| "’From the States’ is a rotating exhibit program inwhich state committees of NMWA bring one artist from their state to greater
 public attention in the nation’s capital," explained Mara Williams, one of
 the jurors who chose the Vermont finalists. "These artists are not related
 by style or theme, only by geography and gender," she continued, "and
 by the fact that three jurors found viewing their work a rich and rewarding
 experience." From this group, one artist-weaver— Elizabeth Billings of
 Tunbridge— was selected by curators from NMWA to represent the state in the
 exhibit from March 1 through May 30, 2003.
   The "spirited women" in the exhibit are aneclectic group. Some are sculptors, some painters or printmakers, others
 weavers or mixed media artists. Their materials range from the traditional to the
 completely unexpected.
   Billings incorporates reeds, fir needles, stalks, grasses,and saplings into her elegant woven wall tapestries. Patricia Burleson of
 Townshend makes fascinating narrative baskets from found objects, intertwining
 inner tubes, buttons, barbed wire, keys, and small dolls with fabric and paint.
   Kathryn Lipke Vigesaa, of Waterville, combines primitivenaturalism with the power of the ritual object in her sculpture, "Seed
 Catchers." Made from willow saplings, Japanese paper, and beeswax, these
 spiky structures project a kind of aggressive delicacy that is often found in
 the natural world. The female human form is a universal symbol of hope to Janet
 McKenzie of Island Pond. Her paintings pay homage to the spiritual search for
 meaning and relevance and seek to remind us, she says, "of our inherent
 dignity, courage, and grace as people."
   Lynn Newcomb, of Worcester, a sculptor and printmaker,both forges steel to make sculptural objects and etches plates for printing on
 paper. Examples of both her chosen mediums appear in the exhibit. Bennington
 artist Sue Rees also straddles different art forms, often collaborating with
 performance artists or adding animation, sound, or video projection to her
 work. Her mixed media installation on view at the Museum combines glove forms
 sewn from luxurious fabrics with a mechanical device the viewer can switch on
 to make the gloves move.
   The Old Testament’s "Song of Songs" inspiredsculptor Kathleen Schneider, of Winooski, to take the image of a
 "lamb" and render it in many different forms and materials,
 suggesting a variety of meanings and symbolisms. Meg Walker, born in Scotland
 and now living in Charlotte, uses cardboard, wood, and paint to give us
 whimsical images of barns and other rural buildings that evoke both the Vermont
 landscape and the Scottish one, and a changing way of life.
   Strange, somewhat mechanical, alien-like objects float inthe atmospheric landscapes of painter and Brattleboro resident Dana Wigdor.
 Trying to decipher what they might be is one of the delights of looking at her
 work. Also surprising are Burlington sculptor Barbara Zucker’s "Time
 Signatures," which appear to be abstract steel wall sculptures, enhanced
 by the shadows cast by their open forms on the white wall. But Zucker based
 their patterns on the wrinkles in women’s faces, which she sees as a beautiful
 part of nature.
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