CREATIVE LOAFING ATLANTA
ARTS | FOR ART'S SAKE 06.26.03
Culture club
Curator brings art to Crescent Avenue nightspot
BY FELICIA FEASTER It's a humdrum, uneventful Sunday afternoon, but
Dorothea Bozicolona-Volpe makes it buzz with the expectant energy
of a Friday night.
Sashaying through her funky East Atlanta digs dressed in heels, red
lipstick and a vintage Bill Blass dress, Dorothea is "Green Acres"
redux; Southern bohemia meets Euro-chic.
She offers up crab salad sandwiches and fruit salad like some exotic
superhostess hybrid of Doris Day and Sophia Loren. The effect is in
direct contrast to boyfriend David Leedle, sweating in the back yard
as he puts the finishing touches on his Cow Parade piece "Transmoogrification,"
a bovine metaphor for Atlanta's Phoenix-like rise.
Dorothea is a woman who knows how to work it in two worlds. By day,
she is as mysterious as 007 about her work "in the law enforcement
arm of the United States government," as she cryptically puts
it. But by night, matters of crime fade away for issues of Fabulousness,
as Dorothea plies her trade as curator of Gallery Eleven50 in the
Crescent Avenue nightclub.
Her art world goal is also very when-worlds-collide. Dorothea has
applied herself to the eternal challenge of harmoniously mingling
the art world with corporate culture.
For the past two years, she has featured some 65 artists in the space,
which currently hosts Embodiment, featuring paintings of the human
body by Christopher Hauck and Karen Jones through mid-August. Dorothea
says she hopes the mix of art and business at Eleven50, which hosts
corporate parties for the likes of EarthLink, Kronos and Coca-Cola
and provides entertainment for the club kid crowd, will expose art
to people who might never attend an art opening.
"When you go out to a gallery event, it's as if there's an invisible
wall between you and the art. And the prices can sometimes be intimidating.
And I think the galleries like it that way. They like the fact that
they are the conduit; they are the go-between." Dorothea has
made various efforts to rectify that intimidation factor. "I
try to make sure that it's affordable," says Dorothea, who keeps
artwork at Eleven50 priced between $200 and $2,000. "And the
thing that I'm very, very passionate about is making sure that it's
accessible."
Words roll out a mile a minute in her lyrically accented English as
she roams from discussions of wine to her weekend rounds of gallery
openings at Saltworks and the Contemporary followed by Hedwig and
the Angry Inch at Actor's Express. "
I get stimulated just like my artists do," she purrs.
Part of Dorothea's eagerness to make sure art reaches a large audience
is undoubtedly due to formative childhood experiences. Her father
was a Brooklyn-based artist who supported the family with brick laying
and construction. Benjamino Bozicolona died just three months after
Dorothea was born, so she never really knew him. But she did inherit
his diaries and remembers one passage in particular about how difficult
it is for an artist to put his life's work up for judgment.
"Having an opening for your artwork at a gallery is like standing
in front of a room full of strangers in a state of undress,"
he wrote.
After her father's death, Dorothea, her brother and model mother moved
to a farm in Abruzzi, Italy. Instead of MTV and Nike, says Dorothea,
she and her brother "read books and played music." By age
4 1/2 she knew Miles Davis from John Coltrane.
Dorothea's culture-infused, gadabout past clearly gives her a feeling
of connection to the artists whose work she shows. "
Most of the artists I deal with are incredibly brave people,"
she enthuses. "They follow their heart."
Gallery Eleven50 is open Mon.-Fri., 11 a.m.-7 p.m., and Sat. beginning
at 6 p.m.
Considering her
own omnipresent femininity, it is little surprise Dorothea was especially
excited about Mimi Moncier's work, Persona Project, on view at pal
Brian Holcombe's Saltworks Gallery, through July 26.
Moncier's oil
on linen paintings have a resplendently feminine quality, referencing
fashion, makeup and Miu Miu shoes in color-mad abstractions consisting
of puddled paint forms layered one upon the other to suggest topographic
maps. Moncier brings a sense of humor to work like "My Mediated
Lunches in September" in which the artist documents five days
of meals as variously colored blobs of guacamole greens and buttercream
yellows.
Michael Barringer
is an English major-turned-painter whose current mixed-media paintings
on gargantuan 80-by-70-inch canvases are on display through July 12
at Fay Gold Gallery. The paintings were inspired by Walt Whitman's
verse but have the mellow earth tones and chock-a-block patterns of
'50s barkcloth textiles. And just as mid-century design toyed with
atomic and TV-age graphics, Barringer's work exhibits signs of our
contemporary genetic consciousness in his repeated motifs of chromosomes
and DNA spirals.
felicia.feaster@creativeloafing.com
For Art's Sake is a biweekly column on Atlanta's visual arts scene.
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