Mentors and Makers: The Artists of Westmont College

MENTORS AND MAKERS: The Artists of Westmont College, at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

MENTORS AND MAKERS: The Artists of Westmont College, at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

As part of its continuing commitment to exhibit the work of talented emerging artists alongside important established and historically significant artists, Sullivan Goss Gallery hosts an exhibition of works by the art department faculty of Westmont College. Mentors and Makers: The Artists of Westmont College opens on Dec. 6 with a 1st Thursday Reception from 5-8 p.m. The exhibition remains on view through Jan. 20.

The art department at Westmont College has always had an outsized influence on the art scene of the region. But tucked away in its bucolic Montecito campus, it can be easy to overlook how much concentrated talent is found there. “Currently, Westmont’s arts faculty consists of some of the most intriguing, adventurous, and distinct artists working in and around Santa Barbara, though their work is making waves over a much larger area,” says Curator Nathan Vonk.

Featured artists include:

Scott Anderson received his M.F.A. in illustration from The University of Hartford, and an M.A. in illustration from Syracuse University. His illustration work has appeared in numerous publications, including The Wall Street Journal, LA Weekly, The Village Voice, Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, and many others. He has also created numerous book covers for the popular “Who Is” series from the Grosset & Dunlap division of Penguin Books. His work has been awarded and recognized by Communication Arts, American Illustration, the Society of Illustrators New York, the Society of Illustrators Los Angeles, and in multiple volumes of Spectrum. A gallery painter as well, Anderson exhibits his figurative work annually with Sullivan Goss Gallery.

Scott Anderson, Wave 2, 2017, 7 x 11," oil on canvas, on view at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

Scott Anderson, Wave 2, 2017, 7 x 11,” oil on canvas, on view at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

James Daly focuses on figurative work and classical methods in various genres. Most recently his art has been an exploration of movement, visual memory, and experience in the outdoors. Daly is a graduate of Westmont and UCSB with degrees in Studio art and a Masters in Education. For the last eleven years he has developed a classically based curriculum that follows atelier-style art education for Providence Upperschool and more recently joined Westmont as an adjunct instructor.

James Daly, Haskell's Sunset, 2018, 6 x 8 inches, oil on board, on view at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

James Daly, Haskell’s Sunset, 2018, 6 x 8 inches, oil on board, on view at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

Nathan Huff earned his M.F.A. in Drawing and Painting, from California State University Long Beach, and also studied at Watts Atelier School of Art. Huff creates drawing and painting installations that function as freewheeling narratives: personal stories that explore the gaps between visual perception and modes of representation. Huff’s solo museum and gallery exhibitions have been featured at UCR Culver and Sweeney Galleries (Riverside), Los Angeles at D.E.N. Contemporary (West Hollywood), New Media Gallery (Ventura) Minthorne Gallery, (Oregon), and Gallerie View (Salambo, Tunisia.)

Nathan Huff, Skies and Schisms 5, 2018, 22 x 30 inches, gouache on paper, on board, on view at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

Nathan Huff, Skies and Schisms 5, 2018, 22 x 30 inches, gouache on paper, on board, on view at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

Sommer Roman was born and raised in California. She received her BA from UC Santa Cruz in 2004, and her MFA from UC Santa Barbara in 2014. She maintains a multi-disciplinary practice spanning sculpture, painting, and drawing and teaches part-time at California Polytechnic University (Cal Poly) & Westmont College in Santa Barbara. Some of her recent projects & exhibits include: Left Coast; Recent Acquisitions of Contemporary Art, a group exhibit at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art; Out of the Great Wide Open, a group exhibit at the Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara; Artist Residency & culminating solo exhibition, Passage at UC Santa Barbara; Artist Residency at The Squire Foundation, and most recently, In the Woods, Perpetual Youth, a solo exhibit at Ventura College.

Sommer Roman, Sighting no. 542, 2018, 55 x 20 x 26 inches, reclaimed fabric, clothing, pillows, feathers, paint, on view at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

Sommer Roman, Sighting no. 542, 2018, 55 x 20 x 26 inches, reclaimed fabric, clothing, pillows, feathers, paint, on view at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

Chris Rupp received his BA from Westmont College and an MFA from Azusa Pacific University. While trained primarily as a sculptor, Rupp does not limit his art making to traditional sculptural mediums or even three-dimensional forms. From graphite drawings, to molded plastic, or the use of unconventional store bought materials. His work has been exhibited at the Inland Empire Museum of Art, Biola University, Westmont Ridley-Tree Museum of Art, San Luis Obispo Museum of Art, The Channing Peake Gallery, and the Santa Barbara Arts Fund.

Chris Rupp, Dreamers Welcome, 2018, 18 x 30 inches, acrylic enamel paint on coir door mat, on board, on view at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

Chris Rupp, Dreamers Welcome, 2018, 18 x 30 inches, acrylic enamel paint on coir door mat, on board, on view at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

Meagan Sterling has an M.A. and an M.F.A. in Printmaking from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Her work has been displayed in many juried and group exhibitions, from Denver and Peoria to Seattle and Spokane. She says, “The paradox of daily life as safe and comfortable, juxtaposed with its polar opposite—defense against life’s uncertainties—appears to bully the American Dream itself. My art explores images of post World War II Americana where energy and resources were often used to advance comfort and promise safety and well being.”

Meagan Stirling, Everlasting Arms 5, 2018, 16 x 16 inches, Drypoint and Monoprint, on view at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

Meagan Stirling, Everlasting Arms 5, 2018, 16 x 16 inches, Drypoint and Monoprint, on view at Sullivan Goss Gallery.

Sullivan Goss – An American Gallery, is located at 11 E. Anapamu St. in downtown Santa Barbara.

Leslie Dinaberg

Originally published in Santa Barbara Seasons on December 2, 2018.

Local Lowdown: Books of Local Interest

Tis the season … for reading! Here are a few books you’re sure to enjoy this summer!

Title

Moonlight Sonata at the Mayo Clinic

Author

Nora Gallagher

What

A lyrical and honest memoir of a woman who almost loses her vision and the surprising ways it changes her life.

Favorite Quote

“Vincent and I decided not to use certain metaphors. Blind drunk. Blind as a bat. We don’t see eye to eye. We used deaf as a bat, until I started to lose my hearing.”

Title

A Pig for Friendship

Author

Mukta Cholette, illustrated by Sommer Roman

What

A playfully illustrated children’s book about a young girl and her relationship with her family, the environment and her barn-loving animal friends.

Favorite Quote

“All the animals will be our friends! We will always treat them well and be grateful for their contribution to our farm.”

Title

The Beauty of Zentangle

Author

Suzanne McNeill and Cindy Shepard

What

A look at the Zentangle method of mindful pattern drawing, which is designed to calm the mind and spur creativity.

Favorite Quote

“Anything is possible, one stroke at a time.”

Title

Dark Venus

Author

Jinny Webber

What

Volume two of a trilogy of historical novels set in William Shakespeare’s England teams series protagonist Sander Cooke with Amelia Bassano Lanyer, the presumed dark lady of Shakespeare’s sonnets.

Favorite Quote

“Mischievous Will Shakespeare…He and she have a confederacy that has served them well, creating ever more varied women in his play scripts, ever more complicated roles for her to play.”

Title

Salade, Recipes From the Market Table

Author

Pascale Beale, photographs by Mike Verbois

What

A beautifully photographed cookbook made up of deliciously lovely studies on the salad in its countless forms.

Favorite Quote

“There are few foods I would happily eat every day of the year. Salad is one of them. I enjoy the ease with which they can be put together, the endless variations—from light mixed greens to more substantial salad-as-a-meal types, and the fact that I always feel so good when I eat them.”

Title

Broad Assumptions

Author

Starshine Roshell

What

Whether attempting naked yoga, exalting hot soccer dads or critiquing 50 Shades of Grey, this book of columns is insightful and audacious, playful and literate.

Favorite Quote

“I don’t love yoga. But I’m supposed to. Women my age, in my town (and let’s just say it, with my name) are supposed to swear by the practice’s tush-tightening, mind-loosening properties. …But yoga mostly makes me…uncomfortable.”

Title

Healing Afghanistan: Hope for the Children

Author

Judy Duchesne-Peckham

What

Local photographer and teacher Duchesne-Peckham shines a light and a lens on one of Afghanistan’s bright spots, a small Montessori-based orphanage school called The House of Flowers.

Favorite Quote

“(The House of Flowers) was beautiful and quiet and peaceful. I just fell in love with the kids. If they had let me take them home I probably would have been an instant mother of about seven children.”


Title

Say This Prayer Into the Past

Author

Paul J. Willis

What

A thoughtful book of poems from former Santa Barbara Poet Laureate Willis that reckons with cadavers in the family closet, a house lost to wildfire, the beauty of the Sierra Mountains and more.

Favorite Quote

“Since I saw your grandpa die/I like to watch you breathe. Mornings especially, /to see the air move easily/across your lip hung down in slumber, /poised to waken, ripen, bleed.”

Title

Trash Can Days

Author

Teddy Steinkellner

What

The middle school adventures of four very different kids.

Favorite Quote

“If you’re not checking Facebook every five seconds, you’re going to miss something huge. And if you’re the last person to hear the big news, you’re going to look like an idiot.”

Title

The Inner Traveler’s Guidebook to MOYO

Author

Linda Newlin

What

Moyo, the Swahili word for “heart,” is the focus of this workbook, which inspires people to discover their hearts’ desires and make their dreams a reality.

Favorite Quote

“Everywhere we go, there are people who are making rainbows as they shine their unique light that was woven into them.

Title

The Shadow Tracer

Author

Meg Gardiner

What

Gardiner’s mystery about a woman accused of murdering her sister is a page-turner of a plot-driven cat-and-mouse game.

Favorite Quote

“Sarah had found that, with effort, she could remain comparatively anonymous. Nobody got suspicious if she protected her privacy.”

—Leslie Dinaberg

Originally published in Santa Barbara SEASONS on August 2, 2014.