This exhibition takes us on a walk through the forest at night, moving between trees to find your way in these mysterious places filled with dark shadows and changing light. Charles Yoder started creating these natured-based paintings because of what he saw in his backyard one winter’s night. This vision of the light from a full moon shining down through pine boughs, and the shadows it made on the snow covered forest floor inspired Yoder. The very real, abstract shapes evoked the question, “How can I paint this?” and he has been following that thought ever since.
Charles Yoder, born in Germany in 1948 and raised
in the States, is an artist living in Tribeca. His college education began at
the University of Maine (Orono) and he graduated with a BFA from Pratt
Institute (Brooklyn) with honors. Over the years he has supported his art making habit with various jobs
including director of Castelli Graphics and curator to the artist Robert
Rauschenberg. Presently he paints full time and teaches printmaking part time
at the School of Visual Arts.
About the Mattatuck Museum
Visit www.MattatuckMuseum.org or call
(203) 753-0381 for more information on all of the museum’s adult and children’s
programs, events and exhibits. The Mattatuck Museum is operated with support from the Connecticut Department
of Economic & Community Development, CT Office of the Arts which also
receives support from the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency,
and is a member of the Connecticut Art Trail, a group of 16 world-class museums
and historic sites (www.arttrail.org).
Located at 144 West Main Street, on the
green in Waterbury, CT the museum is open Tuesday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 5
p.m., and Sunday noon to 5 p.m. Free parking is located behind the building on
Park Place.
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