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Award-winning artist Julie Bell's fantasy animals and realistic works are on view at the Berkshire Museum through September.

Berkshire Museum Opens 'The Wild Indoors' Exhibit

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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The pieces are displayed with some of the museum's collection of taxidermy animals. 
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Berkshire Museum has opened its newest exhibit, "The Wild Indoors," by award-winning artist Julie Bell. 
 
The exhibit runs through Sept. 29 and combines some of the museum's collection of taxidermy animals with Bell's fantasy art and realistic painting of the wild animals from across the united states. 
 
This is Bell's first solo museum exhibition for wildlife or fantasies. She uses oil painting to bring to life wildlife including a lion, wolves, bears, cows, bisons, a dog, and more. 
 
"It's the first solo show I've had in a museum. And I'm just really, really, very excited about this. I just appreciate it so much that you're there," Bell said. 
 
"I'm just very honored for this to be taking place. These paintings mean a lot to me. It's my personal work and and I'm just really, really so appreciative for you to come out and see it and for it to be in this beautiful museum."
 
The diverse pieces of work on view makes the viewing experience fun and interesting, Berkshire Museum's chief curator Jesse Kowalski said. 
 
"A lot of people gravitate towards different ones … it's a fun show. It's really beautiful artwork. And I think there's just something for everyone here," he said. 
 
A lot of people are attracted to the dog painting named "Big Oscar," which is of a neighborhood dog that would go from house to house when Bell was younger, Kowalski said.
 
She has always had a fascination about animals and spends a lot of time around wildlife. Animals also often appear in some of her fantasy work, such as a zebra in her fantasy painting "Behind the Veil," which won a Silver Spectrum Award in 2016. 
 
"She just loves animals. She just feels a real connection to them and for her a lot of the fantasy artwork, she talks a lot about dreams and the subconscious and her fantasy art is really a way of kind of bringing that to life," Kowalski said.
 
"She mentioned specifically the zebra painting, about when she was a child she would have a lot of nightmares about zebras chasing her and things, so [that] came out of that, these childhood dreams."
 
Bell has an eclectic background being commissioned to create advertising illustrations for well-known companies including Nike, Coca-Cola and The Ford Motor Company, her website says. 
 
She has also worked with major publishing houses in New York City to paint book covers and created album covers for artists such as Meat Loaf.
 
"She was the first woman ever paint Conan for Marvel Comics, which paved the way for many other commissions from Marvel, DC, and Image Comics to illustrate superheroes in fully rendered paintings," her website says. 
 
"Her first published cover for Heavy Metal magazine broke ground for other illustrators with the introduction of her now legendary Metal Flesh. Her hyper-realistic style is known for its sexy, powerful images of warriors and amazons and a sensitive, exquisite use of color and texture."
 
Bell usually works one piece at a time and they can take two to three weeks to complete, Kowalski said. 
 
She's lived in a dozen different locations and attended six colleges and universities to continue her artistic passion, focusing on the human figure and life drawings, Bell said. 
 
She took up weight training because of this love of the human body and became a nationally ranked competitive bodybuilder. 
 
It was this path that led her to meet her husband, Boris Vallejo. Vallejo is an award-winning science fiction, fantasy, and erotica genre Peruvian-American painter. She modeled for some of his pieces and they bonded over their shared love of art. They married in 1994 and live and work in Pennsylvania. 

Tags: animals,   Berkshire Museum,   exhibit,   

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BRTA Focuses on a New Run Schedule

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Berkshire Regional Transit Authority is still working on maintaining its run schedules after dropping the route realignment proposal.

Last Thursday's meeting was Administrator Kathleen Lambert's first official meeting taking over the reins; retiring director Robert Malnati stayed during a transition period that ended last month.

Lambert is trying to create a schedule that will lessen cancellations. There was a two-hour meeting the week before with the drivers union to negotiate run bids and Lambert is working with the new operating company Keolis, which is taking over from Transdev.

The board spoke about anonymous emails from drivers, which Lambert said she has not seen. iBerkshires was not able to see those letters, but has received some. 

"They were lengthy emails from someone describing themselves as concerning BRTA employee, and there was a signed letter from a whole group of employees basically stating their concerns. So, you know, to me, it was a set of whistleblowers, and that, what my understanding is that this really triggers a need for some type of process to review the merits of these whistleblowers, not going to call them accusations, but basically expressions of concern," said member Stephen Bannon.

A letter iBerkshires received spoke of unhappy drivers who were considering quitting because of decisions being made without "input from frontline staff," frustration and falling morale, and the removal of the former general manager shortly after Lambert came in.

Lambert said it's difficult to navigate a new change. She also noted many drivers don't want to do Saturday runs and it has been hard negotiating with drivers on the new runs.

"I would like you all to keep in mind that the process of change is super difficult. Transdev has been here for 20 years, and some of these drivers have never known any other operating company, the way some of the operations have been handled has been archaic," she said. "So getting folks up to speed on how a modern transit system works is going to be painful for them. So I don't want to say that I'm unsympathetic, because I am sympathetic, but I am trying to coax people along with a system that's going to seem very strange to them."

The board spoke about better communication between them and Lambert, citing cooperation will be best moving forward.

"There's just a lot of stuff in the air right now, and there are a lot of fires to put out to make this a coordinated effort. And if we don't keep our communications open and be straightforward, then you get blindsided about how you know the input that you could get from us about your position, and how you know what's going on in your direction, and we get blindsided. And I think that we have to make sure that this is a collaboration," said member Sherry Youngkin.

"Both sides have responsibilities, because in the long run, this advisory board is going to have to make decisions as to how we brought forward and if we've gone forward in a fair and helpful way. And I think that's hopefully what everybody is looking for also." 

Transdev and Keolis held a three-day recruiting event interviewing almost 40 candidates and offering jobs to eight, but only three stayed on to start training. Lambert said it was disappointing but she will keep trying to retain more people.

In her first report to the board, she noted that ridership dipped a little over 10 percent, but still remains higher than last year, adding that was because of cancellations of services because of the lack of drivers.

Like the last meeting, some of the advisory board members were torn over the start of the Link413 service, worried that the start of the service took drivers away and the numbers of riders are low.

Lambert, however, said the ridership has doubled from last month.

"As I've spoken before, we have, generally, a six-month adoption for brand-new service before you can really go in and evaluate, are you being successful based on the grant that my predecessor wrote along with the team for PBTA and RTA, we are ahead of schedule, which is pretty good, so I'm hoping that will continue to improve," she said.

Member Renee Wood said the board never approved the service, adding the only thing she could find in the minutes was a vote to accept the equipment. She said it was supposed to be put on the agenda to discuss.

"The Link413 service has been three years in the making. It's been a grant that was accepted and has been working with our partners, PVTA and FRTA, to put into place. So I don't have the entire history of how that process worked, but it's been three years in the making, and did we not understand that once we accept that grant that we were going to put in new service?" Lambert said.

The board discussed if Title VI, the Civil Rights Act, was followed with an accurate review and accurate amount of time for public comment period on the service changes and if its attorney should review if the  grant conditions were properly followed.

Lambert said changes had the 60-day comment period included in the proposed route realignment packet, giving the opportunity for the community to respond to that as well but will look into the legality of the situation with their attorney.

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