Prud’homme veteran exhibitor at annual Rose Algrant Show

CORNWALL – “A long time,” is Erica (Child) Prud’homme’s best offhand guess as to how many years she has exhibited in the Rose Algrant Show, Cornwall’s annual August art exhibition. “I knew Rose, and loved her,” Prud’homme said of the woman who held regular gatherings at her Cornwall home that became a sort of enclave for local artists. The dogs sketched by Cornwall residents James Thurber and Marc Simont were often modeled on the Great Pyrenees that Algrant raised. The annual show began 52 years ago as a way to help struggling artists. Now, it’s how Cornwall’s many highly successful artists and artisans give back to the community. Most pieces, from paintings and sculpture to rugs, pottery and woodworking, are for sale, with a percentage donated to a nonprofit. Proceeds from this year’s show benefit the Cornwall Volunteer Fire Department.It is held these days in the Cornwall Consolidated School gym — not ideal in terms of lighting and display, but the unique collection and worthy purpose make it the best place to sell. Hanging art goes on old classroom dividers painted white and arranged in a double row. This is done out of necessity, but the arrangement has the advantage of creating little pockets of space individualized by each artist.Visitors a couple of years ago were struck by a board full of pear paintings by Prud’homme, each glowing in vibrant shades of yellow and green. Prud’homme shrugs, saying she likes to go with some sort of theme each year. The pear paintings were popular. It was all about grasses and leaves one year, mandolas (a type of musical instrument) another.For this weekend’s show, it’s black-and-white drawings. But that’s where any semblance to a theme ends. She spent a lot of time paring down years of drawings. Some are in pencil, some charcoal. Some were done for a 1994 solo show at Blue Mountain Gallery in New York City. It featured drawings of bones, often manipulated to look like something else, such as a pelvis with leg bones outstretched to mimic a pterodactyl.There are drawings of hands, in the style of anatomical studies, and faces, many done this past spring after a moment of inspiration. There are even a couple of quasi-self-portraits. Eyeballs in eggshells are from her eyeball fascination period.“I don’t really know where that came from,” she said, shrugging.Following her whims has made for a fascinatingly diverse body of work.“Probably the biggest factor in deciding what to put in the show is what would fit on one divider,” she said.The final 18 are arranged on a corresponding space on a wall of her studio, a small room on the second floor of one of Cornwall’s oldest remaining homes. If the show results remain true to form, she will sell most or all of her submissions. Prospective buyers should get there early.The Rose Algrant Show opens Friday, Aug. 5, with a reception from 5 to 8 p.m. It continues Saturday, Aug. 6, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

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