Artwork conveys feelings, memories

SHARON — Open the door of the Garuda Gallery and you enter such a daunting maze of framing and display materials it’s hard to spot the diminutive Karen Kellogg behind her desk.“I’m going to organize this,” she says, “when I have time.”When she will find that time is hard to fathom. Demand for her framing expertise is ongoing. And the minute she gets some respite, Kellogg paints. The walls of her tiny shop are covered with a variety of paintings.“I once asked an artist whose talent I respect to critique my work,” she said. “He said I was in danger of looking like my own group show.”The diversity of style is a natural consequence of Kellogg’s individual approach. She rarely paints en plein air and seldom from photographs. She doesn’t paint a place. She paints a feeling. She paints a memory. Now her engaging work will be featured at Hotchkiss Library, located on the Green in Sharon, from Feb. 1 to March 31. Kellogg works exclusively in oils because they offer her a tactile quality. The majority of her work is landscapes — barns, fields, views, an occasional still life — some of which are wonderfully realistic. Others are surprisingly abstract.“Where’s that?” Kellogg reports people often ask her. “When I tell them, they often don’t recognize it. My paintings aren’t necessarily true to the place itself. But they’re true to way I think about it ... the way it resonates in my mind.” Kellogg took a circuitous path to painting. At Smith she studied music, then switched to botany. But she was always a collector of art. Indian art and Hindu culture held a special attraction for her. When she married and moved to Lakeville, she and her husband opened a shop featuring Indian artifacts. They named it Garuda Gallery for the bird-like Hindu god. A small framing business was a gallery sideline. The sideline took over. By the 1980s when the shop moved to Sharon, it was a full-fledged framing business, which also offered space for local artists to display their work. But while framing supplied her livelihood, Kellogg found herself envying the artists.“They just seemed to be having more fun than I was having,” she said. “I would dream of waking up in the morning and thinking, ‘What will I paint today?’ And one day I said, ‘Why not?’” An opening reception with wine and cheese and a chance to meet and talk to the artist will be held on Sunday, Feb. 5, from 4 to 6 p.m. For more information, call the Hotchkiss Library at 860-364-5041 or visit www.hotchkisslibrary.org.

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