Art Watch: Vet’s sculpture has primordial reach

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Jill Beech coral forms

One of my favorite local sculptors is Jill Beech, and she will be having her annual studio sale this Saturday December 12th 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Even though she is still not planning to create a website, Jill has a large loyal following of collectors, including me, who wait for her studio sale announcement every year.

I already bought 6 of her pieces last weekend, but she has plenty of gorgeous art left for this weekend! Her studio is about 25 minutes from Kennett Square, at 6 Park Avenue in East Fallowfield PA. Weaving artist Eva Stossel will be showing at the Beech studio as well. I stopped by to interview her and to get a sneak peak of what she will be selling at her show.

Jill Beech in studio
Sculptor Jill Beech in her Fallowfield studio

Born in Kent England, and raised in Panama, Jill Beech always knew that she wanted to be a veterinarian. The art bug came later. Though few universities in the 1960s and 1970s would accept female veterinary students, Jill graduated from The University of Pennsylvania with a degree in veterinary medicine and was a Professor of Medicine at New Bolton until she retired in 2011. When not working with horses, she worked independently and also enrolled in art classes, primarily at the famous Penland School of Crafts in North Carolina, to learn various aspects of ceramics, enameling, metal work, blacksmithing, and paper sculpture.

For decades, Jill Beech has travelled the world and found natural and aesthetic inspiration for her creative works in the stone carving and the stone formations in Baffin Island, wild life and wood carvings in Tanzania, frescoes in many European countries, aboriginal art including cave paintings in isolated caves in the Grampian mountains of Australia, the shrines and colors of Bali, the rock carvings, caves and statuary in India to name only a small sample of her creative journeys.

Jill Beech's work is very organic, and resembles  forms in nature. She is inspired to evoke the spirit of a natural form or animal "the spirit of something as opposed to making a copy. I have no desire to make a perfect horse but to evoke the feeling of the animal, that would be the ideal" she states.

She is intrigued by the mystery and layers of natural forms, "the shadows" of the thing. The abstraction of a natural resemblance is what "holds" her while she creates. And, with the enormous number of hours that each artwork takes, she needs to be held in that point of inspiration for a very long time. Her recent coral-like sculptural forms in stoneware and porcelain are heavy, large forms that seem almost ethereal with their thousands of small hand carved holes and curves. Each work of art takes many weeks to create. After completing a piece and firing it for the first time to about 1800O F, she then sandblasts it prior to the final higher temperature firing which takes away the sharpness and creates a weathered, nature-worn effect that is just exquisite.

Her most recent series is of paper-like pods, some of which, rather incredibly, she creates from the Kozo plant. She cooks the Kozo in soda ash, layers it and hammers it into very fine sheets, which she then rips into small bits, carefully burns each edge, and then applies to large wire frames. As Jill humbly reports, this is all "pretty labor intensive!"

Jill Beech's personal aesthetic is driven by her curiosity, wonder and admiration for the primordial natural world. Her art works are fascinatingly contemporary, monochrome in pallet, but portray a rich, ancient echo.  The forms tap in to a palpable connection with the natural world. Whether it is the hard work that it takes to produce them, the worldly journeys that inspire them, or simply the passion of the artist that creates them, there is something transcendent about each of her works.

Do not kid yourself into thinking that you will buy anything here for gifts, because you will want to keep them all! Come visit her studio in the last weekend of her open studio… and walk into the mesmerizing otherworld of Jill Beech.

The Church Street Gallery in West Chester has its opening reception this Friday December 11 from 5:00 to 8 p.m. for the artist, and gallery co-owner, John Suplee. Openings at Church Street are always lively events, packed with art lovers and artists, chatting, connecting and wrestling for works on the walls. This Friday, there should be quite a lot of wrestling, as John Supplee is a well-known, well-liked artist in the community who will be displaying a broad array of his artwork that have not been seen before. Next week's Art Watch will have an interview with this fascinating artist, so stay tuned, and in the meantime, check out the opening on Friday!

At Galer Estate Winery, in Kennett Square, paintings by Torrey Kist and Abigail Patterson as well as artisanal crafts by jewelry artist Susan Heaver, wood turned bowls by Paul Koch, and ceramics by Deanna Haldeman, will be for sale Sunday December 13th from 1 to 7 p.m.

Ten Gallon Hat Winery in Chadds Ford is doing a Pop up Holiday Gift Show this Sunday 1-4 p.m. featuring the work of 10 local artists, including Bob Deane ceramics, Marinella's Jewelry, Mommacat Creations and Bridge Street Chocolates.Yum.

Wilson Winery will be showcasing the beautiful paintings by Sally Wilson. Chadds Ford Winery, Ten Gallon Hat Winery, Flickerwood Winery, Kreutz Creek Winery, Grace Winery and Penns Woods Winery all have artisan shows and sales throughout the December Month. Check out the Brandywine Artisan Wine Trail web site for the best information on winery art shows in December.

Art Show at the Gables of Chadds Ford
Art Show at the Gables of Chadds Ford

At The Gables restaurant in Chadds Ford, Sunday December 13th, six Chester County artists have a Holiday Art Sale from 11:30am-5:30pm, including wood carver John Rush, glass artist Patsy Keller, and artworks from Daphne Longo-Okcuoglu, Jack Marshall, Lauren Mulhern and Philice Ray. The Gables is always so generous to local non-profits with the use of their large open space. The venue is  a perfect place for artists to show, and for customers to shop, eat and enjoy.

The Delaware Art Museum is having a Winter Arts Festival Friday December 11 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. and Saturday December 12 from  10 a.m. to 4 p.m. with sixteen regional artists selling their art wares, to the accompaniment of local choirs, surrounded by floral displays by local flower arrangement artisans, and even special Winter treats to eat at the Museum's Café. Sounds like a terrific experience for all the family, for all the senses.

Chester County Art Association, in West Chester, is having an Artisan Holiday Market from 3-7 p.m. on Friday December 11th. Visit the Galleries at CCAA to see beautiful art and a collection of handmade gifts and jewelry perfect for the gift giving season. Enjoy a festive atmosphere with music, mulled wine and cookies in the spirit of an Austrian Chriskindlmarkt..and think about giving a CCAA Membership as a gift!

About Lele Galer

Lele Galer is an artist who has chaired numerous art shows, taught art history and studio art, public art and has chaired, written and taught the Art in Action Art Appreciation series for the UCFD schools for the past 12 years. She worked at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and wrote for the Associated Press in Rome. She has been dedicated to Art History and art education for most of her adult life. Lele and her husband Brad own Galer Estate Winery in Kennett Square.

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