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Phila Inquirer Art Review by Victoria Donahoe

Sunday, March 4, 2007 Art Review Howard Gallery. Becky Reilly of Jamison and Susan Ketcham of Pipersville, both enamored of traditional tabletop still-life painting, are at Howard. Reilly, the stronger painter, looks to old masters in her oils, which have their own slow, unhurried grace. My only quibble: There is no hint that these fruits and veggies were painted today instead of in the 17th century. Ketcham, though earnest, has a more breezy approach and is drawn to making pretty floral pastels, some with period ceramic tableware. The charm of her best work is the picture it gives of a world more pleasant than our own. Howard Gallery, 77 W Bridge, New Hope to Mar 25, Tue-Fri 10-5, Sat 10-9, Sun noon-5, Free. 215-862-5272
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The Morning Call Art Review 5/3/07

The Morning Call
A generous genre is alive and fairly well in "The Living Still Life," an Ambre Studio exhibition of tabletop universes of fruits and doughnuts, flowers and Chinese food boxes.
Imael Checo is the show's sneaky radical, the one who turns containers of egg foo young and shrimp lo mein into vessels of elegant mystery. In "Take Out," an oil on linen, a Chinese food box is surrounded and enobled, by vaguely metallic, silky shopping bags available in designer stores. Shadow-play lighting and a frayed tablecloth convey a sence of gently disturbing drama.
Becky Reilly is the show's Dutch oil master, the one who elevates cantaloupes, pears, and a pewter tankard with pearly light, ripe tones and a background of shiny, rich chocolate. In a slightly soggy, stormy portrait of chocolate- and vanilla-frosted doughnuts she demonstrates the joshing humor of Claes Oldenburg, sculptor of giant, soft lipstick tube and typewriter eraser. And her ruddy, rough orange slices somehow resemble sculptural nuts or marooned boats.
Lynn Miller is the resident revolutionary, the one who fractures wine decanters into a Rorschach jungle of white-space bottles curtained by slices of olive, tanned gold and watermelon. Her neatest trick is making the watercolor decanters appear to decant liquid color.
The best traditionalists are just as impressive. Priscilla Taylor Rosenberger, a watercolorist of extraordinary delicacy contributes white rice........pastel of lemons in a bowl with egg-like holes is nothing less than a glowing lantern - or a domestic spaceship. Her 22-by-30 inch, frame filled view of a red apple and a green pepper is a sense-filling maze-marriage. The tart fruit, which has a lovely tan splash around the stem hole, seems to make the vegetable pucker up.
A number of bad old habits limit the exhibit to being fairly well rather than well. Pictures are marred by cloudy fruit, harsh reflections, vacous arrangements of objects posed rather than placed. Pleasing surprises - Sharon Jenne's quixotic union of tangerine and lady bug - can't cover for missing examples of still life as a meditation on mortality or a metaphysical adventure. Where's the spirtual decay, the illusory precousness, the threshold between the visible and the invisible?
"The Living Still Life," through June 15, Ambre Studio, 310 W. Broad Street, Bethlehem. Community draw-in with tables of floral and ceramic still lifes, 6-9 pm, May 18,discussion on the still life led by gallery director/designer Evelyn Beckman 6 pm May 18. Hours Wed-Fri 10 am to 5 pm and by appointment. 610-974-8480, www.ambrestudio.com.Art Review 5/3/07
By Geoff Gehman
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Bucks County Herald Sept 6,2007

Becky Reilly'still lifes on view at Michelyn Michelyn Galleries are presenting Becky Reilly as a featured artist for September.
The show opens Saturday, Sept. 8 and continues through Sept. 30. The opening reception is 6 to 9 pm.
Reilly paints still lifes in the traditional style of the old world masters. She always paints from life to see the character, light and shadow of the objects she paints first hand, and she paints in a dark space with a light on her subject.
Victoria Donahue, art critic for the Philadelphia Inquirer, wrote that Reilly "looks to old masters in her oils, which have their own slow, unhurried grace. My only quibble:There is no hint that these fruits and vegetables were painted today instead of in the 17th century."
Reilly has degrees from Bloomsburg University in physics and studio art, and has studied locally from artists Corinne Lalin (painterly realism) and Frank Arcuri (realism-old world style).
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The Intelligencer Saturday, Sept. 6, 2008

Exhibit of Becky Reilly's works features "Romance of Still Life" Becky Reilly is exhibiting her work in an exhibit titled :The Romance of the Still Life" throughout the month of September -- with a reception scheduled for 6 to 9 pm today -- at The Chapman Gallery in Doylestown.
A Bucks County artist who also is internationally known for her Old World style still lifes, she has included more casual florals in her new pieces, along with the fruit-based works which she is known to paint.
Most of the flowers in her new works were picked from her yard.
She loves to paint pears for the curviness of the fruit and the human forms it seems to represent -- and fans of her pears will not be disappointed. She paints still lifes in oil on canvas or linen and is said to have a flowing grace to her work.
Reilly has been an exhibiting gallery artist for 10 years, after leaving her engineering career to raise her family and pursue art. She has won numerous awards in juried events, including best of show. Requests for hr work over the past two years have exceeded what she can produce.
She credits her style and art transformation to her inspiring teachers: Corinne Lalin, Frank Arcuri and Coulter Watt.
Reilly has degrees in studio art, as well as in physics, from Bloomsburg University.
The Chapman Gallery is at 46 E. State St.
Information: 215-348-2011; www.thechapmangallery.com.
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Nouveau Delaware Valley - Sept 2008 pgs 23-24

Still Lifes by Becky Reilly Highlighted at The Chapman Gallery
The recent works of Bucks County artist Becky Reilly are on view at The Chapman Gallery in an exhibit titled The Romance of the Still Life. The exhibit opens with a reception on Saturday, September 6, from 6-9 pm, and continues through September 30.
The exhibit features a new body of the artist's work, including her well-known still lifes and new floral pieces. Reilly paints her still lifes in oil on canvas and favors the curviness and human-like form of pears.
Reilly, who is internationally renowned for her Old World-style still lifes, left an engineering career to raise a family and pursue art. She has been an exhibiting gallery artist for ten years and has won numerous awardes in juried shows, including best of show.
Reilly earned bachelor of science degrees in studio art and physics from Bloomsburg University. She has also studied art with Corinne Lalin, Frank Arcuri and Coulter Watt.
The Chapman Gallery of Fine Art is located at 46 E State Street, Doylestown, PA. Gallery hrs: Tues-Thurs 10 am-5 pm; Fri & Sat 10 am-7 pm; Sun noon-5 pm. Call 215-348-2011 or visit thechapmangallery.com.
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Nouveau-Delaware Valley December 2008

Works by Faherty and Reilly at Frame Shop & Gallery
The Frame Shop and Gallery features works by artists Evelyn Faherty and Becky Reilly in an exhibit that opens on December 7 and runs until Christmas Eve. A second Saturday meet-the-artists reception is scheduled for December 13 from 5 - 8 pm.
Faherty, who lives in Yardley, PA, was trained by renowned Bucks County Impressionists John Folinsbee and Harry Leithross, and has won many awards. At the age of 89 she is still inspired by Edward W. Redfield and continues to draw much of her influence from the Pennsylvania Impressionist school of painters. She is one of the few living local artists with direct ties to the group, and the impact is evident in her style, color pallete and choice of subjects. Her paintings include scenes of area farms, the Delaware River and local canals.
Having fallen in love with a traditional old-world style of painting, Reilly, who has studied with Corinne Lalin and Frank Arcuri, paints still lifes of beautfully voluptuous fruit. She also explores subjects that may represent a client's personality - a portrait of sorts, expressed through still life.
The Frame Shop & Gallery is located at 39 N. Main Street in Lambertville, NJ and is open daily from 11am - 6pm. Call 609/397-8939.
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www.artdaily.org

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| Becky Reilly - New Works/Classic Traditions |
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BETHLEHEM, PA.- "New Works/Classic Traditions," oil painter Becky Reilly fills Ambre' Studio, Weds, March 18 to Friday, May 15 with new works based on traditional, classic 17th century European master still life paintings. Composed of fruit, flowers and special objects, Reilly illuminates canvases to play on the emotion of the moment, and bring importance to everyday objects and genre.
A resident of Bucks County, Reilly has been lauded by Victoria Donahoe, of The Philadelphia Inquirer who wrote: "Reilly looks to old masters in her oils, which have their own slow, unhurried grace. My only quibble: There is not hint that these fruits and veggies were painted today, instead of in the 17th century."
Reilly will conduct an artist demonstration Sunday, April 19, from 12 noon to 4 p.m. at Ambre' Studio. Ambre' Studio is located at 310 West Broad Street, Bethlehem, PA and is the premier grand prize Properties of Merit 2006 winner. Ambre' Studio is available for private bookings, corporate and special events. |
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Nouveau Delaware Valley - Feb 2007 pgs.23-25

Still Life Paintings on Exhibit at Howard Gallery of Fine Art Howard Gallery presents Standing Still, an exhibit showcasing works in oil and pastel by artists Susan Ketcham and Becky Reilly, fron February 10 through February 28. The opening reception takes place on Staurday, Februsry 10, from 5 9 pm. Becky Reilly has loved art her entire life. As a child, she studied art at the Art Institute of Chicago and won several art awards but chose initially to declare physics as her major at Bloomsburg University. (Reilly would ultimately graduate with a B.S. degree in physics and a second B.S. degree in art.) After leaving college, she worked as an electronics engineer in both public and private sector postions. After fourteen years in the engineering field, Reilly decided to actively return to her creative side. She studied with artist Corrine Lalin for two years and then started painting on her own. Reilly began exhibiting her work through the Doylestown Art League, entered juried shows ans was invited to hang her paintings in regional galleries. Since 2005, Becky Reilly has been studying with well-respected still-life artist Frank Arcuri of Erwinna, PA. His Dutch still-life tradition of "painting the light", has expanded and significantly influenced Reilly's work.
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