Sarah Shepard Gallery
1007 Larkspur Landing Circle, Larkspur CA 94939
Marin Country Mart
Monday | Closed
Tuesday | 11:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Wednesday | 11:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Thursday | 11:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Friday | 11:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Saturday | 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Sunday | Closed
*Or By Appointment
Friday, March 28 | 9:30 AM - 11:00 AM
Sarah Shepard Gallery is hosting a Breakfast with the Artist on Friday, March 28, 9:30-11am. Artist Lauren Bartone will join us to share details about her archival research and artistic process of hand-dying linens for the canvases included in her solo exhibition with Sarah Shepard Gallery, Ribbon Rack.
"Ribbon Rack" March 6 - April 19, 2025
Sarah Shepard Gallery is pleased to announce Ribbon Rack, a solo exhibition of work by Bay Area artist Lauren Bartone.
Ribbon Rack presents a new collection of hand-dyed and sewn linen canvases occupied by invigorating fuchsias, dusty blues, and shades of yellow from canary to ochre—along with four watercolor pieces—inspired by Bartone’s botanical and archival research.
Ribbon Rack is informed by Bartone’s concurrent pursuit of a doctorate in Italian Studies and considers narratives of Italian national identity, including a framework of colonial history and cultural exchange. Set against a physical backdrop of fabrics that are hand-dyed using materials significant to this history, Ribbon Rack acts as a material and historical survey of Bartone’s archival interests.
Bartone’s work often navigates histories of craft and domestic labor, and the title Ribbon Rack appropriately evokes associations with craft. However, “ribbon rack” also refers to a small metal bar used to hold and organize military service ribbons. When arranged next to each other, the ribbons create bright, color-coded grids of great honor and significance. The canvases of Ribbon Rack allude to this colorful display, while the colors themselves have their own system of cultural and political significance. For example, the vibrant red-pink hue of cochineal, seen in cardinal and night I and II, was often featured in dramatic Baroque paintings of the Counter-Reformation. The mustard yellow of fustic, such as in the titular piece ribbon rack, makes reference to the khaki color that replaced traditional savoy blue military uniforms to ensure that soldiers blended into sandy colonial landscapes. Indigo blue, a color ubiquitous with colonial trade, also features in pieces such as waterline and lawn.
To create the color-blocked canvases of Ribbon Rack, Bartone dyed linen in hand-ground pigments made from natural materials such as cochineal, fustic, indigo, and weld. Her studio process also involved repeated dye baths and treatments, resulting in an experimental layering and mixing of colors. The product of this process is a collage of true tones and color blends: a convergence and confrontation of cultures and histories, which Bartone traverses with great care. Bartone meticulously selected swatches of dyed linen based on texture and hue and sewed them together in combinations that showcase these intersections and possibilities. The uneven dye marks and irregular seams, while natural traits, are intentionally included in the final works as a feature which identifies and celebrates their handmade origins.
For Bartone, a trace of the artist’s hand is important, underscoring the physical labor traditionally involved in every aspect of textile production, and too easily forgotten in the contemporary moment of synthetics and fast fashion. The compositions in Ribbon Rack also intentionally play on landscape and still life conventions used in traditional painting, in which Bartone is formally trained.Bartone’s studio work coincides with archival research of botanical and textile histories. As a doctoral student, Bartone considers the way plants are collected, categorized, and utilized in both practical and symbolic ways within Italian culture.
In 2024, Bartone had the opportunity to conduct research in botanical gardens, colonial collections, and historic archives, such as those at the Vatican, all of which offered her a view of the complex and sometimes contradictory ways botanics have functioned in history. Four small watercolor pieces—banana tree (orto botanico di Palermo), pomegranate (Chiesa di Santa Teresa alla Kalsa), plane tree (orto botanico di roma), and sumac (Quartiere Musulmano degli Schiavoni, Palermo)—feature memorable trees from these research sites, and use walnut ink made from a tree in Bartone’s own garden in San Rafael, CA. In Ribbon Rack, Bartone’s watercolors and naturally-dyed linen canvases unearth botanical and textile histories to produce a patchwork of thematic and aesthetic possibilities.
Upcoming Exhibitions:
"Stephen Beal" April 26 - May 31, 2025
Sarah Shepard Gallery is pleased to announce a solo exhibition of Stephen Beal’s paintings. The grid—ubiquitous, logical, resolute, infinite—acts as inspiration, structure, and image in Beal’s work. In Beal’s paintings, the penciled matrices function as vehicles to explore the subtleties of color and brush stroke.
Beal’s material interest in the surface quality of paint, and its physical interaction with and manipulation of the grid, is what transforms his modest canvases into methodical, material studies with an undeniable presence. Beal’s process begins with crafting the physical surface, whether stretching linens or preparing wood panels. On this surface, he traces grids in graphite, providing a fundamental orientation, literally and ideologically, for the paint. Beal likens laying out his grids to the “ritual of practicing scales in music:” repetitive but an essential primer to produce a deeper connection to the artistic product–song or painting. The programmatic familiarity of the grid provides a breeding ground for experimentation and improvisation.
Working in oil, acrylic, and gouache, his paintings are an exploration of paint itself. With so much dictated at the conception of the grid, Beal’s thoughtful addition of paint readily negotiates, celebrates, and even unsettles the demarcations.
This exhibition features Beal’s iconic white paintings, a 2016-2020 collection of colorful paintings, and a series of new black paintings. The black and khaki paintings are a departure from his reverent articulation of whites and colors within the grid. They introduce a sequence of dots and dashes that make visual reference to codified telecommunication, and even evoke a staccato rhythmic quality. The conversational network Beal has created, both within and between his motifs, subverts the two-dimensional nature of his compositions. Rich exchanges occur across multiple axes: the artist’s hand traverses the vertical and horizontal—warp and weft—of the grid while also exploring a third dimension that oscillates between pencil plane and paint plane. With grid as structure and paint as subject, this collection of work offers a musical, material musing of the illustrious form.
Images:
Lauren Bartone, rank and file, 2024 Sarah
Lauren Bartone, empire Sarah Shepard Gallery
Lauren Bartone's Ribbon Rack at Sarah Shepard Gallery
Artist Lauren Bartone
Stephen Beal, untitled