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Wren
  • 56, Female
  • Castleton, NY
  • United States
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Wren

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Yeh....I like this a lot.
on Sunday
Thank you so much for your statement about my work. I am floored! I will definitely check out Louis Sclavis. ECM is very big. You say you played with him but I cannot find out what instrument you play. How did you get into Wikipedia anyway, impressi…
on Sunday
A photo by Wren was featured
February 22
Mona Hassan and Wren are now friends
February 20
Wren left a comment for Wren
February 18
February 17
February 15
Wren and Jeanette Luchese are now friends
February 15
February 15
February 11
February 11
February 8

Profile Information

About Me:
Wren Panzella

For years now, in clubs, I have been sketching performing jazz musicians, filling sketchbooks with gesture drawings of these artists making jazz. Using these drawings as a starting place I abstract from them often employing a multipoint perspective and perspectives from different moments to give visual expression to the movement and connectedness of the music.

Jazz is America’s most important contribution to international culture and it is my hope that my work contributes in some way to the appreciation of jazz.

I am interested in music of all cultures and in the human figure moving through music in dance. It is my intention in my artwork to create a figurative, sensual and visual art form.

My baseball work derives from summer nights of the New York Penn League watching short season rookie league baseball in upstate New York and western Massachusetts. Sketching these apprentice ballplayers in congenial settings such as Wahconah Park in Pittsfield, Massachusetts and Demashkie field in Oneonta, New York, I have developed a growing fascination with the visual beauty, the swift motion and complexity of this game.
About My Art:
Why make me do this I just wanted to add a comment on my Film favorite right this minute and I think for a long time like Brokeback mt, MILK. My art is nothing compared to what people do. The courage, yes I was a hippie, sat ins for Vietnam and no bras free sex..lucky on that one but really I did have to at least "love"... But to do what Milk did and I never knew it till today! I would say I was a jerk but we lived without tv (still do) without radio and without a telephone for six years.....I hope you all can forgive me.
Favorite Music:
JAZZ, Latin, Diverse etc....
Favorite Films:
12/15/08 just saw MILK and wow...See this! On the side Bob and I lived in St. Croix from 1974-1979 and we had NO idea
Too many to mention
I think my most favorite films are French and Italian. I am not a big fan of American over and over again films. There have been a few good ones that snuck in.
Favorite Artists:
Still reassessing this one, I am tired of museums
Website:
http://Wrenpanzella.com

A lot of my work is Glass and Etched Transfer painting Here is a discription of the techqnic


GLASS TRANSFER PAINTING

Glass Transfer Painting is a practice dating back to the Middle Ages in which paint is applied directly to glass and viewed from the unpainted side. Since a painting on glass is very fragile I use a technique invented by the artist Robert Cartmell for transferring the painting from glass to paper or canvas. This is a process in which the back of the painting is adhered with polymer to paper or canvas and left to dry for twenty-four hours. It is then carefully lifted away from the less adhesive glass. What interests me most about Glass Painting is that my first impressions and marks are nearest the surface. Because in Glass Painting you work from the foreground to the background, the underpainting is added last creating new possibilities for unifying and deepening a composition. It is like turning a painting inside out.

ETCHED TRANSFER PAINTING

Etched Transfer Painting is a blend of Glass Painting technique and traditional etching methods. A copper or zinc plate is etched and then inked and wiped as you would do before printing your etching. The plate is then coated with a layer of polymer, sealing in the ink and preparing the surface to paint as in a Glass Painting. When the painting is completed it is adhered to the canvas with polymer and left for twenty-four hours to dry. Then the painting is carefully pulled up and away from the plate. The ink in the etched lines is pulled out and sits on top of the painting in relief. This procedure creates a luminosity of color that sits behind beautiful fine black etched lines.

Wren's Photos

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Comment Wall (140 comments)

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At 2:52pm on February 18, 2010, Wren said…
Great! I am so happy you are doing so well. Bravo
At 5:08pm on February 17, 2010, Thomas Hodges said…
Ciao Wren, yes I do have an exhibition in London, but it will be much later this year (dates not set as yet). Prior to that, I have solo exhibitions in Milan, Paris, Moscow, Venice and NYC, all of which I'm trying to schedule before year-end ! It's hectic, but yes, of course I'll take many photos, and hope to see you guys again when I'm across to NY. Tanti baci from CC and I xx
At 4:29pm on February 15, 2010, Jeanette Luchese said…
Thanks Wren for the comments. I love your reverse paintings, really tricky stuff and you do it beautifully.
At 8:06am on February 11, 2010, Luke Gilliam said…
Hi Wren,

sorry for the confusion: try this photo and tell me what you think:

http://buncut.ning.com/photo/les-trois-ouvrages?context=user

Best from L
At 3:10pm on February 8, 2010, Deniz Denizel said…
Thanks a lot, Wren...
At 10:49pm on February 2, 2010, Janelle McKain said…
Thanks so much, I appreciate your comment!
At 7:47am on February 2, 2010, Larisa Clegg Colantonio said…
I really enjoy your work. I love the color followed my the fine lines!
At 2:50pm on January 24, 2010, laura joan levine said…
Oh I'm glad you enjoyed my work - did you see the portrait of the jazz musician Bobby Walker's wife?
At 6:16pm on January 23, 2010, Colin Forrest said…
Thanks for the music, your husband knows his music Clifford Jordan's "Firm Roots" fits like a glove. I have listened to more jazz this week that my previous 52 years put together, now for your other work.
At 9:38pm on January 22, 2010, Masako Simmons said…
Thank you for the kind comment of my work. Your artwork is very lively. I can feel the movement and almost hear the music!
 
 

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