Barr Gallery to showcase ‘There Will Come a Time’

The Gallery @ Barr Photographics announces the spring – summer installment of the Corner Gallery’s 2021 exhibition series with a collection of mixed media paintings titled “There Will Come A Time” by award-winning, Unicoi, Tennessee, artist, Michelle O’Patick-Ollis.

Dad Has Dementia by Michelle O’Patick-Ollis.

An intermediate school art teacher, O’Patrick-Ollis was trained as a printmaker and received a BFA from East Tennessee State University and an MFA from Arizona State University.

“After college I worked as a vitreography printer for Harvey Littleton Studios.  Later, I accepted the position of Exhibits Manager at Hands On Regional Museum where I worked as a muralist who designed and enhanced the permanent/traveling exhibits.  I continued with grad school and received a Master of Art in Teaching. East Tennessee State University (2005) and have been teaching Art for the past 15 years.  My artwork can be found in collections across the country such as The New Britain Museum of American Art in Connecticut, Scottsdale Contemporary Museum of Art in Arizona, University of Washington Book Arts and Rare Book Collection in Seattle, Washington, North West Art Center in North Dakota, and Tucson Museum of Art in Arizona, among others.”

Mom has Parkinson’s by Michelle O’Patick-Ollis.

O’Patick-Ollis reveals in her artist’s statement, “’A work of art which did not begin in emotion is not art.’ This is the famous quote that described Cezanne’s philosophy of art.  When I first read this quote, I immediately printed it and put it on my studio wall.  I had found a kindred spirit.  For me personally, if I cannot express emotion with artwork, or elicit emotion from the viewer, I am not interested in creating it. I aim to visually describe what I feel, and in doing so, artmaking becomes a cathartic experience for me.  At the same time, I invite the audience to share in my personal experiences hoping to engage them.  When viewers cry while looking at my artwork/reading stories about my family, I know it isn’t caused by sympathy or empathy for the characters in my visual novel.  They cry because my work causes them to recall their own personal experiences.  It brings buried feelings to the surface where they can be felt again and ultimately released.  The viewing experience becomes the very definition of catharsis.  It provides psychological relief through the open expression of emotions.”

Stage 4 Resurrecting Momma by Michelle O’Patick-Ollis.

O’Patrick-Ollis’ work is collection of realistic portraits, depicting the challenges of aging and was influenced by her role as caregiver to her parents.

“My drawings tell the story of a mother with Parkinson’s disease and a quadriplegic father with dementia, enduring the winter of their lives.  The stories I tell through my drawings are personal in nature, yet they speak to anyone who has watched loved ones grow old and become imprisoned within their withering bodies.”

She said she watched her parents’ health and happiness decline and wanted to help them.

“I was able to depict my parents in a way where they seem to be at peace or joyful, yet upon closer inspection, the viewer is able to see a visual hint to the truth of the situation.  Transparent, fading figures emerge.  Wheelchairs are present.  A body that appears to be dancing is actually jerking with tremors.  There were days filled with anxiety, sorrow, or pain for both my parents and myself.  My drawings became a way of cataloguing good memories and a way of working through some of the more difficult times.  It has been a grieving process for me, a way of dealing with what is already lost and a way of hanging onto what will inevitably disappear.”

A reception and gallery talk is set for May 14 from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Gallery @ Barr Photographics at 152 E. Main St. Abingdon. “There Will Come a Time” will hang through July 31.