In a studio visit with Veronica Bruce, perhaps 3 years ago, I noticed her paintings felt like they were constrained and wanted to burst out. I encouraged her to think about sculpture. I also suggested that she wasn't going to get very far until she quit her day job and reminded her of the Vikings who went to war and upon landing on foreign shores burned their ships. (The message being to have genuine conviction and to make the big commitment.) We've barely communicated since that visit, but I've been watching her art and career. For the next 5-6 weeks she is an artist-in-residence at Three Walls, where the entire room she is working in is a work in progress, ever responding to the subtleties that came with the space, playing with form, angles, light, imperfections, ambiguity and humor. This is fresh stuff, without ready antecedents, and I find it particularly strong and brave. There's a real sense that significant things are going to happen for this young artist. I've felt it before and been right. There's an opening at Three Walls tonight and Veronica, and her art, can be seen then or any time the gallery is open.
Up north a bit, two strong painters are opening at Eyeporium. Joanne Aono obfuscates text within seascapes or patterned abstraction, creating art that exists on two (or more) levels and series of work that evolve like stanzas in a poem. Her work is paired with the impressive, lush, painterly, richly impastoed, not-so-new, formalism of Brenda Barnum's nature-inspired abstractions. Thoughtful and meditative, they play off their components and each other.
Thanks for reading!
Paul Klein
Paul Klein


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