Hudson Reporter Archive

Art of their own County senior citizens put on show

Two years before the Sept. 11, 2001 attack on the World Trade Center, Union City senior citizen Paul Garza, 65, had a bad feeling. He looked out of his home at the New York skyline and felt a great darkness creeping across it. In an effort to visualize this feeling, he resorted to the one medium he could rely on: his art.

“I felt as if the whole world was going to get turned upside down,” he said. “It was something that was going to happen in New York City.”

While not a professional artist, Garza has often expressed feelings through his work, but never had he felt such an overwhelming force as this that compelled him to shape out the skyline using color to detail the suffering he felt.

“I painted zones of color,” he said, pointing to the red band on his acrylic painting as the point emphasizing the most pain.

His work, called, “Tears in my heart” won second place in its category at this year’s Hudson County Senior Citizen Art Show.

Originally a native of Hoboken, Garza, 65, is retired from work in the fashion industry, and entered his work in this year’s contest, partly because he wanted to make a statement about Sept. 11.

Garza was hardly the only senior artist moved by the Sept. 11. Dan Arrson of Jersey City won first place in non-professional photography for his vivid piece, “After 9-11 NYC skyline.”

Regina Bera, a retired nurse from Bayonne, said her oil painting “Freedom Unity” was also inspired by the attack, particularly the Bergen Record photograph of the three firemen putting up the American flag.

“My daughter wanted me to do something patriotic,” she said.

A gallery-like setting

In the dim light and eloquent marble circle of Brennan Court House’s Rotunda in Jersey City, winners and runners-up in this year’s Hudson County Senior Citizen Art Show took on grand airs, as if each showed the artwork of a master.

Forty works were submitted for this year’s event. Twenty-four won awards for their works, with first place winners qualifying for the statewide competition.

County Executive Bernard Hartnett, Jr. called all the works displayed “magnificent,” and “unique.” The works covered a full spectrum of style and mediums and included pastels, oil paintings, photographs, sculpture and quilts. Each medium was judged separately, with awards given to top professional and non-professional artists.

The event was sponsored by the county executive, the Board of Chosen Freeholders, the Hudson County Office on Aging and the Hudson County Office of Cultural Heritage Affairs.

Larry Eccleston of Hudson County’s Office on Aging coordinated the show and set up the displays at the courthouse. He was impressed by the variety of the art.

“The colors and subjects represent a wide range of cultures and heritage in keeping with the diverse ethnicity of Hudson’s population,” he said.

The show displayed still life paintings, landscapes and self-portraits, abstracts, collages, modern and historical pieces.

“Many of the works are worthy of being in the collections of museums,” Eccleston said.

Judging for the contest was done by an independent panel of artists.

An assortment of subjects and styles

Although views from or around Hudson County dominated this year’s show, many pieces recalled other places and other times, such as Edward Komski’s first place winning oil painting called “Fort Sumter” in the non-professional category.

Gerald M. Glover finished second in non-professional oil painting with his “Blues in F Minor” detailing a black blues singer.

Glover said the image came out of his head, and he attempted to paint an image that captured some of the mood of the blues.

Professional artist Paul Friedman’s “It’s almost over” took a new angle on the classic baseball clich

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