top of page

IN THE GALLERY

March 30
- May 4th

Vermont’s Youth Art Month Celebrations are taking to the road in 2024 and bringing Student Art to all corners of our state in Vermont Welcome Center and Galleries displays. This “Artistic Journey” begins in art classrooms and students' imaginations and ends with our local exhibit at Chandler Gallery. 

Schools represented will be  Bethel Elementary, Braintree Elementary, Brookfield Elementary, South Royalton Elementary,  Ripton Elementary School, Randolph Elementary School, White River Valley Middle School, White River Valley Middle School and Randolph Union High School. There will be work from more than 500 creative imaginations who are learning the skills to communicate and express themselves through art curriculum in our area schools.

Plan to join us for an Artist Reception and Celebration Day - Saturday, April 20. This will be a day of participatory art activities, food, and fun to celebrate everyone's Artistic Journey.

np postcard front (1920 x 780 px).png

This is Chandler Gallery’s Annual Open Call Area Artist Show. Our theme “NATURE’S PALETTE” is open to your artistic interpretation. We are aiming to exhibit a diverse collection of colorful 2-D and 3-D art in all media: drawing, painting, printing, illustration, photography, digital art, sculpture, video, mixed media, and decorative art (textiles, glass, wood, metal, ceramics, paper, or other techniques).

As nature’s inspiring, dynamic, calming, or stormy colors, forms and events are deeply connected with human life and culture, the theme “NATURE’S PALETTE” can be interpreted representatively or symbolically. How do you see nature's wonders and colors? How does the natural world influence your artistic expressions either directly or indirectly? What thoughts, moods, dreams, and visions come  from your connections with the natural world and the elements?

 

  • RSVP deadline to the Open Call: May 3, 2024

  • Show Dates: May 18 – July 6, 2024

  • Drop off dates: 11 am – 5 pm on Saturday, May 4; Tuesday, May 7: Wednesday, May 8 and Thursday, May 9.  

  • Eligibility: Area Artists 18 years and older with diverse backgrounds and levels of experience. 

  • All work submitted is accepted, with the caveat that we may not be able to display all six pieces, depending on size and amount of other work submitted. Artists may submit up to six 2-D or 3-D original recent artworks that have not been displayed at Chandler before. The artwork must be suitably prepared for gallery presentation. 

  • Chandler takes a 30% commission on sold work. We accept work that is not for sale. 

  • Opening Reception: Saturday, May 18  5-7 pm

  • Any questions, please contact gallery@chandler-arts.org

  • Any artists interested in offering a workshop or a special demonstration during the show please contact Marina Aronson brajnikm@norwich.edu 

  • Gallery hours: Tuesday - Friday 11 am- 5 pm and Saturday 12-5 pm

  • Art pick-up dates: July 6-10, 2024. 

PAST EXHIBITS

GALLERY TALK

'Creative Approaches to Housing Equity'
Watch Now

Gallery Talk SS.png

Past Exhibits

“Timeless Art” Featuring the paintings of Carolyn Egeli and the sculptures of Chris Wilson, will be on display at the Chandler Gallery in Randolph, Vermont beginning on August 26th, 2023, and running through November 5th. These masterful realistic artists capture the beauty and detail of the world around them in a timeless classical tradition.   An opening will be held Saturday, August 26th from 6-8 pm, with both artists present to represent their work.

Carolyn Egeli is a classically trained oil painter with decades of experience who reflects the landscape and people around her. She has made a very successful living as a professional artist and supported her family with commissions and gallery sales.  This Chandler exhibit will show some of her Vermont landscapes, portraits, and marines from her early years in Maryland.

Christopher Wilson’s love of the sculptural form began at an early age. At 13, he studied with Milton Kramer of Springfield, OH. After High School, Chris served in the US Air Force, sculpting gold dental crowns and dentures. After completing his Doctorate in Dentistry at The Ohio State University, Dr. Wilson built a thriving dental practice in Vermont.

 

As a sculptor, Chris has studied with Jerry Williams of Barre, VT, and has received sculpting and anatomy instruction from Richard MacDonald and Andrew Cawrse. He has participated in multiple workshops conducted by Bruno Lucchesi and Philippe Faraut. Wilson has taught classes at the Ava Gallery in Lebanon, NH, and provides private sculpting instruction.

August 26 - November 5, 2023

Timeless Art

Tidy_Crimes_Banner_resize.png

Tidy Crimes of Personhood

July 7 - August 18, 2023

Chandler Gallery is thrilled to announce the opening of “Tidy Crimes of Personhood” their newest exhibition featuring works by Caleb Yono, Joey Tatlock, Jordan Turk, and Sofia Moreno.

 

This show features drawings, paintings, printmaking, and collage works on paper that imagines femme futures and documents the experiences of each artist navigating gender as trans and nonconforming individuals. There are few subjects in art as historically relevant and widely discussed as the nude. Throughout history, nudity continues to be a cultural lightning rod and mirror of attitudes toward bodies of all gender. Each of the four artists included in Tidy Crimes engages with its history and reflects the artist’s experience in order to arrive at visual language that is expansive and compelling in our current political climate where trans bodies are categorized as deviant or even criminal.

 

This exhibition includes mature content and nudity.

TIDY CRIMES Talk with Artist Che Gossett

RE:VISIONS

May 13 – July 1, 2023

The theme of Chandler's latest local area art show, “RE:VISIONS”,  is open to artistic interpretation.

As revisions reflect an act of changing, reevaluating, improving many aspects of our lives, and changing phases, we are exhibiting a diverse collection of colorful 2-D and 3-D art in all media: drawing, painting, printing, illustration, photography, digital art, sculpture, video, mixed media, and decorative art (textiles, glass, wood, metal, ceramics, mosaic, paper, or other techniques).

 

RE:VISIONS can be interpreted representationally or symbolically: How do you see events and objects as time goes on? Do you ever revisit your earlier creations and give them a different twist? What makes you pause and revisit familiar things and events that bring new emotions and ideas, or look at your experiences closer?

We will be hosting an opening reception for RE:VISIONS May 13,

5 :30 – 7 pm

Vt_Voices_poster-01.png

Vermont Voices

March 18th - April 29th

Vermont Voices is a collection of student art from area schools. This annual exhibit will feature work from students in preschool through high school in a colorful and inspiring collection of art in diverse mediums and styles. Schools represented will be Bethel Elementary, Braintree Elementary, Brookfield Elementary, Randolph Elementary, Randolph Union High School, and the White River Valley Middle School.

This exhibit that celebrates Youth Art Month will have an opening reception for Artists, Families, and the community on Sunday, March 19 from 2-4 pm. On top of seeing the student art, there will be refreshments and a scavenger hunt with prizes sponsored by the Randolph Elementary PTO.

One way the Vermont Voices theme has been interpreted by schools and students is to focus on Vermont wildlife and there will be striking pastels of Vermont animals, flowers, and vegetables by RUHS students. There will also be a series of nocturnal animals created by RES first and second graders in a series called ‘Moon Light In Vermont”. There will be mushrooms and other fungi as well.

There will also be creative maps of Vermont, one of which highlights local attractions and another Which focuses on Vermont state symbols.

Chandler Gallery is open Tuesday through Saturday from 11 am - 6 pm. Look for additional Earth Day workshops later in April.

Femmezine

February 3rd  -  March 4th

Starting in the 1970’s, a new movement formed out of the disillusionment of failed promises of free love. Punk music and it’s stripped down, raw, and fast sound would evolve in to a culture of people that created their own world, their own community and family, and their own space with their own hands.

 

The Do It Yourself (DIY) movement started with music, but would branch out into the rest of the arts. Fanzines (fan•zeenz) were a way for kids to distribute their message to others, helping to grow the culture, the community, and their chosen family.

 

Our newest show celebrates the Femme (An identity or presentation that leans towards femininity) DIY spirit as well as the necessity to shout out the message of “We are here, we exist, acknowledge us!”

 

Zine makers from all over (with a focus on local artists) will have their work and message on display and available for reading and purchase in the Chandler Main Gallery from February 3rd to March 4th

Vt_Vistas_skinny_poster_web.png

Vermont Vistas

September 17th -  November 5th

The recent exhibit at Chandler Gallery in Randolph, Vermont entitled Vermont  Vistas: Seasonal Views From Regional Printmakers celebrates the natural beauty of our environment. The exhibiting area artists Jeanne Amato, Matt Brown, Janet Cathey, Carol MacDonald, Maureen O’Connor Burgess, and Jeannie Podolak use a range of relief and monoprinting techniques to present their personal connections to the land. The public is invited to the opening reception on Saturday, September 24 from 5-6:30 to meet the artists and learn more about their perspectives.

 

Many of the artists use the relief printing technique of woodblocks but exhibit a variety of approaches. Sharon artist Jeanne Amato continues in the technical and expressive style of her mentor Sabra Field. She says her work tries to capture “a vignette of a place, a moment in time.  More importantly, it’s a personal reflection of the connection I have with that place, in that season, at that moment”  Matt Brown who also creates woodblock prints inspired by Japanese Hanga prints and the ways pictorial simplicity is encouraged, the way an image is separated into parts and put back together, the way the translucent colors blend and juxtapose, the way the wood interacts with the paper.  Randolph Artist Janet Cathey, also expressively uses this technique to capture the ephemeral effects of water and the changing seasons.

 

Carol MacDonald uses monoprinting and lithography to “...tug at the threads of our shared humanity, addressing issues of community, life, transition, process and communication” using birds as a focal point in her expressive prints. Jeannie Podolak also uses monoprinting focusing on the image of the moon. She poetically reflects that “The heartache of Covid lockdown brought missing physical touch of family. It was in those lonely nights, watching the moon rise in my field, did I realize I was not alone. My view was also being shared globally”  Maureen O'Connor Burgress creates more free-form abstract monoprints referring to memories of place. She states “When I leave a place, I take with me the color of that place...the mist after rainfall in the valley; the perfect blue September sky; dark, majestic stands of trees with sky peeking through and snow melt at their feet.”

 

Viewers will experience some of the calming and reflective effects of interacting with the Vermont Landscape as they see these prints arranged by season. The exhibit continues in the lower Gallery and runs through Saturday, November 5th.

Vermont Vistas is open Tuesday through Saturday from 11-6 pm, during Chandler performances, and is free of charge. Printmaking is an affordable art form because most techniques produce multiples so consider them as a thoughtful and memorable gift. The Gallery is located at 71 N. Main Street in Randolph Vermont. 

Whose_New_World_Banner-04.png

Whose New World?

June 19th - September 4th 

In “Whose New World?,” the summer exhibit at Chandler Gallery in Randolph, Vermont, nine regional artists use a variety of mediums to explore social justice issues that are of concern to artists, and everyone, in our post-colonial and environmentally fragile world. The works address displaced people, environmental and societal injustice, and limiting social constructs about gender identity. Through their paintings, multimedia sculptures, large-scale ceramic pieces, prints, collages, and digital images, the artists reflect on the world today and communicate their visions for a new, more equitable world. Designed to intersect with the Vermont Social Justice Festival, the exhibit runs from June 19-September 24, 2022. 

 

 The exhibiting multigenerational artists bring different perspectives and priorities to their messages about envisioning an equitable New World. Jordan Turk uses mixed media to explore how clothing limits our gender expression and Harlan Mack uses sculptural forms and construction to address racial identities. Marina Leybishkis’s mixed-media sculptural work raises our awareness of refugees and migrants as she explores those experiencing displacement. Ann Young’s realistic paintings evoke empathy for our shared humanity. Lauren Buschek’s large-scale sculptural ceramic pieces focus on empowerment and trauma to the female body. Jim Robinson uses digital imaging techniques to address environmental and societal injustices and Tara Goreau’s paintings are cautionary tales about societal inequities.

John Vincent and Rachi Farrow use text but with different visual perspectives in their letterpress prints and paintings to convey messages of environmental concerns 

 

There will be an opening reception for Artists and the community on Saturday, June 25th from 4-5:30. Come and continue imagining a just and equitable New World for all the beings on the planet.

Randolph-Maranda-1-I AmHere.jpg

I'm Whiskers

Hair

Avenir Light is a clean and stylish font favored by designers. It's easy on the eyes and a great go to font for titles, paragraphs & more.

Randolph-Maranda-1-I AmHere.jpg

Voices of Home

Feb. 8 - March 19

Brought to Chandler by the Vermont Folklife Center, Voices of Home explores the experiences of Vermonters living in affordable housing through audio recordings and painted portraits.


Voices of Home is an audio-visual storytelling project launched in 2015 by Corrine Yonce when she served as an Americorps VISTA volunteer with the Vermont Affordable Housing Coalition. The exhibit brings together work from two of Yonce’s collaborative efforts, Voices of South Burlington Community Housing and Voices of Decker Towers.


Yonce envisioned Voices of Home as a way to “erase the stigma surrounding affordable housing communities and educate our friends and neighbors about the importance of a stable, reasonably priced home in helping people lead fulfilling lives.” Through the project she interviewed residents in a number of Vermont affordable housing communities, engaged with them through their stories, and learned how having affordable homes impacted their lives. She recorded those conversations and subsequently paired the recordings with painted portraits of each interviewee.


Yonce’s work compellingly combines visual art—painting and mixed media—with audio, manifesting a creative and engaging approach to documentary that highlights (in form as well as content) the human, and humane, aspects of sharing the experiences of others.

Randolph-Maranda-1-I AmHere.jpg

Changing Seasons: Innovations After 70

Oct. 3 - Nov. 6

A new exhibit in Chandler Gallery counters the bias that new ideas are mostly generated by the young by showcasing artists who have been working for seven decades or longer. Titled “Changing Seasons: Innovations After 70,” the exhibit runs Oct. 3-Nov. 6 and is free and open to the public.


The show opens Chandler’s 2021-2022 gallery season, which is devoted to looking at the unconscious biases we hold and reframe them through the arts in thought-provoking ways. Plans are underway to finish the season with a Social Justice Festival next summer.


Chandler Gallery is located at 71 N. Main St. in Randolph, and during exhibits is open from noon to 4 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday-Friday. 


Pictured here: "reparations (artists)" 2021: collage oil painting on wood panel; Alexandra Bottinelli of Hardwick, VT


Randolph-Maranda-1-I AmHere.jpg

Hidden Messages:
Old and New ,
A Fiber Arts Exhibition

Summer Invitational

July 10 - Sept 6

The Chandler Center for the Arts will be featuring work by Fiber Artist who break the boundaries of traditional fabric work. This exhibition will feature contemporary fiber arts in an exploration of meaning behind each work. 

Examples of the work from the SDA Artists can be seen in their online gallery.


There will be an opening reception on July 17th 4-7pm


This is a collaboration with the our neighbor, the White River Craft Center, who will be exhibiting artist's work of traditional quilting techniques in their main gallery. Learn more about this portion of the show at www.whiterivercraftcenter.org

Coinciding with these exhibitions will be the East Valley Community Groups town-wide Porch Quilt Scavenger Hunt.

Randolph-Maranda-1-I AmHere.jpg

KALEIDOSCOPE

Area Artist Exhibit

May 8 - June 26

** Closing Reception Saturday 4-6 **


“KALEIDOSCOPE” is open to your artistic interpretation. As kaleidoscope reflects an endless variety of colors, patterns and changing phases, we are exhibiting a diverse collection of colorful 2-D and 3-D art in all media: drawing, painting, printing, illustration, photography, digital art, sculpture, video, mixed media, and decorative art (textiles and material, glass, wood, metal, ceramics, mosaic, paper or other techniques). The theme KALEIDOSCOPE can be interpreted representationally or symbolically: How do you see colors, shapes and patterns of changing life? What makes you pause and look at one of these patterns loser?



Randolph-Maranda-1-I AmHere.jpg

EARTH DAY 2021

Community Pop-up Art Installation

April 22 - April 24

Community Collaborative Art installation

Celebrate the 51st Anniversary of Earth Day

Chandler is celebrating Earth Day 2021 with our second vibrant community art installation. This Earth Day art celebration will showcase the I Am Here Student Art Exhibition in the Chandler Gallery and invites all community members to join. Here’s a few ways to participate:

  1. Make a tree charm with recycled materials! Pick up supplies at the Chandler Gallery on April 17th from 12-4pm or April 22nd 5-7pm - or use what you have at home! Bring your creation to Chandler on Earth Day, Thursday April 22nd through Saturday April 24th and hang with the other Earth Day artwork.

  2. Artists are invited to display your artwork in front of the Chandler during the installation. We are asking people to consider materials that can be displayed outside and are reflective of a reduce and recycle ethos. Please email Jess@whiterivercraftcenter.org if you plan to display or have questions.

  3. Chalk drawing on the sidewalk! Stop by between 10am-4pm on Saturday, April 24th and have fun!

The installation will be located in front of the Chandler Center for the Arts (71 N Main Street Randolph VT), this outdoor drive-by or walk–by installation will be on view Thursday, April 22nd (Earth Day) through Saturday, April 24th. To follow COVID health precautions we ask that people keep distance (6-10 feet) from one another and wear masks. Please contact Jess, (jess@whiterivercraftcenter.org), community partner White River Craft Center, with any additional questions. We look forward to celebrating our planet Earth!

Randolph-Maranda-1-I AmHere.jpg

I AM HERE

Chandler's 2021 Student Art Exhibit

March 27 - April 25

In 2020 Chandler Gallery’s student art exhibit opened 2 days before we began stay-at-home orders due to the Covid19 pandemic resulting in schools shutting down and the exhibit closed. On March 27 2021 the Gallery will reopen for the Spring season with student voices asserting I AM HERE  through their artistic creations. Area schools including  Randolph Elementary School, Remote OSSD  elementary art classes, Randolph Union High School, Brookfield Elementary, Braintree Elementary, Bethel Elementary, and the White River Valley Middle School will exhibit work from students preschool through high school.

bottom of page