Solo show ‘The Naked Print’ in Terre Haute gallery


The Naked Print: A solo show in Clabber Girl Museum, Terre Haute, Indiana

I am excited to share this press release about my solo show published Oct. 23 in The Brazil Times and on Oct. 31 in the Terre Haute Tribune-Star ‘BASH Entertainment Guild. (Full release below.)

“The Naked Print,” a solo show by Sheila K. Ter Meer of Brazil, Indiana, will be featured in November at The Gallery in Clabber Girl Museum at 900 Wabash Ave. in Terre Haute.

A First Friday opening reception is set for 6 to 8 p.m. Nov. 1.

Ter Meer’s theme celebrates the physicality of the image itself – dressed down with minimal or no boundaries to detract the viewer’s eye from the subject matter.

She will display a few photographic works and many of her photography-based abstractions, purposefully exposing the colors and form without glazing to reduce or eliminate reflections.

Each piece will reveal the physical qualities of ink or emulsion on paper, canvas and wood, as well as dye sublimation on aluminum, without hiding surface, texture and material under glass or acrylic.

Nature and life experiences as a native Hoosier have inspired Ter Meer’s works created in camera. Her abstractions are born from her desire to express herself through subjective imagery, and from her penchant for whimsies – anything playful or fanciful, as an artistic creation.

She combines digital processes with traditional photography techniques to intensify the colors and contort the form of her representational images. “Brilliant designs in black negative space liken some of my artistic expressions to black light and scratch board art,” she added.

To make her one-of-a-kind abstractions command even more attention, Ter Meer tries to “think outside the frame.” She believes “stripping away conventional parameters and exposing the image on contemporary materials creates a unique presentation and dramatic visual experience.”

Abstract works in Ter Meer’s show also will be stripped of their original titles.

“Much like the Rorschach test, the imagery in each ‘inkblot’ is subjective,” she said, challenging viewers to explore each design and assign their own meaning before peeking under the information card provided at the show.

“I like to keep them guessing,” Ter Meer added, “and experience their reaction when I reveal the original image used to create each abstraction.”

Since 2013, Ter Meer has received awards at juried exhibitions in Indiana and Illinois, including two Best of Show. She has been honored for her nature photography but finds recognition of her abstract designs most rewarding.

Her works have been accepted into regional, national and international juried exhibitions, including Swope Art Museum and Arts Illiana Gallery in Terre Haute, Indianapolis International Airport, Indiana University at Richmond, and the Artsy website by Specto Art Space, Harrisonburg, Virginia. In addition, she has artwork in the Permanent Art Collection at Indiana State University and at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Terre Haute.

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A few of my works for purchase this gift-giving season in Terre Haute gallery and gift shop


Studio 29 gallery and gift shop in Terre Haute, Indiana

My photograph “Sycamore Frost” and “Party Girl” (photography-based digital abstraction) are among works promoted by River City Art Association for purchase October through December in Studio Twenty9, a high end art gallery and gift shop  at 671 Wabash Ave. in downtown Terre Haute, Indiana.

In addition, I have “Sycamore Freeze” and “Snowcap”  on consignment in this gallery.

Party Girl in Studio 29

My RCAA co-artists at Studio Twenty9  include Edith and Richard Acton (fused glass and clay), Dian Der Ohanian Philips (paintings), Ruthann Brady (mixed media), Valerie Funk (quilt artistry), Monty “Indiana” Jones (paintings, drawings), Elise Spaid-Roberts (paintings), Todd Stokes (glass etchings),  and Thomas Wright (photography).

Studio Twenty9 Facebook

Search for Studio 29 on Facebook for more about Jessica Fields and her art gallery and gift shop promoting local artists by displaying their artwork for sale!

For more info, read this Terre Haute Tribune-Star news feature.