Tag: Field Notes: an art survey

More Notetaking: Four Ways to view Field Notes Online

Field Notes online
Details of works by: Misako Nakahira, Yong Joo Kim, Eduardo Portillo and Mária Dávila

Our in-person exhibitions at browngrotta arts last only 10 days each, twice a year. There’s a method to that, but, the small window means not everyone gets to see our exhibitions on site. We’ve tried various ways to share images and information about them after the in-person exhibit ends. This year, for Field Notes: an art surveywe have created three ways to share the experience with those who could not attend.

First, we created a video view of Field Notes. You can see it in sections — each devoted to a gallery space (Gallery 1: Front Hall; Gallery 2: Dining Room; Gallery 3: Living Room; Gallery 4: Den/Old Kitchen; Gallery 5: New Kitchen; Gallery 6: Back Room. They’ll appear on Instagram each Friday on art live, one each for 6 weeks. The first, Gallery 1, was posted on our Instagram on Friday. If you don’t watch them piecemeal, you can see the full video of all six galleries is on our YouTube Channel (see below).

Second, we’ve created a Viewing Room on our website that contains all the works in Field Notes, again, divided into six galleries. You can match works that interest you from the videos to the Viewing Room Galleries where you will see more images of each. We’ll have the Field Notes Viewing Rooms up on our website until June 20, 2025.

art on the rocks
Detail of work by Shoko Fukuda 

Third, we’ll be hosting a program on Zoom, Art on the Rocks: an exhibition talkthrough with spirits — Field Notes edition on June 10th at 7 pm EST. We’ll talk about fiber art’s new found popularity and share insights about the survey we took in order explore where fiber art is at this point. We’ll also feature a curated cocktail from our mixologist, Max Fanwick.

Check in on one, two or all three of these, to learn more!


Make a Day of It – Field Notes and Nearby Exhibitions

There is an abundance of art to see on your trip to or from Field Notes: an art survey at browngrotta arts in Wilton, Connecticut next month (May 3 – 11). 

Tracey Emin
A Moment Without You – Tracey Emin

Coming from the east? The first major presentation of Tracey Emin’s work in a North American museum is currently at the Yale Center for British Art in New Haven, Connecticut. The exhibition, Tracey Emin: I Loved you Until Morning, features paintings from 2007 to the present. Together, the works demonstrate the artist’s unflinching commitment to challenging conceptions of female experience.

Maren Hassinger
Maren Hassinger, Monument (Pyramid), 2022. Wood and metal. Yale University Art Gallery, Janet and Simeon Braguin Fund. © Maren Hassinger

While you are in New Haven, you can also see a 10-foot-tall pyramid made of hundreds of thin tree branches that has been installed in the Yale Art Gallery’s Margaret and Angus Wurtele Sculpture Garden, Monument (Pyramid), a 2022 work by the prominent contemporary sculptor Maren Hassinger.

Isamu Noguchi
Isamu Noguchi sculpture, The Israel Museum, Jerusalem Collection; Photo copyright by yair taller.

Coming from New York or other parts west? The Bruce Museum in Greenwich, Connecticut is hosting a very interesting exhibition of sculptures by Isamu Noguchi. Isamu Noguchi: Metal the Mirror, features a selection of nine galvanized steel sculptures, the exhibition is organized into thematic groupings that showcase the artist’s mastery of material, form, and texture. In the first, Noguchi imparts inanimate forms with human qualities, complicating the relationship between flesh and steel, body and mirror. Man-made material is transformed into representations of mountains, fruit, and sky in the second grouping, reflecting Noguchi’s belief that, in modernity, industry and nature are intertwined. A final trio of works reveals Noguchi’s ongoing interest in abstraction, bringing theoretical and spiritual ideas, weight and weightlessness, and past and present into visual conversation.

Silvermine Gallery
Roger Mudre, Executive Director, Silvermine Galleries, and Rhonda Brown of browngrotta arts at the Galleries in February. On exhibit then: New Members 2025. On exhibit in May: Fiber 2025, Masters of the Medium: CT and Mastery and Materiality: International. Photo by Tom Grotta. 

Coming to Wilton on May 10th? You can visit Field Notes and three other textile art exhibitions at the Silvermine Art Gallery in New Canaan, CT.  Fiber 2025 has been juried by Tom Grotta and Rhonda Brown of browngrotta arts. An international exhibition, it seeks to showcase the best of contemporary fiber art, reflecting the breadth of functional or non-functional works that use fiber and/or fiber art techniques in traditional or innovative ways. In conjunction with Fiber 2025, are two exhibitions curated by browngrotta arts in the Silvermine Galleries: Masters of the Medium, CT, highlighting the work of acclaimed Connecticut artists Helena Hernmarck and Norma Minkowitz, and Mastery and Materiality: International, featuring work by 17 artists from nine countries, including renowned Jacquard weavers, accomplished embroiderers, and fiber sculptors who work in seaweed, bark, wire, paper straws, lead, and fish scales.

The Glass House, Barbara Kastner: Structure, Light, Land, photo Michael Biondo

Coming to Field Notes another day during its 10-day run? You can see art in the neighborhood in New Canaan or Ridgefield. Barbara Kasten: Structure, Light, Land is at The Glass House in New Canaan — 8.4 miles away. For five decades, Chicago-based artist Barbara Kasten has created photographs and sculptural installations that reorient our sense of perception and explore the dynamic relationship between space, material, and form. Structure, Light, Land features Kasten’s work from multiple series, including Architectural SitesCollisions, and Progressions, as well as new iterations of digital projections, cyanotypes, and sculptures. With a striking interplay of light, color, and form, Kasten’s work infiltrates the grounds of The Glass House and responds to the site’s varied built environment and landscape. 

A Garden of Promise and Dissent
A Garden of Promise and Dissent (installation view), The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, November 17, 2024 to April 12, 2026. Photo: Jeffrey Jenkins Projects

Or, visit A Garden of Promise and Dissent at the Aldrich Museum in Ridgefield, Connecticut, just 6.2 miles from browngrotta arts. The exhibition spans the grounds, featuring works by eight multigenerational artists who explore future gardens as embodiments of imagination and rebellion.  
Looking forward to seeing you in May! 

Exhibition Details:

Field Notes: an art survey
browngrotta arts
276 Ridgefield Rd
Wilton, CT 06897
May 3 – 11, 2025
Saturday, May 3rd: 11am to 6pm 
Sunday, May 4th: 11am to 6pm 
Monday, May 5th through Saturday, May 10th: 10am to 5pm 
Sunday, May 11th: 11am to 6pmSafety protocols:
Reservations strongly encouraged.
No narrow heels please (barn floors)
https://browngrotta.com/exhibitions/field-notes

Fiber 2025
(juried by browngrotta arts)
Masters of the Medium: CT
Mastery and Materiality: International

(curated by browngrotta arts)

May 10 – June 19, 2025
Silvermine Galleries
1037 Silvermine Road
New Canaan, CT
Closed Sunday + Monday
https://browngrotta.com/events/events

Tracey Emin: I Loved You Until Morning
Through August 10, 2025
The Yale Center for British Art
1080 Chapel Street
New Haven, Connecticut 06510
Closed Monday
https://britishart.yale.edu/exhibitions-programs/tracey-emin-i-loved-you-until-morning

Isamu Noguchi: Metal the Mirror
Through November 16, 2025
The Bruce Museum
1 Museum Drive
Greenwich, CT 06830-7157
Closed Monday
https://brucemuseum.org/whats-on/isamu-noguchi-metal-the-mirror

Barbara Kasten: Structure, Light, Land
Through December 15, 2025
The Glass House Visitor Center + Design Store             
199 Elm Street, New Canaan, CT 06840                     
Closed Tuesday + Wednesday
https://theglasshouse.org/pressrelease/barbara-kasten-structure-light-land-april-17-december-15-2025/

A Garden of Promise and Dissent
Through December 17, 2025
The Aldrich
258 Main Street
Ridgefield, CT 06877
Closed Tuesday 
https://thealdrich.org/exhibitions/a-garden-of-promise-and-dissent-outdoor-installation


Field Notes: Pioneers

For our Spring 2025 Art in the Barn Exhibition, Field Notes: an art survey, we’ve taken an expansive look at the fiber art field. We’ve checked in with artists we work with and invited a group of artists new to browngrottarts. In addition, we’ve gathered selected works by five pioneering artists — Sheila Hicks, Masakazu Kobayashi, Mariette Rousseau-Vermette, Ed Rossbach and Kay Sekimachi. 

Some 60 years ago, artists begn making works that transcended our existing concept of textiles. While based on traditional techniques, these works, collectively known as fiber art, incorporated metals, minerals, and many other materials in addition to natural and synthetic fibers. For the first time, textiles came off the wall, expanded from two to three dimensions and into the surrounding space. The five artists we will include in Field Works, were not just pivotal in the emergence of contemporary fiber art in the  60s and 70s, but significant contributors to the art form’s current popularity. 

Masakazu Kobayashi
39mko Bow ‘86, Masakazu Kobayashi, silk, rayon, aluminum, wood thread spools, 2.25” x 20” x 20”, 1986

Kobayashi’s work was the subject of a major retropsective at the National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto, Japan in 2024 and Hicks’s work was, most recently, featured in a major exhibition in two German museums, Josef Albers Museum in Bottrop and the Kunsthalle Düsseldorf, earlier this year. Rousseau-Vermette’s work will be the subject of major retrospective at the Musée National des Beaux Arts du Québec (MNBAQ)  in Canada in 2026. And, you can see works by Hicks, Rosshbach, and Sekimachi in Woven Histories: Textiles and Modern Abstraction at the Museum of Modern Art in New York beginning next week and work by all five in Field Notes: an art survey, at browngrotta arts in Wilton, CT, May 3rd through the 11th.

Sheila Hicks
Detail: 40sh Family Evolution, Sheila Hicks, 9” x 25” x 9”, 1997

Renowned fiber sculptor Sheila Hicks began creating innovative textile works in the 1950s. She studied painting with Josef Albers at Yale, and studied weaving in Mexico and Chile. Ball-like forms and “boules” are a motif to which Hicks repeatedly returns. The core of these forms, as in the case of Family Evolution, featured in Field Notes is often formed from garments that have previously belonged to the artist’s friends or family. They hold memories for Hicks, who refers to them as her memory balls. The personal aspect is intentional. 

Masakazu Kobayashi, (1944-2004) was an early actor in contemporary fiber art.  He first studied lacquerware at Kyoto City University of Fine Arts (later Kyoto City University of Arts) but, according to the Kyoto Musuem of Modern Art,  “it was “Encounter with a Single Thread,” which he made while working at Kawashima Textiles Company, that spearheaded a series of works in which he dangled, stretched and unravelled yarn to create three-dimensional pieces.”  Bow ’86 is featured in Field Notes. Made of silk, rayon, aluminum, and wooden thread spools, the work continues the artist’s exploration of the bow — a shape he created by bending aluminum bow space wilth tension held  with silken thread. The bow explorations embody the equilibrium he sought in his work between his capacity as a creator and the energy of the world around him.

Mariette Rousseau-Vermette
Field Note: 171mr Reflets de Montréal, Mariette Rousseau-Vermette, wool, 42″ x 82″ x 2.5″, 1968

Born in Trois-Pistoles, Québec, Mariette Rousseau-Vermette (1926 – 2006) received her training at both the École des beaux-arts du Québec and at the Oakland College of Arts and Crafts, in California where she worked in Dorothy Liebes’s studio in San Francisco. She married Claude Vermette in 1952. The couple travelled extensively in Europe and Asia, allowing Rousseau-Vermette to broaden and deepen her understanding of different tapestry techniques. For four decades, she created luminous tapestries and sculptures for collectors and commissions throughout Canada and the US, including for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the Canadian Chancery, Exxon Corporation and the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC (a curtain gifted by the Canadian Government). Reflets de Montréal, included in Field Notes, is a sumptuous early work from 1968 made of wool that Rousseau-Vermette sourced for its lustrous qualities. 

All three of these artists, Hicks, Kobayashi, and Rousseau-Vermette, exhibited works at several of the prestigious International Tapestry Biennials in Lausanne, Switzerland which were organized from 1962 to 1995.

Ed Rossbach
Ed Rossbach 45.1r Poncho, 8″ x 7.75″ x 7.75″, 1991; 8r.1 Punt,, 14″ x 5″ x 5″, 1989; 20.1r Wyoming, 8″ x 11″ x 11″, 1996, plaited ash veneer, rice paper, heat transfer

Ed Rossbach and Kay Sekimachi were both living in Berkeley, California in the 60s and 70s, which was an incubator for contemporary fiber arts. As a faculty member at the University of California, Ed Rossbach (1914 – 2002) was a major force spurring these explorations. The Museum of Arts and Design in New York, New York described Ed Rossbach’s importance: “Rossbach was an imaginative and adept weaver, mastering ancient techniques and innovating with new and unorthodox materials, such as plastics and newspaper. He is considered by many to be the pre-eminent influence in the rise of basketry as a sculptural art form. In addition, Rossbach is known for incorporating unconventional imagery, including pop culture references.” Numerous artists from Diedrick Brackins to Marvin Lipofsky to Gyöngy Laky claim him as an influence. In Field Notes, Punt, one of Rossbach’s pop culture-inspired works will be exhibited. A resale work, Punt features a football kicker in bright colors. The other works included, Poncho and  Wyoming, also feature intriguing — South American textile patterning and an image of gravel from the West.

Kay Sekimachi
127,136,137,170k Summer session with Trude Guermonprez, Kay Sekimachi, Variation of honeycomb weave, 8 harness, group threading, cotton, linen, 14.5″ x 9″, 1950’s

Kay Sekimachi is recognized as a leader in the resurrection of fiber and weaving as a legitimate means of artistic expression. She is known as a “weaver’s weaver” for her unusual use of a 16-harness loom in constructing three-dimensional sculptural pieces. In the early 1970s she used nylon monofilament to create hanging quadruple tubular woven forms in an exploration of space, transparency, and movement. She attended the California College of Arts and Crafts (CA), where she studied with Trude Guermonprez, and at Haystack Mountain School of Crafts (ME), where she studied with Jack Lenor Larsen. In Field Notes, very significant early works that Sekimachi made in the 1950s while studying with Trude Guermonprez, Samples: Summer Session with Trude Guermonprez, will be on view. Sekimachi credits Guermonprez with empowering her through her style of teaching, which emphasized individual creativity and curiosity. 

As Aby Mackie, another artist in Field Notes, observes: The field of fiber art is currently experiencing a profound shift, gaining recognition as a respected medium within contemporary art. This growing appreciation affirms textiles’ versatility and expressive potential, establishing it as a powerful medium for storytelling and innovation in the current art world.”

Join us May to explore that potential!
SCHEDULE YOUR VISIT 

Exhibition Details:
Field Notes: an art survey
browngrotta arts
276 Ridgefield Rd
Wilton, CT 06897
May 3 – 11, 2025

Gallery Dates/Hours:
Saturday, May 3rd: 11am to 6pm [Opening & Artist Reception]
Sunday, May 4th: 11am to 6pm (40 visitors/ hour)
Monday, May 5th through Saturday, May 10th: 10am to 5pm (40 visitors/ hour)
Sunday, May 11th: 11am to 6pm [Final Day] (40 visitors/ hour)

Safety protocols: 
Reservations strongly encouraged.
No narrow heels please (barn floors)