Gallery 54 celebrates Winterfest
The 2020 edition of Winterfest, here, not only celebrates winter, it highlights the talents of many local artists as diverse as those who create the ice sculptures that annually decorate storefronts in the village for the celebration as well as local artists such as Sharon Bottle Souva whose artistic creations with fabric, needle, and thread have been celebrated and appreciated throughout the Central New York region for years.
Bottle Souva will demonstrate her creative and colorful fabric collage technique from noon to 3 p.m. at Gallery 54 on Saturday, Jan. 25.
She describes herself as a “process artist.”
“I work with my hands to create my artwork,” she said recently, noting “I find that this process adds to my love for fabric and sewing allows me to pursue the endless possibilities inherent within this medium.”
As one of the local artists whose work has been featured at Gallery 54 for years, she notes that the tactile nature of fabric “sends my imagination off into a creative space. Texture and pattern are inherent in fabric, she notes adding “. . . since I have been sewing most of my life, I know its nature and can push the materials. I’m always searching for ways to give fabric a voice through my creations.”
It’s not uncommon for guests at Gallery 54 to think they are viewing a painting when they initially encounter a Bottle Souva creation.
Through her demonstration, she will showcase not only her creative process but artwork that presents itself as predominantly non-traditional/contemporary wall quilts and collage.
In addition to her demonstration she will exhibit a wide variety of images and sizes including small landscape design quilts that are made in much the same way as collage only with the addition of the quilting stitch.
All of Bottle Souva’s creations are original with a strong sense of color and design.
With a keen eye for picking interesting fabrics, she also custom dyes some of the fabrics she uses. The end product is always ready for display and the small nature of her pieces allows them to fit into any room or décor.
During her demonstration or just while viewing her completed pieces visitors to the gallery are likely to be moved by her love of fabric.
“I love to buy it, dye it, iron it, cut it, sew it and (of course) sell the finished work,” she said.
Bottle Souva’s creativity has been recognized with many awards over the years ranging from art festivals around the state, to work commissioned by the Gallisano Childrens’ Hospital for display in their spiritual chapel, to the recognition of having her creations represented in the permanent collections of both Onondaga Community College and SUNY Brockport.
Bottle Souva earned an associates of applied art degree at Onondaga Community College before continuing her education and earning both a bachelor of fine Art and a master of arts from SUNY Oswego.