampa Tribune

Fourteen artists have been awarded grants totaling $40,000 by the Arts Council of Hillsborough County as part of its 2016 Individual Artist Grants program.

The grant program is designed to provide support for the professional growth of accomplished, local artists. Artists applied for funds for specific projects that were reviewed and scored by a six-member panel of arts professionals in February. All of the artists live in Hillsborough County.

The Arts Council’s Board of Directors voted unanimously Feb. 25 to approve the panel recommendations for awards. Grantees include Laura Waller, painter, $3,000 for production of exhibition catalog of new work.

Laura Waller, the highest scoring visual artist, also received the Carolyn Heller Visual Arts Award, providing her with an additional $1,000.

Heller was a popular visual artist in Tampa and upon her death in 2011, her family designated memorials in her name be directed to Hillsborough Arts.

Fourteen Local Artists Receive Grants from Arts Council

Posted on February 29, 2016 – Arts Council Hillsborough County

Awards Total $40,000 for Local Artists

Fourteen artists have been awarded grants totaling $40,000 by the Arts Council of Hillsborough County as part of its 2016 Individual Artist Grants program. The grant program is designed to provide support for the professional growth of accomplished, local artists. Artists applied for funds for specific projects that were reviewed and scored by a six-member panel of arts professionals in February. All of the artists live in Hillsborough County.

The Arts Council’s Board of Directors voted unanimously Feb. 25 to approve the panel recommendations for awards. Grantees include Laura Waller, painter, $3,000 for production of exhibition catalog of new work.

Laura Waller, the highest scoring visual artist, also received the Carolyn Heller Visual Arts Award, providing her with an additional $1,000. Carolyn Heller was a popular visual artist in Tampa and upon her death in 2011, her family designated memorials in her name be directed to Hillsborough Arts.

Funding for the Individual Artist Grant program is made possible by the Hillsborough County Board of County Commissioners and the Arts Council’s annual FIVE by FIVE event.