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Spiritual Artist Joanna Gabler Exhibits Minatures in Brattleboro

Williamstown painter turns to small scale

By: - Aug 21, 2007

Spiritual Artist Joanna Gabler Exhibits Minatures in Brattleboro - Image 1 Spiritual Artist Joanna Gabler Exhibits Minatures in Brattleboro - Image 2 Spiritual Artist Joanna Gabler Exhibits Minatures in Brattleboro - Image 3 Spiritual Artist Joanna Gabler Exhibits Minatures in Brattleboro - Image 4 Spiritual Artist Joanna Gabler Exhibits Minatures in Brattleboro - Image 5 Spiritual Artist Joanna Gabler Exhibits Minatures in Brattleboro - Image 6 Spiritual Artist Joanna Gabler Exhibits Minatures in Brattleboro - Image 7 Spiritual Artist Joanna Gabler Exhibits Minatures in Brattleboro - Image 8 Spiritual Artist Joanna Gabler Exhibits Minatures in Brattleboro - Image 9 Spiritual Artist Joanna Gabler Exhibits Minatures in Brattleboro - Image 10 Spiritual Artist Joanna Gabler Exhibits Minatures in Brattleboro
From August 3 through September 6 The Blue Moose Gallery in Brattleboro is showing a group of miniature oil paintings on board by Joanna Gabler. These are flower studies and mandalas which stem from her intense experience of nature and the spiritual world. She has long explored these subjects in larger works, but she has only recently begun to paint on these 6 x 6 inch panels. This small field enables her to distill all the feeling expressed in her larger works into a truly intimate form for private enjoyment and meditation. Joanna has mounted each painting on sturdy framed panels covered in burlap, providing attractive domestic ornament for flower-lovers and spiritually sensitive collectors alike. In the mandalas subtle irregularities enliven traditionally harmonious, symmetrical circular forms, while the flower studies are teeming with the energetic assymmetrical compositions and patterns. The flowers show display the intense purples, yellows, reds, and oranges familiar from her larger-scale work. In some of the mandalas, the artist's palette appears somewhat muted,

Joanna has a deep and intimate relationship with color and its healing qualities. Her involvement with the world of color and art started in mid eighties when she began working with watercolor and pastels, followed by a series of art classes and the exploration of various media from stain glass to painting on silk. For the past 13 years she has worked  primarily with oil on canvas. Her deep experience of color forms a bridge between her two fields of interest as a painter: spiritual life and nature. Recently she has turned to  subjects which embody the drama of events in the spiritual world, like "St. Michael and the Dragon," "Anatomy of the Soul," and "The Creation."

Inspired by inner experiences, Joanna's abstractions and semi-abstractions show a seemingly limitless variety of different colors and forms, which grow organically, one from another. In these paintings she explores themes which have concerned her since she was a student of philosophy at the University of Warsaw in the late 1970's: the mystery of the World and Nature, particularly the elements, the seasons, the spiritual forces in nature and man's relation to them.
Joanna first began to paint in watercolor in mid 1980's, when she was an assistant professor of philosophy and sociology at the Akademia Podlaska in Siedlce near Warsaw. Shortly before she emigrated to the United States, she turned to pastels. In New York she pursued studies in drawing, painting, and glass work, and other media at FIT, Pratt Urban Glass Center and New York Art League, while working on Wall Street as an Information Specialist/Corporate Librarian. Since 1994 she has worked primarily in oil on canvas. Joanna moved in the summer of 2002 to the northern Berkshires from New York, her home since her arrival in America.

Joanna Gabler has held numerous solo exhibitions in New England and New York City. Currently her more typical works executed on a larger scale can be seen at North Adams Regional Hospital (as part of the North Adams Community Artwork Project, open freely to the public: see our report), in the Latchis Hotel in Brattleboro, and at Hebert Realty in Great Barrington. Her paintings have been purchased by numerous private and institutional collections in the United States and Europe.

Joanna is also an art therapist. In this capacity she has developed a unique approach to meditation through art and color, guiding workshops for the Women's House of Peace in North Adams and other local groups.