FELLOW IMAGINARIESA Collaborative Installation by
CAROLE d’INVERNO and SUSAN ROSTOW
with Incidental Music by BILL FRISELL
April 22 – May 10, 2025
OPENING RECEPTION: Thursday, April 24, 5 to 8 pm
INSTAGRAM LIVE FEED & WALK THROUGH :
Tuesday April 29, 1 pm www.instagram.com/susanrostow
[http://www.instagram.com/susanrostow]
**Artists in Conversation with Etty Yaniv
at the Gallery and on Zoom** :
Saturday, May 3, 5 to 6 pm
RSVP for the zoom link at fellowimaginaries@gmail.com
ATLANTIC GALLERY is pleased to present _Fellow Imaginaries_ , a
collaborative exhibition by artists Carole d’Inverno and Susan
Rostow with an ambient soundtrack by composer Bill Frisell.
For d’Inverno and Rostow _Fellow Imaginaries_ is the culmination of
a long process of sharing ideas as artists, friends, and neighbors.
Over the past year, via trial and error, doing and undoing, they have
arrived at a shared narrative of labor and play. The work they are
presenting comes from memories and stories of their upbringing,
d’Inverno in Italy and Belgium, Rostow in Philadelphia and New York
City. Their knowledge and experience as mature artists pulls the work
into focus and clears it of unnecessary narrative. Bill Frisell, a
renowned composer, has worked with d’Inverno and Rostow before. This
time, he lends his signature sound to create an ambient soundtrack
inspired by the sculptures and paintings. The ethereal soundtrack
enhances the visual experience of the exhibition.
The direct connection between d’Inverno and Rostow is fully apparent
in their 3D collaborative sculptures. We see them fusing their
esthetics to create a hybrid. The pieces are mostly in white or muted
tones and are connected via wires that enhance the works’ narrative.
The sculptures evoke manual labor and play. We see them pull and push
fanciful loads, as in _Yacht Rock_ . Others swing from a makeshift
circus trapeze, as in _Acrobatica,_ or juggle plates, as in
_GrandMa’s Porcelain_ . All are the result of long talks, shared
stories, and memories.
For d’Inverno, this collaboration has opened new pathways in her
artistic practice. She reconnected with the making of 3D objects. To
make her sculptures, she transformed her space from a painting studio
to a shop and used found objects, paper clay, and papier-mâché.
These new works seem, at times, to be toppling over and display
inherent fragility and playfulness. d’Inverno is also presenting new
paintings made in response to Rostow’s colors and shapes. The new
work is notable in the use of a narrative of building blocks, and
earthy tones as in _North-South_ .
For Rostow, the collaboration unexpectedly shifted her palette from
earthy tones to pastels and nearly white pieces. She also reversed her
usual process for creating biomorphic figurative sculptures.
Previously, she built a foundation of prints on paper and wire, then
applied clay and pigments on top. In this collaboration, she began
with a clay foundation, layering prints on paper and wire over it.
This approach resulted in a lighter surface color, with exposed wires
intentionally left visible to connect her pieces to d’Inverno’s
physically.
_Fellow Imaginaries_ is a testament to the power of artistic exchange,
where materials, ideas, and processes merge to form a shared visual
language. Through their collaborative sculptures and individual works,
d’Inverno and Rostow push each other into new creative territories,
while Frisell’s ambient soundtrack ties it all together, making the
exhibition an immersive, multi-sensory experience.
CAROLE D’INVERNO (b. 1956, Spa, Belgium) is a research-driven artist
focusing on American history. Her paintings and drawings investigate
themes of immigration, and the human impact on the land. Notable solo
exhibitions include the Duluth Art Institute, Duluth, MN; Atlantic
Gallery, NY, NY; The Massillon Museum, Massillon, OH; The Western
Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC; PENN State University, Altoona,
PA; and the State University of New York, Rochester, NY. d’Inverno
has participated in exhibitions at the Maitland Art and History
Museums, Maitland, FL; North Seattle College Art Gallery, Seattle, WA;
NARS Foundation, NY, NY; Schweinfurth Art Center, Auburn, NY; Notre
Dame of Maryland University, Baltimore, MD; and the Ronald Barr
Gallery, Indiana University Southeast, New Albany, IN, amongst others.
d’Inverno lives and works in New York.
BILL FRISELL (b. 1951, Baltimore, MD). Frisell’s career as a
guitarist and composer has spanned more than 40 years and many
celebrated recordings, whose catalog has been cited by Downbeat as
‘the best recorded output of the decade.’ In recent years, Frisell
has forged a distinctive and fruitful collaboration with the Blue Note
label, releasing _HARMONY, Valentine_ and _FOUR_ to great acclaim.
Recognized as one of America’s 21 most vital and productive
performing artists, Frisell was named an inaugural Doris Duke Artist
in 2012. He is also a recipient of grants from UNITED STATES
Artists, Meet the Composer among others. In 2016, he was a beneficiary
of the first FreshGrass Composition commission to preserve and support
innovative grassroots music. Upon San Francisco Jazz opening their
doors in 2013, he served as one of their Resident Artistic Directors.
Frisell is the subject of a documentary film by director Emma Franz,
entitled _Bill Frisell: A Portrait_ , which examines his creative
process in depth, as well as an extensive biography by Philip Watson,
_Beautiful Dreamer: The Guitarist Who Changed The Sound of American
Music_ .
SUSAN ROSTOW (b. 1953, NYC, NY) is a Brooklyn based process-driven
multi-media artist working in printmaking, sculpture, and animation.
Her work investigates the balance between nature and technology, the
real and imagined, and physical and digital realities. Rostow is a
recipient of several awards, including a New York Foundation for the
Arts Fellowship in Printmaking / Book Arts, Pollock-Krasner Foundation
Fellowship and the Anolic Jewish Book Arts Award. She has participated
in numerous exhibitions throughout NYC and the United States, Europe,
Peru, Korea, and Japan. Her prints and sculptural books are in the
permanent collections of the Library of Congress National Print
Archives, Washington DC, the Allan Chasanoff Bookwork Collection at
Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT, the Portland Art Museum,
Portland, OR, and the Washington State Art Collection, Olympia, WA.
Atlantic Gallery 548 West 28 th Street, Suite 540, New York, NY 10001
• Tel. 212.219.3183
Gallery Hours: Tues-Sat 12-6 p.m.
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