By Doug Holder
Somerville artist Jane Sherrill
thrives around water. Most recently her sculpture and art has
revolved around oceans, icicles and the shadows they produce. Sherrill
has been producing art for many years now and she is a longtime
resident of the Vernon St. Studios in Somerville. I talked with her amidst the din of the Bloc 11 Cafe in Union Square.
Doug Holder: You have worked in many
different forms: painting, sculpture, etc...You are self-taught. Are
there any disadvantages to that?
Jane Sherrill: Yes. You don't have
teachers to help you get grants and better shows. But it also pushes
you to be more creative. It has been up to me to teach myself how to
draw. So I found my own way of doing things.
DH: You had another life before
painting.
JS: I had a few lives before painting.
I taught emotionally disturbed and learning disabled children. I was
a psychiatric social worker, and a graphic designer. I also did some
performance art based on temp jobs I held.
DH: Recently I heard that you completed
a series of pictures of the pre-Sandy New Jersey shore.
JS: Yes. I took some pictures in Point
Pleasant. I completed some very large paintings using these photos.
There are 5 in the series. Right before I finished them Hurricane
Sandy plowed through.
DH: Why did you choose New Jersey
beaches?
JS: Here is the thing. I started a
series of paintings about the ocean. I did this because I love the
ocean. I worked on the large sense of the ocean and the tiny details,
like droplets. I was aware that beaches are very different. I mean
the color of the water varies from Cape Cod to New Jersey. I visited
different beaches. I wanted to document that in the face of climate
change. But what really inspires me is my awe of all of this. Oceans
are stunning. And from this I have gone into cloud and sky. And
people are telling me after they look at my paintings they are
looking up at the sky all the time. I want people to look at this
gorgeousness.
DH: How long have you been at the
Vernon St. Studios?
JS. Over thirty years. There are people
who have been there longer. It is a wonderful place. The only problem
is that everybody is so busy that we don't get together as much as we
did years ago.
DH: Can you tell me about your icicle
project?
JS: This past year I was accepted into
the Vermont Studios. I went up to Johnson, VT. It was bitter cold.
One morning it was 27 below. The studio was beautiful. I walked in
and I noticed that windows were covered with icicles. I came up with
no set idea of what I wanted to work on. Then I began to draw the
icicles. I also started to trace the shadows they made. I also
decided to paint the icicles. I also made sculptures from hot glue.
DH: You were in the poetry scene in New
York City some years ago.
JS: Years ago. I read at St. Mark's
Church—and in a theatre in Hell's Kitchen—among other venues. My
poetry was very performance based. I was touted as the new Patti
Smith. (Laugh) It was the late 70s. I still love to write. It is
wonderful to work with words. Now that I am on Facebook I write
poetic vignettes.
DH: Do you make your daily nut from
your art?
JS: I do a number of things to get by.
I sell may paintings; I do graphic design and in the past I have
taught everything from the Torah in Hebrew School and substitute
taught. It ain't easy.
Go to: http://wwww.janesherrill.com
for more info.
No comments:
Post a Comment