Wellfleet Preservation Hall presents a virtual Feed Your Love Open Mic on Wednesday, January 20th, at 7 p.m. Register to perform by emailing [email protected], or just watch at wellfleetpreservationhall.org.
Wellfleet Preservation Hall
The Reason I Jump Streams
Wellfleet Preservation Hall’s Doc Days Film Series continues this week with The Reason I Jump, a documentary directed by Jerry Rothwell. Based on a best-selling book by Naoki Higashida, written when he was only 13, it tells the story of five nonverbal autistic young people, trying to understand what it is like to be inside their heads.
The film will be available for online streaming beginning Friday, January 8th at wellfleetpreservationhall.org. Tickets are $12 for a five-day viewing pass, through January 28th.
That’s the Spirit
Wellfleet Preservation Hall presents “Mixing Spirits & Mysteries” a new virtual film and cocktail series hosted by Marc Strauss. First up is a screening of the 1939 version of The Hound of the Baskervilles on Wednesday, January 13th, at 7 p.m. Registration is free at wellfleetpreservationhall.org. You’ll receive a Zoom link and cocktail recipe (alcoholic and non-alcoholic options).
Paint the Town
Get creative with a virtual paint night via Wellfleet Preservation Hall, taught by Colin McGuire on Tuesday, January 5th, at 6 p.m. Registration is $25, excluding materials, at wellfleetpreservationhall.org.
Tazzeka Streams via Wellfleet Preservation Hall
Tazzeka, a 2018 film by Jean-Philippe Gaud, is part of the “Fine Features Film Series” at Wellfleet Preservation Hall, available for streaming Friday, December 25th through January 22nd.
It tells the story of Elias, from the Moroccan town of Tazzeka, who learns to cook from his grandmother. He is inspired by a Parisian pastry chef, as well as a young woman named Salma, to move to Paris. Once there, he faces financial struggles as an undocumented immigrant. A two-day viewing pass is $10 at wellfleetpreservationhall.org.
ARTISTS
You Can’t Take the Wellfleet Out of Paul Suggs
His realist acrylic paintings reflect a community he has made his own
The first light of dawn casts shadows on the white walls of an Outer Cape home. At low tide on Wellfleet Bay, shimmering mudflats mirror the image of a moored sailboat. The hull of a fishing vessel throws foam in the air as it breaks through cresting waves. These are the scenes to which Wellfleet artist Paul Suggs is repeatedly drawn.
Working in a photo-realistic style in his studio, Suggs aims to do much more than simply replicate a picturesque Cape Cod landscape in his paintings. Instead, he renders the motion and light of a fleeting instant with intricate brushstrokes in layers of acrylic paint.
“I am trying to capture a oneness with the moment, the feeling of being right there,” Suggs says. “That is the art. The rest is just technique.” Although he returns over and over again to his favorite themes, no two paintings are alike, just as no moment in time can ever be repeated.
Suggs’s paintings are currently on exhibit at Wellfleet Preservation Hall in a one-man show titled “Scenes of Wellfleet, Maine & More.” Images of local scenery hang alongside views of coastal Maine, where Suggs has built a small vacation home for his family. The exhibit also includes figurative portraits from a new series, inspired by old photographs he finds at flea markets, painted in soft, sepia tones.
A viewer familiar with the Outer Cape will sense in Suggs’s work the intimacy of a native. Though he’s not a Wellfleetian, as some who were born here call themselves, he could easily be mistaken for one, so imbedded is he in the community.
Born and raised in Connecticut, Suggs attended the School of Visual Arts in New York City, where he worked with Chuck Close and Malcolm Morley. “That experience opened my mind,” he says. “So much was happening in the city in the late ’60s. I would go to the galleries and museums all the time. I like primitive art, modern art, classical art, though I was always drawn most to impressionism and realism.”
It was the local landscape that led Suggs to make his home here in 1971 at the age of 20. “I drove into town on one of those beautiful days in September and went to the ocean, the ponds, the bay,” he says. “That was it — a month later, I found a rental and moved here.”
As a young artist, Suggs used “an impressionist approach” and opened the Sun Gallery at Mayo Beach in Wellfleet, a venture he admits “was not successful.” In 1972, Suggs created the landmark lobsterman hanging from a boat on Mac’s Shack for Joe Francis, the owner of what was then the Bayside Lobster Hutt.
“The boat is attached to the rafters of the building using a bed frame that we cut and welded,” Suggs says. “The guy himself is made of papier-mâché and fiberglass. We never thought he’d stay up there for almost 50 years.”
That same year Suggs also built his “squirting clam,” a beloved feature in Wellfleet’s Fourth of July parade. Even though the event was canceled this summer due to the pandemic, Suggs pushed his clam down the entire route, just as he has done every year since it was made, squirting water into the empty streets with only his nephew by his side.
“When I told my wife that I was going to do it, she asked, ‘Why? No one will be there.’ I replied, ‘Why not?’ It was fun, and a few people appreciated it,” he says with a chuckle.
Suggs drew an iconic oyster for the logo of his oystering business, and later sold the image to a T-shirt printer. Shirts bearing his Wellfleet oyster are still being sold today. But Suggs eventually gave up the oyster grant and worked as a house painter. He stopped making art for a few years, and only when his brother-in-law offered him studio space in his garage on Briar Lane did Suggs return to painting.
“My earlier paintings were done in plein air and very quickly,” Suggs says. “When I returned to painting in my early 40s, I started taking photos and using them to work from. That slowed down my process quite a bit, and my style turned to realism.” He shows his work, alongside the pottery of his wife, Ann Suggs, at their Works Gallery on Commercial Street.
His new figurative paintings from vintage photographs represent another shift in style. “At some point last winter,” Suggs says, “I wanted to eliminate color from my palette and try something different. As I continue to work, my paintings will continue to change, because I give myself a new challenge to learn from in each one, whether it be light, color, composition, or subject.
“The key is to love the journey,” he adds. “And to share the work.”
Suggs Shots
The event: “Paul Suggs: Scenes of Wellfleet, Maine & More,” exhibit of paintings
The time: Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and online, anytime; through Jan. 8
The place: Wellfleet Preservation Hall, 335 Main St.; wellfleetpreservationhall.org
The cost: Free
GALLERY
Home Made for the Holidays
Artisan markets to help you keep your shopping local
While we won’t warm up shoulder-to-shoulder at artisan fairs as we have in holidays past, there are plenty of opportunities to support local shop owners, artists, and the creative community this season. The selection of goods and vendors is as wondrous as ever, and shopkeepers and event coordinators have safe shopping protocols in place. From a stroll through Provincetown for Holly Folly, to a visit to Orleans for the Farmers’ Market, with a few well-chosen stops in between, here’s where to find handmade and local gifts for everyone on your list.
Holly Folly, Provincetown’s annual LGBTQ+ holiday-themed festival, is on this weekend, Friday, Dec. 4 through Sunday, Dec. 6. Head to ptown.org/calendar/holly-folly/ for a list of shops, galleries, restaurants, and inns that will be open.
Wellfleet Preservation Hall is hosting its 12th annual Holiday Bazaar outdoors on Saturday, Dec. 5 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The fair will feature handmade pottery, textiles, jewelry, art, children’s goods, and more from local artisans and craft vendors — there will be over 20 in all. And the cafe will be offering homemade soups, hot cocoa, and treats. The Hall is located at 335 Main Street in Wellfleet. View the list of vendors at wellfleetpreservationhall.org.
Through Monday, Dec. 7, the Wellfleet Farmers Market is hosting its first-ever “Baskets of Love” auction. Bidders will have the chance to win a collection of items and gifts provided by Wellfleet businesses, local celebrities, and lovers of the farmers market. Check out wellfleetfarmersmarket.com for more.
Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 5 and 6 are the days to stop in at Longstreet Gallery in Eastham. Their Holiday Hustle offers a way to shop small and arty this year. It’s an extravaganza of original artworks, prints, posters, ceramics, sculpture, assemblage, quilting, apparel, holiday cards, ornaments, and more. Longstreet Gallery is at 4730 Rt. 6 in Eastham. The Hustle is on from 12 noon to 6 p.m. Take a peek at longstreetgallery.com.
Take a road trip beyond the rotary to stop in at the Orleans Farmers’ Market. They’re going strong outdoors from 9 a.m. to 12 noon on the three Saturdays leading up to Christmas — Dec. 5, 12, and 19. In addition to locally grown produce, you’ll find baked treats, handmade gifts, plants, and more. The market is also hosting a Holiday Artisan Market with more than 15 vendors on two of those Saturdays, Dec. 12 and 19, from 1 to 4 p.m. Vendors set up at 21 Old Colony Way and orleansfarmersmarket.com offers details.
This year’s Love Local Fest Holiday Edition will include Saturday shopping on Dec. 5 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., but they do recommend reserving your time spot in advance. Instead, LoveLiveLocal fans can shop the nonprofit local business advocacy group’s 25 participating makers online all week long, Dec. 5 through 12 at lovelivelocal.com/virtualfest.
SEASCAPES
With an Eye on the Surf, Colin McGuire Paints Provincetown
A local artist contemplates the Outer Cape’s past and present
“The ocean is both beautiful and terrifying to me,” says Colin McGuire. An emerging local artist, he finds “limitless inspiration” in the seascapes of the Outer Cape and their “variety of moods and effects of surface and light.”
McGuire has recently been focusing on small works on cradled wood panels (panels backed and raised by a frame). Using bold colors and broad, expressive palette-knife strokes, he seeks to capture the energy of the waters surrounding Provincetown.
“I’m trying to say more with less, allowing texture to speak,” McGuire says. “There are so many facets to explore: the waves, currents, winds, clouds, atmosphere — all of which are fleeting. There is something about the pure vastness and depth of the ocean in relation to our human existence that presents an existential crisis, which I welcome and seek in my work. I find that in their small scale, my paintings are best capable of capturing a glimpse of this.”
He’s the son of painter Michael McGuire, who owns an eponymous gallery in Provincetown, where Colin shows his work. Though he was born in Boston, his family relocated to the highlands of North Truro when he was in elementary school, to be closer to Provincetown’s art scene. “I feel lucky that I saw the beach and the ocean with fresh eyes when I moved out here as a young kid,” McGuire says. “I was enchanted — I fell in love.”
Although he liked to draw, McGuire spent his youth surfing and didn’t begin painting until his late teens, when he picked up a brush during a trip to Mexico with his father.
“My first paintings were of waves, because I had drawn them obsessively my whole life,” he says. “Painting nonstop for a month, I felt the same kind of joy I did surfing.”
Surfing still informs his work as a painter. “I consider my experiences as a surfer similar to the studies of J.M.W. Turner, who, I believe, tied himself to a ship’s mast in a storm to better understand the force of the sea,” McGuire says. “I remember one day surfing in the winter in Truro, looking back to shore once I had made it through the massive breakers. I realized how far I had drifted, and it was clear to me that I was not in control of the situation — the ocean was.”
After taking his first degree at Montserrat College of Art, where he now teaches, McGuire went for an M.F.A. at Lesley University’s College of Art and Design. During his studies there from 2016 to 2018, he further explored the Provincetown environment.
“I always felt a particular connection to the town as an old colony fishing village,” he says. “Much of the history of our country began there.”
McGuire’s series of “Settlers” paintings, done while in graduate school, contemplates the experience of the Pilgrims upon their arrival here. “I imagined what it must have been like to sail into the wild unknown: the fear, the doubt, the danger, the excitement,” he says. “Many of the scenes I painted show groups gathered in a circle around a central glow — a place to shelter in camaraderie, to come together to share ideas.”
The lives that were uprooted and destroyed by the settlers’ arrival are equally important to McGuire. “I tried to imagine this happening today — an alien civilization appearing on the horizon with plans to destroy our way of life,” he says. “These paintings show groups gathered together, migrating to safety, or distantly observing another group.”
The “Settlers” paintings are a marked shift from his usual vibrant palette. “I was questioning making a living from painting a place that was once natural and untouched, wondering what my role was and whether I could feel good about it,” McGuire says. “I would start by painting a bright scene, which I then covered over entirely in black. Then I would use a reductive process to find the painting within.”
McGuire’s recent work, an ongoing “Serenity” series, reflects the deeper connection he now feels to the Outer Cape he has loved since his childhood. It embraces the tranquility of the ocean, and, with it, a lightness he needs at this time and hopes to pass on to his viewer.
Many of his new works are painted in a single session, hoping to capture the energy of the moment. “I am bold in my application,” he says. “I take risks in the studio that present challenges I try to resolve that day. My paintings have become much more minimalist, just this transition of color across the canvas. What I am trying to convey is a state of being.”
McGuire enjoys teaching and is offering two-hour online evening classes this winter on his website. He also hosts single-session virtual workshops via Wellfleet Preservation Hall, including one on Tuesday, Dec. 8.
“I speak to approaching a painting that is not coming out as you intended and reacting to that,” McGuire says. “You have to learn not to worry, but instead trust that that will be a good thing.”
Different Strokes
The event: “Paint Night: A Virtual Workshop With Colin McGuire,” presented by Wellfleet Preservation Hall
The time: Tuesday, Dec. 8, 6 to 8 p.m. (single session)
The place: wellfleetpreservationhall.org
The cost: $25 per person, not including materials
Très Bazaar
Wellfleet Preservation Hall, at 335 Main St., presents its 12th annual Holiday Bazaar on Saturday, December 5th, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. It will be entirely outdoors, with local vendors, spiced cider, and live festive music. More information, and a list of vendors, at wellfleetpreservationhall.org.
Transgender Documentary: Born to Be
The documentary Born to Be follows Dr. Jess Ting as he does his groundbreaking work at the Mount Sinai Center for Transgender Medicine and Surgery in New York City, which offers trans and gender-nonconforming people access to high-quality transition-related care.
The film, directed by Tania Cypriano, is part of Wellfleet Preservation Hall’s Doc Days Film Series, and will become available for online streaming on Friday, November 20th, at wellfleetpreservationhall.org. Tickets are three-day rentals for $10, through December 20th.
Let ’em Rip
The Rip It Ups are throwing a virtual dance party, live-streamed from Wellfleet Preservation Hall, on Saturday, November 21st, at 5 p.m. Registration is free, though donations are appreciated, at wellfleetpreservationhall.org.
Queen of Hearts Streams via Wellfleet Preservation Hall
Wellfleet Preservation Hall continues its Doc Days Film Series with Queen of Hearts, a documentary about the artist Audrey Flack. It will be available for streaming Friday, November 13th through December 3rd. Tickets are $12 for a three-day viewing pass at wellfleetpreservationhall.org.
Flack, now in her late eighties, started as an abstract expressionist, but moved into photorealism in the ’70s. She is one of the first women ever included in Janson’s History of Art. This documentary reveals her struggles as an artist, and as a mother of a child with autism.
The official website for the film states, “Flack has something deep and genuine to communicate to the world. She is a provocateur and a rebel, an example and an inspiration.”
Mic Drop
Wellfleet Preservation Hall and WOMR are hosting a virtual poetry reading, via Zoom, with the winners of the Joe Gouveia Outermost Poetry Contest. It will take place on Thursday, November 12th, 7 p.m. Email [email protected] for the link. Preservation Hall is also hosting a virtual Feed Your Love Open Mic on Wednesday, November 18th, 7 p.m. Contact [email protected] to participate in this free event.
Mic Drop
Wellfleet Preservation Hall and WOMR are hosting a virtual poetry reading, via Zoom, with the winners of the Joe Gouveia Outermost Poetry Contest. It will take place on Thursday, November 12th, 7 p.m. Email [email protected] for the link. Preservation Hall is also hosting a virtual Feed Your Love Open Mic on Wednesday, November 18th, 7 p.m. Contact [email protected] to participate in this free event.
All Roads Lead to Citizens of the World
The Italian comedy Citizens of the World, about three recent retirees from Rome who yearn to travel, is available for streaming via Wellfleet Preservation Hall through November 12th.
The film, available only through live art-house venues, is directed by Gianni di Gregorio. It rents for $10 for three days at wellfleetpreservationhall.org. It’s in Italian with English subtitles.