Date: Fri 10-Jul-1998
Date: Fri 10-Jul-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
Bailey-artist-Pratt-Java's
Full Text:
A Young Artist Poised To Explore A New Facet Of The Art World
(with cuts)
BY SHANNON HICKS
A shy girl by nature, Karen Bailey is about to take one of the most public
steps of her life. For the next three weeks, the Newtown artist will be
featured in a one-man art show -- Karen's first -- at Doctor Java's in Bethel.
On Friday night, Karen will have to face her public, when Java's hosts an
opening reception for "Images of Color."
"I'm extremely nervous," she admitted last week. Karen is home for the summer
from Brooklyn. In the fall she will be returning to Pratt Art Institute for
her sophomore year. She is studying art education and hopes to become a
teacher one day. That decision was years in the making, but much of that
probably had to do with the art teacher who left a permanent impression on
Karen while she was in high school.
Last week, Karen was been making the final selections of which of her works
will be presented in "Images of Color"; she wanted to have everything ready to
go for July 9, when she was planning on having the show hung.
Karen was planning to have 22 works on view, and all will be available for
sale. One watercolor, she pointed out during the interview, may have already
been purchased, but she wanted to include it in the show.
"Images of Color" will include acrylics, watercolors and charcoals by Karen.
Some are new, some are works that were assignments from her years at Newtown
High School, and a few others are assignments from professors at Pratt ("the
Ivy League school of the art world," she calls it). A few of the high school
pieces were actually in Karen's portfolio during high school, and were used
during her interview process to get into college. Some of the works still have
their grades and teachers' comments on the back.
Many of the pieces, regardless of why they were created, will be difficult for
Karen to sell.
A lot of thought has gone into deciding the prices for the work in "Images of
Color." After her father saw some of the initial prices she was considering
and told her to think harder about what she was offering (she was undermining
her own work, pricing well below what her time and efforts were worth, he
indicated) Karen said she had to sit down and fully reconsider what she was
selling: pieces of her.
"Some are going to be very difficult to part with," she confided. "Some are
memories. All have some sort of meaning to me."
What is more important to Karen, however, is not how much someone pays for a
piece of her artwork, but that viewers enjoy what she has created.
"I just pray people like them as much as I do, that they see something in
them," she said.
It's a big step for any artist, the first public exhibition. For someone who
is naturally quiet and fairly shy, the step can even be somewhat painful. Her
first year at Pratt has helped Karen adjust to the sometimes harsh world of
art. Art, says the honors student (she made Dean's List both semesters last
year), makes up a lot of what New York City is. "Everyone, it seems, is an
actor or a singer or a dancer or an artist," she said. "The city is very
art-oriented. "That was one of the reasons I wanted to go there."
New York may be full of artists, but Karen quickly learned at Pratt how
cut-throat the art world can be. Television and films tend to gloss over much
of what goes on for young artists. While professors talked about English
skills, psychology or painting, it was the behind-the-scenes goings on that
were more educating for the Newtown native.
"There are a lot of talented people, but it's also very competitive, even in
classes," Karen said. She saw and heard about many students who were stealing
supplies from others, or students who had had their work purposely destroyed
by a competing student.
"You have to be very careful," she said.
Karen does not pretend to have a certain style to her painting. Like much new
music today, her work falls into a number of descriptive categories. There is
some hint of Abstract Expressionism seen, but nothing that clearly stands out
as a solid form. The works she was sorting through last week were an array of
not only different stages in her career, but also different media. There were
piles of charcoal drawings, some multi-image acrylic paintings, and softer
watercolors.
"I've always been an artist," she said recently. Karen remembers watching her
grandfather paint all the time when she was a young girl. Her grandfather got
over the toughness of having to part with his paintings by never selling any
of his work.
"His walls are covered with his work," she laughed. "I don't think he has ever
wanted to sell a single one."
The hardest part for Karen during the opening at Doctor Java's this week will
be determining what people are really thinking about her art. She attended a
number of openings during her first year at Pratt, and said she overheard some
conversations between critics that were downright brutal.
Karen isn't going into the Doctor Java's show with thoughts of changing the
art world with her work... yet. This is just the first step in what will
probably become a long staircase the young artist will take in her career, so
she shouldn't be too concerned that harsh words will come her way. Her work is
impressive, and creative, and the collection going on view for the Bethel show
is a good representation of what she has accomplished so far.
Karen is nervous about Friday's opening, and at the idea of being in a large
gathering with so many people looking at her work, but the artist also knows
it needs to be done.
"I really think if you have a passion to do something," she said, "you have to
bite the bullet."
"Images of Color" opens tonight at Doctor Java's with a reception from 7-9 pm.
The exhibition will remain on view through August 3. Doctor Java's is at 114
Greenwood Avenue in Bethel.