Connie Noyes’ show and lecture – Chicago

Ms. Noyes’ work is in our February issue – her ‘Human Steps’ collection. She’s produced many spectacular pieces and I would definitely attend this event if I were anywhere near Chicago!  

DOWN TO EARTH: PAINTINGS BY CONNIE NOYES

THE MARY-FRANCES AND BILL VEECK GALLERY
CATHOLIC THEOLOGICAL UNION ACADEMIC AND CONFERENCE CENTER
5416 S. CORNELL AVENUE, 4TH FLOOR
CHICAGO

OPENING RECEPTION
WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 2010
FROM 5:30 – 7:30,
ARTIST TALK AT 6:30 PM

COMPLIMENTARY PARKING AVAILABLE

THE EXHIBIT WILL BE OPEN FROM MAY 5 THROUGH JULY 14, 2010
WEEKDAYS 9:00 AM – 4:30 PM
WEEKENDS BY APPOINTMENT, 773.371.5416

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Connie Noyes is a mature girl painter.The energy is insane.  The aggressive push to explore is palpable. The results fabulous.

Of course with a pursuit like hers, Noyes sometimes misses – and misses big, but she scores big more often than not.  She takes sizeable risks and doesn’t bemoan the failures, learns always and invariably kicks ass.  Her drive and excitement permeate the work.
 
Often a viewer encountering a single work gushes. Seeing several can overwhelm.  She’s scurrying in multiple directions simultaneously.  From the girly, translucent pinks and gossamer whites that make me feel like a happy voyeur to the overlaid black paintings that allude to darker thoughts and ostensibly a comment on society, this is an artist who loves to paint.

And though paint is everywhere it isn’t all there is.  There are a lot of remnants, found materials, garbage, detritus; the castoffs we throw away, Noyes picks up and transforms, though compositional juxtaposition and smears of paint, to worthy constructs of all sorts of sizes.
 
Noyes is a seemingly soft (don’t count on it) a blonde who has danced most of her life. Sometimes she looks elfin and the work that pours out of her body belies her demur demeanor. Her work is powerful, full of soul and physicality.

Earlier this year I blind juried (I couldn’t see the names or gender of the artists whose art I was evaluating) a show for the Indianapolis Art Center and included a piece of Noyes’.  I don’t know about you, but when I look at art I get a psychological and/or sociological portrait of the artist and extrapolate from that information to a dialog with the art.  I was pretty certain a 70-something year-old Black man did the hulking 7 x 10 foot canvas I’d included. The way it riffed on urban issues could only have been done by someone who’d spent time sleeping in alleys or under bridges.  It had that kind of authenticity pouring from it.  I was shocked when I learned the piece was by Connie Noyes.

Her work is like that; lush, rich, authenticate and contains polar opposites. Not often in one piece, but frequently from one piece to the next.  There is always a love of process and materials, a feeling that in making it she’s in there up to her elbows.
Noyes is an artist of deep thoughts, concerns and experience that she mines daily to push us to better know ourselves and the diversity we all touch but rarely delve into with the same honesty Noyes does.

Lots of artwork informs the artist about themselves (Noyes’ does) and lots of other art is didactic – expressing a point of view (Noyes’ does that too) but very few do both.  Noyes is special, pushing hard(er), with brave honesty and vulnerability.  She’s on top of her game, making more art and better art than most. She’s driven.  And we are the fortunate benefactors.

Paul Klein, 2010
 Chicago based curator, critic and writer