By Doug
Holder
One of the first things I noticed while
talking with Bridget Galway was the tattoo flowers that tangled their way up
the sides of her expressive hands. And then there was the silver hoop earrings
with yellow stones—in some ways she is a living piece of installation art. And
no wonder… Bridget Galway has always been involved with the arts. In
Provincetown, Mass. (where she grew up) her mom owned a sandal shop and was a
model for the artist Hans Hoffman, and her father was a writer. And as a young
artist Galway was intimately involved in the arts scene. Later she founded a
free arts center in Holyoke, Mass. There she developed innovative art programs
for city youth and others. She has designed book covers for a number of poets
including Eating Grief at 3A.M. (Muddy
River Books) by yours truly and the upcoming On the Wings of Song (Ibbetson Street Press) by Molly Lynn Watt, a
memoir in verse that deals with the Civil Rights Movement of the
60s.
Galway was the arts/editor for the Wilderness House Literary Review, an online journal, where she interviewed and featured the work of a number of locally and nationally known artists. She has had a number of her paintings featured on the front cover of the Pushcart-Prize winning journal Ibbetson Street. Most notably her pensive woman in the “Red Beret”, and a haunting portrait of the Beat writer William Burroughs adorned the magazine. Recently the Small Press Review lauded her cover for Ibbetson Street 34, which was titled “Birds of a Feather.” This painting portrays a man and a woman shedding tears as black birds fly like bitter words from each other’s mouths.
Galway was the arts/editor for the Wilderness House Literary Review, an online journal, where she interviewed and featured the work of a number of locally and nationally known artists. She has had a number of her paintings featured on the front cover of the Pushcart-Prize winning journal Ibbetson Street. Most notably her pensive woman in the “Red Beret”, and a haunting portrait of the Beat writer William Burroughs adorned the magazine. Recently the Small Press Review lauded her cover for Ibbetson Street 34, which was titled “Birds of a Feather.” This painting portrays a man and a woman shedding tears as black birds fly like bitter words from each other’s mouths.
When Galway arrived in Somerville from P-Town
she was unconnected and isolated. But one day she wandered into the Au Bon Pain
in Davis Square for a Bagel Bard literary group meeting and slowly got her feet
planted in the rich artistic soil here. Now she works under the direction of
Lea Ruscio at the Arts Armory as an Education Programming Coordinator. One of
her duties is to work with youth on art initiatives . One such program is titled: Youth, Arts, Arrive. According to
Galway this program “…provides
multi-disciplinary art instruction to youth 11 to 19 years old, and
incorporates peer leadership.” And Galway, an experienced grant writer will be
working to find more funding sources. Galway is also working on a found objects
project. This would have kids make art pieces out of objects that they might
throw out like old toys or dolls, etc…, and turn them into permanent fixtures.
Galway who
holds a degree in painting from U/Mass Amherst among others, recently had an
exhibit at the Somerville Public Library that featured a selection of her work
from the past thirty years. The opening for her exhibit included a poetry
reading that featured many of the poets she met through the Bagel Bards. About
her own art Galway told me: “A lot of my work is studies of people, portrayed
in an intimate way”. According to Galway, through her renditions of people she
processes her own thoughts about her relationships and the world. Galway said:
“What I am feeling I express through a person I paint. You can feel it from the
colors I use, from the environment, and the setting of the picture.”
Galway’s
unique perspective and tireless advocacy of the arts is a welcomed presence in
the Paris of New England.
nice article on bridget. we get a better insight into who she is as an artist. thanks doug
ReplyDeleteI'm a big fan of her work. It's distinctively beautiful.
ReplyDeleteOh, she's O.K.
ReplyDeleteHaHa...
FANTASTIC Artist, Writer, Poet, Person.
Love you Bridg.
Joey
Oh, she's O.K.
ReplyDeleteHaHa.
FANTASTIC Artist, Writer, Person
Love You.
Joey.