Upcoming Exhibition - COUPLETS by Slingshot Studio Artists
January 11 – March 8, 2025
Opening Reception – Saturday, January 11th from 1 – 3 p.m.
Curator’s Walkthrough – Saturday, February 8th at 2 p.m.
The Architectural Foundation Gallery
Alligator Fish (2015), by Michelle Oliner.
Foam print with colored pencil on paper.
Altered Woman (2015), by James Jasper.
Print with colored pencil on paper.
Robot Box (2022), by Tom Neumeyer.
Glazed ceramic sculpture.
The Architectural Foundation of Santa Barbara is pleased to announce the opening of COUPLETS, an exhibition featuring the work of Slingshot / Alpha Art Studio artists Michelle Oliner, James Jasper, and Tom Neumeyer. Slingshot is a progressive arts center that supports the creative practice and professional visibility of artists with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) in Santa Barbara County. COUPLETS presents work from each of these artists across different media – printmaking, drawing, embroidery, and ceramics. An opening reception for the public will be held at the Architectural Foundation of Santa Barbara on Saturday January 11, from 1 – 3 pm. All are welcome.
Slingshot’s Gallery Director, Jessica Schlobohm, curated the exhibition. She will present an informal tour of the exhibition and an introduction to the studio’s progressive practices, on February 8th at 2 pm.
COUPLETS takes inspiration from several different series of prints produced by Michelle Oliner during the past decade. These prints are created by drawing on a foam plate with a dulled instrument such as a pencil, pen, or sharpened dowel. After printing the plates, typically in black, she adds a colored pencil overlay to each successive print, creating a novel version.
The prints are presented as mated pairs to highlight the rhythm and meter of their relationships. The dynamics can be jarring, like a non-sequitur, but the totality is expressive and expansive, as the asymmetry invites a closer look and prolonged reflection.
James Jasper’s works on paper introduce another aspect to this discourse. His process is methodical but economical as he completes each composition in a single sitting, rendering his abstract portraits in permanent pen or thick, indelible charcoal, without hesitation. His meditations produce multiples (or series) that are linked through their shared referent – the image, subject, or themes his drawings point to in the world.
Jasper’s embroideries remain more mysterious as their designs seem to emerge from his memory, or other non-representational musings. Created sporadically over the course of many months, if not years, these works are defined by concentric rings of linear stitches and colorful patches of dense texture reminiscent of fields or farmland, seen from above.
Sharing these contemplative tones, Tom Neumeyer’s ceramic vessels belong to a more open-ended series. His strong glyphic markings mimic and dissect their ceramic shapes with deeply inscribed lines and grids that contain hidden figures, cryptic messages, and tessellating geometry. This visual theme is continually revisited throughout his practice in different media, providing a window into a complex world that is intricate and highly organized.
In its entirety, the exhibition presents the successive and repeated gestures of these artists’ sustained attentions. Their iterative approach reminds us of the unresolved nature of artistic practice and time. Actions or moments are strung together and made continuous even when asynchronous or lacking agreement.
Michelle Oliner, James Jasper, and Tom Neumeyer have been artists at Slingshot since the studio’s inception in 2013. During the 1990s, each made their way to the programs of the Alpha Resource Center (Alpha) where their individual artistic aptitudes were noticed and encouraged. Over the past decade at Slingshot, all three artists have developed their creative interests and individual practices with more focused attention.
The Architectural Foundation of Santa Barbara office and gallery are based in the historic Acheson House at the corner of Garden and East Victoria Streets in Santa Barbara. Gallery hours are Saturdays from 1:00 to 4:00 p.m. and by appointment.