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

7.13.2010

Tetsugo Hyakutake (MFA '09) in Group Exhibition at Ramis Barquet, July 8th - August 21st

Tetsugo Hyakutake (MFA '09) has work in the group exhibition titled "Imperial Video" at Ramis Barquet Gallery in Chelsea, NYC. Following last summer’s East Coast Video, "Imperial Video" brings together the work of five artists from five nations: England, Germany, Japan, Mexico and Puerto Rico. United by themes of nationality and national identity, the works included explore modes of cultural assimilation and imperialism in an era of mass media and global communication. Engaged in notions of social legacy and consequence, these are simultaneously contemporary portraits of places and people. Artists featured aside Tetsugo include Karlo Andrei Ibarra, Mauricio Alejo, Rob Carter and Wieland Speck.

Exhibition Dates: Thursday, July 8th - Saturday, August 21st
Gallery Hours: 10:00am - 6:00pm (closed on Sundays and Holidays)

Ramis Baquet Gallery
532 W 24th Street
New York, NY 10011
(212) 675-3421
http://www.ramisbarquet.com/

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

7.08.2010

MFA '10 Alumni in Group Exhibition at Solamon Contemporary, NYC, Opening July 15th 6-9pm


Graduates from the Penn Design's class of 2010 will be featured in an upcoming exhibition titled "Notes on Induction: Selected work from the University of Pennsylvania MFA Program" at Solamon Contemporary Gallery, NYC. "From instances come principles." The artists featured will present different variations on what it means to be creating in the present. Artists include Tay Cha, Susan Fang, Matt Krawcheck, Chris Lawrence, Jiwon Lee, Maria Rajewski, Heather Ramsdale, Ramon Urenia, Leigh Van Duzer, Christie Whisman, Nathan Thomas Wilson, and Cay Yoon.



Opening Reception: Thursday, July 15th 6:00 - 9:00pm
Exhibition Dates: Thursday, July 15th - Saturday, August 14th

Salomon Contemporary, NYC
526 West 26th Street
#519
New York, NY 10001
http://www.salomoncontemporary.com/

Gallery Hours: Wednesday - Saturday, 12:00 – 6:00pm or by appointment

To see more regarding Penn Design, visit, http://www.design.upenn.edu/fine-arts/exhibitions

7.05.2010

Susan Fang (MFA '10) in exhibition at the Bronx Art Space, Opening July 7th, 6pm


Susan Fang (MFA '10) will be in a group exhibition titled, (Sonic) Fest & Synthetic Zero at the Bronx Art Space, NYC. The event will feature performance, experimental film and works of art by various contemporary artists. The work has been curated by (Sonik) and Synthetic Zero. This year, Linda Cunningham, Mitsu Hadeishi and a group of artists, curators and arts organizations have collaborated to create a series of events, shows, experimental film, performance, music and readings in the space. The first event for this exhibition was held July 3rd with the next scheduled for this week.




Exhibition Dates: Saturday, July 3rd - Saturday, July 17th
Exhibition Hours: Fridays & Saturdays, 2:00 - 7:00pm

Bronx Art Space
305 E. 140th Street #1A
Bronx, NY 10454
http://www.bronxartspace.com/


To see more of Susan's work, visit http://susanfang.com/

7.01.2010

Joshua Mosley (Associate Professor/Acting Chair) in "Histories in Motion" at the PMA, June 29th - July 25th

Joshua Mosley, Associate Professor and Acting Chair, has work titled International, 2010 in the Philadelphia Museum of Art's Live Cinema exhibition "Histories in Motion". Live Cinema is a series of programs in the film gallery of the Museum that explores the production of single-channel video and film work by a diverse group of local, national, and international artists. Mosley's work will follow the installments of Jennifer Levonian and Martha Colburn's. "Histories in Motion" presents work that infuses with the artists personal reflections on contemporary life and its complex dynamics. Characterized by a critical engagement with the world, their films are representative of a generation for whom the moving image and its cinematic qualities have become the prevailing form of expression. The exhibition is made possible by The Women's Committee of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Edna W. Andrade Fund of The Philadelphia Foundation, and the Mondriaan Foundation, Amsterdam. It has been curated by Adelina Vlas, Assistant Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art. For more information, visit http://www.philamuseum.org/exhibitions/399.html?page=1.

Exhibition Dates: Tuesday, June 29th - Sunday, July 25th

In Dialogue: Joshua Mosley and Adelina Vlas: Friday, July 9th, 6:30 pm

The Philadelphia Museum of Art
26th Street, Benjamin Franklin Parkway
Philadelphia, PA 19130
215-763-8100
http://www.philamuseum.org/

Location: Galleries 178 & 179, 1st Floor

To see more of Mosley's work, visit http://joshuamosley.com/.

6.24.2010

Thomas Isaac (MFA '06) in Temporalia, Art & Music Show at the Salt Space, Opening June 25th, 7pm


Thomas Isaac (MFA '06) will have work at the Salt Space, NYC for the art and music show titled Temperalia. Isaac will present his new rhythmic-ultra, plastic-tribal-color-beat video, in this group exhibition curated by Yuko Torihara and Jesse Peterson.





Other artists and performers include Davide Balula, Miho Hatori's New Optimism, Hisham Bharoocha, Mai Ueda + Pete Drungle + Brian Close, Hanna Alvgren + Jose Vargas, Yuko Torihara, Francois Nnang and Hanna Sandin.

Exhibition Date: Friday, June 25th, 7:00pm

The Salt Space
1160 Broadway @ 27th Street
New York, New York
http://www.saltartspace.org/

To See more of Thomas' work, visit http://www.isaaccaasi.com/

6.22.2010

Emilie Selden (MFA '09) in Exhibition at After Dark Projects, Opening Thurs. July 8, 8pm


Emilie Selden (MFA '09) has work in an exhibition titled Piles at a pop-up gallery called After Dark Projects, opening Thursday, July 8 from 8:00-11:00pm. Her piece is a new work titled Like Butter Played Toast.

Opening Reception: Thursday, July 8, 8:00 - 11:00pm
Exhibition Dates: July 8 - 10, 2010

After Dark Projects
548 W. 28th Street
New York, NY 10001
http://adprojects.org/index.html

To see more of Emilie's work, visit http://emilieselden.com/

6.20.2010

Tadashi Moriyama and Sinae Lee (both MFA '06) in Exhibition at Arario Gallery, NY, Opening, Thurs, July 1, 6-8pm


Tadashi Moriyama and Sinae Lee (both MFA '06) will have work exhibited at Arario Gallery, NY for the show titled Irrelevant: Local Emerging Asian Artists Who Don’t Make Work About Being Asian, an ambitious survey exhibition featuring the work of nearly fifty artists curated by Joann Kim and Lesley Sheng. Irrelevant will present a surging flow of creativity where artists actively engage in their practice, exploring the absurd within everyday experience, the use and misuse of materials both new and found, and the curiosity of defining artistic practice. A major focus of this exhibition is to formulate a community, building a foundation for artists to gather and exchange ideas and experiences. There is an endless array of amazing underrepresented artists in NY, thriving yet unheard. Through this exhibition we get to see artists engaging with their given role and their interests within a particular medium, exploring on both conceptual and idealistic levels with painting, photography, performance, sculpture and installation.

Opening Reception: Thursday, July 1, 6:00 - 8:00pm
Exhibition Runs: July 1 - August 6, 2010

To see more of Tadashi Moriyama or Sinae Lee's work, visit http://tadashimoriyama.com/ and http://www.sinaelee.org/.

Arario Gallery
521 West 25th Street
New York, NY 10001
212-206-2760
http://www.arariogallery.com/
Gallery Hours: M - F, 10:00 - 6:00pm

Antonio McAfee (MFA '09) in Exquisite Corpse Exhibition at Civilian Art Projects, Opening Thurs, June 24, 8pm


Antonio McAfee, 6:30, 2007

Antonio McAfee (MFA '09) has work in an exhibition titled Exquisite Corpse at Civilian Art Projects, opening Thursday, June 24. Exquisite Corpse is a collaborative photo project curated by Corcoran Photography alums Jessica Cebra, Dave Gustine, and Marissa Long.

Invented by Surrealists in 1925, the Exquisite Corpse method involves a group of collaborators assembling a collection of words or images - each collaborator adds to a composition in sequence, either by following a rule or by being allowed to see only the end of what the previous person has contributed. The technique is similar to an old parlour game called "Consequences" in which players write in turn on a sheet of paper, fold it to conceal part of the writing, and then pass it on to the next player for further contribution.

While the Exquisite Corpse being exhibited at Civilian Art Projects utilizes the method most commonly seen in the writing exercise, words have been substituted here with images. The project began with each of the three co-curators initiating a "set" or "sentence" of images with his or her own photograph. Each of these photographs was then passed on to another photographer, who created a new image in response to the one he or she had received. That new image then served as inspiration for the next photographer, and so on. The project now includes 28 photographers and three sets of images, each of which present both recognizable connections and surprising juxtapositions, and illustrate the responsive, dreamlike aesthetic that makes the exquisite corpse methodology so exquisite.

Opening Reception: Thursday, June 24, 8:00 - 11:00pm
Exhibition Runs: June 24 - July 3, 2010

The Exquisite Corpse photographers:

Ken Ashton, Page Carr, Jessica Cebra, Jenn DePalma, Ginger Farnham, Dave Gustine, Avi Gupta, Kyoko Hamada, Whitney Hubbs, Paul Jeffreys, Marissa Long, Seth Lower, Michael Lease, Kate MacDonnell, Antonio McAffee, Andy McMillan, Ed Panar, Laurel Ptak, Eric Powell, Ahndraya Parlato, Cory Riggle, Paul Schiek, Mike Terzano, Zach Storm, Sarah Small, Asha Schecter, Sarah Wilmer & Jason Zimmerman.

Civilian Art Projects
1019 7th Street NW
Washington DC 20004
info@civilianartprojects.com
202-607-3804
www.civilianartprojects.com/exhibitions/excorpse/

Joshua Mosley (MFA Professor, Acting Chair) Exhibits Work in SITE Santa Fe Biennial, Opening June 20


Joshua Mosley, A Vue Video Still, 2004

Joshua Mosley (MFA Professor, Acting Chair) is participating in SITE Santa Fe's Eighth International Biennial titled The Dissolve. The exhibition opens today, June 20, and will be on view until January 2, 2011.

SITE Santa Fe's 2010 Bienniual will explore a striking development in contemporary art. Emerging and established artists working in many mediums, from painting and sculpture to film and mixed-media installation, have mined techniques of early animation and moving image technologies to create a hybrid practice where the homespun meets the high-tech. The Biennial's title, The Dissolve, describes the essential quality of this new sensibility merging with the old.


Exhibition Dates:
June 20, 2010 - January 2, 2011

SITE Santa Fe
1606 Paseo de Peralta
Santa Fe, NM 87501
505-989-1199
info@sitesantafe.org
www.sitesantafe.org/index.html

For information about The Dissolve, visit http://thedissolve.net/

To see more of Joshua's work, visit http://joshuamosley.com/

6.18.2010

Travis Heck (MFA '08) is Gallery Director of new Philadelphia exhibition space


Travis Heck (MFA '08) is the Gallery Director of the new exhibition space in Philadelphia, Jolie Laide. The gallery aims to provide an innovative forum for contemporary art, presenting work by largely unseen artists or early career artists exhibiting in the US and abroad. As an exhibition space, Jolie Laide advocates progress, new ideas, and trends in contemporary art by actively pursuing young artists and provoking new work in an effort to support innovation in contemporary art.

Among the gallery's featured artists is Jacolby Satterwhite (MFA '10). Other artists include Mike Andrews, Kevin Baker, Tom Costa, Joel Dean, Austin Eddy, Jordan Griska, Robert Horvath, Andrew Holmquist, Fabienne Lassere, Easton Miller, and Leslie Smith 3.

Jolie Laide will hold its first opening on Friday, July 2nd, 6:00 - 9:00pm. The opening will feature work by Tom Costa, Kevin Baker and Austin Eddy.

Jolie Laide
224 N. Juniper Street
Philadelphia, PA 19107
http://www.jolielaide.com/gallery/home.html

6.16.2010

Susan Fang (MFA '10) and Martha Rich (MFA '11) in Group Exhibition at Giant Robot, NYC, Opening June 19th, 6:30pm


Susan Fang (MFA '10) and Martha Rich (MFA '11) will have work in "Post-It V: Art on Sticky Notes", a group exhibition at Giant Robot, New York. Curated by artists Mark Todd and Esther Pearl, the exhibition is unique featuring a "Cash and Carry" setting where visitors are encouraged to view, purchase and walk away with any work of interest. The exhibition features roughly 1,000 works by noted contributors for only 20$.

Opening Reception: Saturday, June 19, 6:30 - 10:00pm
Exhibition Dates: June 19 - July 7

Giant Robot New York
437 e. 9th Street (between Ave A and 1st Ave)
New York, NY 10009
www.grny.net

To see more of Susan Fang or Martha Rich's work, visit http://susanfang.com/index.html and http://www.martharich.com/

6.15.2010

Tia-Simone Gardner (MFA '09) in ISP Exhibit at Art In General, Until June 26


Tia-Simone Gardner (MFA '09) completed the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program in 2010 and is having an studio program exhibit at Art in General.

The Independent Study Program (ISP) consists of three interrelated parts: Studio Program, Curatorial Program and Critical Studies Program. The ISP provides a setting within which students pursuing art practice, curatorial work, art historical scholarship, and critical writing engage in ongoing discussions and debates that examine the historical, social, and intellectual conditions of artistic production. The program encourages the theoretical and critical study of the practices, institutions, and discourses that constitute the field of culture.

The other participating artists include:
Malin Arnell
Julia Brown
Michael Cataldi
Brennan Gerard
Johanna Gustavsson
John Houck
David Kelley
Ryan Kelly
Marty Kirchner
Chelsea Knight
Hans Kuzmich
Jens Maier-Rothe
Gabriel Martinez
Mary Simpson
Danna Vajda

Art in General
79 Walker Street
New York NY 10013
212-219-0473
info@artingeneral.org
www.artingeneral.org/projects/500

For more information about the ISP, visit http://whitney.org/Research/ISP

6.12.2010

Sinea Lee (MFA'06) in Exhibition at Edge Gallery, Opening Friday, July 18th


Sinea Lee (MFA '06) has work in "Private Property", a two-person exhibition at EDGE Gallery. Lee is an artist working with photography, video, installation and drawings. The work will be featured aside artist, Susanne Mitchell. EDGE Gallery is a contemporary, non-profit space outside the domain of commercial art venues that encourages the individuality and artistic vision of its members.

Exhibition Dates: Friday, June 18th - Sunday, July 11th



EDGE Gallery
3658 Navajo Street
Denver, CO 80211
303.477.7173
http://www.edgeart.org/

To see more of Sinea's work, visit http://www.sinaelee.org/

6.04.2010

Tamara Suber (MFA '11) in Exhibition at Trust Gallery, Opening June 6th, 6pm


Tamara Suber (MFA '11) has work in Made in America. The exhibition at Trust Gallery (formerly FUEL) features a showcase of 40 artists from the Philadelphia region; the "City of Brotherly Love". Material ranges from drawings and paintings with small scale sculptural installation as well. The show works to capture a moment as several of the city’s most active groups and studios are involved, and the emphasis is surely on Philadelphia’s young artist population. The event is produced by McJawn and Prequency.

Opening Reception: Friday, June 4th, 6:00 - 11:00pm
Exhibition Dates: June 4th - July 31st

Trust Gallery
249 Arch Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106
(215) 592-8400
http://www.phillyartgalleries.com/gallery_fuel.htm

5.27.2010

Elizabeth Hoy (MFA '09) has work on Phoned-In, BOMB Blog


Elizabeth Hoy, You'd Be Home By Now, 2009

Elizabeth Hoy's (MFA '09) piece You'd Be Home By Now is the visual accompaniment to Bomb Magazine's Phoned-In poetry reading with Zachary Schomburg. Phoned-In is a series of recorded conversations and poetry readings by authors, curated by Luke Degnan.

Look and listen here: http://bombsite.powweb.com/?p=9585

Rebecca Sargent (MFA '09) has work on Phoned-In, BOMB Blog


Rebecca Sargent, Faded Waterslide, 2009

Rebecca Sargent's (MFA '09) piece Faded Waterslide is the visual accompaniment to Bomb Magazine's Phoned-In poetry reading with James Shea. Phoned-In is a series of recorded conversations and poetry readings by authors, curated by Luke Degnan.

Look and listen here: http://bombsite.powweb.com/?p=9992

Emilie Selden (MFA '09) has work on Phoned-In, BOMB Blog


Emilie Selden, Fenced In, 2008

Emilie Selden's (MFA '09) piece Fenced In is the visual accompaniment to Bomb Magazine's Phoned-In poetry reading with Mark Leidner. Phoned-In is a series of recorded conversations and poetry readings by authors, curated by Luke Degnan.

Look and listen here: http://bombsite.powweb.com/?p=10548

5.21.2010

Heather Ramsdale and Christie Whisman (both MFA '10) in Exhibition Curated by Catherine Betz (MFA '07) Opening Sun, May 23, 3:15pm


Heather Ramsdale and Christie Whisman, both MFA '10, have work included in 5 Into 1, the annual exhibit hosted by Moore College of Art and organized by Philadelphia Sculptors. The exhibition features work by senior and graduate students at Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Tyler School of Art, University of Pennsylvania, The University of the Arts, and Moore College of Art & Design. This year, the exhibition is curated by Catherine Martens Betz, a graduate of Penn with an MFA in sculpture and a 5 into 1 participant in 2007.

There will be a presentation on public art by Julia Guerrero, Director of the Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority Fine Arts Program on Sunday before the reception from 1:30 – 2:45 pm.

Opening Reception: Sunday, May 23, 3:15-5:30pm
Exhibition Dates: May 22 - June 19, 2010

Moore College of Art & Design
Wilson Gallery
20th Street and The Parkway
Philadelphia, PA 19103
http://moore.edu/events_calendar/list/2

To see more of Heather's work, visit www.heatherramsdale.com

5.19.2010

Tadashi Moriyama (MFA '06) in Exhibition at Luis de Jesus LA, Opening May 22, 5pm


Tadashi Moriyama

Tadashi Moriyama (MFA '06) will exhibit work at Luis de Jesus Los Angeles in a show titled Group Show. The exhibit opens Saturday May 22 at 5pm. The other participating artists are Christopher Barnard, Margie Livingston, Christopher Russell, Jason Sherry, and William Staples. The exhibition runs concurrent with Lael Corbin: "Greetings from Earth", in the main gallery.

Tadashi Moriyama was born in Tokyo and raised in Japan and the United States. Moriyama attended Tyler School of Art (BA 2003) and the University of Pennsylvania (MFA 2006). His intricately detailed aerial views of post-apocalyptic landscapes explore themes of creation and subsequent collapse of cities, memories, space and time, where technology and digital media function as manipulators and instigators of fear, death and hopeful renewal. Inspired and influenced by Buddhist and Hindu miniature painting, Italian Renaissance painting, as well as personal experiences, his overcrowded, over-systematized metropolises sprout consumptive organs, and breeding buildings evolve into chaotic knots of life-sustaining connective tissue. This will be Tadashi’s first exhibition with Luis De Jesus Los Angeles. He lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.

Opening Reception: May 22, 5:00 - 8:00pm
Exhibition Dates: May 22 - June 26, 2010

To read more about the show, view www.luisdejesus.com/news

LUIS DE JESUS LOS ANGELES
2525 MICHIGAN AVENUE
BERGAMOT STATION F2
SANTA MONICA, CA 90404
www.luisdejesus.com/exhib_dtl

To see more of Tadashi's work, visit http://tadashimoriyama.com/

5.15.2010

Marc Blumthal (MFA '10) in Exhibition at International Print Center, Opening Thurs May 27


Marc Blumthal (MFA '10) has work in New Prints 2010/Spring, the thirty-fifth presentation of International Print Center New York (IPCNY)'s New Prints Program. The show consists of sixty-seven pieces by sixty-seven emerging to established artists, selected from a pool of nearly 2,200 submissions. The exhibition represents a cross-section of some of the most exceptional printmaking today while continuing IPCNY’s commitment to provide an ongoing exhibition venue for contemporary prints and a major source of information about artists working in the medium. It was curated by Philip Pearlstein.

Opening Reception: Thursday, May 27, 6:00 - 8:00pm
Exhibition Dates: May 18 - June 26, 2010

International Print Center New York
526 West 26th Street, Room 824
New York, NY 10001
212-989-5090
www.ipcny.org

To see more of Marc's work, visit www.marcblumthal.com

5.06.2010

Jacolby Satterwhite (MFA '10) in Event at the Kitchen, June 23 - 24


Robert Melee's Talent Show

Artist Robert Melee returns as the curator of another evening of dance, performance art, music, and video. Organized as an evening of introductions between artists that Melee admires, each artist presents a short performance or video that unfolds in a talent show format on a stage set of Melee’s own design. Melee also adds to the showcase with the presentation of a new performance.

Participating artists include: Blanko + Noiry, Gerald Casel, Erin Dunn, Jacolby Satterwhite, Bruce LaBruce, Austin McCormick, Mirror Mirror, Marilyn Minter, Tom Melee, and Robert Melee.

This program is made possible with public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs and the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency.

Exhibition Dates: June 23 - 24, 2010, 8pm

The Kitchen
512 West 19th Street
New York, NY 10011
(212) 255-5793
http://www.thekitchen.org/

University of Pennsylvania 2010 MFA Thesis Exhibition!! Opening Thurs. May 13


The University of Pennsylvania MFA Class of 2010 invites you to our MFA Thesis Exhibition opening Thursday, May 13 from 6:00-9:00pm.

The participating artists are Marc Blumthal, Tay Cha, Susan Fang, Nsenga Knight, Matthew Krawcheck, Chris Lawrence, Jiwon Lee, Liby Limoso, Kyle LoPinto, Joe Ovelman, Maria Rajewski, Heather Ramsdale, Jacolby Satterwhite, Ramon Urenia, Leigh Van Duzer, Christie Whisman, Nathan Thomas Wilson, and Cay Yoon.

Opening Reception: Thursday, May 13th 6 – 9pm
Exhibition Dates: May 13th – 30th, 2010

Ice Box Project Space
Crane Arts Building
1400 North American Street
Philadelphia, PA 19122
www.pennexhibitions.com
www.design.upenn.edu

Pernot Hudson (MFA '06) and Ivanco Talevski (MFA '08) in Exhibition Opening Fri. May 7, 6pm


Pernot Hudson (MFA '06) and Ivanco Talevski (MFA '08) have work in a three-person exhibition titled I don't think we can do this any longer, opening Friday, May 7 from 6 - 10pm. The third participating artist is Christine Fenwick.

Opening Reception: Friday, May 7, 6:00 - 10:00pm

319 North 11th Street
Second Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19107

To see more of Pernot's work, visit www.pernothudson.com

To see more of Ivanco's work, visit www.ivancotalevski.com

5.05.2010

Joshua Mosley (MFA Professor of Animation and Acting Chair) Has Work Exhibited at Philadelphia Art Museum


Joshua Mosley, International (Animation Still), 2010

Live Cinema/Histories in Motion presents a program of animated films by three young artists for whom the moving image and its cinematic qualities have become the prevailing form of expression. Philadelphia-based Jennifer Levonian and Joshua Mosley, along with Martha Colburn, originally from Pennsylvania and based in New York and Amsterdam, employ animation to examine both personal and communal experience. Combining paper cut-outs, collages, drawings, watercolors, and sculptures with stop-action techniques and computer technology, their animated films employ cinematic devices to create stories that reflect a range of experience, from daily interaction to ideological debates. Each artist’s animation and accompanying artworks will be on view for approximately one month.

Joshua Mosley’s International (2010) focuses on two historical figures, the American builder and philanthropist George Brown and Austrian economist Friedrich Hayek. Using photographs of pivotal places in the lives of the two protagonists, Mosley constructs an imaginary conversation that identifies Brown and Hayek’s perspectives on how a nation’s economic and social order should ideally evolve. International will be on view June 29 – July 25, 2010, together with a sculpture installation by Mosley.

Joshua will also give an artist's talk on Friday, July 9 called In Dialogue: Joshua Mosley and Adelina Vlas.

Exhibition Dates:
June 29 - July 25, 2010
Artist Talk: 6:30pm, Friday, July 9, 2010, Van Pelt Auditorium

Philadelphia Art Museum
26th Street and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway
Philadelphia, PA 19130
www.philamuseum.org/exhibitions/399.html

To see more of Joshua's work, visit http://joshuamosley.com/

Brent Wahl (MFA '06 and Fine Arts Lecturer) In Group Exhibition at Tate Modern, May 14-16


Brent Wahl, excerpt from Interplanetary Death Star

Brent Wahl (MFA '06 and Fine Arts Lecturer) will be featured along with the other artists at the Vox Populi artist collective, at the Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall this month. Wahl will be part of a three-day festival entitled No Soul For Sale – A Festival of Independents, from May 14-16. Tate Modern is working in collaboration with artist Maurizio Cattelan and curators Cecilia Alemani and Massimiliano Gioni to stage this event and to celebrate 10 years of the Tate Modern.

Just released this month, Wahl will also be one of the artists featured in, Vox Populi's first publication, We're Working On It. It’s a 120-page book that includes the history of Vox Populi (by Amy Adams), the starting point for a history of artist-run spaces in Philadelphia (by Richard Torchia), and an essay on our city's identity as a center of artistic production (by Paul Galvez).

Event Dates: May 14 - 16, 2010

Tate Modern
Bankside
London SE1 9TG
http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/

To see more of Brent's work, visit http://brentwahl.com/home.html

To learn more about Vox Populi, visit http://www.voxpopuligallery.org/

4.29.2010

Tetsugo Hyakutake (MFA '09) has exhibit in Challenge 3 at Fleisher Art Memorial, Opening Sat. May 1


Tetsugo Hyakutake (MFA '09) has an exhibition as part of the Wind Challenge at Fleisher Art Memorial opening Saturday, May 1 from 5:30 - 7:30pm.

Born and raised in Japan, Tetsugo Hyakutake remembers hating the ubiquitous factories that created so much pollution. Now an adult, he cannot help but to be mesmerized by their mythological structures and colored lighting. By recording reality through photography, with minor aesthetic adjustments, Hyakutake confronts his complicated relationship with modern industrial Japan. He intends his work to serve as a tribute to those who made it possible for Japan to thrive as a nation, as well as to create open dialogue on all the contradictory “truths” it created through its' industrialization.

Fleisher Art Memorial presents the final exhibition in the thirty-second season of the three-part Wind Challenge Exhibitions at Fleisher - the Delaware Valley's premier juried artist exhibition program. This season's nine Challenge artists were selected from a field of nearly 300 applicants to exhibit in one of three three-person exhibitions. Challenge 3 features the work of artists Tetsugo Hyakutake, Scott Kip, and Brenna K. Murphy.

Opening Reception: Saturday, May 1, 5:30 - 7:30pm
Exhibition Dates: May 1 - June 25, 2010

Gallery hours are 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM (Monday through Friday), 6:30 to 9:30 PM (Monday through Thursday), and 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM (Saturday).

Fleisher Art Memorial
719 Catharine Street
Philadelphia, PA 19147-2811
215-922-3456
info@fleisher.org
http://www.fleisher.org/exhibitions/challenge3-2010.php

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

4.13.2010

Visiting Artist Sze Tsung Leong Lectures Mon. Apr. 19, 5pm


Sze Tsung Leong, New Fengdu, Chongqing Municipality, 2003

Photographer Sze Tsung Leong will present a lecture on Monday, April 19 at 5:00pm. Leong is American and British, born in Mexico and living in New York. His work is included in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, the Milwaukee Art Museum, the Brooklyn Museum of Art and the Yale University Art Gallery, among others. His work has been exhibited internationally, including An Atlas of Events at the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation in Lisbon, the 2006 Havana Biennial, New Photography at the High Museum of Art, the 2004 Taipei Biennial, and Painting as Paradox at Artists Space. He is a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship. In 2006 his book History Images was published by Steidl. He is represented by Yossi Milo in New York.

This lecture is generously sponsored by the Silverstein Lectures in Contemporary Photography.

Event Date and Time: Monday, April 19, 5:00pm

University of Pennsylvania
Meyerson Hall, B1
210 S. 34th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
www.design.upenn.edu/fine-arts-undergraduate
http://www.design.upenn.edu/calendar

To see more of Leong's work visit www.szetsungleong.com

Fine Arts Lecture Series : Dana Schutz, Thurs. Apr. 15, 5:30pm


Dana Schutz, How We Cured the Plague, 2007

Painter Dana Schutz will present an artist talk on Thursday, April 15 at 5:30pm at Penn as part of the MFA Fine Arts Lecture series. Schutz is a New York-based artist who graduated with her MFA from Columbia in 2002 and has tremendous artistic success since that time. Her work has already been included in major museum collections and she is represented by Zach Feuer LFL.

In Bomb magazine, critic Mei Chin wrote that "dissection and dismemberment abound in Dana Schutz's work, all offset by sunny colors and a pert sense of humor. Among other things, she has created a race of people who eat themselves; a guy called Frank who is the last man on Earth; a gravity-phobic person who has tied herself to the ground; and a variety of characters that are spliced, for different reasons, on operating tables. Schutz loves to give her characters life and then cut them up. Yet hers is a blithe cruelty, the curiosity of a child playing at being a creator. Even when she hates, she does it with whimsy."

Event Date and Time: Thursday, April 15, 5:30pm

University of Pennsylvania
Meyerson Hall, B3
210 S. 34th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
215 - 898 - 8374
fine-art@design.upenn.edu

http://www.design.upenn.edu/calendar/dana-schutz?destination=home

To see more of Dana's work, visit www.zachfeuer.com/danaschutz.html

4.07.2010

Matt Neff (MFA '05/Lecturer) & Virgil Marti (MFA Lecturer) in Panel Discussion for Philagrafika at the PMA, Fri. Apr. 9, 6:30pm


Virgil Marti, Austrian Swag, 2009

Matt Neff (MFA '05, Printmaking Lecturer, Manager of Common Press) and Virgil Marti (MFA Printmaking Lecturer) will participate in a panel discussion at the Philadelphia Museum of Art on Friday, April 9 from 6:30 - 8:00 as a part of Philagraphika 2010: Perspectives on Print in Contemporary Art.

Shelley Langdale, Associate Curator of Prints and Drawings and member of the Philagrafika 2010 curatorial team, will lead a discussion with artists and other Philagrafika 2010 participants about the role of print in their work and the impact of the Philagrafika festival in re-framing the position of print in contemporary art.

Other Panelists include:

Cindi Ettinger, Master Printer, founder of C.R. Ettinger Studio, Philadelphia

Caitlin Perkin, artist, member of the artists’ collective Space 1026 and Program Manager for Philagrafika 2010

Anabelle Rodriguez, Curator of the inaugural International Curatorial Exchange (ICE) @ Crane Arts LLC; Guest Curator at Painted Bride Art Center; and muralist for the Philadelphia Mural Arts Program

Event Time and Date: 6:30 - 8:00pm, Friday April 9, 2010
Philadelphia Museum of Art
Main Building, Seminar Room
26th Street and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway
Philadelphia, PA 19130
http://www.philamuseum.org/calendarEvents/calendar.html

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

To see more of Virgil's work, visit http://www.elizabethdeegallery.com/artists/view/virgil-marti

Joshua Mosley (MFA Acting Chair & Professor of Animation/Video) in Solo Exhibition at Donald Young Gallery, Opening Fri. Apr. 9, 5pm


Joshua Mosley, International (Animation Still), 2010

Joshua Mosley (MFA Acting Chair & Professor of Animation/Video) will have a solo exhibition of his new work International, opening at the Donald Young Gallery in Chicago on Friday, April 9 from 5:00 - 7:00pm.

International is a video and sculpture installation that aligns two historical figures in conversation for the first time, Austrian economist Friedrich Hayek (1899–1992) and American builder and philanthropist George R. Brown of Brown & Root (1898–1983).

Sampling oral history recordings captured between 1968 and 1978 of Brown and Hayek (they never met), the animation folds together a conversation that identifies their perspectives on how the ideal economic and social order for a nation should evolve. From a contemporary perspective, the conversation also reveals how it is possible for the mind to simultaneously hold incompatible ideas and how individuals like Hayek and Brown use logic to reconcile public theories and actions with more personal motivations.

The animation presents cycles of photographs staged in locations pivotal in the lives of Hayek and Brown. These include images of the Hôtel du Parc in Mont Pelerin, Switzerland (the location of the initial Mont Pelerin Society meeting in 1947 where economists, philosophers, and historians met to discuss the fate of classical liberalism and in their view, the crisis of socialism) and a triangular plot at the confluence of the Green Bayou and Houston Ship Channel in Texas purchased by the Browns in 1941 to complete a series of federal contracts to build ships for WWII. Intercut with these landscapes are animated images of old logging roads along the coast of Oregon composited with an animated 3D scan of the truck.

Interwoven with Hayek’s and Brown’s voice is a musical score composed by Mosley of single notes played on a 1938 Haines Brothers piano, matched to the piano owned by Brown's family during this transitional period of growth in their business.

Opening Reception: Friday, April 9, 5:00 - 7:00pm

Donald Young Gallery
224 S. Michigan Avenue
Suite 266
Chicago, IL 60604
312-322-3600
gallery@donaldyoung.com
www.donaldyoung.com

To see more of Joshua's work, visit http://joshuamosley.com/

3.30.2010

Gianna Delluomo (MFA '08) and Edward Carey (MFA '09) in Exhibition Opening Fri. Apr. 2, 6pm



Gianna Delluomo (MFA '08) and Edward Carey (MFA '09) will have work in a three-person show called "I don't think I can love you longer than just tonight" opening Friday, April 2 from 6:00 - 10:00pm. The third participating artist is Nathaniel Clark.

Opening Reception: Friday, April 2, 2010, 6:00 - 10:00pm at

319 North 11th Street, Second Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19107

To see Gianna's work, visit http://giannadelluomo.com/

Artist Jun Kaneko Lectures TONIGHT, Tues Mar 30, 5:30pm


Jun Kaneko will present a lecture titled Between Light and Shadow tonight, Tuesday March 30 at 5:30pm. Jun Kaneko is an internationally recognized artist known for his large ceramic sculptures. He has completed numerous public art commissions in the United States and Japan and is the recipient of national, state, and organization fellowships. His work is included in more than seventy museum collections.

In 2008 The Opera Company of Philadelphia commissioned him to design their production of Beethoven’s Fidelio. In the photo above, Kaneko prepares for Heads, an installation on the Park Avenue Malls, New York. The University of Pennsylvania’s Residency Program is made possible by the Emily and Jerry Spiegel Fund to Support Contemporary Culture and Visual Arts. The Spiegel Fund creates and supports a series of coordinated interdisciplinary courses, programs and events.

Event Time and Date: 5:30pm, Tuesday March 30, 2010

Admission is free. Seating is limited.

Free tickets will be available at the door at 4PM.

University of Pennsylvania
School of Design
Meyerson Hall, B1
210 S. 34th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
215-898-8374
fine-art@design.upenn.edu
http://www.design.upenn.edu/fine-arts

To see more of Jun's work, visit http://www.junkaneko.com/

3.26.2010

Kurt Freyer (MFA '09) has work on Phoned-In, BOMB Blog


Kurt Freyer, Little Death, 2010

Kurt Freyer's (MFA '09) piece Little Death is the visual accompaniment to Bomb Magazine's Phoned-In poetry reading with K. Silem Mohammad. Phoned-In is a series of recorded conversations and poetry readings by authors, curated by Luke Degnan.

Look and listen here: http://bombsite.powweb.com/?p=8897

3.25.2010

New Prints : Part II Exhibition Opening Reception TONIGHT, March 25, 5pm


The University of Pennsylvania School of Design and Dean Marilyn Jordan Taylor are proud to host New Prints, Part II, a juried exhibition with new works from over thirty-eight emerging to established artists, and one collective. Organized by International Print Center New York for New Prints 2010/Winter, this show presents a wide array of exciting contemporary work that challenges our understanding of fine art printmaking.

The Selections Committee for New Prints 2010/Winter included Alexander Campos, Executive Director, The Center for Book Arts; Michele Oka Doner, Artist; Kathleen Flynn, Executive Director, Dieu Donné; Shelley Langdale, Associate Curator of Prints and Drawings, Philadelphia Museum of Art, and Curatorial Team, Philagrafika 2010; Dwight E. Lee, Collector; and Leslie Miller, Founder, The Grenfell Press.

The complete artists' list for New Prints: Part II is as follows: Erika Adams, Roberta Allen, Felipe De Jesus Baeza, Karin Bos, Marisa Boullosa, Victoria Burge, Sophie Calle, Jonas Criscoe (in collaboration with writer Patrick Whitfill), Sage Dawson, E.V. Day, Hope Dector, Lesley Dill, Barbara Duval, Brad Ewing, Alejandro Garcia Restrepo, Klara Glosova, Tai Hwa Goh, William Howard, Richard Hricko, Anita S. Hunt, Nils Karsten, William Kentridge, Andrew Kozlowski, Yunmee Kyong, Karen Lederer, Whitfield Lovell, Franco Marinai, Michael Neff, Mark Parsons, Alyssa Pheobus, Ross Racine, Jenny Robinson, Zoë Sheehan Saldaña, David Sandlin, Ana Vivoda, April Vollmer, Tammy Wofsey, and Erin Woodbrey. Artists participating in the S.P. Weather Station collective are: Leah Beeferman, Natalie Campbell, Carrie Dashow, Neil Freeman, Richard Garrison, Michael Geminder, Katarina Jerinic, Daniel Larson, Bridget Lewis, Lize Mogel, Heidi Neilson, Chris Petrone, Sarah Nicole Phillips, Jing Yu, and Liz Zanis

TONIGHT Reception: Thursday, March 25, 5:00 - 7:00pm
Exhibition Dates: March 8 - April 4, 2010

University of Pennsylvania
School of Design
Meyerson Hall Gallery
210 South 34th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Gallery Hours: Monday - Friday, 10:00 - 5:00pm
http://www.design.upenn.edu/calendar/tonight-new-prints-part-ii?destination=home

To learn more about IPCNY, visit http://www.ipcny.org/

Jessica Clauser (MFA '09) has work on Bomb Magazine Blog


Jessica Clauser, Beijing Cotton Candy, 2009

Jessica Clauser's (MFA '09) photograph Beijing Cotton Candy is the visual accompaniment to Bomb Magazine's Phoned-In poetry reading with Dorothy Lasker. Phoned-In is a series of recorded conversations and poetry readings by authors, curated by Luke Degnan.

Look and listen here: http://bombsite.powweb.com/?p=8282

To see more of Jessica's work visit http://jessicamarieclauser.blogspot.com/

Daniel Gerwin (MFA '08) has work on Bomb Magazine Blog


Daniel Gerwin, Moment of Doubt, 2008

Daniel Gerwin (MFA '08)'s painting Moment of Doubt is the visual accompaniment to Bomb Magazine's Phoned-In poetry reading with Ben Lerner. Phoned-In is a series of recorded conversations and poetry readings by authors, curated by Luke Degnan.

Look and listen here: http://bombsite.powweb.com/?p=8669

To see more of Daniel's work visit http://www.danielgerwin.com/

Chris Lawrence (MFA '10) in Exhibition at Seventh Gallery, March 16 - April 3



Chris Lawrence (MFA '10) in exhibition titled Response: Nobody is an Island at Seventh Gallery in Melbourne, Australia. For this exhibition, 13 artists were given a piece of music composed by Dead Dog (Liam and Rohan from My Disco) and a spherical object. They were asked to listen to the music and respond using the object.

On March 31 the musicians will be performing in the space in response to the artwork.

Artists include: Rebecca Agnew, Lauren Brown, Adam John Cullen, Jessica Dean, Christopher LG Hill, Sean Hogan, Kim Jaeger, Renee Jaeger, Amy-Jo Jory, Chris Lawrence, Emma Morgan, Dunja Rmandic & Simon Taylor

Musicians include: Matthew Brown, Houlette, The Artifishal Limb, Pissypaw and Damien Sutton.

Opening Reception : March 31
Exhibition Dates : March 16 - April 3, 2010

Seventh Gallery
155 Gertrude Street
Fitzroy, Victoria, 3065
Melbourne
Australia
infoseventhgallery@gmail.com
http://seventhgallery.org/

To learn more, read this: http://www.threethousand.com.au/look/respond-exhibition-and-closing-gig/

To see more of Chris' work, visit http://chrislawrenceprojects.com/

Andrew Graham (MFA '06) in exhibit at DCCA, Opening March 26


Andrew Graham, Bonanza, 2006

Andrew Graham (MFA '06) is in a show titled Spectrum: Contemporary Color Abstraction, at the Delaware Center for the Contemporary Arts in Wilmington, Delaware.

"The term "decorative" is still suspect in many art circles, but, as Spectrum demonstrates, color abstraction is clearly here to stay. In fact, this is the second exhibition on the topic installed by the DCCA in recent years. This exhibition brings together both painting and sculpture. Not only is color abstraction alive, but it plays a vital role in today's art practice. Younger artists have found innovative ways of incorporating color and abstraction into their artistic vocabulary, while more established artists have found a renewed interest in color exploration in their recent work. The range of approaches to color abstraction in this exhibition represents the vast array of approaches to the theme, from from softsculpture to cast forms, from paintings on Plexiglas to painted and shaped plywood. Stylistic presentations span a continuum from organic to geometric abstraction, and from abstraction based on natural forms to the purely non-objective. Some of the artists in Spectrum present highly elegant images or constructions while others utilize everyday materials, attaching a sense of the absurd or the whimsical. Yet, in all cases, color and abstract form are at the heart of the work. Clearly, neither painting nor formal abstraction has died. In fact, it is not even on life-support, but rather contributes a healthy, robust voice to the art of the twenty-first century."
- J. Susan Isaacs, PhD
Curator of Special Projects

Exhibition Dates: March 26 - August 1, 2010

Delaware Center for the Contemporary Arts
Carole Bieber and Marc Ham Gallery
200 South Madison Street
Wilmington, DE 19801
302-656-6466
info@thedcca.org
www.thedcca.org/

To see more of Andrew's work, visit http://andrewgraham.110mb.com/

3.16.2010

Sam Durant (MFA Senior Critic) in Solo Exhibition at Paula Cooper, Mar 13 - Apr 17


Sam Durant, Dead Labor Day, 2010

Sam Durant (MFA Senior Critic) has a solo exhibition titled Dead Labor Day at Paula Cooper Gallery from March 13 to April 17, 2010.

The title of the exhibition refers to Karl Marx’s description of surplus value as the “dead labor” of capitalist production.

“Capital is dead labor, that, vampire-like, only lives by sucking living labor, and lives the more, the more labor it sucks. The time during which the laborer works, is the time during which the capitalist consumes the labor-power he has purchased from him.” (Michel In Beaud)

The show will include a large sculpture based on the scaffold used to hang the famous Chicago anarchists known as the Haymarket Martyrs (shown in the image above). Monument-like in scale, the sculpture is not an exact reproduction of the gallows but rather an outline of the structure that doubles as a worker’s break room. Viewers can access the platform using an industrial steel staircase, and once on top get a drink from a water dispenser.

The “Haymarket Martyrs” (August Spies, Albert Parsons, Adolph Fischer, George Engel, and Louis Lingg who committed suicide in prison before he could be hung) were labor activists and anarchists. They were arrested following an ambiguous bombing and subsequent shoot-out involving police officers on May 4, 1886 known as the Haymarket Riot, which had begun peacefully as a labor rally in support of the 8-hour workday. Though there was no credible evidence linking the rally organizers to the bombing, they were sentenced to death and executed publicly on November 11, 1887. The case sparked outrage and gained the labor movement worldwide attention. The 8-hour day was finally enacted into law over 20 years later. The five Anarchists became martyrs to both the founding of International May Day (May 1st), a day of celebrating labor, and the 8-hour workday.

This exhibition partly grows out of Durant’s recent work on capital punishment comprised of small-scaled architectural models of historically significant gallows and drawings with statistical imagery. However, it also addresses issues of labor history and its relevance to today’s economic conditions. According to the artist, historical accounts of the economic conditions in which the Haymarket affair took place reveal striking similarities to today’s relationship between labor and capital, especially with respect to the weakening of labor laws and worker unions’ loss of leveraging power.

Durant’s work explores the political dimensions of contemporary culture by weaving relationships between defining historical and cultural events of the recent and less recent past. He has focused on such pivotal periods as the civil-rights era, the 1968 student riots, and the last century’s struggle between Native Americans and European settlers. He started exhibiting in the 1990s and has had one-person exhibitions at the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; the Kunstverein Düsseldorf; the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; and the Massachusetts College of Art, Boston. His work has been included in numerous group exhibitions such as the 2004 Whitney Museum of American Art Biennial, New York; the 2002 Venice Biennale, Italy; and Out of Place: Contemporary Art and the Architectural Uncanny at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. He lives and works in Los Angeles.

Exhibition Dates: March 13 - April 17, 2010

Paula Cooper Gallery
534 W. 21st St
New York, NY 10011
212-255-1105
info@paulacoopergallery.com
www.paulacoopergallery.com

To see more of Sam's work, visit www.samdurant.com

3.12.2010

Demetrious Oliver (MFA '04) in Solo Show at Inman Gallery, Opening Fri. Mar. 12


Demetrious Oliver, Albedo (detail), 2010

Demetrious Oliver (MFA '04) has a solo show titled Albedo at Inman Gallery in Houston, Texas, opening Friday March 12 from 6:00 to 8:00pm. This is Oliver’s third solo exhibition with Inman Gallery, concurrent with Fotofest’s 2010
Biennial.

In Albedo, comprising a series of photographs, an installation, and a sculpture, Demetrius Oliver explores the effects and potential meanings of reflected light. In astronomy, albedo describes the ability of a celestial body, including Earth, to reflect (or, conversely, absorb) solar radiation — snow, for example, has a higher albedo than dirt. Derived from the Latin “albus,” meaning white, albedo is also an alchemical phase, the stage in which impurities are removed. Oliver transforms common objects to evoke poetic associations between physical materials and abstract ideas. Albedo, 2010, presents a single, carry-on piece of luggage unzipped to reveal surreal contents: incandescent light bulbs and chunks of lustrous anthracite coal.

Light bulbs appear again as structure and surface in the photographic series Ember, 2007. In each image, Oliver’s hand clenches a fistful of lightbulbs, creating a globular mass onto which the artist has projected photographs of workspaces.

The installation, Mare, 2009, projects light directly onto the gallery walls and, incidentally, the bodies of gallery viewers. A digital projector presents a slideshow of a rotating, circular image of a crashing wave. The projector is placed on a spinning turntable, and the image orbits the room. Connecting personal means and empyrean phenomena, the installation recreates the sense of wonderment felt when looking at the night sky, and the desire to understand one’s place in the universe. Moreover, Mare, Latin for “seas”, recalls both ancient conceptions of the moon’s dark spots as oceans and Earth’s tides, created by the moon’s gravitational pull. The three parts of the exhibition together suggest narratives of energy stored and transferred, as well as metaphors of darkness and illumination, looking and discovery.

Opening Reception: Friday, March 12, 6:00 - 8:00pm
Exhibition Dates: March 12 - May 1, 2010

Inman Gallery
3901 Main Street
Houston, TX 77002
713 - 526 - 7800
info@inmangallery.com
www.inmangallery.com

3.09.2010

Joshua Mosley (MFA Acting Chair, Professor) in Solo Exhibit at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, Opening Mar 12


Joshua Mosley (MFA Program Acting Chair and Associate Professor of Animation and Digital Media) has a solo exhibition titled American International at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. Joshua will give an artist talk on March 11 at 6:00pm and the exhibit is open from March 12 - August 29, 2010.

This exhibition brings together two video and sculpture installations by Joshua Mosley: A Vue (2004) and the museum premiere of his newest work International (2010). Each work is composed of a video that uses computer and stop-motion animation, and bronze sculptures of figures that populate the works. Combining the most current technology with the hand-wrought physicality of studio-made objects, A Vue and International employ video and sculpture in a critically engaged manner that poses nuanced questions about American ideology and contemporary life.

Artist Talk: March 11, 2010, 6:00 pm

Exhibition: March 12 - August 29, 2010

Indianapolis Museum of Art
4000 Michigan Road
Indianapolis, Indiana 46208-3326
317-923-1331
www.imamuseum.org/explore/exhibitions/joshuamosley

To see more of Joshua's work, visit http://joshuamosley.com/

3.03.2010

Tadashi Moriyama (MFA '06) has work at Scope Art Show, Mar 3 - 7


Tadashi Moriyama (MFA '06) has work represented by Bonelli Arte Contemporanea at the SCOPE art fair in New York. The fair is open from March 3 - 7, 2010. SCOPE launches its 2010 season with its flagship fair, SCOPE New York Art Show. SCOPE proudly returns to Manhattan's most famous cultural icon, Lincoln Center, with a glass facade pavilion situated in Lincoln Center's Damrosch Park, at the corner of 62nd Street and 10th Avenue. Introducing artists, curators, and cutting-edge galleries to new audiences internationally has made SCOPE the most comprehensive destination for the emerging art world available anywhere. With art fairs in Miami, Basel, New York, London, and the Hamptons, SCOPE is proud to be an influential presence in the expanding global art market.


Event Dates:
March 3 - March 7, 2010

Opening Schedule

Wednesday | March 3 | 3pm-9pm (for all VIPs and press)
Wednesday | March 3 | 6pm-9pm (Press View)

General Admission Fair Hours

Thursday | March 4 | noon - 8pm
Friday | March 5 | noon - 8pm
Saturday | March 6 | noon - 8pm
Sunday | March 7 | noon - 7pm

Location
Lincoln Center Damrosch Park
62nd Street and Amsterdam (10th Avenue)
New York, NY 10023

For more information, visit the Scope website: http://69.24.73.123/SCOPE/index.php/new_york/

To see more of Tadashi's work, visit http://tadashimoriyama.com