One of our favorite annual exhibitions returns, this year with a virtual twist. The Seventeenth Annual College Show is a juried, online exhibition open to Worcester-area college students in any major. Below, engage with the work of 44 students with a broad range of academic concentrations, as well as insights from the artists themselves.
This year's juror is Aprile Gallant, Associate Director of Curatorial Affairs and Senior Curator of Prints, Drawings, and Photographs at the Smith College Museum of Art. From over one hundred and eighty submissions, Gallant selected 51 works by 44 artists in traditional and new media, including film, printmaking, photography, paint, and digital art.
For all purchase inquiries please contact the gallery at info@artsworcester.org. Not all works for sale are framed.
Congratulations to the prize winners of the 17th Annual College Show. Juror Aprile Gallant awarded three prize winners, all of equal value and receiving cash awards. She also selected two artworks for honorable mentions.
We thank Aprile Gallant for her time and thoughtful selections, as well as the faculty of Worcester-area colleges and universities who encourage the next generation of regional artists.
Ed's House, sharpie and pen on sketch paper, 8.5" x 11", 2020, Not For Sale
Worcester State University, 2021, Visual and Performing Arts
Mirrors, photo printed on Epson premium luster photo paper, 11" x 8.5", 2018, Not For Sale
Breaking News, photograph featuring newspaper clippings, 12.3" x 18.5", 2020, Not For Sale
Breaking News in progress
From the artist: "As a photographer, I aim to create images that capture the simplicity of nature and our surroundings. I am deeply inspired by the outdoors, and it is my favorite subject to photograph. My process involves focusing on the smaller elements of a moment. I try to best capture the lighting, details, and shape of these elements which contribute so much to the magic of the larger scene.
My photograph, “Snow on the Picket”, examines the freshly fallen snow resting on a fence picket in my backyard. The goal of this image is to convey the beauty and simplicity of a snowy morning using a “less is more” approach. Through my art, I hope to inspire the audience to look more deeply at the world around us and appreciate it in a new way"
Palazzo dei Priori in progress
It's Just a Skull in progress
Tayla Cormier invites us into her home and studio space to discuss the inspiration behind her prize-winning work, It's Just a Skull.
From the artist: "Floral Pane is a mixed media portrait collage that I created in November 2020 while in isolation. I photographed my friend Caitlin Tzimorotas in the spring of 2019 and used colored thread to stitch the portrait with a portion of Claude Monet’s Cap Martin, near Menton, 1884. Monet once said, “Everyday I discover more and more beautiful things. It’s enough to drive one mad. I have such a desire to do everything, my head is bursting with it”. I have felt this way countless times and feel that Monet perfectly puts into words how we can be both wildly excited and simultaneously overwhelmed by the boundless possibilities of life. As it relates to art, I strive to create pieces that are vibrant and exhilarating, by constantly experimenting with new mediums and taking inspiration from the artists and people that I encounter and adore."
Floral Pane in progress
Nepenthe in progress
Still from A Frog's Tale
Nebula in process
Shapiro's home studio
Kurt Vonnegut (detail)
From the artist: "Representation in abstraction is a prominent and versatile concept present throughout my work and artistic process. Working primarily with lines drawn in black ink I capture a flow of consciousness. The abstract nature of thoughts which are continuously and spontaneously branching off each other are parallel to the network of lines being represented on the page. Each line is its own thought, behaving as its own element. The rigidity yet fluidity of the medium of black ink pen provides a sense of control. During this process, the control of thoughts is transferred to the control of the pen, and the mind is free from inhibition. This is the very purpose of embracing this spontaneous artistic process, to release control and ultimately visualize a state of mind. Formal qualities such as the line thickness, direction, and shape are each subconsciously influenced by the flow of one’s thoughts."
From the artist, continued: "Likewise, color choice and material usage are also influenced by this flow of consciousness. Graphite and charcoal are additional prominent materials used within my work. “Ink City” embodies a sense of contrast between the abstract and the representational. Graphite and charcoal in my work are typically used to represent an image more accurately, whereas the black lines are used to represent abstract ideas. Throughout this piece are words, moments of consciousness in time embedded into a web. The combination of this web with the city buildings signifies the business of the mind. “Disease” embodies this business further, taking form as an explosion of thoughts which erupt into a sea of color and emotional intensity. The top of this sea of color and collision of varying materials such as colored pencil, watercolor paint, and ink are met with another face. Another opposing sense of identity to the gloomy, melting, and evaporating face on the bottom. It is the contrast of color and the contrast of abstraction and representation that captures the duality of the nature of thoughts sought to be expressed within my work."
Thank you to Aprile Gallant, Associate Director of Curatorial Affairs and Senior Curator of Prints, Drawings, and Photographs at the Smith College Museum of Art, who served as this year's juror. ArtsWorcester also wishes to thank the faculty of Worcester-area colleges and universities who encourage the next generation of regional artists.
Prizes for the Seventeenth Annual College show are generously supported by Marlene and David Persky and the Artist Prize Fund.
ArtsWorcester exhibitions are sustained in part by the C. Jean and Myles McDonough Charitable Foundation.