Smitten
A tribute to romance in Scarsdale
January 14 - February 16, 2013
January 14, 2013
Brut and Rose Champagne Tasting

Saturday, February 9th from 6pm to 9pm



Smitten


Elisa Contemporary Art is curating Smitten, an artistic tribute to Romance. The exhibit opens January 14, 2013. It will run through February 16, 2013. Smitten will take place at Vintology Wine & Spirits in Scarsdale, NY.

Smitten will feature artwork by four artists.

  • Canadian artist Franco DeFrancesca who creates vibrant and pulsating artwork.
  • Original photography by New York native, Jesse Kalisher
  • Flirtatious, Roy Lichtenstein inspired layered birch paintings by Texas artist, Mitch McGee
  • Enchanting figurative paintings by Connecticut artist, Daryl Zang.

Smitten will enchant and excite, seduce and captivate its viewers will a range of artwork styles and mediums.

Join us for a special Tasting featuring Brut and Rose Champagne from premium estates on Saturday, February 9th from 6-9pm.

    What: Smitten, a curated exhibit by Elisa Contemporary Art at Vintology Wine & Spirits

    When: January 14 through February 16, 2013

    Special Events:

  • Brut and Rose Champagne Tasting: Saturday, February 9th from 6-9pm


  • Where: Vintology Wine & Spirits, 10 Palmer Avenue, Scarsdale NY.

    Hours: Monday - Wednesday 11-7pm, Thursday - Friday 10-8pm Saturday 10-7pm, Sunday 12-5pm

    Here's a video walkaround of the exhibit:





    About the Artists

    Franco DeFrancesca
    Franco DeFrancesca is a native of Toronto. He graduated from the Ontario College of Art (now OCAD) in 1990 and returned to the University of Guelph in 2004-05 to further his studies after 12 years working in communication design and the renovation industry. He has been a multidisciplinary artist since 2004, exhibiting his art and art projects ranging from sculpture/installation, photography, digital art, and sound art. His work explores notions of media, technology, art history, and pop culture.

    With his recent “Plasma Gel”, series of digital/mixed media “picture objects”, Franco explores digital media as a mode of abstract image production in the creation of an art object. Investigating the links between art and memory, history and technology, the Plasma Gels series use digital imaging as a means to navigate the territory between photography and painting, mixing references to photography, painting and display technology.

    Visualizing ephemeral and elusive environments that allude to a non-delineated, but deep pictorial space, these works recall the color-field and the elemental geometry of mid to late twentieth century post painterly abstraction, minimalism and op-art.

    Franco’s work has exhibited in Canada and the United States and is included in various private and corporate collections throughout North America.

    Jesse Kalisher
    Jesse's first camera arrived on his sixth birthday as a present from his father, celebrated photographer Simpson Kalisher. A darkroom soon followed. Yet despite his enthusiasm for the medium, when it came time to go to college and consider a career, Jesse took his father’s advice and focused on anything but photography.

    It was not until early 1996, Jesse boarded a plane for Hanoi and two months of untold adventures. He carried with him a simple point and shoot camera. It was during his first few days in Vietnam that he looked through the small viewfinder and had an epiphany. He had seen a few kids playing badminton on an otherwise deserted early morning street, lifted that camera to his eye and expected to see a snapshot. He saw instead a tableau filled with meaning. And in that very instant he re-discovered his love affair with photography.

    According to Jesse:
    "I am attracted equally to stories, ideas and aesthetic. The challenge I set for myself is to find moments and create pictures that stimulate the viewer on more than one level. A great photograph (for me) is one in which both the aesthetic and the meaning fight equally for our attention. It’s easy to create a pretty picture. It’s easy to create a photograph with a meaningful story. But create a picture that has both elements and you’ve got a treasure. These images are rare and difficult to make, and thus my most treasured achievement.”

    Jesse’s work has been featured in The New York Times, Art Business News, Black and White Magazine, Art & Living Magazine and Interior Design Magazine. His photography is in private collections throughout the world as well as many museums including The Louvre, The Smithsonian, The George Eastman House, The de Young Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, The Museum of Fine Arts Houston and many more. The first photographs of Barack Obama acquired by the Smithsonian National Museum of American History were those taken by Jesse.

    Mitch McGee
    Houston artist Mitch McGee’s artwork lives between painting and sculpture. In his current Birch series, he uses layers of wood, each illustrated, hand cut and stained to create dimensional pieces. On average, each takes 35-40 hours to complete.

    His influences include Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein. According to Mitch, "I have always been fascinated with Pop Art and the ability of artists like Lichtenstein and Oldenburg to take everyday objects we are bombarded with and make them fascinating. Roy Lichtenstein took comic strips and repositioned them as lithography. In an almost tongue in cheek fashion, I wondered how I could take one of his pieces and recreate it in another medium.”

    Mitch has exhibited his work throughout Texas since 2001 and in New York with Elisa Contemporary Art since 2012. His work is private collections including TV Journalist Serena Altshul and his work will be featured in an upcoming issue of Dwell Magazine.

    Daryl Zang
    Daryl is a Figurative artist from Connecticut. Her paintings capture the rollercoaster of motherhood and life in general, and through their honesty and vulnerability connect with others on an emotional level across all ages and at every stage.

    According to Daryl, “The images I create reflect my own experiences and I often describe my work as autobiographical. At home as a new mother I painted about pregnancy and the early stages of motherhood, focusing on all the ambivalence, isolation, and exhaustion as well as the tenderness. When it was rest I needed most, my work became about private, restful moments and quiet relaxation. As my children grew, I found endless inspiration in them.”

    Her latest series created in 2011 and early 2012 included The Gift and Reward. She focused on the lighter side of life and simple joys.

    Daryl's work will be featured in a solo show in Manhattan in September 2013 and she was recently featured in a solo show at the Michele & Donald D'Amour Museum of Fine Art Museum in Springfield, MA, as well as exhibits in New York and Greenwich.

    About Vintology Wine & Spirits:

    Vintology was founded by Dean Morretta in October 2008. The first year open was the toughest, having endured a stock market collapse.

    Dean had quickly learned the retail trade as a French wine buyer, then stepped into a position with a major fine wine importer, setting up new distribution in the Northeast with leading fine wine wholesalers. Following his time as an importer, he was the Fairfield Sales Manager at a leading fine wine distributor in Connecticut. With 17 years in the wine trade, Dean finally decided to use his extensive experience and contacts from around the world to begin his own wine shop.

    As Vintology began to grow, so did the team. Today, Elizabeth Miller, CSW, is Vintology’s Manager. Mike Horton and Garret Whitney, complete the sales team, bringing with them over 65 years of Fine Wine Knowledge and experience.

    In 2009, Vintology Wine & Spirits was awarded the Best of Westchester by Westchester Magazine.

Here's a look at some of the installed work:
Here's a look at some of the installed work:
Mitch McGee's Teal Eyes and Sypro Gyro by Franco DeFrancesca
Mitch McGee's Teal Eyes and Sypro Gyro by Franco DeFrancesca
The Framed Sensual Photography of Jesse Kalisher
The Framed Sensual Photography of Jesse Kalisher
"What I Did For You", a limited edition framed woodcut by Mitch McGee
Outside Looking In - A view from the Window
Outside Looking In - A view from the Window