{ title: 'The Times of Northport & East Northport. (Setauket, N.Y.) 2005-current, October 13, 2005, Page 18, Image 18', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/2008245210/2005-10-13/ed-1/seq-18/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/2008245210/2005-10-13/ed-1/seq-18.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/2008245210/2005-10-13/ed-1/seq-18/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/2008245210/2005-10-13/ed-1/seq-18/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Suffolk Cooperative Library System
L s a gum A Are you ' >] troubled by ~ 2 unwanted hair? safe, effective, affordable, Q permanent \xi-xi laser hair removal for men and women terri epstein levin RN, NP free 2233 nesconset hwy., suite 107, lake grove, NY 11755 Ohne 631.588.1100 ccssgsis Serving Long Island Smce 1967 249 Main Street, Suite 3 Setauket, NY int 631.246 9400 Usmg color and nostalgla MP artist Carmen Stasi sees beyond the ordlnary BY TERI SCHWARTZ None of us will ever forget the local peach farm that once comered Route 25A in Mount Sinai thanks in part to local artist and Miller Place resident Carmen Stasi. Stasi has immortalized the Davis Peach Farm in numerous paintings with a creative and unique use of color, texture and nostalgia. \The peach farm was an enchanting muse to me for many years. I enjoyed plain air painting at sucha picturesque locale. 1 would pass the farm and an image would monopolize my thoughts. A mental snapshot would form and that's when 1 knew I had to paint it.\ Stasi said, standing amongst a sampling of over 100 works he'screated, in his studio. \Now that it's gone, I've lost my lust for painting, at the moment.\ He may have lost his lust forthe can- vas temporarily, but he's transferred his passion for breathing life into his mental visions by sculpting from recycled mate- mals. Two such metal sculptures, a swishing-fish and a tall standing bull were recently on display at the North Shore Public Library. These works attest to Stasi's versatility. \I was doing an electrical job at a res- idential home and as I was ready to leave I saw this large pitch-fork type piece, made of what seemed to be steel. The tines of it mingledbetween a chain link fence and it took shape before my mind's eye. It looked to me like two pairs of horns. So I simply asked the resident for it, and began sculpting it that evening.\ Stasi took metal wire sheeting, the type you might find under stucco and blanketed a steel bone structure, added resim hooves and crowned it with the metal fork,. after removing the two end tines, creating a rustic apparition of Taurus with long threatening homs. When speaking of another sculpture, Stasi recalled his wonderment, when finding the half-dollar size pieces of _ metal. \I found them lying in the top of a heap of junk someone had put out at the curb. There were dozens and dozens of metal but still pliable. I glued them onto each other, one by one to make the scales of the fish.\ Stasi laughed as he continued, \After Pd completed the sculpture I found out what the coin-like objects were. They were used like wash- IN THIS EDITION MMJaavb altvéuxrtnugvvllz‘ala Mum. timinutasmttq” W‘dsutuvvxfigaificva-qarvqunqnm“a cm utrghkflutbfitt;i.piwdmy'l cm * 4% ahrnvfiifinin-i minckt+itxs Dring & Entericimert - .... 8198021 . mMonauuflmm-autuqv a 44 # %. m - m ”tuttinthsviaxtfi»»~wgflk4*xnm “Mg. l‘;’cé;hwd~t bvfig “anew Mii‘filfil‘.ttvfintt¢t;fit m ”unfit r-vflvooratw Antiv‘u‘tugvvlm mm x # # 4 a uau’ti 4 & atinuuuum WJWWM A sede Photo by Teri Schwartz Miller Place artist Carmen Stasi in his studio. ers when roofers install rubber roofing, to insulate the nail, but that's not what I saw.\ Stasi's creative vision dates back to his childhood. He remembers dabbling with water colors as a youngster and then meeting back up with his \energy\ in his teens. He may have been distract- ed by life, marriage and kids, but the energy to paint and create kept building inside him as time went by, he said. While recovering from back surgery. Stasi studied the masters, took classes from his mentor Jack VanDecter and heeded his inner voice to paint. After going through what he calls a Van Gogh phase where he tried to copy some of the enigma's work, he decided to emulate it, fashioning entire canvases with palette knives only, completely foregoing any brush strokes. He became so selective about the shapes he wanted to create with the knives, he began shaping the blades of the palette knives himselt, assisting him - to convey separate, distinctive leaves on the trees surrounding the peach farm. With a quick glance, one could refer to most of Stasi's works as impression- ist, echoing the works of Claude Monet. Monet, as many know, spent 30 years painting water-lilies and the bridge in his garden over and over again. Stasi has re- Continued on page B21 Saturday, November 19 from 10 am EEAC accepting submissions The East End Arts Council will be accepting submissions for its \Juried Small Works Show,\ on Thursday, November 17 through printmaking, mixed media, sculp— ; ture and relief work that can be | hung. There is a $5 entry fee- per-| |_ picce for EEAC members and $10 - for nonmembers. For further infor- | mation, call 727-0900.