Artistic realism captured in two different perspectives by artists in June at Alliance Art Gallery

hat-mushroom

Top: Trying on Hats-a watercolor by Brenda Beck Fisher; Bottom: Magic Mushroom, a photographic image by Barry Wright. | Photos courtesy of Alliance Art Gallery

HANNIBAL, Mo. — The Alliance Art Gallery will feature the work of guest artist Brenda Beck Fisher and member artist Barry Wright during the month of June.

An opening reception, with artist provided refreshments, will be held from 4-7 p.m. on Saturday, June 10. Receive a ticket to win a piece of art any time during the day. Brief talks by Fisher and Wright will be at 6 p.m. followed by the drawing at 6:30 p.m. The winner, if not present, will be notified. This event is free and open to the public.

Brenda Beck Fisher, Featured Watercolor Artist

When you are born with a passion, nothing and no one deters you. Brenda Beck Fisher, Alliance Art Gallery’s Second Saturday’s featured artist, dove into life with that passion.

In a press release, Fisher said, “I couldn’t have been more than five.”

Discarded pads of paper from the phone company where her father worked became sketch pads. In seventh grade, delighted to finally take an art course, things went south.

“The teacher, Mr. Brooks, grabbed the pencil out of my hand and erased my work,” Fisher said. In her determined mind, “it was no longer my art; it was our work.” When he accused her of cheating when, without glasses, she couldn’t even see to cheat, her appreciation of art classes plummeted.

Never taking another class, she showed up in college telling her academic advisor she wanted to major in … art. Then, with only one class in watercolor, she knew. “I fell in love with it. I knew it would be my thing.”

But upon graduation, she went into the “Mrs. Career,” happy to be an at-home mother. For the next 20 years, she did not do any art at all. But once the youngest was launched into kindergarten, a bigger problem arose … lack of spousal support. The marriage eventually ended, and Brenda told herself, “I am going to do this”

Her watercolors show a vibrant realism. Sometimes artists suggest she explore different styles, but she shrugs. She has fully developed the skill she wants and never tires of using it to capture what delights her.

Well-recognized in the Midwest, Fisher has taken commissions to illustrate three children’s books and a cover for an adult book. She’s provided artwork for a can of chili, a bottle of wine, the first Hannibal billboard, electric traffic boxes in town, the banners lining Main and Broadway and 40 original watercolors to launch the opening of the Becky Thatcher home.

Twenty years ago, invited to be an inaugural member of the Alliance Art Gallery, she remembers her biggest shock. The gallery manager, Anita Lamb Sorrel, suddenly died. Fisher stepped in as manager, but all the assets were temporarily frozen. Fisher stepped forward into management, but eventually, with too many irons in the fire, she had to bow out of the Gallery.

As the gallery celebrates its 20-year history, of which Brenda is a big part, she brings her watercolor passion back.

Barry Wright, member photographer

Everyone asks about the “Magic Mushroom” with its inviting under-cap glow. One almost expects psychedelic effects to emote from the framed image of this solitary mushroom in a darkened landscape. What makes this photo extraordinary is the fact that Wright does not do digital enhancements to manipulate images. In this case, he used old-fashioned dark room techniques.

So how does he do it?

In a press release, Wright said, “I used a tripod so the camera won’t move. I took 15 close-up pictures, adjusting the depth of field so different parts of the mushroom were in focus. Then I waited until a little before dark, and I lit the mushroom with a flashlight — a 4 to 5 second exposure moving the flashlight around.”

Back home, Wright overlaid the 15 images so that all parts of the mushroom were in sharp focus. Finally, using Photoshop, he erased areas where the light had bled onto and around the mushroom cap, so that all the light in the final image was captured on the underside.

This old-school technique intrigues Wright.

The Alliance Art Gallery’s Second Saturday continues on June 10 at 121 N. Main.

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