"Windsor From Belle Isle," oil on canvas, 2004 `Manhattan From Long Island City," oil on canvas, 2004 Parallel Views Detroit native Neil Plotkin presents paintings of his hometown and adopted home in local gallery exhibit. SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to the Jewish News N eil Plotkin clearly believes there's no place like home even when home can be more than one place. In his case, there are two hometowns, and he captures them through an exhibit of his paintings that show realistic scenes of Detroit and New York City. Home — Paintings of Two Cities runs through Jan. 15 at P.F. Galleries in Clawson. Some images are parallel, part of a journey into the commonality of his birth and adopted towns. Other views stand alone to provide distinctive — and sometimes out-of-the-way — ele- ments of his favorite urban centers. "There is no way I could paint something without an emotional tie, and both of these cities have that," says Plotkin, 35, who traveled back to Michigan many times so that he could offer views of today, not the ones alive in his memory. "My intent was not to paint sites that served as parallels, but I came to realize that there were paral- lels." Plotkin, in complementary render- ings, shows large buildings with back- drops of water and sky He has depic- tions of the Belle Isle Bridge and the Brooklyn Bridge. With nature as the centerpiece, the artist features a Detroit lot filled only with plant life and a sim- ilar area seen from a passing train in New York. There are some 25 images in the exhibit, converging ideas in personal- ized ways. Taxis on 37th Street, for instance, presents a New York street with a line of parked cars covered with snow. Although the scene provides a glimpse into his adopted city, the idea of painting cars takes him back to the dominant business in the city of his birth. "I used to live on a street called Woodstock in the Green Acres subdivi- sion near Eight Mile and Woodward, and I remember cooling off in the summer with the water from a fire hydrant," says Plotkin, whose family moved to Franklin while he was still quite young. "I have a painting of a fire hydrant that recalls those times." Plotkin's artistic interests were explored early and in different media, but he emphasized photography and jewelry projects while attending Birmingham Groves High School. His observance of neighborhood sites, which eventually would join his sub- jects, intensified as he walked from home to attend bar mitzvah classes at Temple Beth El. Serious art studies were pursued at the University of Michigan, where Plotkin earned two bachelor's degrees, one in drawing and another in art his- "Lot 1 Off Atwater," oil on linen, 2004 "Taxis on 37th Street," oil on panel, 2004 tory. After attending the New York Academy of Art, he signed up for spe- cialized classes in London and Prague to experience more closely the 19th- century French academic methods. Back in New York City, his adopted home for the past eight years, Plotkin leased an apartment big enough to allow studio space. His paintings, mostly oils on canvas, come after com- pleting his day job as a design director at Bloomingdale's, where he develops private-label home products from candy to furniture. "I knew in high school that I would be a professional artist, but I did not want to focus on jewelry," says Plotkin, who painted scenes of miniature fig- ures and created new worlds with them long before high school. Although some of those will not be part of the Clawson exhibit, they will be available for sale. "While I was in Ann Arbor, I found that painting offered more expressive opportunities," the artist says. "I chose to focus on the figurative style because it's so universal and accessible, and I like to show the beauty of the reality in our surroundings. I think that abstract paintings speak to a smaller audience because they are more about the people painting them." Plotkin took hundreds of photos in Michigan as foundations for his series now on view. He brought in scenes of Belle Isle to let him mix nature among the industrial images. Plotkin, the son of Arthur Plotkin of Franklin and Eunice Ciaccio of San Diego, credits his sister, Leah Plotkin, of Ferndale, for helping to arrange his Clawson show. A friend of gallery .owner Lee Jackson, she introduced recent works completed by her brother. Although this is Plotkin's first exhibit in Michigan, his paintings have been on view in New York, Florida and Switzerland. His projects also have become part of private collections. "Having grown up in Detroit, I was happy to portray the city rebounding," says Plotkin, who is single and enjoys skiing and rollerblading when he decides to take brief periods of time away from his artistry. "When I return to Detroit, I find the new buildings very exciting in themselves and as subjects for my work. The Renaissance Center is shown in View of Detroit From Belle Isle and The Reflecting Pool." Li "Home — Paintings of Two Cities" runs through Jan. 15 at P.F. Galleries, 213 E. 14 Mile, Clawson. Gallery hours are 9:30 a.m.-7 p.m. Mondays-Fridays and 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturdays. (248) 989-8889. tza "Johnny Pump," oil on linen, 2004 "Con Edison Building 2," oil on panel, 2004 t 'Y 12/10 2004 55