Making Lemonade Exhibit
1:00 pm to 3:00 pm
From Saturday, July 8, 2023 to Saturday, October 28, 2023

Exhibit Dates: Saturday July 8th – Saturday October 28th

Gallery Hours: 7/15, 7/22, 7/29, 8/5, 8/12, 8/26, 9/2, 10/7, 10/21 1-3pm; Wednesdays, 6-9:30pm

View photos from the exhibit.

Making Lemonade is an artistic interpretation of the proverbial phrase, “when life gives you lemons, make lemonade.” The exhibition features 13 local artists who give homage to “lemons” by transforming ordinary ideas and materials into extraordinary works of art. Through the use of photography, ceramics, woodwork, collage and encaustic art, Making Lemonade encourages the viewer to find the beauty in what might be overlooked.

Featuring works by Christo Braun, Jackie Carlise, Jenn Doyle Crane, Ed Holmes, Janet Koike, Pons Maar, Eben Ostby, Ginny Parsons, Marc Ribaud, Charlie Sullivan, Deb Sullivan, Tom Varghese and Jan Watten.

Making Lemonade Artists

Christo Braun

Christo Braun makes his lemonade as a fine artist and educator. Recently returned to the Bay Area and settled here in Alameda, Christo works primarily with epoxy resin on aluminum panels, capturing natural and unnatural phenomena alike.

Jackie Carlise

Jackie is an Alameda grown 3D graphics artist and graduate of the School of The Art Institute of Chicago. You can see more of her 3D illustrations in publications like the New York Times, Bloomberg Magazine, and The New Yorker.

Jenn Doyle Crane

Jenn Doyle Crane is an artist, curator, creative connector and chief jam maker of Alameda Fruit Co. Her encaustic paintings are imaginary entanglements of the natural and made world.

Ed Holmes

Ed Holmes, aka Lazlo Bean-dip of the Jalopy School of Fauxtography, has been collecting photons for 50 years. Occasionally he gets some good ones.

Janet Koike

As an artist, Janet has taken a path from ceramics and textiles, to tap dance and taiko, founding Rhythmix Cultural Works, creating Island City Waterways and now back to art about fabric scraps. She believes it is important to drink lemonade.

Pons Maar

Pons Maar’s creative life has veered from ceramics to graphic design to performing arts to video. Now, on his little cruiser bicycle, he terrorizes Alameda neighborhoods searching for that reason to keep going.

Eben Ostby

Eben has lived in the East Bay for much of the last 35 years. He is particularly interested in hybrid photography, using analog methods including hand-coated emulsions and watercolor, as well as digital and darkroom work. He now spends most of his time in Virginia, where he has a darkroom and cats.

Ginny Parsons

Ginny Parsons is an intuitive painter using common household ingredients like borax and peanut butter. An environmental artist, Ginny paints on found materials with leftovers people leave on her porch. She shows at Gray Loft Gallery, curates at Rhythmix and makes lemonade with her Art Camp kids.

Marc Ribaud

Marc Ribaud has worked in house painting, picture framing, the toy business and the film business. He now lives in Alameda and practices bricolage.

Charlie Sullivan

Charlie Sullivan re-purposes found and discarded items, combining them with lenses and mirrors to create emotionally inspired freestanding sculptures and hangings. Everyday items are rearranged in a playful balance and are built to be viewed in the round to encourage shifting perspectives.

Deb Sullivan

Deb lives in Alameda and has been working in clay for over 30 years. Her current work, inspired by her grandma’s 1926 beauty contest trophy, aims to spark a humorous conversation about which attributes deserve recognition.

Tom Varghese

Tom is a long-time Alameda resident and art-lover. He enjoys creating portraits in graphite and watercolor media, and recently produced illustrations for Abraham Verghese’s new novel The Covenant of Water.

Jan Watten

Jan Watten hails from Oakland, California and has a BFA in Photography from California College of Arts and Crafts. She has been taking photographs for more than 25 years in her Oakland studio in the Jingletown Arts District. She has shown domestically and internationally and was profiled in Black and White Magazine in 2010. She still shoots with film.


Banner image: Pulp, 2023 by Jackie Carlise.