Showing posts with label Rhonda Ratray. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rhonda Ratray. Show all posts

Thursday, January 28, 2021

MUSHROOMING


 

I was excited to make some new Valentines this year inspired by my favorite room....the MUSHROOM!!!
5 sets of my Valentines are available through the Bennington Museum. Proceeds from card sales will be split equally between the Museum and myself. Cards are available for purchase through the link below until the 14th and may be shipped or picked up at the Museum by appointment.



Friday, September 13, 2019

Gruss Vom Krampus



                               Greetings from Krampus!

My Etsy Shop now seems to be a Krampus shop! Get your own Tea Towel/ Bar Towel, Ornaments and more!! https://www.etsy.com/shop/SNAKEeyes?ref=seller-platform-mcnav

Sunday, February 3, 2019

Artists to Watch 2019




An exhibition of Artists to Watch will take place at the Vermont Arts Council Spotlight Gallery January 7th to February 28th, 2019. The Arts Council’s gallery is open to the public and located in the corridor and conference room of the offices at 136 State Street in Montpelier.  Exhibition curator and Vermont Art Guide Editor Ric Kasini Kadour recruited nine additional Vermont art professionals and asked them to nominate artists who are making contemporary Vermont art that commands our attention. The 2019 Vermont Artists to Watch are: Sarah Amos (Enosburg Falls); Clark Derbes (Charlotte); Hasso Ewing (Calais); Andrew Frost (Burlington); Sally Gil (Brooklyn, NY); Sean Hunter Williams(Montpelier); Elizabeth Nagle (East Dorset); Andrew Orr (Richford); Rhonda Ratray (North Bennington); and Jackson Tupper (Burlington). And don't forget to pick up the latest edition of Vermont Art Guide! HERE 

R-CADE










  R-CADE
 Installation at The North Bennington Train Depot
  part of the North Bennington Outdoor Sculpture Show (NBOSS_
                     

Family Affair

 Family Affair was introduced to our neck of the woods by Jennifer Jasper and Kate Whitehall. Oldcastle Theater and Bennington Area Arts Council Co- sponsored the caberet which raised $657 for the Kitchen Cupboard in Bennington Vermont! Storytellers included: Brandy Reynolds, Mike Nigro and Tim Van Orden, Musicians Cindy Legge and Kate Whitehall Poet James Crews,dancer Sophie Marie with EDM Artist Otto Schatz
and Visual Artist Rhonda Ratray. What a great event! My work will be on view at Oldcastle Theater Company through February. Highlighting some of the many facets of my personality and history...


               A new incarnation of the Sinterklaas Shrine! A Near Brush with death: Your Painted miracles!                             

               
          A detail of the Shrine                     
               

Many of my Bridges are on view!
       Disaster at Wishbone , Bridge the Coffin Bridges and The Old Sheetbend bridges

 Three views of Carpenter Hill Road, Aimee LaPorte
                                       



Bearberry, Animal Botanical,
Aimee LaPorte
                             

Saturday, January 20, 2018

HEARTS on FIRE




Leather Postcard circa 1910

Hearts on Fire:

 Valentine Ephemera and Tokens of Love

This show features local artists work as well as Valentines and tokens of affection from private collections.

Please join us for a reception at The Left Bank in North Bennington,  Jan 27th 4-6pm On view till Feb 17th

Friday, December 1, 2017

Tempus Fugitive








Each year the Bennington Museum’s Festival draws its inspiration from one of the objects in the Museum’s outstanding collection. For 2017, the annual festival of the season celebrates the creativity of a wide range of regional artists as they respond to Nichols Goddard’s Musical Tall Case Clock, ca. 1810, one of the centerpieces of the Museum’s newest exhibition, Early Vermont.
When I was in elementary school I had a watch that belonged to my grandfather that played the song “Yesterday” by the Beetles. After I heard the lyrics...I was struck, it was both funny and tragic, a watch that played a song about another time.

My Piece Tempus Fugitive, incorporates technology from the early 1800’s. The Phenakistoscope was developed in the 1830’s, the name comes from the Greek root word 'phenakisticos' , meaning "to deceive" or "to cheat", and- óps, meaning "eye" or "face.  
It was invented simultaneously by a physicist and a mathematician independently observing optical illusions created by moving cogs when viewed through an aperture. Their successful prototypes were marketed as novelties that created fluid illusion of motion in the form of looped animations. These were mass produced on paper in several iterations. This concept is known to be the precursor to motion pictures. These optical studies remind us that our eyes can be tricked.

Tempus Fugit comes from the latin verse Georgica, written by the Roman poet Virgil: fugit irreparabile tempus, translates as ”but it flees irretrievable time” or simply put, “time flies”  This notion is often portrayed as the winged hourglass which has been used as a memento mori
(remember that you have to die) and is used here as a front and is the main static image of the piece. It is through our mortality that we embrace the illusion of time.

The images on the large wheel of my phenakistoscope are directly inspired by the Nichols Goddard Musical Tall case clock, ca.1810. The Nichols Clock face features a rotating image dial that shifts slowly from a glowing full smiling moon to a burning ship on the water. The song (Heathen Mythology or Hunting the Hare) was surreptitiously buffed from the clock face, and is brought to life here through a section of it’s own on the phenakistoscope. Hounds hunting a hare morph into Diana Goddess of the Hunt, Cupid riding Pegasus and Pan looking mischievous. By turning the handle and spinning the image wheel then spinning the “frame” wheel the viewer can speed up and slow down the animations  watching the quickening of the moon in it’s 28 day cycle, the hopping hare swarmed by gods and dogs, and observing the endless cycle of the ship igniting, raging and immolated. The viewer can be a time flier, a tempus fugitive.

Excerpt from the Lyrics of
Heathen Mythology or
Hunting the Hare
A Favorite Song
Songs of Shepherds in rustical roundelays,
Form’d in fancy, or whistled on reeds,
Sung to Solace young nymphs upon holidays, Are too unworthy for wonderful deeds,
Sottish Silenus
To Phoebus the genius
Was sent by dame Venus a song to prepare,
In phrase nicely coin’d.
And verse quite refin’d,
How the states divine hunted the hare.
Stars quite tired with pastimes Olympical,Stars and planets that beautiful shone,
Could no longer endure, that men only shall swim in pleasures, and they but look on,
Round about horned
Lucina they swarmed
And her informed how minded they were,
Each god and Goddess
To take human bodies,
As lords and ladies to follow the Hare

Reading the Signs






This body of work is currently on view at the Bennington Free Library  as part of the Wall works program, till Jan 2018

This show features a combination of prints and paintings that present  messages that seem direct and others that are are warnings if you only know where to look for them.

The Canary Warnings are a series of paintings inspired by the practice of keeping a canary in a coal mine as an early warning system for miners. When the bird dies the air will soon be too toxic for humans as well. The canary serves a kind of guardian, like a life force monitor. This series considers a myriad of possibilities about the ways in which one could be warned of tragedies or other dangerous situations.  

Sunday, October 22, 2017

SCREAM DREAM






💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀

SCREAM DREAM! 
Hauntings! Visions! Illuminations!

Tag along with you subconscience to
The North Bennington Train Depot for an art show you won't want to sleep through...Paintings, Sculptures, Prints and More!! 
Support local creeps!
Opening October 27, Begining at DUSK (6-8)pm
***ALL LUCID DREAMERS and astral bodies welcome

"On such a night, when Air has loosed 
Its guardian grasp on blood and brain, 
Old terrors then of god or ghost 
Creep from their caves to life again;" 
Low Barometer,(excerpt) Robert Bridges




Saturday, August 19, 2017

MILK and HONEY


Honey Hex, Intoxicate 2017

When I first thought about this show I wanted it to celebrate the magnificent abundance that is Vermont in the summertime, a sweet land of plenty. Fortunately or not, things are never simple.
My series of Honey Hexes are similar to Pennsylvania Dutch hex paintings in that these are made to welcome good luck and good fortune.The Honey Hexes, are talismans meant to foster sweetness, harmony, abundance and fertility and vision through altered consciousness. The designs that I have painted incorporate a honeycomb format that frames the icons within. Symbols such as cornucopias, and similar mead horns, udders, beehives and symbolic flowers and of course, bees adorn this ongoing series. As it has become profoundly clear that the majority of life on the planet depends on some of the tiniest pollinators these hexes attempt to pay tribute where it is due.







In a similar vein the series of Botanical heads symbolize rebirth and regeneration and abundance.They are inspired by “green men” variations of folate heads that have adorned architecture and gravestones across cultures. My botanical heads range from Foliate style head that which is completely covered in leaves, to the Disgorging Head which spews vegetation from its mouth, as well as the Bloodsucker Head which sprouts vegetation from all orifices (Facial) such as the eyes nostrils and mouth. In addition my botanical heads  are multi faceted images that when rotated 180 degrees reveal a new “face.”  The heads represent animals, plants and male and female “gods.”



Canary warning #3

There are always signs and warnings...if you are listening. Speaking of warnings, the Warning (canary) is part of an ongoing series of guardians. The “See Wheat (sweet)” depicts cornucopia eyes with wheat... endless sweetness.This was inspired in part by Amy’s vintage blue Pyrex Bowl.  Not a sickly sweet but, a sweet like a sunny Vermont summer day. “Milk Made,” a little Vermont Dairy truth in advertising... connecting milk to where it comes from.
The Hobo Hankies, created as part of the series, Mythos Merch. These hankies incorporate some hobo symbols (jail, Safe water, Danger) and commemorate some of my favorite attractions/characters from Big Rock Candy Mountain. I love a good story and the tale of Big Rock Candy Mountain is just that, a fictional land of Milk and Honey, with its straight up tourist trap hucksterism and charm and when you have a moment look up the last verse of Big Rock Candy Mountain!



“The most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or touched, they are felt with the heart.”
“One sees clearly only with the heart. The essential is invisible to the eye."  Antoine de Saint-Exupéry these are Lessons from The Little Prince, The Rose and the Fox, which speak for themselves. To me these speak to bittersweet experience of opening oneself to friendship and love and the ways in which the senses can be fooled.


Currently on view at the the South Street Cafe in Bennington, Vermont.

Friday, March 24, 2017

Friday, October 21, 2016

Death by 1,000 papercuts




                           A new series of papercuts based on excusite corpses.

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Dia de los Muertos


                       Soul suck/ Mind meld
                  Double Double Devil painting
                        Acrylic on paper 2016


                                                             
 One of my Double Devil Paintings is included in this awesome show in LA!

Opening Reception

Thursday, October 6th 5-8pm


Works on view through November 27 

at Esqueleto LA: 1298 W Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 
 The  5th annual Day of the Dead themed group show to our Los Angeles location for the first time. Ten different artists have created works on paper which represent their unique takes on the holiday. 
Featuring new work by:
Afton Love
Raul Gonzalez
Rhonda Ratray
Ethan Caflisch
Sophie Lourdes Knight
Todd White
Shane Butler
Melissa Bolger
Kreh Mellick
Alexis Adams

http://shopesqueleto.com/module/imageGallery/gallery?cat_id=39

                                                 

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

ONCE BALLROOM


Poster illustration I created for Wolves in the Throne Room, Feral and 
Obsidian Tongue!!!
The show is already sold out!

Flip The Bird




Flip the Bird
a splendid 7 page micro zine for fun and amusement. ALSO includes a large 8.5" x 11" DOUBLE BIRD with CLOVER illustration.
Through powerful optical illusions you can see a bird or the bird!!!
available at my ETSY SHOP


Thursday, July 21, 2016

Sunday, February 28, 2016

Potty Palz


Finally for sale at my ETSY SHOP SNAKEeyes.

 Custom stickers for your Potty...There's always a friend when you're down in the dumps... with POTTY PALZ!
Each package contains a set of stickers for a (1) toilet water tank. Please specify which pal you prefer...Happy Go, Sad Sac, Scream Dream, Squee, Stare Care or Winky! More Palz to come!!

Thursday, February 4, 2016

Hankies


Cops and Whiskey Lake Screenprint on cotton. Mythos Merch 2016 Rhonda Ratray

Big Rock Candy Mountain by Harry McClintock

One evening as the sun went down
And the jungle fires were burning,
Down the track came a hobo hiking,
And he said, "Boys, I'm not turning;
I'm headed for a land that's far away
Beside the crystal fountains
So come with me, we'll go and see
The Big Rock Candy Mountains.
In the Big Rock Candy Mountains,
There's a land that's fair and bright,
Where the handouts grow on bushes
And you sleep out every night.
Where the boxcars all are empty
And the sun shines every day
On the birds and the bees
And the cigarette trees
The lemonade springs
Where the bluebird sings
In the Big Rock Candy Mountains.
In the Big Rock Candy Mountains
All the cops have wooden legs
And the bulldogs all have rubber teeth
And the hens lay soft-boiled eggs
The farmers' trees are full of fruit
And the barns are full of hay
Oh I'm bound to go
Where there ain't no snow
Where the rain don't fall
The winds don't blow
In the Big Rock Candy Mountains.
In the Big Rock Candy Mountains
You never change your socks
And the little streams of alcohol
Come trickling down the rocks
The brakemen have to tip their hats
And the railway bulls are blind
There's a lake of stew
And of whiskey too
You can paddle all around them
In a big canoe
In the Big Rock Candy Mountains.
In the Big Rock Candy Mountains,
The jails are made of tin.
And you can walk right out again,
As soon as you are in.
There ain't no short-handled shovels,
No axes, saws nor picks,
I'm bound to stay
Where you sleep all day,
Where they hung the jerk
That invented work
In the Big Rock Candy Mountains ...
I'll see you all this coming fall
In the Big Rock Candy Mountains.

Big Rock Candy Mountain, was first recorded by Harry McClintock in 1928, and appears to be a modern version of the medieval concept of Cockaigne. Cockaigne or Cockayne /kɒˈkeɪn/ is a land of plenty, an imaginary place of extreme luxury and ease where physical comforts and pleasures are always at hand and where the harshness of peasant life does not exist. In Specimens of Early English Poets (1790)
George Ellis printed a 13th-century French poem called "The Land of Cockaigne" where "The houses were made of barley sugar and cakes, the streets were paved with pastry, and the shops supplied goods for nothing.”  Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s painting "Luilekkerland" (The Land of Cockaigne), 1567. Literally translated as, ”relaxed luscious, delicious land” pictures sleepy revelers lounging in abundance. The Brothers Grimm translated a similar fairy tale, Schlaraffenland  “The Land of milk and honey.” This story also describes a land of extreme abundance, as well as a land of opposites, where the weakest and meekest are the strongest.
What could be better for a person, than to have all their needs met? Is it the lap of luxury to live in a place where no one has to "work" for money with plenty of clean water, food, and ample alcohol?  Another kind of luxury, where the police are not a threat, where traveling is easy and sleeping under the stars every night is always warm and comfortable… That sounds like utopia. The land of milk and honey… Big Rock Candy Mountain is a Neverland.
 What is the message beyond reveling in the fantasy of a decadent Willy Wonka world, a place so opposite of the one we inhabit? Is it to imagine a world of pure wish fulfillment? A true escapist fantasy: escaping the human condition?  Is it in recognizing the actual abundance in nature?  Is it found the cliché’ “If something sounds too good to be true…it probably is.”  Does the song make a mark of you? In the tradition of Fairy tales, does it serve to be a warning for children, for teenagers and dreamers?  
The lesser known last verse reveals the cautionary nature of the song. Originally the song described a child being recruited into hobo life by tales of the "Big Rock Candy Mountain." McClintock sanitized the song considerably from the version he sang as a street busker in the 1890s.  When he appeared in court as part of a copyright dispute, he cited the original words of the song, the last stanza of which was:
The punk rolled up his big blue eyes
And said to the jocker, "Sandy,
I've hiked and hiked and wandered too,
But I ain't seen any candy.
I've hiked and hiked till my feet are sore
And I'll be damned if I hike any more
To be buggered sore like a hobo's whore
In the Big Rock Candy Mountains."
                                                                                                              
I created these pieces as part of the series, Mythos Merch These hankies incorporate some hobo symbols and commemorate some of my favorite attractions from Big Rock Candy Mountain. I love a good story and the tale of Big Rock Candy Mountain is just that, with its straight up tourist trap hucksterism and charm. I actually didn’t know about the final stanza until I began researching the song and I had been strictly thinking of BRCM as a vision of paradise. Anyway, this song always had a special place in my heart and I always like walking along railroad tracks. Please enjoy these hobo hankies from bum paradise.

 You can see more on my website: http://ratray.com/recent-work.html 

These will be on view at the Distillery in south Boston as part of the show "wish you were there."