Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

6.03.2011

Joshua Mosley (Associate Professor, Chair) in group exhibition at the Fabric Workshop and Museum, opening June 3rd, 6pm

Joshua Mosley, Associate Professor of Fine Arts and Acting Chair, Department of Fine Arts, has a special project included in the group exhibition Close at Hand, which opens June 3rd at The Fabric Workshop and Museum. The show includes Philadelphia artists from the museum’s permanent collection. Also in the show is our Professor and Chair Emeritus John Moore and former graduate photo faculty & senior critic Eileen Neff. Close at Hand is co-curated by Virgil Marti, along with Marion Boulton Stroud, Ruth Fine and Mary Anne Friel.


For more information about Close at Hand, visit

http://www.fabricworkshopandmuseum.org/exhibitions/close-at-hand.php


Close at Hand:

Philadelphia Artists from the Permanent Collection

June 3 – Late Summer 2011
Opening Reception: Friday, June 3, 6-8 pm


The Fabric Workshop and Museum

1214 Arch Street
Philadelphia, PA 19107-0922
[T] 215.561.8888
[F] 215.561.8887
info@fabricworkshopandmuseum.org

Hours

Monday through Friday, 10 am to 6 pm

Saturdays and Sundays, 12 pm to 5 pm

Admission

$3 for Adults
Free for Children under 12 and all FWM Members.
Group tours available by appointment.


4.11.2011

Jane Irish (MFA Program Coordinator) receives the Alfred and Trafford Klots International Program for Artists Residency


Jane Irish (MFA Program Coordinator) recently received the Alfred and Trafford Klots International Program for Artists Residency in
Léhon, France. The residency invites Irish to a five week program beginning May 15th, 2011. In addition it provides artists with notable resources includinng Painting French rooms, WWII landscapes and beautiful churches. In 1989, Isabel Klots founded the Artist Residency Program in Rochefort-en-Terre in memory of her father-in-law, Alfred Klots, and her husband, Trafford Klots, both artists, and of their hospitality to other artists. In 1995, Maryland Institute College of Art began to administer the program. The "Friends of Rochefort" was established in 1998 to support the program as its focus and reputation expanded. Through the generosity of the Friends and of Isabel Klots, MICA has established an endowment fund for the Residency Program. Through 2010, the Residency Program was housed on the grounds of the Château that Alfred Klots created in the early 20th century from medieval structures remaining on the site of an ancient castle destroyed during the French Revolution. Now, because the Château requires extensive renovation and is no longer habitable, MICA has moved the Residency Program to Léhon, another extraordinary medieval village in Brittany. Irish, a painter, received her MFA from Queens College, CUNY, and has exhibited in New York and Philadelphia since 1983. Irish’s ceramic work can be seen in the Institute of Contemporary Art’s exhibition, Dirt on Delight: Impulses Which Form Clay (Jan 16 - Mar 29, 2009), which travels to the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, MN. In 2002-03, Irish created a large-scale installation for the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts - her first solo museum exhibition, History Lesson. She is currently represented by Locks Gallery, Philadelphia.

In addition to receiving the Alfred and Trafford Klots International Program for Artists Residency, Irish has been named the Bill Co-Organizer of the Bill Walton exhibition opening at ICA in September 2011.

4.05.2011

Matt Neff (MFA '05 & Undergraduate Faculty) has print featured on cover of the Philagrafika Graphic Unconscious Exhibition Catalog


Matt Neff's (MFA '05) print with Óscar Muñoz was recently chosen to featured on the cover of the Philagrafika Graphic Unconscious Exhibition Catalog. The Graphic Unconscious catalog is a reference for the expanded field of printmaking featuring work by forty artists and collectives, working in a variety of media from traditional print to multi-disciplinary practices, featured in The Graphic Unconscious exhibition of the Philagrafika 2010 festival. Featured artists within the catalog and Philagrafika include Lisa Anne Auerbach, Eric Avery, Christiane Baumgartner, Erick Beltrán, Bitterkomix, Mark Bradford, Cannonball Press, Enrique Chagoya, Sue Coe, Julius Deutschbauer, Dexter Sinister, Dispatch, Drive By Press, Eloísa Cartonera, Art Hazelwood, Pablo Helguera, Orit Hofshi, Thomas Kilpper, Gunilla Klingberg, Virgil Marti, Paul Morrison, Óscar Muñoz, Pepón Osorio, Carl Pope, Qui Zhijie, Duke Riley, Betsabeé Romero, Francesc Ruiz, Jenny Schmid, Self Help Graphics & Art, Regina Silveira, Kiki Smith, Space 1026, Superflex, Swoon, Tabaimo, Temporary Services, Barthélémy Toguo, Tromarama, and YOUNG-HAE CHANG HEAVY INDUSTRIES.

2.08.2011

Jayson Scott Musson (MFA '11 candidate) featured on "ArtBlog Radio"


Jayson Scott Musson (MFA '11 candidate) was recently interviewed by "ArtBlog Radio". Profanity and insults are just distractions in Jayson Scott Musson’s posters, screeds and rants. The real message is the human comedy of rules, categories, identities, stereotypes, pretensions and social classes. In the "ArtBlog Radio" interview, Musson talks about trying to solve his problems as an artist and as an equal opportunity irritant to the politically correct. Jayson Musson currently has a solo show of his work at Marginal Utility February 4th - March 27th, 2011.


To view this feature, visit http://theartblog.org/2011/02/the-real-jayson-scott-musson-speaks-on-artblog-radio/

1.05.2011

Demetrius Oliver (MFA '04) featured in the Village Voice's "Best Art of 2010", December 29th


Demetrius Oliver (MFA '04) has been featured in the Village Voice's "Best Art of 2010" review. The Village Voice's intrepid art critics have been at it all year, striding from gallery to gallery, museum to museum and several other locations. After 12 months of gazing and pondering, and a fair amount of debate, three Voice writers selected their top five exhibits of 2010. R.C. Baker chose Oliver's "Jupiter" (The Highline project). Baker notes that, "With the city's most magical public space as a backdrop, this young multimedia artist combined a billboard depicting such mysterious tableaux as empty violin cases wedged into open windows with stargazing sessions and musicians jamming on Coltrane's 'Jupiter'."

To view the "Best Art of 2010" review, visit http://www.villagevoice.com/2010-12-29/art/the-best-art-of-2010/

To see more of Oliver's work, visit http://demetriusoliver.blogspot.com/

Joseph Erb (MFA '02) featured in New York Times for work with Apple, December 23rd, 2010


Joseph Erb (MFA '02) has been noted by the recent New York Times article on December 23rd, "Cherokee, Apple Partner to Put Language on iPhones". Joseph Erb had worked in sculpture and animation during his years at Penn and has recently been working with Apple so that they would include Cherokee on iPhone, iPad and iPod. This project started at Penn in 2001 when Erb produced a thesis animation in Cherokee, subtitled; towards saving the language.

The article can be accessed on the New York Times official site, http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2010/12/23/us/AP-US-iPhone-Cherokee-Language.html?_r=3&pagewanted=1&emc=eta1

It is also available on NPR's official site, http://www.npr.org/tablet/#story/?storyId=132277962

7.28.2010

At Penn, he left imprint as artist and as teacher




From the Philadelphia Inquirer:

Hitoshi Nakazato, 74, a painter and master printer who was on the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania for four decades, died Saturday, July 17, at Bellevue Hospital from head injuries suffered in a fall in his loft in New York City.

A native of Tokyo, Mr. Nakazato graduated from Tama Art University there in 1960. He earned a master's degree in art from the University of Wisconsin and a master's degree in fine art from Penn.

In 1970, Mr. Nakazato's work was selected for an exhibition of contemporary Japanese art at the Guggenheim Museum in New York. The next year, he was invited to join the faculty of the Graduate School of Fine Arts at Penn and was appointed its master printer.

"He called Philadelphia and the University of Pennsylvania the place of his intellectual awakening," said his wife, Sumiko Takeda Nakazato.

Mr. Nakazato established the Print Studio at Penn in 1979 and reinstated the major in printmaking that had been dropped years before. He wasn't given a lot of resources and was adept at finding funding and equipment, said a colleague, John Moore.

From 1995 to 1999, Mr. Nakazato was chairman of the Graduate School of Fine Arts. He retired from Penn in 2007.

"Hitoshi had such a long history with the department, he was its institutional memory," said Moore, who chaired the department from 2000 to 2009.

While attending to his academic duties, Mr. Nakazato pursued his art. In 1999, 13 of his brightly colored paintings were exhibited at the Ericson Gallery in Old City. He told an Inquirer reporter that his circle, square, and triangle forms were inspired by the art of Sengai, a Zen monk and artist whose work he had seen as a young man in Japan.

"I chose the three forms, created by man, not nature, in order to focus on the essential element of placement," he said. "Realistic images would only diffuse the tension."

In 2007, Inquirer art critic Edward Sozanski reviewed the artist's exhibit at the Arthur Ross Gallery at Penn. "Nakazato's prints tend to be bold and assertive, to the point where they burst off the wall," Sozanski wrote. "Some hang like banners from the ceiling. They imbue the large, high-ceiling space with a ceremonial or celebratory feeling. They make one feel energized."

"He displays a mastery of all the traditional graphic methods plus a few of his own," Sozanski added. "These include 'viscosity' color etchings, drypoint etchings, offset lithography, aquatints, monoprints, and a process he calls sand serigraphy, which produces a sandpaper-like surface."

Last year, the Pageant Soloveev gallery in Bella Vista exhibited Mr. Nakazato's work commemorating the bombing of Hiroshima. Though he was known as a colorist, he produced somber black-and-white works titled Black Rain for the show.

Mr. Nakazato's works are in collections in Japan, Israel, and the United States, including the National Gallery of Art in Washington, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

In June, an exhibit of more than 400 of his works opened in the Machida City Museum of Graphic Arts in Tokyo. A memorial for Mr. Nakazato will take place before the closing of the exhibit in August.

A celebration of his life will be held in September in New York City.

In addition to his wife, Mr. Nakazato is survived by a son, Gene; a daughter, Amy Filiaci; a brother; two sisters; two grandchildren; and his former wife, Anne Richter.

By Sally A. Downey of the Philadelphia Inquirer

http://www.philly.com/philly/obituaries/20100725_At_Penn__he_left_imprint_as_artist_and_as_teacher.html

1.12.2010

Jane Irish (MFA Program Coordinator) Awarded 2009 Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant


Jane Irish, the MFA Program Coordinator, has been awarded a 2009 Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters & Sculptors Grant.

The Painters & Sculptors Grant Program was established in 1993 to assist individual artists. The grants are given to acknowledge painters and sculptors creating work of exceptional quality.

The Foundation selected nominators nationwide dedicated to supporting artists who are under-recognized for their artistic achievements and whose careers would benefit from the grant. The candidates' images were viewed for consideration through an anonymous process by a jury panel, which convened in November at the office of the Joan Mitchell Foundation. Nominators and jurors include prominent visual artists, curators, and art educators.

Additional programs undertaken by the Foundation include free art classes for New York City youth, grants to MFA graduates to aid in their transition from academic to professional studio work, and support to painters and sculptors in the Gulf Coast area.

The Joan Mitchell Foundation was established in April 1993 as a not-for-profit corporation following the death of Joan Mitchell in October 1992. The Foundation strives to fulfill the ambitions of Joan Mitchell to assist the needs of contemporary artists and to demonstrate that painting and sculpture are significant cultural necessities.

Congratulations, Jane!!

For more information on the Joan Mitchell Foundation and its recipients, please visit www.joanmitchellfoundation.org

To see more of Jane's work, visit www.locksgallery.com/artists

11.18.2009

Matthew Richie (MFA Distinguished Senior Fellow) exhibition at Andrea Rosen, NYC, reviewed by Roberta Smith in the New York Times

Matthew Richie, Weep in Light, 2009

MATTHEW RITCHIE review by Roberta Smith
Published in the New York Times Art In Review section Nov. 12, 2009

Line Shot
Andrea Rosen Gallery
525 West 24th Street, Chelsea

Exhibition on view through Nov. 21, 2009

"It is hard to know if Matthew Ritchie is a genuine polymath or a painter with too many ideas for his own good. The canvases in his latest New York gallery show are some of the best of his career. They have lost the small mythological figures, scribbled equations and sky-chart compositions that once signaled obscure narratives. Instead their cosmic implications inhabit semi-abstract forms and light-rinsed colors, suggesting wheeling planets, meteors, toxic atmospheres and sun showers. “Weep in Light” and “Initial Series” take things a little further with fantastical Rorschach compositions that could be elegantly monstrous heads or crystal formations.

Mr. Ritchie’s narrative lives on in large-scale multimedia musical works like “The Long Count,” which was part of the New Wave Festival at the Brooklyn Academy of Music last month. Synthesizing various American creation myths, it was written and directed by Mr. Ritchie with wonderful music by Aaron and Bryce Dessner. Mr. Ritchie also provided a three-screen video whose images suggest rushing landscapes and aerial views that form the work’s highly effective backdrop.

A related video accompanied by music and text dominates one corner at Rosen. It is surrounded and bisected by lattice-like tangles of line drawn directly on the wall, so the rushing seems to be viewed through fancy goggles. Some of the ink-and-pencil drawings in a second gallery also have Rorschach-like symmetry, and despite the long text keeping them company are most interesting as studies for future paintings. When all is said and done it is still painting that would most benefit from Mr. Ritchie’s undivided attention.

The least appealing element in this show is three-dimensional: the lattice motif recurs on perforated polygonal sculptures that pile up unpleasantly at the entrance and sprawl about the gallery. Made of cast aluminum covered with black epoxy, they look like nothing so much as hip wrought-iron garden furniture." ROBERTA SMITH

See the review here: www.nytimes.com/2009/11/13/arts/design/13galleries.html

See Matthew Richie's website here: www.matthewritchie.com/

Matt Neff (MFA '05) spoke at The Print Center Gallery, Philadelphia, this week

Matt Neff, Pallbearer #4, 2008

Gallery Store Talk: Matt Neff

The Print Center Gallery Store artists speak about their approaches, techniques, subject matter and art collecting in an informal environment. Enjoy a 10% discount in the Gallery Store that day. FREE and open to the public.

Printmaker Matt Neff combines a modern sensibility with antiquarian subject matter. In addition to creating his own work, Neff runs Common Press at the University of Pennsylvania, publishing artists' books, posters and prints.

To see more of Matt's work visit: http://mattneffonline.com/

Find out more about the Common Press at Penn here: www.design.upenn.edu/commonpress/common_press_home.htm

Find out more about the Print Center: www.printcenter.org/pc_home.html

9.29.2009

Michael Brenson (MFA Senior Critic) a Panelist at the Phillips Collection Fourth Annual Symposium Sat., Oct 10


Michael Brenson is a Senior Critic in the Penn MFA program as well as an art historian and a writer. He will serve on the panel at the The Phillips Collection Center for the Study of Modern Art Fourth Annual Symposium on Saturday, October 10, 2009.

The symposium investigates the potential of art to raise awareness of social and cultural affairs, politics, economies, ecologies, and the human condition. Other topics to be addressed include different modes of civic engagement with art, from private and corporate collecting to government and federal involvement; the nature and purpose of collaborations among artists, patrons, art institutions and funding agencies; and collective responsibility towards art.

The Phillips Collection
1600 21st St., NW
Washington DC 20009
202-387-2151 x286
www.phillipscollection.org

The Center for the Study of Modern Art
Fourth Annual Symposium
Saturday, October 10, 2009 10:00am – 1:00pm
$15; Free for members
http://www.phillipscollection.org/docs/TEMP/CenterSymposium.pdf

9.06.2009

Tetsugo Hyakutake (MFA '09) Awarded 1st Place in Architecture at IPA Awards



Tetsugo Hyakutake (MFA '09) was awarded 1st place in Architecture in the International Photography Awards Competition for his project Post-Industrialization.

The 2009 International Photography Awards received nearly 18,000 submissions from 104 countries across the globe. The IPA is a sister foundation of the Lucie Foundation, where the top three winners are announced at the annual Lucie Awards gala ceremony. The Foundation's mission is to honor master photographers, to discover new and emerging talent and to promote the appreciation of photography. Since 2003, IPA has had the privilege and opportunity to acknowledge and recognize contemporary photographer's accomplishments in this specialized and highly visible competition.

For more information about the Photo Awards, visit www.photoawards.com

To see more of Tetsugo's work, visit www.tetsugohyakutake.com

8.28.2009

Matthew Ritchie named Distinguished Senior Fellow in Fine Arts


Artist Matthew Ritchie will join the MFA faculty at PennDesign this year as a Distinguished Senior Fellow. He will be teaching seminars and doing critiques, and we welcome him with great excitement.

The press release from Dean Taylor:

"It is with great pleasure that Joshua Mosley, Acting Chairman of Fine Arts at PennDesign, and I announce the appointment of Matthew Ritchie as Distinguished Senior Fellow at the University of Pennsylvania School of Design, effective July 1, 2009. Matthew will teach studio and seminar courses through the Department of Fine Arts.

An installation artist and painter, Matthew Ritchie integrates contemporary fabrication processes and innovative narrative forms to explore, as TIME magazine put it, “the unthinkable or not-yet-thought.” His work is respected internationally and has premiered in museums and galleries such as the Contemporary Art Museum, Houston, the Dallas Museum of Art, Mass MoCA, Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art, White Cube London, and Andrea Rosen Gallery, NY. In addition, his work has been curated for important international exhibitions including the biennials at Venice (in Architecture), the Whitney, Sydney, and São Paulo.

Matthew’s work is widely published, serving as the focus of eight monographs as well as an anthology of seven hybrid monographs/artist books titled Matthew Ritchie: Incomplete Projects 01-07. Over 50 catalogs have been published which include his work for both solo and group exhibitions, including such titles as Guggenheim Collection: 1940s to Now, Art 21: Art in the Twenty –First Century (PBS), and Drawing Now: Eight Propositions (Museum of Modern Art).

Prior to this appointment at PennDesign Matthew taught as an adjunct professor at Columbia University and the School of Visual Arts in New York, and he held most recently a studio professorship in the School of Architecture at Princeton University. Additionally, he has been a visiting artist at Yale University, Pratt Institute, Boston University, and Goldsmiths College of Art in London.

The breadth of Matthew Ritchie's work is a great fit with the broad interdisciplinary scope of the School’s mission. I know you will all join me and Joshua in welcoming him to Penn and the faculty of Fine Arts as Distinguished Senior Fellow."

To see more of Matthew's work, visit www.matthewritchie.com and www.andrearosengallery.com

8.25.2009

Ivanco Talevski (MFA '08) is mentioned in a review of an exhibition by the New York Times

Ivanco Talevski’s “Self Portrait” (2009)

Ivanco Talevski (MFA '08) was mentioned in an enthusiastic review of the exhibition, Up and Coming: New Printmakers Make Their Mark, currently on view at the Hunterdon Art Museum in Clinton, NJ. The show will be up until the 13th of Sept., 2009. The review was written by Benjamin Genocchio of the New York Times. Yay Ivanco!

By Invitation Only

By BENJAMIN GENOCCHIO
Published: August 21, 2009

"There is a welcome recent trend at regional museums in which exhibitions of work by nominated or invited emerging artists are taking the place of juried shows open to whomever pays the entry fee. This phenomenon has led to better quality control by curators and ultimately much better exhibitions.

The Hunterdon Art Museum is treading this path, replacing its annual juried print exhibition with an invitational show of prints by M.F.A. candidates and recent graduates from East Coast art schools. Titled “Up and Coming: New Printmakers Make Their Mark,” it is one of the best contemporary print shows I have seen in a long time.

To choose the artists, the museum’s curator, Mary Birmingham, asked 11 art schools to nominate their best up-and-coming printmakers, from which she selected 22 artists. Some work with traditional printmaking techniques, but over all the accent is clearly on artists experimenting with the print medium.

If the majority of exhibitors have anything in common, it is probably that they tend to look beyond conventional printmaking materials and techniques, incorporating elements like painting, drawing, sculpture and collage. One artist, Tara Cooper, has even combined printmaking with new technology to create a 10-minute animation.

Nearly all the artists are first rate, and I suspect that several will go on to have long and productive careers...

There are artists here working in more traditional media, but this does not mean their art is in any way conventional or boring. Ivanco Talevski makes strikingly unusual and beautiful etchings of figures, among them “Self Portrait” (2009), which shows him in profile wearing a fanciful hat; it combines elements of a village folk costume from his native Macedonia and an ancient helmet worn backward...

Nothing about this show is brisk or businesslike, qualities all too common in juried exhibitions. Chalk it up to the exuberance or the optimism of youth, but for many of the participants in this show, being an artist appears to be the most important thing in the world. That is a quality worth fostering."

“Up and Coming: New Printmakers Make Their Mark,” Hunterdon Art Museum, 7 Lower Center Street, Clinton, through Sept. 13, 2009.

Read the full article here: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/23/nyregion/

For more info on the exhibition see: www.hunterdonartmuseum.org

To see more of Ivanco's work see: http://www.ivancotalevski.com/

Nsenga Knight (MFA '10) mentioned in review of MoCADA exhibition in the New York Times

Nsenga Knight (MFA '10) was mentioned in a review of the exhibition that is currently on view at the Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts, Perspectives: Art, Women and Islam. The review was written by the great Holland Cotter in the Art In Review Section of the New York Times. Go Nsenga!! The exhibition will be on view until Sept. 13th, 2009. Here is an excerpt of the review:

"The Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts, more easily called Mocada, is a New York story, by now often told. The museum started in a walk-up office space in a church house in Bedford-Stuyvesant. It now has its own space, small but sharp. An adjacent empty lot is begging for future expansion.

None of this would mean much if the exhibitions weren’t good, but for the most part they are. The current one, “Perspectives: Art, Women and Islam,” is a collaboration with the Museum for African Art, which is completing its own new permanent home in Manhattan. There are five artists, all women, all in their 20s or early 30s, whose relationship to Islam is as varied and diffuse as the term itself....

[W]illing devotion is the subject of videos by the New York artist Nsenga Knight, who for several years has been interviewing Muslim women in Brooklyn. At least two of the three subjects included in the Mocada show converted to the Nation of Islam from Christianity in the civil rights era. One of them speaks plainly but eloquently of that moment of change in her life and weeps when recalling it. Obviously her perspective on Islam is quite different from that of the younger Ms. Bouabdellah, but you wonder whether in the end the impact on both is not equally strong." HOLLAND COTTER

Read the full post here: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/21/arts/design

For more info on the exhibition see: http://mocada.org/

6.16.2009

Marc Blumthal (MFA '10) and Peter Schenck (MFA '09) accepted to Vox Populi's annual juried exhibition, VOX V


(Marc Blumthal, Self-Portrait of Me As A Home, above)


(Peter Schenck, Threshold Guardian, below)

See Vox's website for information on exhibition dates: http://www.voxpopuligallery.org

VOX POPULI
319 North 11th Street
3rd Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19107

See more of Marc and Peter's work at their websites:

http://marcedmundblumthal.blogspot.com/

http://peterschenck.com/

6.15.2009

Cecelia Post, Kurt Freyer, Nicolas McMahon, and Elizabeth Hoy (all MFA '09) highlighted in a review of our MFA show by Libby and Roberta of THEARTBLOG


(to read the post, click on image for bigger view)

Roberta Fallon and Libby Rosof reviewed the Penn MFA exhibition at Crane Arts on their famed ARTBLOG website this week. They had a great take on the whole exhibition and highlighted four of their favorite graduating artists from the Penn MFA program.

To see the full artblog post on individual students from the end of the year shows go to: http://theartblog.org/2009/06/student-post-part-2/

For a synthesis of artblog's thoughts on end of the year shows at Philly colleges (including Penn) see: http://theartblog.org/2009/06/student-explosion-of-navel-gazing-survivalism-and-home-sweet-home/

5.06.2009

Jamal Cyrus (MFA '08) solo show at The Kitchen reviewed by Karen Rosenberg in the NY Times Art section!

JAMAL CYRUS

Winners Have Yet to Be Announced

The Kitchen (through Saturday)

An artist collaborative eases the pressure of developing new ideas, but it can also be a crutch. As a member of Otabenga Jones & Associates, a Houston group of young African-American artists who base their fictional movements and identities on 1960s radicals, Jamal Cyrus has shown at the Whitney and the Menil Collection. His own voice, as seen in his first New York solo show, is still being developed.

The crux of the show is an untitled video, inspired by Palmer Hayden’s Social Realist canvas “The Janitor Who Paints,” that takes the form of surveillance footage. It shows a maintenance worker engaged in a performative drawing with his broom and a pile of graphite dust. Mr. Hayden’s heroic subject, who works on his art in the off hours as his adoring wife, baby and cat look on, becomes a moodier, more elusive figure in Mr. Cyrus’s portrayal. He circles the room, spreading the dust into a galactic swirl and then erasing it with crosswise strokes.

In several seemingly unrelated sculptures, Mr. Cyrus modifies musical instruments. In “New Ghosts,” he plasters a drum kit into a gallery wall; in “Conga Bomba,” he fashions trumpet brass into an ax blade. “Piece of the Sargasso Sea,” another drum kit, is festooned with coral, seaweed, incense sticks and a graphic pattern of black-and-white safety tape. These works owe a lot to David Hammons’s sardonic street art and to Jim Lambie’s punk-rock assemblages.

A cryptic set of graphite-dust drawings (bearing no resemblance to the janitor’s) round out the show. They seem to reproduce blacked-out documents, with an ironic-poetic twist: the streaky graphite makes precision and control impossible.

Mr. Cyrus needs to clarify his intentions and distance himself from his idols (Mr. Hammons in particular). Indulging his material attraction to graphite dust, in the drawings and video, is a start. KAREN ROSENBERG

See the article online: www.nytimes.com/2009/05/01/arts/design/

See the gallery website: www.thekitchen.org/

4.21.2009

Terry Adkins is Awarded the Rome Prize! Congratulations!


Sculpture Professor Terry Adkins has been awarded the prestigious 2009 Rome Prize in visual arts. Terry is among 25 visual artists and scholars who will spend a year working at the American Academy in Rome.

Terry's proposed project, Flumen Orationis, Latin for River of Speech, will highlight African influence in Rome. Three early popes came from North Africa. “In my work, I try to pick historically transformative figures who are little known,” Adkins said. “In Rome, I want to bring to light their presence there and revisit their legacy. “

The American Academy in Rome was established in 1894. The Rome Prize is awarded to artists and scholars through a national competition. Rome Prize fellowships are designed for emerging artists and for scholars in the early or middle stages of their careers. Fellowship winners come to Rome to refine and expand their own professional, artistic or scholarly aptitudes, drawing on their colleagues' erudition and experience, as well as on the inestimable resources of the Italian capital, Europe and the Mediterranean. The Academy's Rome Prize winners, the core of a residential community of up to 100 people at any given time, are at the center of a multi-disciplinary environment, where artists and scholars are encouraged to work collegially within and across disciplines.

4.10.2009

Alexi Worth (MFA Senior Critic) awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship...Congratulations!

Model in Shadow, 2008

Alexi Worth, Artist, Brooklyn, New York; Senior Critic, Graduate School of Fine Arts, University of Pennsylvania: Painting.

From the Guggenheim press release:
"Edward Hirsch, the president of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, announced today that in its eighty-fifth annual competition for the United States and Canada the Foundation has awarded 180 Fellowships to artists, scientists, and scholars. The successful candidates were chosen from a group of almost 3,000 applicants.

Guggenheim Fellows are appointed on the basis of stellar achievement and exceptional promise for continued accomplishment. One of the hallmarks of the Guggenheim Fellowship program is the diversity of its Fellows. The ages of this year's Fellows range from twenty-nine to seventy; their residences span the world, from Waipahu, Hawaii, to New York City and from Toronto to Glasgow; and their Fellowship projects will carry them to every continent..."

To learn more about the Guggenheim Foundation fellowships, see their website: http://www.gf.org/news-events/