about the gallery
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“Art's
in my blood,” says Julie Heller with the quiet intensity
that bespeaks a true dedication. Trained as
an art historian, she has been working in the art world for
virtually her entire adult life. Her first job
in Provincetown was as what she terms “a frame
girl," and
for the past nine years she has operated the
Julie Heller Gallery, which is currently located on the beach
at 2 Gosnold Street.
Heller's first gallery was situated above the
Studio Shop in the East End gallery district.
Operating on a slim budget, the fledgling
gallery owner also lived in the space, putting
up curtains to screen off the art at night
and “pulling out the futon." While this might seem a little too Spartan an existence for
some, for Heller it was simply a matter of
emotional necessity. “When I reached the point where I knew
I wanted to operate a gallery," she explains,
“I was willing to do almost anything."
The gallery remained in its
East End location for two years, and having found
the area not as good for her business as she had hoped it would
be, Heller decided to move. “I wanted to be
more in the mainstream." The building
she now occupies was, at the time she began
considering it as a gallery space, the former home of the Box Office
Museum of the Provincetown Playhouse, and
it was in serious need of repair. “There were holes in the
roof," she recalls, and it was full of
storage items. Nevertheless, she liked the spot, which
she now refers to as “the best of both worlds," being
in the center of town, but not right on busy
Commercial Street.
Even after effecting major
repairs, however, the space was not yet quite
right, Heller notes, for the gallery she had always
dreamed of operating. “The walls weren’t good
enough," she explains with a smile, and
adds, “it used to be dark." Rather than attempting to
show art not to the best advantage, Heller
opted for dealing mostly in another of her passions. “It was
more an antique store than a gallery... lt made
a funky old antique shop," she remembers with another
broad smile.
Eventually, the space "slowly evolved
into the gallery as you see it now," says
Heller. With new walls and new windows installed, she was ready
to begin realizing her ambition of creating
the finest gallery she was capable of.
Though she notes with a slight smile
that the building and its environs “will
never be a slick spot,” she speaks of
the gallery itself as "constantly evolving even now.”
That evolution revolves around
what Heller refers to as her “eclectic"
taste in art. “I don’t just focus on one
thing,” she points out, and this is confirmed by a quick glance
around the
room. Over the years, Heller has more
often than not had exhibits opening
every Friday night in season, and, she
says, "because of this I've been able to
show a great variety of artwork. Regardless of what show is
up, there`s
always a great storehouse of art on
hand," with paintings literally stacked eight to 10 deep
against the walls
all around the baseboard. Similarly, the
upper portions of those walls hold dozens of paintings and
sculptures, as do
the movable folding walls that are repositioned from show to
show to help
create new environments in the small,
homey space.
Despite her eclecticism, Heller does specialize
in a few particular eras and
areas of art: "chiefly 19th and 20th century American, with
an emphasis on early Provincetown," as she
puts it. In addition, Heller has a passion for “contemporary
and antique folk art.” In
the matter of styles, however, the gallery “storehouse” features
everything from realistic to Impressionistic
to the most modern and Abstract-with the
only emphasis on quality. "This is not
garbage art," she says with a teasing
smile. Amid this wealth of paintings,
Heller has not forgotten her love of
jewelry, which she maintains is "a part
of art," and she has an impressive collection of antique pieces
always on display.
Among the Provincetown artists whose work Heller
shows are Charles
W. Hawthorne, Oliver Chaffee, Ross Moffett,
Milton Avery, Agnes Weinrich, and Blanche Lazzell. She also
represents the estates ot lrving Marantz. Marguerite and William
l'Engle. "You'd be surprised," she
asserts. "the
impact Provincetown art has. Provincetown art is coming
into its own,
due to more and more visibility
through museum shows," she explains.
Speaking of Provincetown art and
museum shows moves Heller easily
and enthusiastically onto the subject of the
Provincetown Art Association and
Museum's Founders of an Art Colony exhibition, which
she terms "a
fabulous show," explaining, "that
show is the heart of Provincetown
art."
Heller`s enthusiasm for art makes it clear
that this is far more than a business for her. "What l
do for pleasure is what I do for business," she says.
"When I take time off, I do the same thing as when
I'm working": that is, remaining in what
she calls “my element." From her description of her
“working" life,
it’s easy to see why she derives such pleasure
from it, and why she says, “I can’t imagine ever being
removed from art."
As the gallery is open year-round,
Heller encounters a great variety of people
who, knowledgeable or not, further fuel her
enthusiasm for her work. “In the off-season.
I get an awful lot of people who live here
in town or on the Cape” who don’t have time for
gallery hopping during the summer," she
says. “I meet people who have bought art since
they were kids. and some people who are just
beginning to relate to art.” She finds both
types equally interesting, principally because “it’s
important that art be in people's lives, even if their taste
isn't very evolved or isn`t my taste," she asserts, concluding, "at
least they're looking at
art."
The gallery's patrons seem
to have responded to Heller's welcoming attitude. “l've started
to get letters from customers thanking me," she
reveals with a tone of surprised pleasure
to her voice. "I've become friends with
my customers," she says simply. Heller
feels that this camaraderie stems in part from her
off-the-beaten-path location, which largely
ensures she will not get much just-passing-through
foot traffic."When people see the sign, because it's
not on Commercial Street, they have to want to come here."
"Julie Heller: Art is Her Life" -
by Michael McGuire - Provincetown Magazine - Sept 1989
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