Monday, April 26, 2010

NEW WORKS BY AARON BALDWIN

New works by Aaron Baldwin are available through if ART Gallery, wroefs@sc.rr.com, (803) 238-2351.







Untitled, 2009
Oil on panel
38 x 48 in.
$ 2,250











Untitled, 2009
Oil on panel
38 x 48 in.
$ 2,250

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Biography: Aaron Baldwin

Aaron Baldwin (b. 1963)

Aaron Baldwin was born in 1963 in McClellanville, S.C.  After receiving his MFA in painting at Clemson University in 1991 and living several years in Charlotte, N.C., he returned to his hometown.  He teaches at Charleston Southern University in Charleston, S.C.  In the late 1990s, as a carpenter, Baldwin worked in the 18th and 19th century woodworking techniques. He also applied modern methods toward the preservation and restoration of historical structures. In addition, Baldwin has built several houses in McClellanville, including his own, and calls himself a "compulsive boat builder." His artwork has been shown in galleries galleries in New York City, Atlanta, Charleston, S.C., Columbia, S.C., Greenville, S.C., and elsewhere.  He has exhibited in the Greenville (S.C.) County Museum of Art, Charleston's Gibbes Museum, and the Chattahoochie Valley Art Museum in LaGrange, Ga.  His work was selected for several Spoleto and Piccolo Spoleto exhibitions in Charleston and for the 1992 South Carolina Triennial and is in the S.C. State Art Collection. 

Sunday, November 12, 2006

if ART Gallery Opening

Developed Landscape, 2005
Oil and wood on panel
14 x 17 in

OPEN NOW: 


if ART Gallery

1223 Lincoln St.
Columbia, S.C.

Gallery Hours:
Most days, except Sunday, from 11:00 AM – 7:00 PM
& by appointment (call 803-238-2351)


For more information, contact Wim Roefs at if ART
(803) 238-2351 – wroefs@sc.rr.com


On Nov. 10, 2006, if ART, International Fine Art Services, opened if ART Gallery. The gallery is at 1223 Lincoln St., Columbia, S.C., in the Vista district, across from the Blue Marlin restaurant. For more information, contact if ART’s Wim Roefs at (803) 238-2351 or wroefs@sc.rr.com.

If ART Gallery carries the work of South Carolina artists Leo Twiggs, Mike Williams, Carl Blair, Tom Stanley, Virginia Scotchie, Tonya Gregg, Peter Lenzo, Jeff Donovan, David Yaghjian, Anna Redwine, John Monteith, Christine Tedesco, Brown Thornton, Paul Yanko, Laura Spong, Steven Chapp, Katie Walker, Edward Rice, Aaron Baldwin, Bill Jackson, Herb Parker, Dorothy Netherland, Eric Miller, Mary Gilkerson, Matt Overend, Kim Keats and Phil Garrett. The gallery also carries work by Dutch artist Kees Salentijn, German artists Reiner Mahrlein, Roland Albert and Klaus Hartmann, and Washington Color Field painter Paul Reed.

The gallery also carries a wide selection of unframed and lithographs, silkscreens, etchings and other limited edition prints by such nationally and even internationally prominent artists such as Karel Appel, Richard Hunt, Bram van Velde, John Hultberg, Sam Middleton, Benny Andrews, Hannes Postma, Corneille, Lucebert and Alvin Hollingsworth.

Since March 2005, if ART, International Fine Art Services, has organized commercial gallery exhibitions in Columbia, mostly at Vista Studios/Gallery 80808. In addition to presenting gallery artists and special exhibitions at if ART Gallery, if ART will continue to organize exhibitions at Vista Studios/Gallery 80808. The company also provides curatorial and exhibition design services. 

Most recently, in September, if ART was hired by the Technical College of the Lowcountry to install dozens of art works at the college’s new building in Bluffton, S.C. Earlier this year, if ART installed two exhibitions of work from the South Carolina state art collection at the Sumter (S.C.) Gallery of Art. The if ART production “South Carolina Birds: A Fine Art Exhibition,” curated by company owner Wim Roefs, is at the Pickens County Museum of Art & History until Nov. 11, 2006. The exhibition opened in 2004 at the Sumter Gallery of Art and traveled to the Burroughs & Chapin Museum in Myrtle Beach, S.C., and the City Gallery at Waterfront Park in Charleston, S.C. Roefs wrote the essay for the exhibition catalogue, which he also edited.

In 2005, Roefs curated exhibitions of work by Leo Twiggs and Carl Blair for the Fine Arts Center of Kershaw County in Camden, S.C. He also curated an exhibition of paintings by Marcelo Novo for HoFP Gallery in Columbia, S.C., and wrote the essay for the exhibition catalogue. Earlier this year, Roefs curated an exhibition with work by Dutch artist Kees Salentijn for the Center of the Arts in Rock Hill, S.C. In May, he curated an indoors/outdoors sculpture exhibition for the city of Dillon, S.C. 

Roefs contributed an essay to the catalogue for the exhibition “A Collection for Margaret: The Personal and Private Art of Carl Blair.” The exhibition is on view at Hampton III Gallery in Greenville until Nov. 11. Roefs teaches a course in African-American art at the University of South Carolina.

Since March 2005, if ART has published eight small exhibition catalogues. The catalogues featured short essays by Roefs about Aaron Baldwin, Mike Williams, Anna Redwine, Tom Stanley, Carl Blair, Janet Orselli, Matt Overend, Laura Spong, Leo Twiggs, Jeff Donovan, John Monteith, Dorothy Netherland, Herb Parker and Phil Garrett and Mary Gilkerson and the process of making monotypes.

Friday, October 7, 2005

Essay: Aaron Baldwin

Head, 2005
Mahogany
65 x 65 x 65 in

AARON BALDWIN
By Wim Roefs

Aaron Baldwin is foremost a formalist. He is driven by aesthetics and the formal qualities of his surroundings. Those surroundings include coastal McClellanville, S.C., where he was born and lives. It includes tools, forests, fish, chickens and people, including Ted, David, Mose and other folks with whom he used to work in construction or architectural restoration.

That boat shapes appear frequently in Baldwin’s work is no surprise. Nor are the nails, wire or tools, including the open-ended wrench or the plaster knife doubling as human bodies in K4 and David In High Places. GI Joe’s head, sanded down to dull its features, is the model for the heads made from putty in Baldwin’s three-dimensional wall pieces. Hard Ted’s body is modeled after a turtle exclusion device, an underwater cage used to spare turtles while catching shrimp. Wood, in all shorts and shapes, pure or processed, is a staple of Baldwin’s art. “I look for shapes and materials close to home.”

Baldwin seldom depicts what’s close to home literally. The work reflects how he relates to his environment, both physically and mentally. Sometimes merely as a mental exercise, he puts together everyday elements in ways that change their purpose. The door hinge that gives Icarus a body and wings is conceptually related to Picasso’s handlebar-turned-bullhorns. Baldwin also reduces nature to its essential shapes in sculptures informed by the clean, understated stylings of Constantin Brancusi or Martin Puryear. Sculptures such as Dolphin and Fish Trap suggest, in Puryear fashion, a heaviness that, hollow as they are, isn’t there, even though they have gravitas.

In his Tower sculptures, Baldwin uses branches, twigs and scrap wood for construction and architectural purposes. In his Developend Landscape and Undeveloped Landscape series, Baldwin exercises his recent “compulsion to impose a sense of order on nature and daily life.” Those three-dimensional paintings, inspired in part by early Christian relief paintings, underscore that Baldwin is above all a sculptor. His two-dimensional Hand paintings in essence depict sculptures of hands.

“I like the formal part of my work to have a lot of value,” Baldwin says, “because then it doesn’t matter whether it means something.” Still, the painted hands are a tribute to “working with your hands.” A lot of his work deals with ego, Baldwin says, about people, including himself, taking themselves too seriously. The tiny heads on a seven-feet-plus support system in his Tower sculptures are somewhat absurd. A head as heavenly body or on top of a pyramid or tilted to suggest crucifixion are merely a spoof, not attempts at new age or religious communication. The same is true for a body pierced with nails, St. Sebastian-style.

“There’s nothing more deep behind it. I am making fun of myself and other people, for instance of our notion that we sacrifice so much. To me it’s sort of humorous. But it’s disturbing to some people, and I can see that. I gravitate toward Romantic art in art history, and some of that stuff can be sort of dark. But I don’t try to make my art dark. I enjoy life and generally am optimistic.”

Wim Roefs


Icarus, 2001
14 x 14 in
Mixed media and wood

Wednesday, October 5, 2005

Brief Biography: Baldwin


Hand 3, 2002
Oil on panel
12 x 12 in
$450

Aaron Baldwin (b. 1963)

Aaron Baldwin was born in McClellanville, S.C.  After receiving his MFA in painting at Clemson University in 1991 and living several years in Charlotte, N.C., he returned to his hometown.  He teaches at Charleston Southern University in Charleston, S.C.  In the late 1990s, as a carpenter, Baldwin worked in the 18th and 19th century woodworking techniques. He also applied modern methods toward the preservation and restoration of historical structures. In addition, Baldwin has built several houses in McClellanville, including his own, and calls himself a "compulsive boat builder." His artwork has been shown in galleries galleries in New York City, Atlanta, Charleston, S.C., Columbia, S.C., Greenville, S.C., and elsewhere.  He has exhibited in the Greenville (S.C.) County Museum of Art, Charleston's Gibbes Museum, and the Chattahoochie Valley Art Museum in LaGrange, Ga.  His work was selected for several Spoleto and Piccolo Spoleto exhibitions in Charleston and for the 1992 South Carolina Triennial and is in the S.C. State Art Collection. 

Sunday, September 25, 2005

Aaron Baldwin & Mike Williams: Up From the Mud: October 7-19, 2005

If ART
International Fine Art Services
2300 Lee St.
Columbia, SC 29205
(803) 799-7170 / (803) 238-2351
wroefs@sc.rr.com
if ART

presents

UP FROM THE MUD:

AARON BALDWIN & MIKE WILLIAMS

at

Gallery 80808/Vista Studios
808 Lady St
Columbia, SC

October 7 – 19, 2005

Artists’ reception: Friday, Oct. 7, 5:00 ¬– 10:00 p.m.

Opening Hours:
Saturdays: 11:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Sundays: 1:00 – 5:00 p.m.
Weekdays: 3:30 – 7:00 p.m. & by appointment

If ART, International Fine Art Services, presents Up From The Mud, an exhibition of paintings, three-dimensional wall pieces and sculptures by Aaron Baldwin and Mike Williams. The exhibition is at Gallery 80808 at Vista Studios, 808 Lady St, Columbia, SC, October 7 – 19, 2005. The artists’ reception is Friday, October 7, 5:00 ¬– 10:00 p.m. Opening hours are Saturdays, 11:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.; Sundays, 1:00 – 5:00 p.m; and weekdays 3:30 – 7:00 p.m. or by appointment.

The artists will present a mixture of new work and older pieces not previously shown in the Columbia area. Baldwin’s work will include wooden sculptures and three-dimensional oil paintings on board with wooden relief elements. Williams will not just show the abstracted swamp and fish paintings he’s known for. Much of his contribution will consist of works on the margins of his artistic production, including metal wall assemblages, formalist metal sculptures, and even energetic, highly expressionist, painted portraits.

Both Baldwin and Williams are deeply influenced by the natural environment, the water and dirt of their childhood. Baldwin (b. 1966) was born and raised in coastal McClellanville, SC, with the ocean and marshes nearby. After some time away living in Clemson, SC., and Charlotte, NC, Baldwin in the 1990s moved back to his hometown. Williams (b. 1963) was born and raised in Sumter, SC, near the swamps and lakes of Sumter and Clarendon counties. He lives in Columbia, SC, and is still an avid outdoorsman.

Literal elements from the environment the artists hold dear are easily identifiable in their work. Baldwin, for instance, incorporates boat shapes or reduces bird forms to their abstracted essence. In Williams’s paintings and sculptures fish and fish forms play prominent roles.

Still, while their backgrounds and personal preferences inform their subject matter, both Baldwin and Williams more often lean toward sensibilities they associate with the environment they grew up and live in. The work is about how they personally relate to that environment, about the existential, even spiritual component of the physical world. Esthetically, that translates not into literal depictions but compositions with strong formal qualities, built from abstracted forms that can be traced back to nature.

“In that sense, Baldwin and Williams have a lot in common,” says Wim Roefs, if ART’s director. “They share a certain sensibility. At the same time, their work looks very different. Baldwin’s three-dimensional work, usually in wood, relates to the cool, reductive, understated stylings of Constantin Brancusi or, more recently, Martin Puryear. Williams, especially in his paintings, takes his cues more from Abstract Expressionism’s legacy, although his metal sculptures at times take austere, clean forms.”

If ART of Columbia, SC, represents artists, organizes art exhibitions, and provides curatorial services to galleries, museums, and other institutions. If ART also provides consultation services to fine art institutions, individual artists and art collectors. If ART was founded early in 2005 by Roefs, the company’s director and curator. Recent if ART exhibitions include “Janet Orselli – Matt Overend: Double O 80808,” in April, at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios, Columbia, SC, and “Carl Blair: The Verner Award Celebration Exhibition,” April-May 2005 at Lewis & Clark Gallery, Columbia, SC.

Sunday, July 17, 2005

Works of Art: Aaron Baldwin

All works of art by Aaron Baldwin are available at if ART Gallery, 1223 Lincoln Street, Columbia, SC.

Contact Wim Roefs at if-art-gallery@sc.twcbc.com or (803) 255-0068/(803) 238-2351.

Hand 1, 2002
Oil on panel, 12 x 12 in., $450
Hand 2, 2002
Oil on panel, 12 x 12 in., $450















Hand 3, 2002
Oil on panel, 12 x 12 in., $450





Hand 4, 2002
Oil on panel, 12 x 12 in., $450













Untitled, 2009
Oil on panel, 38 x 48 in., $ 2,250


Untitled, 2009
Oil on panel, 38 x 48 in., $ 2,250
Hand 5, 2002
Oil on panel, 12 x 12 in., $450




















































































































All works of art by Aaron Baldwin are available at if ART Gallery, 1223 Lincoln Street, Columbia, SC.

Contact Wim Roefs at if-art-gallery@sc.twcbc.com or (803) 255-0068/(803) 238-2351.