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Upcoming Events

  • aCollection - Opening
    aCollection - Opening
    Fri, Jun 14
    Stone Ridge
    Jun 14, 2024, 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM
    Stone Ridge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
    Jun 14, 2024, 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM
    Stone Ridge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
    Join us for the opening reception to celebrate the artists & their artwork!
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  • aCollection - Exhibition
    aCollection - Exhibition
    Sat, Jun 15
    Stone Ridge
    Jun 15, 2024, 11:00 AM – Jun 23, 2024, 6:00 PM
    Stone Ridge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
    Jun 15, 2024, 11:00 AM – Jun 23, 2024, 6:00 PM
    Stone Ridge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
    aCollection, Journey of the life as an Artist First public viewing of a private art collection
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  • aCollection - Special Event
    aCollection - Special Event
    Sat, Jun 22
    Stone Ridge
    Jun 22, 2024, 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM EDT
    Stone Ridge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
    Jun 22, 2024, 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM EDT
    Stone Ridge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
    aCollection - Journey the life of an Artist The evening will highlight Jack Goldstein's audio & video work.
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  • Alchemy of Color - Opening
    Alchemy of Color - Opening
    Fri, Aug 23
    Stone Ridge
    Aug 23, 2024, 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM
    Stone Ridge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
    Aug 23, 2024, 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM
    Stone Ridge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
    Three Artists Eva Lundsager | Patricia Sonnino | Janine Wong
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  • Alchemy of Color - Exhibition
    Alchemy of Color - Exhibition
    Sat, Aug 24
    Stone Ridge
    Aug 24, 2024, 11:00 AM – Sep 16, 2024, 6:00 PM
    Stone Ridge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
    Aug 24, 2024, 11:00 AM – Sep 16, 2024, 6:00 PM
    Stone Ridge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
    Eva Lundsager | Patricia Sonnino | Janine Wong Exhibition Dates: August 23 - Sept 15
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  • Alchemy of Color - Events
    Alchemy of Color - Events
    Sat, Aug 24
    Stone Ridge
    Aug 24, 2024, 7:00 PM
    Stone Ridge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
    Aug 24, 2024, 7:00 PM
    Stone Ridge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
    Eva Lundsager | Patricia Sonnino | Janine Wong Special Events: Dinner with the Artists: Saturday, August 24 @ 7pm Artists Talk: Sunday, August 25 @ 11am
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  • Encounter
    Encounter
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    Merge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
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    Merge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
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    Merge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
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    Merge, 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
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  • Encounter
    Encounter
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    Merge , 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
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    Merge , 178 Schoonmaker Ln, Stone Ridge, NY 12484, USA
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2023 

This year MERGE is extremely proud to showcase solo exhibitions of two brilliant woman artists, neighbors in our very own midst.

Each artist, S. Lillian Horst aka SusanLRoss and Millicent Young live and work in Upstate New York,  coincidentally, right here in Stone Ridge both only a stone throw away.

Upcoming Exhibitions 

spring 

BEHIND THE SCENES

S.Lillian Horsaka SusanLRoss
Exhibition:  May 27 - June 11
Daily: 11am - 6pm
extended: June 12-25
by Appointment only
Opening: Friday,May 26, 6 - 9pm

MERGE is thrilled to present the work of a multi-talented tour-de-force, (Susan) Lillian is not only an accomplished painter but whose illustrious career at George Lucas Digital Films, ILM - Industrial Light and Magic as a lead viewpainter, supervisor, texture mapper, and modelmaker has created images sealed in our imaginations.

We are thrilled to showcase the exuberant, impressive and powerful large scale paintings of a talented local artist.

The retrospective will span her career as an artist hyphenated and influenced by her  prodigious and creative years at ILM. 

The early years

Lillian, was an early experimenter of Acrylic Rhoplex and worked often in large format 6' x 6'.

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George Lucas Film- the ILM  Years
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Lillian's career at ILM, then known as Susan Ross, began in the model room and she was promoted to lead viewpainter of digital textures in the paint department at a nascent time of digital animation, of which Lucasfilms was at the forefront and the pioneer of the technology.

Lillian created the painting texture maps that brought to life the digital Chewbacca of Star Wars fame and the dinosaurs from Lost World and worked in the visual effect department creating fantastical worlds for Star Wars and many others.

Artist statement

My interest lies in the interior world, how we process thought, the decisions we make. Knowing that we take in all we see, hear, and feel, initially with no censorship, and out of this information we develop a story which may or may not make sense, based often on little or no preceding information or from beliefs or feelings we already have, provides the starting point of my inquiry.

The Later Years
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For twenty years I worked in the special effects industry, first building models using real materials and for the last twelve of those years I painted creatures for the movies using the computer. By zooming in for greater realistic detail, I found at some point the pixel paint became completely abstract but within the abstraction, recognizable images emerged.

 

In my own work, I find scribbling with brush and paint while continually turning the canvas, encourages the same unconscious behavior, and out of this, the images appear that with a few strokes become visible to a wider audience. When this happens, the seeming disparate elements that form are already speaking clearly to an issue before I have become cognizant of it. This is the moment that fascinates me, the discovery that my unconscious state has already organized the information in a particular way that makes sense.

 

A completed painting confronts and explores issues that I am concerned with. The characters are not so much referential to humans as to a working thought process that allows me to explore questions concerning family relationships, and our relationship to the culture and world within which we live. The issues focus on the state of things, how we communicate, live, and love. My paintings are the visceral connection I have with the questions and exploration of what it means to be human.

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The viewer, when confronted with my work, brings their own unique experiences and history which informs the way in which they perceive and understand my painting. I am not interested in them having my experience but rather that together we inform each other in another way of seeing. I hope that my painting brings questions, dialog, elicits an emotional response that makes one think.

summer 

Mid-summer art weekend extravaganza
 

will celebrate this year's woman artists.

featuring:

unveiled & untapped work from S. Lillian Horst aka SusanLRoss

sneak teaser preview of Millicent Young's fall exhibition

Exhibition:  July 22-23

Daily: 11am - 8pm
extended: July 28
by Appointment only
Opening: Friday, July 21, 6 - 9pm

fall  2023

ALTER ALTAR

Millicent Young 
Exhibition:  Sept 22- Oct 15
Daily: 11am - 6pm
extended: Oct 16-31
by Appointment only
Opening: Friday, Sept 22, 6 - 9pm
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MERGE is incredibly thrilled to collaborate with Millicent Young whose stupendous works are evocative on all levels from their conception, to how they are made and how they are experienced. 
Emotional, provocative, visceral, her pieces are spatial, to be only truly understood by interacting with them through their invitation to question and reflect. Her expansive talent of weaving, stitching and threading to nailing, casting and joining her pieces into art forms is a delight for wonder; to react, and ponder our human experience and our engagement with the world and our environment. Millicent's talent to fold memory and history into materiality is transformative.  In all of her sculptures, one senses the human hand that forms, touches and engages.

It is MERGE’s first foray into working with a sculptor and we are extremely excited about the installation of her pieces embedding themselves within the array of our agrarian spaces, acting as a nexus, iterative in finding their new sense of place in their temporal home; the opportunity for an intimate dialogue with the barn structures and coaxing a new understanding of them.  Moreover, we are excited to present her new and recent work nested and intertwined with the specificity of the historical spaces, that  in contrast to the paradigm of a neutral white box space, and perhaps bridging the time and space the buildings themselves have known. If walls could talk!  We look forward to the gallery visitors having the opportunity to immerse and engage themselves with her work.

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Artist’s Statement

What it is to be human in a larger than human world has been the focus of my work for 28 years. Fragility, endurance, loss, awe, and paradox are central and manifest in subject and material. Cultural practices and natural processes of transformation and healing, spiritual ecology, and the essentiality of inter being inform my inquiry.

 

Focusing on topics such as extinction, habitat collapse, and the atrocities of war, my work challenges what divides us: within our own being, human from human, human from other than human, culture from nature, matter from spirit. They interrogate boundaries that are movable: for instance between victim and perpetrator, predator and prey, geological time and historical time, or the known, the unknown, and the unknowable. They ask questions about what is given and what is taken. My works are visual poems about grief, liminality, brutality, and beauty. By bearing witness to moments of grace and acts of violence, my works face the irreconcilable and in doing so, ask the same of the viewer. To witness is to become undefended and therefore permeable to imagination. To be changed is to create change and in this regard my artwork is a liminal space.

 

The materials I use are both substance and symbol. They are ordinary and often provided by my place: dead fall trees, vines, barbed wire, waste lumber from sawmills, architectural steel and window frames from derelict buildings. Other materials include: hair, fur, clay, glass, plaster, lead, ink, raw pigments. The prior memories the materials posses enter into conversation with the new ones they receive through touch, erosion, evaporation, fire, and other processes of construction and reduction.

 

I make all my pieces by hand with simple tools and methods I have developed over years. Some processes are highly repetitive, the form emerging through accretion. Others involve a single irreversible action; from many attempts only one is right. All labor is a powerful ritual, a physical engagement with the unknown and the record of labor itself becomes content.

 

For the past five years my practice of making sculpture has grown to include working in installation, in iterations, and on inter-media projects that embed sound and poetry in the sculpture through a motion activated sound track.

Past Exhibitions 

fall 2022

REFRACTED LIGHT 
John McDevitt King

MERGE presented the exquisite work of John McDevitt King in a solo exhibition. The show, encompassing his encaustic paintings and works on paper allowed the gallery visitor a window into the unique gaze of the artist who has a led a parallel life as an expert in precious gems for over many decades. His enigmatic and exquisite pieces evolve from the eminence of light to bright crescendos to the near absence of light and evoke an otherworldliness and intensity of a wise and discerning eye.

John McDevitt King lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. He received his BFA from Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan, his MFA from Hunter College, City University of New York and holds a Graduate Gemologist diploma from the Gemological Institute of America. Mr. King exhibits regularly in the United States and abroad and his work can be found in numerous public and private collections, notably the Brooklyn Museum, Yale University Art Gallery, Harvard University Art Museums, Zimmerli Art Museum and the Weatherspoon Art Gallery. He is the recipient of a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship Grant, and a Vermont Studio Center Artist Residency. In his gemological work he has written and lectured extensively on colored diamonds and laboratory practice and has graded some of the world’s most famous diamonds, including the 45-carat blue Hope diamond at the Smithsonian Institution, the 128-carat yellow Tiffany and the 273-carat Internally Flawless and Colorless Centenary Diamond.

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In Your Moment, 2021   Colored pencil on paper

Quality of Light. Light reveals itself through a myriad of gradations and glimmers from shadowed hints to shining in bold clarity, counterpoints that form the foundation of King’s work. Through many layers of translucent encaustic wax, depths of color and scintillation are created that alters appearance with physical movement, its relay back and forth, near and far, never still and different from every vantage point. King’s drawings in graphite, black lead or colored pencil, carry this same quality by employing the roughness of the paper with the chosen drawing medium. This sharp, edgy, vivid, honed quality of light has been long present in King’s art, as meditation on light as transmitted through diamonds.

spring 2022

Prelude:  FEAR NOT

FEAR NOT  - The Stone Gallery

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FEAR NOT
Stephen Zaima
Works from 1984 - 2021

This past spring, Merge presented an exhibition of selected artworks by Stephen Zaima curated by Reinhold Spiegler and Lisette Wong.

Merge was very pleased to present a local artist, from Stone Ridge. Stephen Zaima has lived in the Hudson Valley for the past three decades and we are fortunate to have him as part of our cultural landscape. We enjoyed the opportunity to enrich the community through presenting his artworks at Merge in a forum where people learned about his work and engaged in discussion with him, people of all ages!

Zaima was born and raised in California and received his BA from California State University at San Jose and his MFA from the University of California at Davis. He also studied at the School of Visual Arts and Pratt. Zaima’s work has been exhibited in numerous shows in the US and abroad. He has been an educator at several art schools across the United States and since 1980 at Syracuse University where he was head of painting and also served as associate dean for global programs and initiatives.

As a graduate student in art at UC Davis from 1969 to 1971, Zaima was taught by an eclectic faculty of influential working artists such as William T. Wiley, Robert Arneson, Roy De Forest, Manuel Neri, and Wayne Thiebaud, along with semester composer-in-residence John Cage. Significantly, there were no set disciplines, allowing students to explore different art forms and methods, and instilling in Zaima a flexibility that allowed him to avoid being wedded to any particular style, method or approach to making art. As Zaima has recalled, it was a heady time that he likes to think of as a “Black Mountain College moment”, best exemplified by one of his favorite quotes, from Francis Picabia: “Our heads are round so our thoughts can change direction.”


Through these grounding influences in art, Zaima has never been confined to a box, either in his medium or his ideas. He works in a wide a variety of mediums from oil on linen, paper, wood, and jute to encaustic painting, mixed media, collages, installation works on scrim, photo composites on translucent fabric, and dye-sublimation photos on aluminum.

Center Street Studio
35 Years of Printmaking   2021
Prints, Paintings, and Sculpture 2022

Merge hosted the renowned Center Street Studio, in Fall 2021, New England's premier printer and publisher of contemporary prints. 35 years of printmaking were presented in the Stone gallery and Pass-through. 

Thrilled for the return of Center Street Studio this past summer of 2022, a fascinating show which delved into the group of  Center Street  Artists'  relationship of each artist's printmaking pieces to their primary mediums was met with great enthusiasm.

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Featured CSS Artists:  

MARK COOPER - BILL THOMPSON - CARRIE MOYER - CHARLIE RITCHIE -ELTONO - EVA LUNDSAGER -

EVA MUELLER - GEORGE WHITMAN - JAMES STROUD -JANINE WONG -JEFF PERROTT - JOHN WALKER  -

JOHN WILSON - LAUREL SPARKS - LESTER JOHNSON - MARKUS LINNENBRINK - MARK COOPER -

MATTHEW CARTER - NELL BLAINE  - PARKEHARRISON - RAUL GONZALEZ III - RACHEL PERRY (WELTY) - '

RICHARD RYAN - ROBERT TIBBETTS - TEO GONZALES - WILLIAM STEIGER

A brief ode 

For Font Aficionados, a selection from Center Street Studio
on Matthew Carter's work produced in collaboration with Center Street Studio 

a-z (2017) Mathew Carter

Past Highlights

Andy Freeberg Photographs
Guardians | Art Fare

Curated by Reinhold Spiegler & Lisette Wong with Andy Freeberg

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Performance Dinner
spring 2012
Feast at Stone Ridge
Convergence

convergence  is a site specific collaborative concept developed by Marina Sartori of which the Feast at Stone Ridge was the third happening in a series.

Curated by Marina Sartori with co-curators Lisette Wong and Reinhold Spiegler, the happening is an immersive participatory performance dinner created by a collaboration of artists. The dinner and the guests are integral to the performance and the art. The point of departure is the specificity of the space and its sense of place; the compound of barns and its agrarian setting. Themes explored are inspired by the traditional harvest and the seasonal cycle of four seasons through food and gathering, hand-crafted ceramics, art, video, poetry readings, and sound design.

News:  Congratulations!

Serlachius Museum in Finland acquired 12 of Andy Freeberg's pieces of work following his solo exhibition.

 

Serlachius Museum Gösta: 

Joenniementie 47, 35800 Mänttä, Finland

WHERE ART THOU?

Works by American photographer Andy Freeberg

Art Museum Gösta 26 March — 4 September 2022

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MERGE  is an alternative art space and gallery in the Hudson Valley that supports artists by providing a platform to encourage discussion, collaboration and community in a rural landscape of restored historical farm outbuildings.

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