Different Invisible Lines, Group Show at BAAC

“Different Invisible Lines” with members of my critique group, Culture Shock, at the Batesville Area Arts Council Gallery in Batesville, AR. February-March 2019

Culture Shock
Culture Shock (formally the Show & Tell Art Collective) was founded in the fall of 2013. Current members include Melissa Cowper-Smith, Melissa Gill, Tammy Harrington, Dawn Holder,  Holly Laws, Sandra Luckett,  Rachel Trusty, Louise Halsey, Tessa Davidson and Jessica Mongeon. Past members include , Sofia V. Gonzales, Melissa Wilkinson, and Paige Dirksen. Culture Shock holds monthly critiques. During the critique one artist shares their work and receives constructive feedback from the group. In addition to fostering one another's creative work, the collective provides members with exhibition and networking opportunities.

UCA Faculty Invitational at the Baum Gallery

I have two works in this faculty show at the University of Central Arkansas.

Without Remedy, 2019, Pigment print on handmade paper (cotton, mulberry, hibiscus, medicinal herbs, antique lace and cotton fabric), 41 x 30 inches

Without Remedy, 2019, Pigment print on handmade paper (cotton, mulberry, hibiscus, medicinal herbs, antique lace and cotton fabric), 41 x 30 inches

The Baum Gallery begins its Spring Season of exhibitions with the UCA Faculty Invitational. The show opens Thursday, January 24, 2019, and runs through February 15, 2019. Also showing is From I To Thou: Bring Conscious of the Sacred in Nature.  The opening reception is Thursday, January 24th from 4:00-7:00 PM.

Arkansas Arts Council Individual Artists Fellowship for Works on Paper

Thrilled to be awarded an Individual Artists Fellowship (Works on Paper) from the Arkansas Arts Council! I plan to spend the money on ink for my printer and framing work for upcoming shows at the Butler Center (January-March 2019) and Batesville Area Arts Council Gallery (March-April 2019).

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LITTLE ROCK, AR – Nine Arkansas artists will be recognized for their achievements during an awards ceremony 5:30-8:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 27, at the Historic Arkansas Museum at 200 E. Third St. in Little Rock.

The Arkansas Arts Council, a division of the Department of Arkansas Heritage, will award its Individual Artist Fellowship awards.

“The Individual Artist Fellowships encourage Arkansas artists of all disciplines and give them the resources to grow their careers and talents. This, in turn, contributes to our successful creative economy,” said Stacy Hurst, director of the Department of Arkansas Heritage.

The fellowships recognize individual artistic ability and creative excellence in literary, performing and visual arts. These $4,000 fellowships are awarded annually and enable artists to set aside time for creating their art and improving their skills. Three artistic disciplines are selected each year as categories for the awards.

Anderson Ranch Arts Center: Photo Encaustic

In this week long workshop (June 25-29, 2018) we explored adding encaustic (bees wax and damar resin) to photographs. In my work I played with layering wax over photographs and handmade paper. I added oil paints directly to the warm encaustic, fusing paint strokes into the wax. These materials allowed me to deepen my exploration of the relationships between photography and painting- the photographic light captured in a moment and the gestural paint stroke. 

I was fortunate to receive the 2018 Polly Wood Crews Scholarship from the Arkansas State Committee of the National Museum of Women in the Arts. Additionally, I was awarded an Executive Directors Scholarship from Anderson Ranch. 

You can read more about my work this summer in this article "Nature in Art: Melissa Cowper-Smith" by Julie Kohl. Published by Only in Arkansas on August 7, 2018.

 

 

Course Description: 

Photo Encaustic: luminous layers

Explore the luminous, versatile and limitless possibilities of encaustic – a wax-based paint – in combination with photography and mixed media. During this uniquely engaging workshop, students examine their own visual vocabulary through small, large or multi-paneled works. Demonstrations include layering encaustic over photographs, prints, drawings, collages, fabric, and transferring images onto an encaustic wax surface to create intriguing works. Additional topics include mixing encaustic paint and media, studio safety, resisting, stenciling and masking, encaustic tools, fusing, metal leafing, collage and alternative techniques.

Encaustic techniques include choosing a substrate, encaustic gesso/grounds, gluing papers and prints, fusing, mixing medium, mixing encaustic paint from oil paint, dipping prints and papers, black and white and color xerox type transfers, and collage techniques. We also cover a wide variety of surface techniques including layering images, stencils and masks, incising lines, oil pastels, pigment sticks, metal leafing, indirect and direct transfers, graphite/carbon paper, encaustic tools and encaustic monoprints, and incorporating objects onto the surface of panels. We use inks, oil paints, gouache, watercolor, etc., in combination with encaustic. .

60th Annual Delta Exhibition at the Arkansas Arts Center

May 25, 2018 — August 26, 2018

Hours: Tues - Sat 10 AM - 5 PM | Sun 11 AM - 5 PM      Address: 9th & Commerce / MacArthur Park, P.O. Box 2137, Little Rock, Arkansas 72203-2137      Phone: 501.372.4000

I have two works in the 60th Delta Exhibition- a video work titled "Unremember" and a pigment print on handmade paper titled "With Their Own Hands". Both of these works are part of a series I did based on images of homes that were built by hand. Some of the places were inhabited by their builders, others were abandoned.  In the video and prints I added appropriated images of places devastated by war or natural disaster.  In the series I explored the intimacy of once cherished objects, clothing, and spaces left behind as people move on or are pushed away. 

I was especially excited to have "Unremember" included in the Delta Exhibition as video works are less often accepted. I hope there will be more opportunities to see new mediums such as video art, performance art, interactive art and/or digital art in the Delta and other regional juried shows. These media often critique art as a commodity, they challenge our aesthetic assumptions about art, and they represent issues or ideas connected to our contemporary media-driven culture.

Solo Show at Rockford University Art Gallery

Work from the series "Traces Remain" was on view at the Rockford University Art Gallery from March 23rd- April 20 2018. 

In the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette River Valley & Ozark Edition

Delighted to be featured in the "front & center" section of the Sunday paper. Below are some excerpts. Here is a link to the full article "Canadian Artist Finds Inspiration in Arkansas". 

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Photos by William Harvey

Story by Tammy Keith

Sunday, January 21, 2018

“I am unusual in that I move between mediums a lot. I have one I’m usually in love with, but it shifts. Right now, I’m really interested in paper,” she said. “I’m super interested in cotton.”

The Canadian has lived in Arkansas since 2011 and loves her rural life; it’s why she came to Arkansas. She grows 30 to 40 brown Nankeen cotton plants on her eco farm, Wildland Gardens. She also uses the stalks of some of the flowers she grows to make paper. “Daylilies make great paper — not the actual flowers, just the leaves,” she said.

The recipe to make paper includes boiling the grass for hours outside in big pots, which she said reminds her of a witch standing over a cauldron. The mixture is strained and blended. “It becomes like a really gross garden smoothie,” she said, laughing.

The rest of the long process is so time-consuming that even she says, “it’s silly.” But it’s so satisfying.

“I think it’s important because we’re interested in localism now. … How do we connect to a place? It’s incredibly local to make your own paper,” Cowper-Smith said.

“So often now, we feel alienated from our things. We order on Amazon; things are made in China,” she said. “A lot of people are seeking a deeper connection to the materials in their lives and the products in their lives.”

...

Cowper-Smith said that although she won awards for art in high school, she first took science and math courses in college, planning to become a biologist. “I just didn’t realize art could be a serious thing to study,” she said. “I thought science was more worthwhile, so I didn’t study art. It seemed like a hobby.” However, she met serious artists at the University of Victoria, and she switched her major after a year.

“I belong with artists; I always have,” she said. “I like the way they think.”

In 2013, Cowper-Smith founded an all-female artists group in Arkansas called the Show & Tell Art Collective, now called Culture Shock. Although Cowper-Smith didn’t experience a huge culture shock in Arkansas, most of the nine or 10 women in the group are transplants to Arkansas, thus the name, she said. The women all have master’s degrees in art and are “currently making a body of art,” she said. They hold critiques and exhibit their work.

Cowper-Smith’s work was selected for the 31st annual Small Works on Paper touring exhibition at the Mosaic Templars Cultural Center in Little Rock, where it is on display through Saturday. The free exhibit is sponsored by the Arkansas Arts Council. Her piece selected is a pigment print titled Convention Fire on her handmade paper. “It’s a mix of lilies and cotton,” she said. “I made that paper while I was at Penland. “This work depicts a burnt-out version of the derelict convention center at Meadow Creek in Fox. It was an important meeting place for people concerned with the environment and global climate change in the 1980s-1990s.”

Cowper-Smith said her work is ever-changing. “I’ve always loved drawing,” she said. But pigment paper is getting her attention now. She creates it by taking digital photographs, which she uses to make paintings, “not directly from them, but parts of them, mixed up,” she said. She scans the paintings and uses Photoshop software to blend them together, something she has done for “years and years.” She also makes videos of the work using the “layers” of the Photoshop program, she said. “I make animations, a form of digital stop-motion animation, and prints,” she said. “When I have a show, I will have a projection of the video, and usually it’s the same scene.”

Cowper-Smith enjoys depicting scenes of nature through her pigment prints. Not long after her family moved to Arkansas, a deadly tornado tore through Vilonia and Mayflower. “That was new to me,” she said. “I started thinking about natural disasters. I started thinking a lot about how you can love the beauty of the landscape but also have this fear of it, and how it can almost betray you. It can take your life and destroy your stuff.”

She said Arkansas has been a good place to create art; it’s a constant inspiration.

 

2018 Small Works on Paper

"Now in its 31th year, Small Works on Paper is a juried visual art exhibition that showcases artwork no larger than 18 x 24 inches by Arkansas artists who are members of the Arkansas Artist Registry. The Arkansas Artist Registry is an online gallery showcasing the artwork of Arkansas artists. Membership to the Arkansas Artist Registry is free and open to all Arkansas artists.

The Small Works on Paper exhibition travels to 10 venues throughout the state in a yearlong show, offering Arkansas artists an extraordinary opportunity to showcase their artwork to patrons all over the state. This year’s entries were juried by James Phillips, an associate professor in the Department of Arts at Howard University in Washington, D.C." - Arkansas Arts Council

Convention Fire, 2017, Pigment print on handmade paper (cotton, daylily, hosta, bamboo, and yucca), 15 1/2 x 21 inches

Convention Fire, 2017, Pigment print on handmade paper (cotton, daylily, hosta, bamboo, and yucca), 15 1/2 x 21 inches

This year a piece titled “Convention Fire” was selected. This work depicts a burnt out version of the derelict convention center at Meadow Creek. Meadow Creek, located in Fox Ar, was an important meeting place for people concerned with the environment and global climate change in the 1980-1990s. This print is part of my most recent series “Traces Remain”. 

This is my second time participating in the small works show. My work “Fire Start” was selected in 2016. It’s an honor to be included in a group show that is so widely viewed around the state


The exhibition will travel around the state to the following venues:

January 4-27 Mosaic Templars Cultural Center, Little Rock 

February 5-23 Harding University, Searcy

March 5-16 Arkansas Tech University, Russellville

April 2-30 Community Creative Center, Fayetteville

May 3-29 University of Arkansas Rich Mountain, Mena 

June 4-July 13 The Arts Center of the Grand Prairie, Stuttgart 

August 2-28 Henderson State University, Arkadelphia

Oct. 2-27 Batesville Area Arts Council (Gallery on Main)

Nov. 2-29 DeltaARTS and Arkansas State University Mid-South, West Memphis


This years artists include

Lloyd L. Litsey, Little Rock

Jason McCann, Maumelle

Glenda L. McCune, Little Rock

Cheryl N. McMickle, Marianna

David McRoberts, Sherwood

Emily Renay Moore, Conway

Michael Preble, Hot Springs

Lynn Reinbolt, Searcy

Charlotte Rierson, Fairfield Bay

Jane Rockwell, North Little Rock

Steven B. Schneider, Fayetteville

Robert R. Simmons, Little Rock

Mitchell Skinner, Grady

Leslie Toler, Little Rock

Neilann Brown Verdell, Sherwood

Elizabeth Weber, Little Rock

Steven Wise, Rogers

Emily Moll Wood, Little Rock

Kathy Bay, Sherwood

Lynn Bell, Little Rock

Maria Botti-Villegas, El Dorado

Lyn Brands, Conway

Michael S. Church, North Little Rock

Brian Cormack, Little Rock

Melissa Cowper-Smith, Morrilton

Kristin DeGeorge, Hot Springs

Rex DeLoney, Little Rock

Terry Lynn Dushan, Fayetteville

Melissa Foster, Conway

Bryan Frazier, Little Rock

B. Jeannie Fry, Cabot

Elissa Gordon, Mountain Home

Diane Harper, Little Rock

Marion A. Hotz, Russellville

J. Kathleen Keefe, Little Rock

Historic Arkansas Museum acquires two prints from Traces Remain

These two works from Traces Remain have been added to the permanent collection of the Historic Arkansas Museum

Dorm Bathroom, 2017, Pigment print on handmade paper (cotton, bamboo, yucca, daylily and indigo dyed cloth), 17 x 21 inches

Dorm Bathroom, 2017, Pigment print on handmade paper (cotton, bamboo, yucca, daylily and indigo dyed cloth), 17 x 21 inches

We Are Not Ok, 2017, Pigment print on handmade paper (cotton, daylily, bamboo, hosta, yucca, and indigo dyed cloth), 21 x 16 inches

We Are Not Ok, 2017, Pigment print on handmade paper (cotton, daylily, bamboo, hosta, yucca, and indigo dyed cloth), 21 x 16 inches

Traces Remain

TRACES REMAIN Opened Friday May 12th and continued through August 6th 2017 at Historic Arkansas Museum, Trinity Gallery. Honored to show with Dawn Holder.

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Curator, Carey Voss, writes

"Melissa Cowper-Smith is enamored with memory, with forgetting, with the fleeting nature of everything around us. Her recent work is filled with markers of anxiety: abandoned building projects, roads made impassable by fire, domestic spaces empty of inhabitants, a sense of urgency and constant movement. Bright, saturated hues reminiscent of Color Field painting and sinuous gestural marks may initially turn the viewer’s attention toward surface and form, but delve deeper into the layers of atmospheric space created by collaging photographs digitally, and the work as a whole pushes toward an exploration of content. Melissa’s multimedia art is trapped between worlds: the past and its love of analog processes and handwork, and the present/future with its preference for the slick digital surfaces of high-definition photography and video. Cowper-Smith’s 2D pieces begin as acrylic paintings collaged with photographs and manipulated using specialized computer software. The resulting images are then pigment-printed onto paper made by hand from cotton and other plant fibers grown at Wildland Gardens, Melissa’s eco-farm. Each still image, each print, represents only a single moment in Cowper-Smith’s stop-action videos, multimedia projections that play with the representation of time’s passage and the ephemeral quality of memory. Melissa Cowper-Smith grew up in Canada where she received a BFA in painting from the University of Victoria in British Columbia. Later, she received a Master of Fine Arts degree from Hunter College in New York City. Melissa and her husband moved to Morrilton, Arkansas in 2011."

Nasty Women

 Nasty Women, March 2017, Russell Fine Arts Gallery, Henderson State University, Arkadelphia, AR

My piece "Porch Fire, 2016" was selected for the "Nasty Women" show at Henderson State University.  The show has received some local press: Idle Class Magazine  and in the Arkansas Times

Press Release from Henderson State University:

Henderson State University’s Russell Fine Arts Gallery will host the works of 32 female artists from across the nation March 1-31.

The exhibition, entitled Nasty Woman, celebrates the female voice in art. It will be held in conjunction with women’s history month and will open with a reception March 1 from 2-4 p.m. The public is invited.

Nasty Woman explores topics dealing with the woman’s perspective, from reflection on historic female figures, to contemporary issues surrounding the female body, the political climate, and varied iterations of the experience of being a 21stCentury woman.

The title of the show stems from recent events plastered throughout the media. While it was first mentioned in a derogatory context, it has become a uniting force among women across the globe. For many, it represents strength, unity, and the ability to use one’s voice to be heard. The participating artists interpret their reactions through a dynamic use of photography, printmaking, painting, sculpture, and video pieces.

The gallery is located on the first floor of the Russell Fine Arts Building. It is open 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Admission is free.

The artists included in the show are Zina Al-Shukri, Heather Beckwith, Darcie Beeman-Black, Megan Berner, Cynthia Buob, Beverly Buys, Melissa Cowper-Smith, Norwood Creech, Nancy Dunaway, Margo Duvall, Melissa Gill, Mia Hall, Diane Harper, Tammy Harrington, Heidi Hogden, Robyn Horn, Erin House, Jeanie Hursley, Catherine Kim, Kimberly Kwee, Joli Livaudais, Angie Macri, Hannah May, Rosemary Meza-DesPlas, Catherine Nugent, Emily Rogers, Dina Santos, Kasten Searles, Katherine Strause, Brittany Wilder, Kat Wilson, and Miranda Young.

Penland School of Crafts

I spent two weeks learning about handmade paper from Mary Hark at the Penland School of Crafts. Filled with gratitude to have been awarded a Horn Scholarship to cover all tuition, accommodations, and meals giving me the opportunity to concentrate fully on making paper.  

The Topography of Handmade Paper

Soft and airy or tough and bark-like, paper can carry a smooth-as-glass surface or become a field of lush texture. This workshop will begin with a thorough investigation into paper-making fibers and traditional tools. Production of high-quality papers suitable for use in books, printmaking, and sculptural forms will lead to a personal exploration of surface, texture, color, and the use of natural dyes. Each person will find ways to fuse the materials that address their own aesthetic concerns.

Painting 360°: A Look at Contemporary Panoramic Painting at the Butler Center, Little Rock

Honored to be included in the second exhibition of this inspiring thematic group show curated by Matthew Lopas. 

Painting 360°: A Look at Contemporary Panoramic Painting
This exhibition features works in a variety of media by artists who explore the possibilities of looking at the world beyond the edges of a viewfinder as they create images on curved surfaces.
Artists whose work is featured in Painting 360° include Marcia Clark, Nicholas Evans-Cato, Christopher Evans, Amer Kobaslija, Jackie Lima, Matthew Lopas, Carrie O'Coyle, Dick Termes, and Melissa Cowper Smith.

Butler Center Galleries
February 12 - April 30, 2016
Reception for First Friday Art Walk
February 12, 5 – 8pm

Gallery Information:
401 President Clinton Ave.
Little Rock, AR 72201
501-320-5790

Hours:
Monday-Saturday: 9 a.m.-6 p.m.

2016 Small Works on Paper

"Now in its 29th year, Small Works on Paper is a juried visual art exhibition that showcases artwork no larger than 18 x 24 inches by Arkansas artists who are members of the Arkansas Artist Registry.The Arkansas Artist Registry is an online gallery showcasing the artwork of Arkansas artists. Membership to the Arkansas Artist Registry is free and open to all Arkansas artists." -- Arkansas Arts Council

Here is a list of participating artists.

2016 Touring Schedule

The Exhibition will tour the state through different venues all year. 

January 5-29   Batesville Area Arts Council

Feb. 4-26         Hendrix College, Conway

March 4-30      Arkansas Tech University, Russellville

April 1-30         University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

May 6-27         University of Arkansas, Fort Smith

June 4 - July 9   Searcy Art Gallery

July 19 - August 27   Delta Cultural Center, Helena

Sept. 1-29         Art Center of the Grand Prairie, Stuttgart

Oct. 6-26           University of Arkansas, Monticello

Nov. 2-28          University of Arkansas, Hope

This was the first time I have applied to be in the small works on paper show. I am thrilled to have been selected. 2015 was great year for me showing in Arkansas. I had a solo show, titled Fleeting Gardens at the Batesville Area Arts Council Gallery in March (2015). In the past year my work was selected for the Delta and the Art of the South (Memphis). I hope to carry this momentum into 2016. In addition to having a work in the small works on paper show, my critique group, Culture Shock will have a show at the Butler Center Concordia Gallery from April-August 2016. Press about the show in the River Valley & Ozark edition Arkansas Online. 

Fire Start, 2015

Fire Start, 2015

"Fire Start" is printed on homegrown, harvested, and hand-prepared Nankeen Cotton paper. I grew the cotton on my eco-farm, Wildland Gardens. The image is printed digitally using HP Vivera pigment-based inks. The imagery in "Fire Start" originates in both painting and photography. The print represents a forest edge and vast desert. In the forest a small fire has started. The work comments on the monumental environmental changes caused by removing and burning trees. The loss of trees results in top soil erosion, greater daily temperature changes, and an increased likelihood of drought and flood. I seek to capture our environmental anxiety- the feeling of dynamic changes in the land and our memories of natural places.

Painting 360 Group Show at Hendrix College

Gabe, 2015, Digital print

Gabe, 2015, Digital print

Participating Artists - Marcia Clark, Christopher Evans, Nicholas Evans-Cato, Jackie Lima, Matthew Lopas, Amer Kobaslija, Melissa Cowper Smith, Dick Termes, Carrie O’Coyle, and Sanford Wurmfeld In this show contemporary artists work with the possibilities of looking at the world beyond the edges of a viewfinder. Their processes require each artist to turn their head as they make their image. The level and plumb pictures we are so accustomed to give way images that are either on a curved surface, or have curves and turns incorporated into them. Location: Art A LobbyDates: September 7th to October 30th, 2015 Reception: Thursday September 7th from 5:00 to 6:00pmGallery Talk: Matthew Lopas, Thursday September 7th from 5:30 to 6:00pmPublic Gallery Hours: 3:30 – 5:30 Monday to Friday

Art of the South in Memphis TN

My work will be part of this group exhibition, now open at Hyde Galleries in Memphis. The reception is this Friday evening. I will be there! Hope to see some of you!

From Juror Wayne White:
I was recently asked to look at the work of 166 talented artists and pick 40 for a show. The results? 126 disgruntled artists muttering “What does he know?” And they’re right! What do I know? Please keep that attitude, my fellow artists. You have many victories ahead. As for the rest of you, please savor. This is a wonderful show. Inspire each other, secretly know you’re the best one and keep trudging out to that studio every day. I’m very happy to see such a perfect storm of creativity roaring across the South.

Number: Presents
Art of the South 2015
Opening Reception, May 29 Trolley Night

May 20 – July 31, 2015
Memphis College of Art
Hyde Galleries
477 South Main

M–F, Noon–5pm
Sat, Noon–7pm