Cross Contemporary Art Projects
Skip to main content
  • Menu
  • Artists
  • Artworks
  • Exhibitions
  • Video
  • Contact
  • Press
  • Publications
  • Events
  • Art Writings
  • Art Fairs
  • The VENICE PROJECT
Cart
0 items $
Checkout

Item added to cart

View cart & checkout
Continue shopping
Menu
Forest Bathing
A Group Exhibition About Nature, January 15 - February 27, 2022

Forest Bathing: A Group Exhibition About Nature

Past exhibition
  • Overview
  • Works
  • Installation Views
  • Events
  • Press release
Overview
Forest Bathing, A Group Exhibition About Nature

Forest Bathing is a concept that originated in Japan in the 1980’s as an antidote to an increasingly technological and alienating world. The idea is to mindfully walk in the woodlands and reconnect with the sounds, smells. colors and texture of nature. Forest Bathing is prescribed by Japanese physicians as a medical cure to calm stressed nerves, mitigate pain and heal the soul. 

FOREST BATHING - A Group Exhibition about Nature

 

Woodstock, NY - Forest Bathing is a concept that originated in Japan in the 1980’s as an antidote to an increasingly technological and alienating world. The idea is to mindfully walk in the woodlands and reconnect with the sounds, smells. colors and texture of nature. Forest Bathing is prescribed by Japanese physicians as a medical cure to calm stressed nerves, mitigate pain and heal the soul. This exhibition, Forest Bathing features artwork by Ashley Garrett, Anne Leith, Iain Machell, John Lyon Paul, Christy Rupp and Martin Weinstein. All six artists independently use the woodlands of upstate New York as a touchstone for very different and contemporary styles of painting and sculpture.  Forest Bathing opens with a reception for the artists on  Saturday, January 15th, 2022  1 - 5pm and runs through Sunday February 27th, 2022 at the Kleinert/James Art Center, Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild, 34 Tinker Street, Woodstock, NY 12498.

 

More About the Artists: 

 

Ashley Garrett

Ashley Garrett works from the memories of landscape in her mind.  Her brushwork sparkles with captured filtered light of the forest with percussive sky blue patches and calm stone grey shadows.  In Garrett’s work, we have the illusion of floating in a cacophony of mysterious spaces and colorful burrows where we can feel the joy and the struggle of creation. There is chaos and improvisation. But like nature, there is a hidden geometrical organization and a perpetual balance between what is and is not.

 

Anne Leith   

Anne Leith’s plein-air paintings are an exuberant expression of a will to create a greater, organized whole from the chaos of nature. Leith’s mark-making velocity and vibrant colors (often accentuated with silver or gold leaf) race to capture the startling flashes of brilliant light found in the forest. Anne Leith seeks to bend space and time with a vigorous response to the intimacy of the solitary self and its attentive relationship to the vastness of the Catskills. 

 

Iain Machell

Iain Machell’s work explores the tactile presence and possibilities of paper as well as allowing fluid, organic influences in his mark making media.  Materials are bent, stressed and meticulously detailed to create a delicate cartography of space and being. There is a non-objective element to everything Machell makes but there is also a subtle bridge  between the object itself and it’s position of a fractal microcosm of a greater world. 

 

John Lyon Paul

John Lyon Paul’s reverse paintings on clear glass evoke ecclesiatical ornament with its glowing, fractured light. These luminous, colorful forms manifest the intangible rendering clearly previously unseen realms.  Paul’s vibrating pigments change with the ambient light manifesting a multitude of shadows and infinite gem-like combinations. 

 

Christy Rupp

Christy Rupp analyzes the dynamic connection between creatures, their distinctive purposes and the ominous threats to their habitats. In her wall sculptures of rainforest animals, Rupp etches welded and crafted animal forms with the molecular formulas that these frogs, ants and snakes contribute as healing pharmaceuticals for humans. In her Snap Shot collages, Rupp dynamically blends the intrusions on woodland creatures and their ecosystems creating a new environment that weaves both unnatural and natural worlds.

 

Martin Weinstein

Martin Weinstein's paintings reference both the earth and the surrounding cosmos in perfect harmony. This balanced meeting of the inner and outer worlds are due to Weinstein’s technique of painting on 3-5 interlocking sheets of clear acrylic panels over a period of months to years. The clarity of these layered paintings only becomes apparent with the joinery of each incomplete translucent layer that records only a part of the visual story. Seen together as overlapping panels, the optical illusion of reality is perfect; yet slid away from one another, each panel holds only a titillating fragment of the whole.

 

About Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild

The Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild is a regional center for the arts located in Woodstock, New York. From its 250-acre mountainside campus and its arts and performance center in the village of Woodstock, Byrdcliffe offers an integrated program of exhibitions, performance, classes, workshops, symposia, and artists’ residencies. Byrdcliffe embraces all disciplines of artistic endeavor in a collaborative spirit, and seeks creative partnership with other not for profit and educational entities in order to leverage its unique resources for the benefit of the cultural life of the Hudson Valley region. Byrdcliffe was founded in 1902 and has operated as a nonprofit organization since 1938.

 

  • Forest Bathing in dART International Magazine
  • Painter Anne Leith & Curator Jen Dragon in Conversation about Forest Bathing
  • Forest Bathing Virtual Tour
  • Forest Bathing Zoom Artists Panel
Share
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Email
Download List of Works
Works
  • Darkling Plain © Ashley Garrett 2017 oil on canvas 9"X12"

     Darkling Plain © Ashley Garrett 2017 oil on canvas 9"X12"

  • Eidolon © Ashley Garrett 2021 colored pencil and pastel on paper 10 X 14 Inches

    Eidolon © Ashley Garrett 2021 colored pencil and pastel on paper 10 X 14 Inches

  • Cardinal Ashley Garrett 2016 30X40
  • Lucaria © Ashley Garrett 2021 oil on canvas 10" X 14" inches

    Lucaria © Ashley Garrett 2021 oil on canvas 10" X 14" inches

  • Pond, Fall, Morning Under Afternoon © Martin Weinstein 2021

    Pond, Fall, Morning Under Afternoon © Martin Weinstein 2021

  • Snowy Evening Under Snowy Morning © Martin Weinstein 2021

    Snowy Evening Under Snowy Morning © Martin Weinstein 2021

  • Sassafrass, Morning Under Afternoon © Martin Weinstein 2021

    Sassafrass, Morning Under Afternoon © Martin Weinstein 2021

  • Road Through Oaks Evening Under Afternoon © Martin Weinstein 2021

    Road Through Oaks Evening Under Afternoon © Martin Weinstein 2021

  • Oaks, Morning Under Evening © Martin Weinstein 2021

    Oaks, Morning Under Evening © Martin Weinstein 2021

  • The Cove © Anne Leith 2021

    The Cove © Anne Leith 2021

  • The Reservoir © Anne Leith 2021

    The Reservoir © Anne Leith 2021

  • The River © Anne Leith 2021

    The River © Anne Leith 2021

  • The Creek © Anne Leith 2021

    The Creek © Anne Leith 2021

  • The River © Anne Leith 2021

    The River © Anne Leith 2021

  • River Trail © Anne Leith 2021

    River Trail © Anne Leith 2021

  • Snake (Satopril) © Christy Rupp

    Snake (Satopril) © Christy Rupp 

  • Fire Ant (Solenospin) © Christy Rupp

    Fire Ant (Solenospin) © Christy Rupp

  • Frog (Epibatidine) pain killer © Christy Rupp

    Frog (Epibatidine) pain killer © Christy Rupp

  • Fawn Constellation © John Lyon Paul

    Fawn Constellation © John Lyon Paul 

  • Incantation © John Lyon Paul 2019

    Incantation © John Lyon Paul 2019

  • Turning to the Light © John Lyon Paul 2019

    Turning to the Light © John Lyon Paul 2019

  • Miracle on the Mountain © John Lyon Paul 2018

    Miracle on the Mountain © John Lyon Paul 2018

  • Below Sound © John Lyon Paul 2018

    Below Sound © John Lyon Paul 2018

  • Tree 3 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 3 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 4 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 4 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 2 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 2 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 1 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 1 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 5 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 5 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 6 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 6 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 7© Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 7© Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 9 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 9 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 8 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 8 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 11,12,13,14 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 11,12,13,14 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 10 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 10 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 19 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 19 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 15 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 15 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 16 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 16 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 17 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 17 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 20 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 20 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 21 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 21 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 18 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 18 © Iain Machell 2021

  • Tree 6 © Iain Machell 2021

    Tree 6 © Iain Machell 2021

Installation Views
  • 4C864A5C 255B 4383 B1Ba Bbaa758513C7 2
  • 127002Cc 9Aed 4875 B090 8416Db0Fde94 3
  • 303D1801 Fee3 40A6 9E0D E269E084Bcf4 2
  • Ebd41A04 A0D3 4B5D A12A Eee2D43627Fa
  • Forest Bathing Installation With John Lyon Paul Sculpture
  • 9E9Afdea Ec58 43B4 A8F0 7E990Ab7949E
  • C072Dc6D 8B81 4Ebf 97C6 12D9183D275D
  • E4Caf01C 0B08 4C9F 9Bfe 5D023Bb375Fc 2
  • D614Fe37 2F6C 4Be9 B0Ae 5D3C21E313Bc 2
Events
  • Christy Rupp & Scott Volz in Conversation about Noisy Autumn

    Christy Rupp & Scott Volz in Conversation about Noisy Autumn

    March 31, 2022
  • Christy Rupp : Othered

    Christy Rupp : Othered

    An Installation at Howl : Happening, NYC, NY April 21, 2022
Press release

FOREST BATHING - A Group Exhibition about Nature

 

Woodstock, NY - Forest Bathing is a concept that originated in Japan in the 1980’s as an antidote to an increasingly technological and alienating world. The idea is to mindfully walk in the woodlands and reconnect with the sounds, smells. colors and texture of nature. Forest Bathing is prescribed by Japanese physicians as a medical cure to calm stressed nerves, mitigate pain and heal the soul. This exhibition, Forest Bathing features artwork by Ashley Garrett, Anne Leith, Iain Machell, John Lyon Paul, Christy Rupp and Martin Weinstein. All six artists independently use the woodlands of upstate New York as a touchstone for very different and contemporary styles of painting and sculpture.  Forest Bathing opens with a reception for the artists on  Saturday, January 15th, 2022  1 - 5pm and runs through Sunday February 27th, 2022 at the Kleinert/James Art Center, Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild, 34 Tinker Street, Woodstock, NY 12498.

 

More About the Artists: 

 

Ashley Garrett

Ashley Garrett works from the memories of landscape in her mind.  Her brushwork sparkles with captured filtered light of the forest with percussive sky blue patches and calm stone grey shadows.  In Garrett’s work, we have the illusion of floating in a cacophony of mysterious spaces and colorful burrows where we can feel the joy and the struggle of creation. There is chaos and improvisation. But like nature, there is a hidden geometrical organization and a perpetual balance between what is and is not.

 

Anne Leith   

Anne Leith’s plein-air paintings are an exuberant expression of a will to create a greater, organized whole from the chaos of nature. Leith’s mark-making velocity and vibrant colors (often accentuated with silver or gold leaf) race to capture the startling flashes of brilliant light found in the forest. Anne Leith seeks to bend space and time with a vigorous response to the intimacy of the solitary self and its attentive relationship to the vastness of the Catskills. 

 

Iain Machell

Iain Machell’s work explores the tactile presence and possibilities of paper as well as allowing fluid, organic influences in his mark making media.  Materials are bent, stressed and meticulously detailed to create a delicate cartography of space and being. There is a non-objective element to everything Machell makes but there is also a subtle bridge  between the object itself and it’s position of a fractal microcosm of a greater world. 

 

John Lyon Paul

John Lyon Paul’s reverse paintings on clear glass evoke ecclesiatical ornament with its glowing, fractured light. These luminous, colorful forms manifest the intangible rendering clearly previously unseen realms.  Paul’s vibrating pigments change with the ambient light manifesting a multitude of shadows and infinite gem-like combinations. 

 

Christy Rupp

Christy Rupp analyzes the dynamic connection between creatures, their distinctive purposes and the ominous threats to their habitats. In her wall sculptures of rainforest animals, Rupp etches welded and crafted animal forms with the molecular formulas that these frogs, ants and snakes contribute as healing pharmaceuticals for humans. In her Snap Shot collages, Rupp dynamically blends the intrusions on woodland creatures and their ecosystems creating a new environment that weaves both unnatural and natural worlds.

 

Martin Weinstein

Martin Weinstein's paintings reference both the earth and the surrounding cosmos in perfect harmony. This balanced meeting of the inner and outer worlds are due to Weinstein’s technique of painting on 3-5 interlocking sheets of clear acrylic panels over a period of months to years. The clarity of these layered paintings only becomes apparent with the joinery of each incomplete translucent layer that records only a part of the visual story. Seen together as overlapping panels, the optical illusion of reality is perfect; yet slid away from one another, each panel holds only a titillating fragment of the whole.

 

About Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild

The Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild is a regional center for the arts located in Woodstock, New York. From its 250-acre mountainside campus and its arts and performance center in the village of Woodstock, Byrdcliffe offers an integrated program of exhibitions, performance, classes, workshops, symposia, and artists’ residencies. Byrdcliffe embraces all disciplines of artistic endeavor in a collaborative spirit, and seeks creative partnership with other not for profit and educational entities in order to leverage its unique resources for the benefit of the cultural life of the Hudson Valley region. Byrdcliffe was founded in 1902 and has operated as a nonprofit organization since 1938.

 

Related artists

  • John Lyon Paul

    John Lyon Paul

  • Christy Rupp

    Christy Rupp

  • Martin Weinstein

    Martin Weinstein

Back to exhibitions
Manage cookies
© Cross Contemporary Art #2023#
Site by Artlogic
 
Facebook, opens in a new tab.
Twitter, opens in a new tab.
Youtube, opens in a new tab.
Pinterest, opens in a new tab.
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
LinkedIn, opens in a new tab.
Join the mailing list
Send an email

This website uses cookies
This site uses cookies to help make it more useful to you. Please contact us to find out more about our Cookie Policy.

Manage cookies
Accept

Cookie preferences

Check the boxes for the cookie categories you allow our site to use

Cookie options
Required for the website to function and cannot be disabled.
Improve your experience on the website by storing choices you make about how it should function.
Allow us to collect anonymous usage data in order to improve the experience on our website.
Allow us to identify our visitors so that we can offer personalised, targeted marketing.
Save preferences
Close

Join our mailing list

Signup

* denotes required fields

We will process the personal data you have supplied in accordance with our privacy policy (available on request). You can unsubscribe or change your preferences at any time by clicking the link in our emails.