A Contemporary
Co-operative Gallery
in Boston's SoWa
Art & Design District

Youngsheen A. Jhe

Flowing: The Flow of Love

Marian Dioguardi

Still Refections

NAWA Massachusetts

Playing With Fire

GALLERY HOURS: Mar-Oct, Thu-Sun, 12-5pm, Nov-Feb, Thu-Sun 12-4pm and by appointment

Rebecca Anne Nagle

Rebecca Anne Nagle

Rebecca Anne Nagel

Artist Statement: 
Training for many years and becoming a professional figure skater, the graceful physical process of creating visible rhythmic patterns on huge ice canvases strongly influences my work. That physicality energizes the edgy, abstract mark making to produce movement and emotional impact. Using pastels, acrylics, oil and a wide variety of collage materials, a bond is forged between the integrity of the subject matter and the empathy of the viewer. Materiality is ever prominent in my creative process and I often use it to define the why and how of a piece. What excites me is that through the material’s properties certain issues and challenges arise and as they are resolved they give a soulful birth to a body of work.

Artist Bio: 
Graduating from the New England School of Art & Design and Northeastern University in the early 1980s with a degree in Visual Communications, I began my career in marketing before taking an unexpected turn—joining the World Premier Tour of Disney On Ice. That experience launched a career as a professional figure skater and choreographer, which continues to shape the movement and rhythm of my artistic practice today. After retiring from coaching, I remained connected to the sport as a United States Skating Official. In 2021, I returned to my artistic roots, earning a BA in Fine Art from Montserrat College of Art, where I continue to explore the intersections of motion, form, and visual expression.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Deborah Perugi

Deborah Perugi

Deborah Perugi

Artist Statement:

I returned to painting plein air In 2016, but later, transitioned to a non-representational practice with Cold Wax and oil. Cold wax is an intuitive process working with multiple applications and/or removal of paint. Paint is usually applied with squeegees and palette knives with only seldom use of a  brush. My recent cold wax paintings are on cradle board and often mimic landscapes of solitude. My favorite artists are post modern abstract expressionists; Helen Frankenthaler, Mark Rothko and Gerhardt RIchter,

 

Artist Bio: After receiving a BFA in printmaking from Penn State University, I made a career as an illustrator and information graphic designer for the Boston Globe. During this time I co-founded a local art exhibition at the Charlestown Navy Yard for Charlestown artists. Post college education includes graphic design, typography, photography and illustration. Deb has exhibited her abstract and non-representational work in numerous shows in the Boston area, including Concord Art Association, The Copley Society and Newton Art Association. Besides Galatea FIne Art, she is an active member of The Copley Society of Art and registrar and webmaster for Newton Open Studios, a yearly open studios art fair in Newton, Massachusetts.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Nora Charney Rosenbaum

Nora Charney Rosenbaum

Nora Charney Rosenbaum

Artist Statement: 
Each painting is a close view of the natural world. Sometimes, it’s a fragment – a view of trees, a slice of sky, clouds, the patterns of water lilies, reflections in water. Sometimes it’s the stillness, the light, the color. I use photographs that I take as stimuli. Then, during the process of painting, the initial concept evolves and other things enter in. For me, the process of painting is the solving of problems - color, form, texture, composition – and leads to something that was unknown at the start.

During the Renaissance and the Baroque periods in Europe, artists painted on copper, utilizing the reflective qualities inherent in the metal to accentuate a sense of spiritual luminescence in their two-dimensional works.
 
I use copper sheets and apply chemicals to create patinas. I find that the copper surfaces interact with the subject matter in ways that are both apt and surprising. I use impasto and transparent glazes together with lines I scratch into the copper to produce depth and luminosity.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Rani Sarin

Rani Sarin

Rani Sarin

Artist Statement: 
My work is a constant push and pull of seemingly opposite forces and the search for the underlying harmony of our common human experience. I grew up in India, a dynamic world of vivid color and design. Rooted in India, I have lived and thrived in the US and Europe my entire adult life. My formal education is in Textiles, English Literature and Printmaking. My art is a joyful self expression that uses my hands, my inner life, and my experience of the physical world to create something new. As a printmaker who also makes handmade paper, and works with textiles , I am influenced by the complexity and traditional Indian approach, the spare Scandinavian sensibility and the experimental American approach that inform my unique use of color, space and form. My mixed media paintings and my collages are a vehicle to explore these diverse and seemingly disparate forces, revealing their underlying harmony.

I am done when my work sings.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Matthew Simons

Matthew Simons

Matthew Simons

Artist Statement: 
Matthew Simons is a visual artist based in Easthampton, Massachusetts, who seeks out visual conversations that are ­dynamic, unorthodox, and experimental. He is driven by the ­excitement of transforming the ordinary into the extraordinary.

Influenced by many years as a graphic designer, Simons’s work often reflects a flat, mechanical aesthetic that blends ­precision with spontaneity. His practice draws inspiration from pop ­culture, graffiti, texture, and line—elements that merge to ­create a distinctive visual language.

Primarily working with ink on paper, Simons uses printmaking techniques as a foundation, occasionally integrating ­collage, drawing, and painting to deepen both texture and ­meaning. Through this process, he strives to balance control with ­experimentation, creating works that invite reflection, curiosity, and dialogue.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Jo Smith

Jo Smith

Jo Smith

Artist Statement: 
“I've been painting barns throughout my career. In 1994 I moved to Western MA and lived on a sheep farm for 7 years. During this amazing time I became extremely connected to the agricultural landscape. 32 years later, I now live on land that once was a dairy farm.

Barns fascinate me for their openness, history, and working spaces. I love the way light filters through the walls of barns and the beauty of the evidence of being in constant relationship to the elements. Walking into a barn feels almost cathedral-like to me, a great symbol of our dependence on the land and a place to give thanks for all the
land gives to us.

This series of paintings is inspired by the tobacco barns of the Connecticut River Valley, with their slatted sides and striking geometric forms. In this work, I explore color, texture, and abstraction, reducing these familiar structures to bold, minimal shapes that invite viewers to see barns in a new way.”

Artist Bio: 
Jo Smith is a painter from Western Mass. She is known for her bright colors, sense of whimsy and a depth that is profound. This curious combination can be understood when you learn about Jo.

Jo studied art in college and lived off-campus twice, once in NYC with 2 artists, (Elaine Reicheck and Niki Berg) and once in Kenya with the school for international training. “My focus in Kenya was on a cross-cultural analysis of art through field work with the Pokot tribe and in Kisii, at a soapstone quarry. I became deeply interested in undeveloped and unschooled forms of art as well as the universal need for art and self-expression. I started to think deeply about my time in NYC and my time in rural Africa”. It was the juxtaposition of “high art” and the universal human need for expression that dominated Jo’s mind. She was heavily influenced by artists like Joan Miro whose playful forms and bright colors crossed the cultural barriers and talked about such dualities and contradictions. These themes are still part of her work today. “I am constantly being pulled between making “good art” and just allowing myself to paint intuitively and focus on self-expression and our human experience”.

After college Jo started teaching art.  In 1994 she moved to Western Mass to paint full time. In 1995 she went to graduate school for Art therapy as she became interested in the unconscious mind and its contribution to art making. She continued to focus on understanding that there is a deep drive within all of us to be creative and that this drive is ancient and crosses all cultures but she also started to believe that art making is essential and healing.

Even as Jo became an Art Therapist and worked with clients in psychiatric settings she was painting. “I have always had a studio of
my own, it is essential. I am constantly in conversations about one’s relationship to self, others and the community. It is the intersection of the human condition and the creative drive that fuels my own
creative process.”

Jo currently works and paints at Jo Smith Studio Gallery located at 9 market street in Northampton, MA. Her gallery is open to the public the 2nd Friday of the month (during Northampton Arts Night Out) or by appointment. “Being open on Northampton Arts Night Out gives me the opportunity to interact with our local community and have these

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Irene Stapleford

Irene Stapleford

Irene Stapleford

Artist Statement: 
Upstretched branches, linear form, living presence: 
“Trees are poems the earth writes upon the sky
We fell them down and turn them into paper,
That we may record our emptiness.”
                 — Kahlil Gibran, The Prophet
Inspired by landscapes, dreams, and memories, I make paintings incorporating energetic figurative gesture, layered color, organic geometry such as tree branches, triangle or dot patterns, and sometimes digitally manipulated figures or objects via image transfer.
Upstretched arms of tree branches, tracing imperceptible yet undeniable growth and linear form, have been a recurring theme in landscape and abstraction. Working outside painting directly from the subject allows particular, distinct “personalities” to emerge. Trees affect our quality of life, yet are overlooked and underappreciated: unsung climate change heroes, property value anchors, intelligent elders, and constant, gracious companions. My paintings have been transitioning to more powerful massing of tree forms in silhouette, framed against bright, constrasting skies. I look forward to seeing where this shift in palette and tone takes me.


Artist Bio: 
I’m a practicing artist and graphic designer, earned my BA and MFA in fine art, and have taught classes in both fine art and graphic design at the deCordova Museum, Worcester Museum of Art, Greenfield Community College, and University of Southern Maine. I have lived in New England for the past quarter-century, and am staying for the foreseeable future, for love of the trees, seasons, and compelling scenery taken in while driving. I currently reside in Merrimac, MA with my two daughters and one cat.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Alan Strassman

Alan Strassman

Alan Strassman

Artist Statement: 
I apply the early 20th century aesthetics of “straight photography” and “modernist photography” to capture unmanipulated images of the real world in the 21st century. I capture the monumentality of the ordinary, whether it is an abandoned building or everyday street life. The images pose questions rather than answers.

​Whatever the subject, I never compromise careful attention to line, form, composition, texture and light. The finished product must be a compelling image. I compose in the camera’s viewfinder and use the computer like a traditional dark room to make adjustments of exposure, contrast and color balance in order to more closely approximate what the human eye can see.

Artist Bio: 
A serious amateur for many years, photography became Alan Strassman’s second career in 2008. His work has been widely exhibited and is owned in private, corporate and museum collections. Recent exhibitions include group shows at the Attleboro Museum, Griffin Museum, Emerson Umbrella Arts Center, Danforth Museum, Cambridge Art Association, Panopticon Gallery and Connecticut Academy of Fine Art and solo exhibitions at The Harvard Graduate School of Education and The Newton (MA) Free Library.  His publications include Signs of Life, an illustrated history of photography and New England Mill Towns, contemporary images from the birth place of the industrial revolution in America. (www.blurb.com )
 
Alan has studied art history, drawing, sculpture, ceramics and photography at Princeton, Westchester Art Workshop, School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and the Maine Media Workshops. Also, a graduate of the Harvard Business School, he has been active on the Board of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (President Emeritus) and on the Board of the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (Chairman Emeritus).

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment