JANE ZAMOST

Nourishing The Soul

 
 
  • home
  • gallery
  • workshop
  • my story
  • the facts
  • what they're saying
  • contact
Windows of possibility
  • Sign In
  • Register
  • Art Marketplace
  • Artist Websites
  • USD
    • US Dollar
    • Euro
    • GB Pound
    • Canadian Dollar
    • Australian Dollar
    • Japanese Yen
    • Swiss Franc
    • New Zealand dollar
Your cart is empty.
Artspan art marketplace
  • Home
  • Shop Prints
  • Shop Originals
  • Collections
  • Artists
    • A-Z Listing
    • By Category
    • By Region
  • Art Categories
    • Painting
    • Mixed Media
    • Photography
    • Sculpture
    • Ceramics
    • Native Arts Market
    • See All Categories
  • Articles
  • USD
    • US Dollar
    • Euro
    • GB Pound
    • Canadian Dollar
    • Australian Dollar
    • Japanese Yen
    • Swiss Franc
    • New Zealand dollar
  • Sign In
  • Register
  • Art Marketplace
  • Artist Websites
  • Home
  • Shop Prints
  • Shop Originals
  • Collections
  • Artists
    • A-Z Listing
    • By Category
    • By Region
  • Art Categories
    • Painting
    • Mixed Media
    • Photography
    • Sculpture
    • Ceramics
    • Native Arts Market
    • See All Categories
  • Articles

Windows of possibility

  • Home
  • Articles
  • Windows of possibility

            Is there any image more full of possibility than a window? A window can serve as a frame for a picture, organizing the space and directing our eye. We can look out from the window onto the world; the world as we see it, or the world of our imagination. Or we can look in at a window and catch a glimpse of somebody else’s life, which can leave us feeling lonely and on the outside, or can be welcoming and inviting. In the reflection of a window we can find ourselves, or catch a glimpse of everything sneaking up behind us. An open window suggests infinite promise, letting light and air pass through, making patterns of sunshine and shadow. A closed window hides something, mysterious or off-putting.

            Photographer Robert Goodman likes to freeze a moment in time and share it with the viewer, letting us see what he sees. Whether in his own neighborhood or halfway across the world, his photographs show us qualities that we all share. In Havana Man in Window, we see the familiar sight of a man in a window, beautifully framed in the dark shadows of his home behind him. A jumble of wires and clothesline, mundane and off-kilter, contrasts with the more solid and formal structure of shutters and railings. He’s looking up to the sky, but we don’t know what he sees.

 

            Linda Lally deconstructs images to form new meaning. She uses digital photos, which she prints and uses as a painting medium through a photo transfer process, to create dream-like, unexpected landscapes, joining images in a new context. In City Window, she leaves out the frame of the window altogether, which gives the picture a lost, loose, ungrounded appearance. We see windows across the street, through the bars of our window, and the whole picture creates an atmosphere of urban suspicion and solitude.

            Ethel Hills creates an abstract landscape in Window on the World that plays on our expectations of the structure of a window to open limitless possibilities. She works with pattern and movement to create simple and intimate compositions, and captures the memory of a place to make a landscape of emotion. The window could be any window, but we make meaning out of color and line and shape to construct the memory of a specific window, in a certain place, at a certain time of day and time of year. It’s vibrant and green, full of hope and life.

            Nothing feels quite as desolate as an unkempt window with broken panes, falling in on itself. The danger of broken wood and wire and glass adds drama to the atmosphere of abandonment. Larry Fuchs’ Tuskegee Window, rusted and splintered, suggests years of neglect, and yet there is a raw beauty in the overlapping shapes and colors.

 

Robert Scheuerman’s Derelict Window, in black and white, is complex and haunting. A tangle of wires, rotting wood and peeling paint echoes vines that grow outside the window, visible through the clouded glass, although the vines suggest life and hope.

            D. Marsh’s painting Train Window #1 captures the giddy feeling evoked when the interior and exterior worlds travel at different speeds, in a rush of movement and color. We’re sitting still, but we’re engrossed in the world that we pass, which seems alive and alight. The painting is nearly abstract, but we recognize the rails of a bridge, the suggestion of a city in the background, and the moodiness of an urban night. The painting is full of mystery and questions, captured in bold strokes and strong colors.

            When she paints, Elizabeth Cadwalader transforms a blank canvas into a miniature world, and in Provence Window she provides a beautiful little stage for the action of her world to unfold upon. The original window is located in the “colorful town of Roussillon, France, where ochre is quarried,” and we get a hint of the brightness of the town in the bright blue shutters and bright red flowers. The painting is full of sunshine and light, and we feel we are waiting for somebody to open the window and let in the summer breeze.

            Whether open or closed, well-kept or derelict, windows speak to us. They help to focus our attention on the world within a work of art, and they suggest the mystery and promise of lives created by others.

            

Sign up for our email list

Find out about new art and collections added monthly

Previous: Artspan & Jewelspan are Supporting an Art Business Workshop - and you are invited!

Next: The Light of Morning

Most popular

  • 1

    Eleven Places to Submit Artwork Online | Artspan

    Discover new platforms to promote yourself with this list of 11 places to submit your artwork online. Sell your art on the Artspan Marketplace online today.

  • 2

    4 Leading Artist Website Builders for 2024

    Founded in 1999, Artspan was first to offer artist-specific, ecommerce, full-featured, easy to set up and customize websites . See why it is still the leader, offering more for less.

  • 3

    Five Questions for KATHERINE MINOTT

    An interview with photographer Katherine Minott

  • 4

    23 Art Galleries That Accept Submissions from Photographers (based in the US)

  • 5

    Artspan Affiliate Program

Artspan Recommendations

Marketing Advice

Artist Features

Website Makeovers

Group Shows
Curated collections

Contests

Inspiration

Interviews

Art History

Video

Resources

Solo Show

SWAIA
Southwest Indian Market

Art Collecting Tips

Create a buyer account

Continue with Google Continue with Facebook

or

Already have an account? Login
By clicking "Create account" or "Continue with ...", you agree to the Artspan TOS and Privacy Policy

Login with your account

Continue with Google Continue with Facebook

or

Not a member?
Register here!
Forgot username or password
Login Assistance
Having Trouble Logging In To Your Artspan Account? Please Enter Your Information Below And We Will Be Happy To Help:
 
What can we assist you with?
Artspan Logo
Find Art
  • Search+Shop
  • Artists
  • Collections
  • Articles
  • Purchase Info
Quick Links
  • Painting
  • Photography
  • Sculpture
  • Mixed Media
  • Ceramics
  • Jewelry
  • About Artspan
Member Links
  • Member Login
  • Free Trial
  • Plans & Pricing
  • Artist Website Reviews
  • FAQ
Other
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility
  • Artspan affiliate program
Follow us

Instagram Follow on Instagram Facebook Follow on Facebook Twitter Follow on Twitter Pinterest Follow on Pinterest
Contact Artspan
This marketplace was launched in Beta in late 2022. We would love to hear back from anyone using it. What do you like and what would you like to change? Please note: we would be happy to assign a curator to anyone looking for art. This would also apply to anyone visually disabled. We can help you find just the right artwork! How can we help you? Contact us here
Artspan Copyright 2025 - All Rights Reserved.
Confirm your action

Are you sure you want to perform this action?

No
Yes
[#]Join Email List
Powered by artspan.com
Artist Websites