Impressions & Found Work by Irma Freeman
Feb
27
10:00 PM22:00

Impressions & Found Work by Irma Freeman

The Irma Freeman Center for Imagination presents rare original works by Irma Freeman (December 14, 1903 - June 10, 1994).  Irma’s name became a part of our city’s landscape with the opening of the IF in 2009. This exhibition called “Impressions & Found Work” is aptly named based on a unique combination of many displayed artworks having been only discovered recently (in basements, suitcases, boxes, in the mail, and, in one bizarre case, in a Shadyside resident’s garbage), along with most of the works that either have never, or rarely, been viewed before. This exhibition also offers high resolution prints of Irma’s paintings available for sale for the first time. The journey of the work reported found, along with a heap of art by Ruth Freeman, were at least six pieces labeled or signed by Irma Freeman.  The found treasure owes its recovery to Donna Palermo, a Pittsburgher who discovered, and rescued it from the rain after her landlord had tossed out the pile of dusty, large sketches into the garbage, outside her apartment in Shadyside (hauling in at least 50 items). The origins of how they got to that house on Aiken have been undetermined, even after ace reporter Bill O’Driscoll attempted to find a paper trail. Once Donna brought the art into safety, she began ruffling through it and was elated to recognize a name, whose labels read: “Artist: Irma Freeman” (probably from an entry into the Three Rivers Art exhibition in 1974.) as well as most items signed “Ruth Freeman”. Donna consequently found the Freeman Center and I spoke with her in this past summer. With Bill O’Driscoll from WSEA/local NPR, and a few relatives, including Irma’s daughter Ruth Freeman (78), we all went to investigate. What is shown here are a range of works dated from 1964 to 1974, with the other items not dated, but most likely from the early sixties or late fifties, especially noting one sitter’s Mad Man attire.

 

Other notable work is the largest painting ever done by Irma Freeman (4 x 8 feet) and most likely only once exhibited, since its colossal size kept it living in one spot for three decades, a house most recently occupied by Ruth. This large work (along with the other sketches seen here) were abandoned by Ruth Freeman after moving out of her Pierce Street dwelling two years ago. Ruth, is also a prolific artist and often has more work taking up space in her home than she can possibly manage. It was her request that this writer (niece to Ruth, and granddaughter to Irma) rummage through the house before it sold, and pull out the best of many paintings, books and art supplies, left by Ruth who moved to a much smaller house. Among the work recovered were sketches of Irma Freeman’s in many sizes, found and saved from the dumpster, along with Irma’s 1929 Passport and other important papers that noted her entry to Ellis Island. Other sketches (such as the portraits of Sheila and Abby) were found in the basement of the longtime Freeman home in a well-preserved suitcase that safeguarded them there for some thirty or more years. (Also found were many other remarkable sketches including a suitcase full of 18 x 23” sketch books with carefully rendered still-lifes, portraits and landscapes. It is a hope that another attempt to uncover and care for Irma’s many more pastel sketches will someday result in their being catalogued, photographed, displayed, and preserved, in a proper archive.

 

The other paintings here, never seen before by the author, include a wonderfully rich landscape painted on a wooden plank, probably meant to ornate the windowsill for the renovations done to Irma’s small row house during the last years of her life. Other works may have been seen, yet after doing some digging, the author notes that most of the Irma’s exhibitions shown at the IF Center occurred in 2010 (the IF Center’s first year of existence.) That year there were six exhibitions of Irma’s work: “Urban Landscapes”, “Later Portraits”, “Bridges & Fences”, “Waterscapes”, “Pathways” and “Flowers”. In 2015, we showed “Copper Foil Portraits by Irma & Ruth Freeman” and “Natural Renderings”. Other works have been exhibited in various group showings such as the Pittsburgh by Pittsburgh Artist series. Still more work was displayed as solo art exhibitions, but not clearly documented, such as “Cat Paintings”, “Surreal Landscapes” and “Early Portraits”. If you are an avid fan of Irma’s you may find a smattering of paintings that you have seen before. If they are here it is because the author and curator has an intense fondness for them coupled by their capturing a great nuance of Irma’s impressionistic period. It is never-the-less no less phenomenal to have these great paintings, prints and sketches cards by Irma Freeman available for the viewer.

 

This exhibition also offers a chance to study Irma’s many eclectic styles where her visions, as well as her lifespan (born in in Germany in 1903) fell fairly close to the evolution of Modern Art, ranging all the way from realism to abstraction, inclusive of many genres in between, such as those shown here as “impressions”. Despite many difficulties and obstacles in her life, Irma left behind an inspiring body of work, consisting of over 800 paintings and sketches. The legacy of Irma Freeman is a Pittsburgh treasure waiting to be discovered. 

 

–Sheila Ali, curator

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Nat Finkelstein: UP ALL NIGHT
Nov
6
to Dec 18

Nat Finkelstein: UP ALL NIGHT

November 4 – December 18, 2015

Featuring Projections & Photography with Music covers by the Velvet Underground

Nat Finkelstein (1933-2009) was a photographer specialized in emerging subcultures.   As an established young photojournalist in the 1960s, Finkelstein became a vital collaborator among Andy Warhol’s Factory, serving as the in-house media.    His intimate and intense photographs of the legendary Silver Factory scene (including Warhol, the Velvet Underground & Nico, Edie Sedgwick, and visitors including Bob Dylan and Marcel Duchamp) are now among the most recognized images of the era.

While best known for his photographs of The Factory, Finkelstein documented stories as wide-ranging as civil rights protests for LIFE Magazine, to post-punk New York City, to the international rave scene of the 1990s, and beyond.    Throughout his life and work, Nat Finkelstein remained steadfast in his vision: emerging art and music, the expansion of consciousness, and freedom of expression.

For the exhibition UP ALL NIGHT, Elizabeth Murray Finkelstein presents a selection from her late husband’s print archive illustrating these themes through images of celebration.

Representing the Factory-era, Elizabeth includes Nat’s photographs of the Velvet Underground – described by critic Ian Johnston as “…[Among] the best ever portraits of a rock band, exuding sleaze, menace, and decadent glamour.”    Yet, it is poignant to consider Nat Finkelstein’s own words:  “These unposed images were made when Andy Warhol et al were people, not products; young artists, not celebratees.”

Another series of photographs from the Factory scene depict dancing models, young women whose names are lost to history.

Years later, Nat Finkelstein would document another New York City scene, another generation of young artists whose history became legend.    Irma Freeman Center will present Nat’s never-before-screened videos of Disco 2000 – the early 1990s dance party known as center of club kid culture.    The club kid / rave moment of the early 1990s is further depicted in photographs from Nat Finkelstein’s body of work, Merry Monsters.    Author and photography critic Miss Rosen described this work, “With a cast of characters to rival the Wizard of Oz, the club kid scene was one of the most magical, mystical, global phenomena at the end of the millennia.  Fueled in equal parts by drugs, creativity, and anti-authoritarian vibes, the creatures shown in the Merry Monsters series rule the night.”


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The Big Little Show: Art in Miniature
Apr
3
to Jun 20

The Big Little Show: Art in Miniature

Date: Friday, April 3rd - Saturday, June 20th, 2015
Time: 12:00 AM Gallery Hours: Saturdays, 2 - 5pm, or by appointment.

An Exhibition curated by Sheila D. Ali with local and international exhibiting Artists in all media: Abira Ali, Alberto Almarza, Bill Shannon, Dougie Duerring, Eliza Henderson, Etta Cetera, Katy Dement, Laverne Kemp, Lisa Demagall, Nino Balistrieri (ACBIII), Michael “Fig” Magniafico, Merrily Mossman McAllister, Ryder Henry, Sandra Streiff, Sheila Ali & Waylon Richmond.

Family workshops & camps to take place the IFCI & CMOA 

The Big Little Show exhibition education programming is a collaboration between the Irma Freeman Center for Imagination & the Carnegie Museum of Art of Pittsburgh & the Wisdom Arts Laboratory of Los Angles, California.

For decades people have been influenced and awed by the perfection of the fantastical miniature rooms in the Carnegie Museum of Art, and some of them are even inspired to make very small things of their own.
 
The Big Little Show: Art in Miniature Exhibition Abstract:
There is a kind of enthusiast; one who strives to create their own little universe. Whether it be fascinating handcrafted glass insects, fairy houses in the woods, science fiction models hanging in the air, or secret tiny salad bowls on top of a fire hydrants, these artists all agree to make things small. Perhaps these Miniaturists are a little cultish, and most likely even obsessed with keeping house in a make-believe tiny home, but what better way to manifest ones aspirations, hopes and dreams than through nurturing the imagination in the art of minituria? In this exhibition and series of events, we will explore the infinitely vast and curious of the very small. Like the sculptural portraits made on the head of a pin in the 14th century, these artists have found the tiniest bits of happiness and perfection in expressions of art and craft in miniature. Perhaps it is to make this big world small again: un mundus parvus iterum.

Exhibition receptions for The Big Little Show at the Irma Freeman Center for Imagination:

  • Opening reception April 3rd 

  • Artist reception May 1st 

  • Closing reception June 5th

Mini Art Artist Workshop Series Education Schedule at the Carnegie Museum of Art 12:30 – 4:30 pm:

  • April 11 Abira Ali & Eliza Henderson of Wisdom Arts Laboratory – Mini Electronics 

  • April 12 Sheila Ali of IF Center or Imagination -Miniature Board Games

  • May 17 TBA

Exhibition runs April 3rd – June 20th  2015.  
Gallery hours Saturdays 2 -5 pm or by appointment.
Family Workshops to take place at CMOA: see above schedule.
Call or go online for more scheduled camps at the IFCI.
 
 
For more information on guided tours, workshops, field-trips for the exhibition
The Big Little Show:  Art in Miniature*
Contact Sheila Ali, IFCI Director  sheiladali@irmafreeman.org
5006 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15224  Gallery: 412-924-0634

*The Big Little Show available for Group Tours with Make & Take Workshops (ages 6 and up). Please email to Sheila Ali for more information: sheiladali@irmafreeman.org
Also see Spring Break Camp: 
“The Little Big Show: an exploration in Miniature Finery” & Summer Camps.

Miniature Board Games
Miniature Painting
Miniature Models
Miniature Pinhole photography
Miniature Landscaping
Miniature People Craft
Miniature Book Making
Miniature Worlds
Miniature Waterworks

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