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In ‘Little Italy,’ Dina Brodsky and Lorraine Loots Collaborate on a Tiny Scale

Lorraine Loots, “Pasta Amatriciana.” All images courtesy of the artists and Paradigm Gallery + Studio, shared with permission

In ‘Little Italy,’ Dina Brodsky and Lorraine Loots Collaborate on a Tiny Scale

From Manhattan to San Diego to Cleveland, neighborhoods known for their Italian-American populations have endearingly been called Little Italy, where facets of the Mediterranean nation’s culture and cuisine are preserved and celebrated. For artists Lorraine Loots and Dina Brodsky, who both create work on a very small scale, a trip to Italy and a collaborative body of work proved to be a wonderful way to explore this theme quite literally.

Little Italy, Brodsky and Loots’ duo exhibition on view now at Paradigm Gallery + Studio, chronicles the artists’ trip to the country through itty bitty paintings. Loots works in watercolor, while Brodsky composes in oil, and each draws upon the landscapes, architecture, food, and cultural icons—think Vespas, pizza, spritzes, and the Colosseum—that we associate with La Dolce Vita. Framed, Loots’ works are only five inches across, while Brodsky’s tiny tondos encapsulate vast landscapes within a three-inch diameter surface.

Dina Brodsky, “Florence, Ponte Vecchio”

Brodsky and Loots—based in Massachusetts and South Africa, respectively—first connected during the pandemic, inspired by each other’s interest in working in a tiny format. During the trip, they each experienced the place through their unique lens, tapping into memories and associations. Brodsky, who was born in Belarus and whose family traveled as refugees from the Soviet Union to the U.S. in the 1980s, spent a brief period in Italy during this relocation. The nation’s bucolic countryside and ancient architecture stuck with her over time.

Loots was long fascinated by Italy’s architectural and cultural heritage, and during the trip, she wandered the cobbled streets and plazas with two heirloom film cameras, snapping photos which she then developed once she returned home and used as reference for tiny watercolor paintings.

In Little Italy, some of Loots’ photographs, along with some of Brodsky’s sketchbooks, illustrate the two artists’ approaches to recording their experiences. The exhibition continues through August 24 in Philadelphia, and you can find more on the gallery’s website.

Lorraine Loots, “Vespa”
Dina Brodsky, “Bagnoregio”
Lorraine Loots, “Bialetti”
Dina Brodsky, “Rome, Golden Hour”
Lorraine Loots, “Fontana di Trevi”
Dina Brodsky, “Orvieto, Dawn”
Lorraine Loots, “Colosseo”
Dina Brodsky, “Siena, Dawn”

Related articles

  • Timelapse of Lorraine Loots Creating a Miniature Painting
  • A New 100-Day Miniature Painting Project by Lorraine Loots Tackles Vintage Book Covers, the Cosmos, and Furry Animals
  • ‘Outcasts’ Highlights the Scientific Contributions of Trailblazing Artist and Naturalist Mary Banning
  • 271 Years Before Pantone, an Artist Mixed and Described Every Color Imaginable in an 800-Page Book
  • Bird by Bird: Miniature Bird Paintings by Dina Brodsky
  • Inside the Well-Traveled Sketchbooks of Artist Dina Brodsky


Source: Art - thisiscolossal.com


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