7.31.2009

Jamie Diamond (MFA '08) Reviewed in New York Times, July 30

Jamie Diamond (MFA '08) has a video piece in East Coast Video at Ramis Barquet. The show was reviewed by Ken Johnson at the New York Times. The show is still up until August 14.

"This smart, cool show, organized by Nick Kilner, presents five videos by six artists. With one exception, each involves a straightforward shot of human performers. In “With Open Arms” (2005), the artist and performer Kate Gilmore repeatedly flings her arms wide as though about to burst into song, at which point she is pelted by tomatoes thrown from off-camera. Her determinedly cheerful bravado is funny and sad.

In “Test Run” (2004), Alex McQuilkin films her face as bathtub water rises and covers it. For a long time she holds her breath underwater. A dreamlike feeling creeps in. Then she suddenly erupts to the surface, gasping for air.

Rashaad Newsome’s “Shade Compositions: Screen Tests 1 & 2” (2008-9) is loaded with sociological complexity. Following instructions from an off-screen director, young black women perform gestural, facial and vocal mannerisms commonly associated with black women. It’s a wry comment on racial stereotyping and identity politics.

Jamie Diamond’s “Untitled, From the History of the Portrait Series” (2009) is more enigmatic. Two monitors show the same well-dressed, male-female couple sitting on a couch from the neck down. For undisclosed reasons, they move closer, hold hands and move apart, generating a frustratingly lukewarm sexual tension.

Finally, the team of Caraballo-Farman offers “For a While We Were All Protagonists” (2007), in which colorful, battery-driven vibrators — some of which light up — run until exhausted. It is not profound but it is fun to watch for about half a minute." KEN JOHNSON

Read the review online at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/arts/design/31gall.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all

Ramis Barquet
532 West 24th Street
New York, NY 10011
212.675.3421
www.ramisbarquet.com
mail@ramisbarquet.com
Gallery Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10-6 PM

7.29.2009

Joshua Mosley (MFA Faculty) is Enlightened at the Edinburgh International Festival Opening August 6


Joshua Mosley (MFA Faculty) will participate in The Enlightenments at the Edinburgh International Festival.

"Edinburgh epitomizes the ideals of the 18th century Scottish Enlightenment with its neo-classical beauty and places of learning, law and finance.

Edinburgh also exists as a series of warrens and darker places. The city's enlightenment edifice is built upon a maze of intriguing geological fissures, labyrinthine architecture and iniquitous underworlds.

Against this backdrop of the city and its philosophical history the artworks that make up The Enlightenments offer contemporary observations on subjects including religion, philosophy, superstition, architecture, literature, natural history, the cosmos, scepticism, stoicism and social manners.

Every August, the Edinburgh International Festival transforms one of the world's most beautiful cities, presenting three exhilarating weeks of the finest creators and performers from the worlds of the arts - for everyone.

Edinburgh's six major theaters and concert halls, a few smaller venues and often some unconventional ones too, come alive with the best classical music, theatre, opera, dance and visual art from around the globe.

The atmosphere in the city is something special. The Daily Telegraph said - ‘not just the most thrilling, beguiling, preposterously enjoyable place on Earth; it is also wonderfully addictive.' Or as The Spectator suggested, ‘you can sleep in September'.

Outside the buzz of those three weeks the Festival has a year-round program of education and outreach work, aimed at all ages from primary school pupils to adults."

Festival Dates: August 7 - September 27, 2009

For more festival information, visit www.eif.co.uk

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

7.21.2009

Jessica Clauser (MFA '09) in Exhibit at Soho20 Opening Thurs. July 23


Jessica Clauser, Video Still, 2009




Jessica Clauser (MFA '09) will have work in a show titled Boxing Gloves and Bustiers at Soho20 Gallery Chelsea. It is an exhibition of works that explore the many faces of heroic female figuration through the lens of contemporary video. The show, which was curated by artist Kate Gilmore, reflects a shift in women’s relationship to power and the subsequent critique this change entails. The videos range from heroic narratives to short and snappy “music videos”, all of which evoke from the viewer empathy, intrigue and laughter.

Opening Reception: Thursday July 23 5:00 - 7:00pm
Exhibition Dates: July 21 - August 14, 2009


SOHO2O GALLERY CHELSEA
511 West 25th Street, Suite 605
New York, NY 10001
www.soho20gallery.com

Nathlie Provosty (MFA '07) in Exhibit at Gallery Satori through August 16


Nathlie Provosty, Untitled 1 and Untitled 2, 2009




Nathlie Provosty (MFA '07) is exhibiting ink drawings in a group show at Gallery Satori. The show is titled Fresh Asphalt and features thirteen artists. "Like freshly poured steaming asphalt in the middle of a hot and sticky summer the artworks in the show all share a rich dark black element. However in contrast to this dark facade they put forth a cool crisp presence that breathes slowly and meditatively.

"Beginning with material realism, the works in this exhibition deal with the transformation of our notions of the familiar. Some portray organic forms that mysteriously emerge out of darkness while others introduce minimalist shapes that are stripped of all evocative elements except their own luminous presence. From an organic gestural large-scale charcoal drawing to shiny computer manipulated nightscapes of Shanghai and Tokyo, the show presents a wide array of media including Sintra and melamine paintings, ceramic automobiles and mixed media leather sculptures."

Exhibition Dates: July 8 - August 16, 2009

Gallery Satori
164 Stanton St
New York, NY 10002
646-896-1075
info@gallerysatori.com
http://www.gallerysatori.com/

See more of Nathlie's work at www.nathlieprovosty.com

7.18.2009

Amy Kaufman (MFA Alum) Exhibition Opening Tonight, Saturday July 18


Amy Kaufman will be exhibiting recent work at the Left Bank Gallery in Wellfleet, MA.

"I keep coming back to pears and flowers in my art. I enjoy reinventing the brushstrokes and color in my work, expressing them in new ways each time I paint. Having that one pear surrounded by gestures, colors, textures and patterns, or having a grouping of pears all relating to each other, creates a complex and interesting composition. The flowers always bring me happiness as they give me an emotional feeling of life in its glory - whether it is a bouquet or a field of flowers. With the layering and mixed media in my art, you see more as you keep looking. Each work is one-of-a-kind original." - Amy Kaufman

A native of Newton, Massachusetts, Kaufman received her B.A. from Brandeis University, where she learned printmaking from Michael Mazur, and her M.F.A. from University of Pennsylvania. She continued her studies at Massachusetts College of Art and School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Kaufman has participated in workshops with Eric Fischl, Wolf Kahn, Larry Rivers, and Lois Tarlow. She is also a Corporate Artist for the DeCordova Museum Corporate Program as well as a member of the Monotype Guild of New England; Medici Society at SMFA, Boston; and Cambridge Art Association. She has worked at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Art New England magazine. Kaufman's art is in many collections nationwide. She has received awards and has exhibited extensively in museums and galleries, including the Provincetown Art Association and Museum and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Her art was in Dream Home/2008, at the Boston Design Center. You can see her paintings in the Hollywood movie Bride Wars with Kate Hudson and Anne Hathaway directed by Gary Winick. Recently, her art was featured on TV NECN Dream House: Elderly Home.

Opening Reception: July 18, 6:00 to 8:00 pm
Exhibition Dates: July 18 - 31, 2009

Left Bank Gallery
25 Commercial Street
Wellfleet, MA
www.leftbankgallery.com

Represented at Commercial Street: 508.349.9451

7.09.2009

Kim Brickley, Rebecca Sargent, and Nicole White (All MFA '09) in Exhibit at Rodger LaPelle, Opening August 7


Kim Brickley, Limb, 2009

Rebecca Sargent, Port Authority Bus Depot, 2009

Nicole White, Drainage #2: Scope, 2009















Recent MFA graduates Kim Brickley, Rebecca Sargent, and Nicole White will show in an exhibit titled Fractured Territory at Rodger LaPelle Gallery in Philadelphia.

Opening Reception: Friday, August 7, 5:00 - 10:00pm
Exhibition Dates: August 1 - 30, 2009

Rodger LaPelle Galleries
122 N Third Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106
215-592-0232
www.rodgerlapellegalleries.com
rodgerlapellegalleries@yahoo.com

Gallery Hours: Wednesday to Sunday, 12:00 - 6:00pm

See more of Kim's work at http://kimbrickley.com/home.html

7.08.2009

SAVE THE DATE: MFA '09 Artists will exhibit at Michael Steinberg Fine Art, NYC... Opening Thurs. July 23rd

“WHERE THERE’S SMOKE, THERE’S SMOKE”

Exhibition Dates
: July 23- August 15, 2009

Opening Reception: Thursday, July 23rd from 6-8pm

Expansive and challenging, the artwork presented in this exhibition deals with a diverse range of subject matter, realized in various media. Experiments in activism, examinations of subjective realities, America’s rusting industrial and recreational Edens, deadpan re-creations of childhood, chest-beating, pleasure and enlightenment all combine to form a unique body of work from an outstanding group of young artists.

The Artists: Kim Brickley, Edward L. Carey, Jessica Clauser, Jennifer Ruiz Copeland, Jaimeson Daley, Kurt Freyer, Tia-Simone Gardner, Elizabeth Hoy, Tetsugo Hyakutake, Jules Joseph, Kate Kaman, Antonio McAfee, Jessa McFarlane, Nicolas McMahon, Aaron Metté, Evi Numen, Cecelia Post, Jaime Roth, Rebecca Sargent, Peter Schenck, Emilie Selden, Laura Shema, Nicole White, Ricardo Zapata

Many of the twenty-four emerging artists in this exhibition have received special recognition from prestigious organizations for their recent endeavors. Highlights of their collective accolades include numerous exhibitions throughout the United States, a Dedalus Foundation Award, Jacob K. Javits Fellowship, Fulbright Scholar, and Whitney Independent Study Award.

Michael Steinberg Fine Art
526 W. 26th St. Suite 215
New York, NY 10001

t: 212-924-5770

www.michaelsteinbergfineart.com

Gallery Hours: Tuesday-Saturday, 11-6pm

7.07.2009

Marc Blumthal (MFA '10) and Peter Schenck (MFA'09) in Vox V Exhibit, Opening July 10


Marc Blumthal (MFA '10) and Peter Schenck (MFA '09) are in the Vox V Exhibit at Vox Populi Gallery opening Friday, July 10. VOX V is a group exhibition juried by Ryan Trecartin, artist, and Larry Mangel, the founder of Cerealart.

This is Vox Populi's fifth annual exhibition of emerging artists and features 51 national and international artists, including many from the greater Philadelphia area. The artists were selected from a pool of over 400 applicants and will exhibit works in a variety of media: painting, sculpture, photography, drawing, installation, video, animation, and ceramics.

The exhibition will feature nearly 100 individual works and will fill the gallery in a playful, sprawling installation designed by Trecartin and Mangel.

Opening Reception: Friday, July 10 from 6 - 11pm
Exhibition Dates: July 10 - August 2

Vox Populi
319 North 11th Street
3rd Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19107
http://www.voxpopuligallery.org
215-238-1236

See more of Marc's work at http://marcedmundblumthal.blogspot.com/

See more of Peter's work at http://peterschenck.com/

Jamie Diamond (MFA'08) in East Coast Video Exhibit at Ramis Barquet, Opening July 9


Jamie Diamond (MFA '08) is in a group exhibition of recent work by six young New York City based video artists, curated by Nick Kilner, at Ramis Barquet in New York titled East Coast Video.

Since Andy Warhol's 1960's experiments with his 16mm Bolex, the moving image has played a significant part in New York's art scene. His Screen Tests, unedited four minute long living portraits on film, saw a variety of sitters performing themselves for the camera, and helped establish a language of voyeurism that is still relevant in video today.

Like the Screen Tests, all the work in East Coast Video takes place in front of a stationary camera in a privatized space and is for the most part shot in one unedited take. The emphasis here, however, is firmly on performing for the camera, engaging the viewer directly and in some cases implicating them in the final product. Themes of voyeurism, sincerity, endurance and an overwhelming desire to please unite the work that ranges in tone from the humorous to the severe. Exhibiting artists are Caraballo-Farman, Jamie Diamond, Kate Gilmore, Alex McQuilkin and Rashaad Newsome.

In With Open Arms (2005), Kate Gilmore, standing in front of a wall decorated with silver duct tape stars and dressed in a pretty frock, doggedly attempts to perform while being pelted with tomatoes from behind the camera, continually flinging her arms wide open and maintaining a winning smile as she wipes the pulp from her eyes. In Test Run (2004) Alex McQuilkin draws the viewer into a suicidal fantasy as she slowly sinks beneath the surface of her bathwater and remains there until running out of breath, all the while holding the camera at arms length.


Rashaad Newsome’s Shade Compositions: Screen Tests 1&2 (2009) present a series of black women auditioning, with varying degrees of success, culturally specific or stereotyped gestures under the artist’s direction, while in Jamie Diamond’s Untitled (History of a Portrait series, 2009) the artifice of the pose of two strangers, acting as a couple for the camera, is exposed by capturing aspects of its construction in real time. Finally, in Caraballo-Farman’s For A While We Were All Protagonists (2006), 15 vibrators dance until their batteries run out.

Opening Reception: Thursday, July 9 from 6 - 8 PM
Exhibition Dates: July 9 – August 14, 2009

For more information or images contact Amanda Alvarez at amanda@ramisbarquet.com.
Ramis Barquet
532 West 24th Street
New York, NY 10011
212.675.3421
mail@ramisbarquet.com
Gallery Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10-6 PM.

To see more of Jamie's work, visit www.jamiegdiamond.com

6.20.2009

Kim Brickley (MFA '09) in Solo Show at Amos Eno Gallery, June 24-July 11



Skull, Kim Brickley


The tension between the natural and unnatural is a consistent thread in much of what Kim Brickley makes, especially the space where the two overlap, as well as how this overlap and tension influence our self-perception. The orange-powdered cheese and blue Kool-Aid dust that is advertised as food fascinates and disgusts Kim, as does the preserved open cadavers photographed for medical books.
The spaces in this work could be seen as systemic portraits, with the aim of examining the incomprehensibility of existence through scanned medical imaging, biochemical reaction, and psychological space. Despite all of our current technological imagery, a distinct disconnect still exists between the image of an interior of a body and our personal understanding of it.
The title Syn-chronic refers to the synchronicity of bodily function, and how it eventually falters into sickness and degeneration, and the constant struggle between thriving and contaminated tissue. Chronic also refers to the compulsive daily habits of our culture that contribute to this slowly faltering synchronicity, such as the daily pollutants from urban post-industrial society and culture. By exploring the converse of this disconnect through abstraction and materiality of media, Kim wants this disconnect to be seen it in a less clinical and more alive way.

Opening Reception: Thursday July 2, 2009 from 5:30 to 8:30 PM
Exhibition Dates: June 24- July 11, 2009

Amos Eno Gallery
111 Front Street, #202
Brooklyn, NY 11201
Alex Wixon, Director
718-237-3001
director@amosenogallery.org

www.amosenogallery.org

Gallery Hours: Wednesday through Saturday, 12 PM - 6 PM

See more of Kim's work at www.kimbrickley.com

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/

6.02.2009

Leigh Van Duzer (MFA '10) Awarded Coslett Traveling Fellowship

Leigh Van Duzer has been awarded the Susan Cromwell Coslett Traveling Fellowship award for 2009. The award goes to one student in the School of Design each year to travel to a garden or landscape site for a proposed project. Leigh plans to visit and photograph the Landschaftspark in Duisburg and the gardens of Dusseldorf, Germany. By photographing the intersections of landscapes with buildings, where man-made and natural elements blend or intertwine, Leigh will be building on her earlier projects that involved photographing abandoned or partially preserved/developed sites. Her goal is to explore organization and form in such sites, and to capture images of how interruptions or imperfections caused by natural elements or the passage of time may lead to visually beautiful images.

See Leigh's work at www.leighvanduzer.com

5.24.2009

ART REVIEW

A regular sort of marsh, stuffed like a St. Anthony’s day turkey with aluminum, garbled sludge, and feathers. The studio stood shyly among the pines. Birds hung from the rafters on the porch, all kinds. A woodpecker with its wings drawn back presided over a table of magic sand candles. A kingfisher eyed the fire from his rosary nest across the room while two finches huddled in the scraps of a baseball glove. The flames dried his wings, whispering over colored sand. It was delightful. Caterpillars ranged over melted sheets of plastic. We toasted them with mugs, coffee sediment cemented to the bottom.

Acadian music leaked from the radio. It was so off-tune it might have been the city distorted by the marsh, all of its sounds, whatever that meant. Either way it was a fascinating sort of noise, unpredictable and alive like an eerie Morandi or the eyes in a portrait of Jeanne. He compared the sound to art, then to his own work, a comparison as garbled and fleetingly sublime as anything. I was in no mood. He said painting was like this, like transmuting noise into Acadian folk fables about the Lusitania. We moved on. I moved on.

He worked in the vanitas tradition, he insisted, not still-life. But either way an ars moriendi, mining vitality in decay, fishing out constants from subjects whose chests sunk by the hour. Though their bodies faded their feathers retained such color I suspected plasticine or tar. They outshone the rainbow sand on the table, mixed as it was with ash.

He fleshed out the rest of the canvas with marsh salvage. Only the birds were constant, in his painting as well as in the tradition. A dead thrush’s wings break almost by the weight of their own feathers, separating quickly even in the sluggish currents of the marsh, but they persist across the centuries and not the powder horns or ivory radios which surround them in the paintings and in the dunes.

But if Vanitas vanitatum, dixit Ecclesiastes; vanitas vanitatum, et omnia vanitas, I asked him, why such precision, such delicate colors, such care? For that too has remained constant, the pursuit of aesthetic perfection even in a tradition which aggressively renounces the pursuit of aesthetic perfection, if it would ever even concede the possibility of such perfection. But something perfect, he said, exhausts all its possibilities, and since there is nothing left for it to be it shines forth only in its inadequacies and limitations. So be it.

He wanted to say, with Wallace Stevens

Clear water in a brilliant bowl,
Pink and white carnations….
A world of clear water, brilliant-edged,
Still one would want more, one would need more,
More than a world of white and snowy scents.

There would still remain the never-resting mind,
So that one would want to escape, come back
To what had been so long composed.
The imperfect is our paradise.
Note that, in this bitterness, delight,
Since the imperfect is so hot in us,
Lies in flawed words and stubborn sounds.

and from this affirm the vanity of thought, act, and desire, condemning the entire complex of the soul for its lack of reasonable heating or adequate shelter. There were neither illusions in his work nor anywhere to escape. We returned to the dock after looking at his paintings. Piers sloped to the west, light died on the water. Fireflies settled sometimes three to a can. We watched.

5.18.2009

Andrew Graham (MFA '06) in Exhibition at David Weinberg Gallery, Opening June 5


Andrew Graham,
Serenity
, 2009





Alum Andrew Graham (MFA '06) will exhibit work in a show titled Golden Ratio at David Weinberg Gallery in Chicago.

Opening Reception: June 5, 2009
Exhibition Dates: June 5 to July 11, 2009


For more information: http://www.davidweinberggallery.com/

5.16.2009

TONIGHT!!!!! PENN MFA THESIS EXHIBITION OPENING....WHO'S EXCITED!?



UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA MFA THESIS EXHIBITION
ICEBOX PROJECT SPACE-CRANE ARTS BUILDING


Please join us for the opening reception: Saturday, May 16th from 6-9pm

Exhibition Dates:
May 16- June 4, 2009

The Artists:
Kim Brickley, Edward L. Carey, Jessica Clauser, Jaimeson Daley, Jennifer Ruiz Copeland, Kurt Freyer, Tia-Simone Gardner, Elizabeth Hoy, Tetsugo Hyakutake, Jules Joseph, Kate Kaman, Antonio McAfee, Jessa McFarlane, Nicolas McMahon, Aaron Metté, Evi Numen, Cecelia Post, Jaime Roth, Rebecca Sargent, Peter Schenck, Emilie Selden, Laura Shema, Nicole White, Ricardo Zapata


The ICEBOX Project Space
Crane Arts Building
1400 N. American Street
Philadelphia, PA 19112-3803

Gallery Hours: Thursday-Sunday, 12-6pm or by appointment.


Please visit www.pennmfathesis.com for more information.

For more information about the exhibition or the PennDesign MFA program in general, please call our office at 215-898-8374 or visit our website at www.design.upenn.edu/fine-arts

5.13.2009

Kate Kaman (MFA '09) in Kensington Kinetic Sculpture Derby, Sat. May 16, 12:30pm


Kate Kaman will have a sculpture in the annual Kensington Kinetic Sculpture Derby in Philadelphia, this Saturday, May 16.

A Kinetic Sculpture is a Human-powered vehicle that also has an artistic theme. Think of parade floats on bicycles, or mummers on hand crank driven pirate ships, or an alien space ship on 2 welded together bikes, think of a giant pink poodle hurdling through space, mud, sand and water. A Kinetic Sculpture Competition is all about fun and ingenuity, making the wackiest, most interesting contraption is the goal- finishing the course or winnning is not. Kinetic Sculpture Competitions have been taking place all over the world since 1969 when a California artist named Hobart Brown made some artistic improvements to his son's tricycle.

The Derby Parade leaves at 12:30pm, the Arts Fest is from 12-5pm with bands and vendors all day.
The award ceremony will be held between 3:30 and 4pm at the Arts Fest.

The Kinetic Sculpture Derby is at the Trenton Avenue Arts Festival on the 2000-2300 blocks of Trenton Avenue in the Kensington Neighborhood of Philadelphia, PA, USA, Planet Earth. The Parade leaves from Trenton and Dauphin.

For more information visit http://www.kinetickensington.org/

Kate's Studio: http://www.katekaman.com/

5.08.2009

Tetsugo Hyakutake (MFA '09) Invited to PHotoEspaña 2009, June 3 - July 26




Tetsugo Hyakutake

PHotoEspaña 2009 is a festival of photography and visual arts that will take place from June 3 to July 26 in Madrid, Lisbon, and Cuenca. The event will include 72 exhibitions spread across 60 exhibition spaces, with 248 artists from 40 countries participating.

As part of the festival, Tetsugo has been invited to participate in Descubrimienos PHE Madrid, which is PHotoEspaña's portfolio review that gives photographers the opportunity to show their work to renowned curators, gallery owners, critics, editors, and publishers specializing in photography. He will also be exhibiting in a group show in Madrid.

For more information:

http://www.phe.es/festival/
http://www.phedigital.com/
http://www.artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=2&int_new=29909

See Tetsugo's work at:
http://www.tetsugohyakutake.com/

5.07.2009

East West South North Exhibition, Opening Thurs. May 21, 4 - 6pm














East West South North

Work from the The Howard A. Silverstein and Patricia Bleznak Silverstein Photography Studio Abroad: Beijing/China/2009.

Opening Reception: Thursday, May 21, 4 - 6pm
Exhibition Dates: May 21 - June 26

Participants: Matthew Thomas Cianfrani, Jessica Marie Clauser, Tasha Doremus, Jesse Harding, Elizabeth Hoy, Tetsugo Hyakutake, Nsenga A. Knight, Gabriel Martinez, Antonio McAfee, Nicholas Salvatore, Julie Saecker Schneider, Larry Shprintz, Kira Simon- Kennedy, Leigh Van Duzer, Arthur Vierkant

The Charles Addams Fine Arts Gallery
University of Pennsylvania
200 South 36th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104

215-573-5134

www.undergradfinearts.org

Gallery Hours: Monday - Friday 10am - 5pm

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/

5.05.2009

Judith Shea (MFA Senior Critic) in Global Books Exhibit, Aix-en-Provence, France, Opening May 7

Global Books: Exposition des Les Livres d'Artistes de Gervais Jassaud (Collectif Generation)

Cite du Livre

Aix-en-Provence
France

Exhibition Dates: May 7 - June 20

Artist/poet collaborative books published by Gervais Jassaud, Director, Collectif Generation, Paris and Frejus, France

Includes Haibun 1990, by John Ashbury, with painted etchings by Judith Shea.

Cite du Livre
8, Rue Allumettes
13090 Aix en Provence, France
+33 4 42 27 11 86
http://www.fondationsaintjohnperse.fr/

Judith Shea (MFA Senior Critic) in Exhibit at National Academy Museum, NY, Opening July 8

Reconfiguring the Body in American Art 1820-2009

The National Academy Museum

Exhibition Dates: July 8 - November 15

"Reconfiguring the Body in American Art 1820-2009 examines the critical role the figure has played in art of the United States over the past 200 years. Installed chronologically and thematically, the exhibition will illustrate how the body has been central to the artist from formal portraiture, genre painting, and modernist devises of deconstructing the figure. A section of contemporary work by younger artists will show how the figure continues to be relevant for artists today."

The National Academy Museum
1083 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY
212-369-4880
http://www.nationalacademy.org/

Judith Shea (MFA Senior Critic) in Dress Codes Exhibit, Katonah Museum, NY, Opening July 12


DRESS CODES: Clothing as Metaphor in Contemporary Art

Katonah Museum of Art, Katonah, NY

Exhibition Dates: July 12 - October 4

"Toward the end of the 20th century, many artists seized upon the idea and form of clothing as a subject for their work. Clothing today can be a metaphor for larger issues such as feminist concerns, racial stereotyping, current events, and the violence of war.

The 40 works in DRESS CODES: Clothing as Metaphor in Contemporary Art highlights contemporary artists' interest in the body, while also offering personal, social, cultural, political, and ethnic critiques."

Includes: Louise Bourgeous, Do-Ho Suh, Willie Cole, E.V. Day, Oliver Herring, Beverly Semmes, Judith Shea, Jean Shin, Yinka Shonibare and Andrea Zittel, among others.

Katonah Museum of Art
134 Jay Street - Route 22
Katonah, NY 10536
(914) 232-9555

5.02.2009

MFA Thesis Show ... Opening Sat. May 16!


UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA MFA THESIS EXHIBITION
ICEBOX PROJECT SPACE-CRANE ARTS BUILDING


Opening reception: Saturday, May 16th from 6-9pm
Exhibition Dates: May 16- June 4, 2009



The Artists: Kim Brickley, Edward L. Carey, Jessica Clauser, Jennifer Ruiz Copeland, Kurt Freyer, Tia-Simone Gardner, Elizabeth Hoy, Tetsugo Hyakutake, Jules Joseph, Kate Kaman, Antonio McAfee, Jessa McFarlane, Nicolas McMahon, Aaron Metté, Evi Numen, Cecelia Post, Jaime Roth, Rebecca Sargent, Peter Schenck, Emilie Selden, Laura Shema, Nicole White, Ricardo Zapata




The ICEBOX Project Space
Crane Arts Building
1400 N. American Street
Philadelphia, PA 19112-3803

Gallery Hours: Thursday-Sunday, 12-6pm or by appointment.

www.pennmfathesis.com

www.design.upenn.edu/fine-arts

4.30.2009

ART REVIEW: 11 th S t ree t


Nothing yet. None of it will disclose itself in a series. Or if it did the terms are still discrete, not even a shadow between them. And after all this waiting. As for the painting, mauve dunes, power lines above a black road, silver where the night wears thin, sinuous little else. What next? More sculptures, more installations. Discontinuous to the end.

The month of April, a tunnel on 11th street, a nearby gallery. No way to bring them together.

Beneath the streets they pass, back and forth on bikes. Lights dangle from the cement roof. Silver to the tungsten coil like to the seams of the grass, gone by the moon. They pass back and forth. A state-sanctioned tunnel where the invisible collect their thoughts. Too weak to cast a shadow, the light merely vibrates, creating a field like to the empyrean. But this is underground. Water unravels like a tapestry, coiling in ripples on the ground.

There is a wind outside the tunnel, moving past the city. So much space. There will only be more.

The motives were less clear at the gallery. They created a landscape from parts of Scotland and England, a deer to wander in the twilight. The forest only shimmered. Green, blue, and gray, then antlers poached the frame. A luminescent deer strays in a phosphorescent forest. He’s still there, grazing.

Waves wash on the shore. Paul Klee disembarks. He has been at sea. He finds the tunnel, sees the deer. They displace his dreams of ghostly pyramids, shimmering fish, haunted fathers and the tables they set. He starts from the tunnel like a doe. He walks west, soon to join the Theatre of Oklahoma.

Who else will bring us together? He sets the table. Just walking through the desert, dream-figures, dream-fathers. Moses in the desert figures every pilgrimage. Still nothing but himself, he nonetheless embodies all that is to come. There was never anything but wandering.

The paintings, the film, and the installation figure something as well. They must. We have no idea what it is. This is the best place to be. Paul Klee takes it with him to his tomb. Another artist walks up a mountain, arranging stones in a line behind him, Nazca-like.

Only a dream-father can unite the disparate. We walk with him, and he with us. At last the paintings come together. A series, however unsatisfying. Still it is unstable, impossible to deduce anything solid. Art-prophets wander the desert. They might scatter the tribe, or unite the remnant. Max Ernst picks through the glacial scree, seeking in stone the marks of a different sculpture.

Such a topic is old, everyone’s favorite: no father to bring us together, forgotten in the desert, discontinuous, without future or memory, alas! we say, quietly rejoicing in our penance, its marvelous open-endedness. If the wailing was sincere we would have our tablet. Instead we have a philosopher’s stone. Passing it back and forth through memory.

http://www.pluralmedium.com/QE_JC_small.mov

4.29.2009

PennDesign MFA Thesis website up and running!

Thanks to Ricardo Zapata (MFA '09), the website for the Class '09 Thesis exhibition is online, and it is a beaut! Check out the website for info on our upcoming exhibition at the ICEBOX Space in the Crane Arts Building in Philly and at Michael Steinberg Fine Art in NYC.

You will find images of everyone's work, our artist statements, and contact info.

We will be posting more updates here as soon as our final crits are over this weekend.

In the meantime, go see the website: www.pennmfathesis.com

4.28.2009

Hunter Stabler (MFA '06) in group exhibition in Berlin! Opening Wed., April 29th. 7-10PM.

Subversive crafts, resurgent regionalism & fake folklore..

Kunstraum Richard Sorge presents part II of the international group show:

Strich & Faden - Heimat, Volkskunst und Travestie

Opening Reception: Wednesday, April 29, 7-10PM
with live band Heatsick & Austin

Exhibition Dates: May 1 - 29, 2009

Closing Reception: May 29, 3 - 7 pm

In 2008, Kunstraum Richard Sorge initiated an ongoing series of large international subversive Arts & Crafts and Neotrad exhibitions, the second of which will take place this May. Titled Strich & Faden, the exhibition project offers subversive travesties of craft and folklore and works that thematize Heimat (heritage), gender & identity in innovative or humorous ways.

The folksy German expression "nach Strich und Faden" means to do something thoroughly, with great artistry and precision, or according to the rules of an art or craft. In contemporary language the term has gained connotations of trickery, deceit and travesty.

Travesty is a device present in many works in this show, either as an artistic attitude, or as a subject matter. The participating artists use it to subvert both the traditions of Art & Crafts and our expectations of art.

This new edition of Strich und Faden presents outstanding representatives of the thriving US-american confrontational Arts & Crafts scene - some of which are shown in Germany (or Europe) for the first time - and presents them alongside their (Eastern) European colleagues. Strich und Faden II goes beyond ironic crafting however, also incorporating conceptual and neo-traditional works.

"Genius papercutting artist Hunter Stabler (USA) will attend the opening,
as well as a number of his fabulous German colleagues."- note from Hunter

Participating Artists

Peeter Allik - EST
Walter Bruno Brix - DE
Ulrich Diezmann - DE
Rinaldo Hopf - DE
Severija Incirauskaite-Kriauneviciene - LT
Garth Johnson - USA
Ai Kijima - USA
Charles Krafft - USA
Nava Lubelski - USA
Natasza Niedziolka - DE
David Rios Ferreira - USA
Schalalala Strickzirkel - DE
Johanna Schweizer - NL
Hunter Stabler - USA
Sztuka Fabryka - BE
Tulip Enterprises - DE
Georg Weise - DE

Curated and organized by Hans Booy & Paulus Fugers

Kunstraum Richard Sorge
Old Brewery
Landsberger Allee 54
10249 Berlin

4.27.2009

Jiwon Lee, Heather Ramsdale, & Leigh Van Duzer in Exhibition at Rebekah Templeton... Opening Thurs. May 14 6-9pm


Bubble 'n Squeak

Rebekah Templeton Gallery

Opening Reception: Thursday, May 14th, 6-9pm
Exhibition Dates: May 14-June 20, 2009

Rebekah Templeton Contemporary Art is pleased to announce Bubble and Squeak, a group exhibition highlighting the work of first year Master of Fine Arts students Fritz Horstman, Jennifer Jones-O’Neil, Jiwon Lee, Heather Ramsdale and Leigh Van Duzer, some of the Mid-Atlantic region’s most promising emerging artists. The title references a classic English dish that is made from leftovers and scraps.

Fritz Horstman uses discarded shipping crates to form a dialogue about the human perception of nature. By cutting out a hole, in which the viewer is enticed to place their head, Horstman illuminates an interior space full of images of stars. Using elements of camera obscura, Horstman envelopes the viewer in a private world of light and image.

Jennifer Jones-O’Neil is a photographer exploring ideas of abstraction, flattening and altering by using color fields that are created analogously and digitally. Infused with elements of the absurd, Jones-O’Neil’s photographs highlight the alienation we can experience from consistently being bombarded with mass amounts of information.

Jiwon Lee’s carbon paper drawings jumble multiple images together to create a mass of circumstances and marks. Lee’s fragments are mashed together giving the drawing the power to create something new and unpredictable in the mind of the viewer and outside the complete control of the artist.

Using common construction materials, Heather Ramsdale’s work challenges our notions of our private spaces. Ramsdale inverts the organization of domesticity by reorganizing the materials we encounter during everyday life, exposing the space within structures.

Leigh Van Duzer’s photographs detail an interior space rich with narrative and engorged with structural decay. Her photographs deal with the detritus of human activity. Van Duzer’s recent series involves photographing a bankrupt video store as a ‘container of history’.

Rebekah Templeton Gallery
173 W. Girard Avenue
Philadelphia, PA 19123
267-519-3884
info@rebekahtempleton.com
www.rebekahtempleton.com

See more of Leigh's work at www.leighvanduzer.com

4.23.2009

Jamie Diamond (MFA '08) Open Studio at LMCC May 1-3... Opening Reception Fri. May 1, 6-8pm



LMCC Open Studio Weekend
May 1-3, 2009
Reception: Friday, May 1 6-8pm

Studios Open
Saturday, May 2, 12–6pm
Sunday, May 3, 1–6pm



Two Locations
120 Broadway, 29th Floor
77 Water Street, 10th Floor

All events are free and open to the public.
RSVP is required for all events. RSVP here: http://www.lmcc.net/openstudios

Lower Manhattan Cultural Council will open its two Workspace studio locations in the Financial District to the public for one weekend only, with an opening reception, open hours, and a reading. Workspace is LMCC's 9-month studio residency serving emerging visual artists and writers working in all media from painting to video, sculpture to photography, poetry to playwriting in unique spaces generously donated by the downtown real estate community. Meet this year’s 21 visual artists and 8 writers in their studio spaces and see the work they have been making while in residence. Changing what it means to 'work' in the Financial District, the program serves artists and writers working in all media from painting to video, sculpture to photography, poetry to playwriting in unique spaces generously donated by the downtown real estate community.

For more information about LMCC: http://lmcc.net/art/residencies/workspace/2008/openstudioweekend.html

See more of Jamie's work at www.jamiegdiamond.com

4.22.2009

Micah Danges (MFA Photo Technician) in Group Exhibition at Gershman Y... Opening Thurs. April 23 6-8pm



Invented: (un)Realities, In Two Parts.


Vox Populi Gallery at the Gershman Y

Opening Reception: Thursday, April 23rd, 6-8pm
Exhibition Dates: Part 1 - April 23-June 6, 2009





The two-part exhibition Invented: (un)Realities, In Two Parts,
examines the duality of constructed landscapes and fabricated
architectural environments. The work selected for this exhibition
demonstrates the investigation into ‘artificial’ places and spaces,
which are found in the modification of the natural world or human
constructed/architectural surroundings. The artists in this
exhibition, in order to better suit their mission, rebuild, piece
together or manipulate these established constructs. These fictitious
environments, literally and figuratively, reflect our own experiences
and human interactions between real and illusionary surroundings.

The artists presented in Part 1 are particularly interested in
imaginary landscapes, constructing objects of flora and fauna and
creating images that depict an illusion between interior/exterior
spaces through installations, paintings and photography/video.

Artists Kate Stewart, Amy Adams, Kara Crombie, Micah Danges and Eva
Wylie all use the natural world (and the departure from the natural
world) as the genesis of their work.

Organized by Vox member and UArts Faculty, Julianna Foster
and Vox Member, Josh Rickards

Gershman Y
Borowsky Gallery
401 South Broad St.
Philadelphia, PA 19147
https://www.gershmany.org/
http://www.voxpopuligallery.org/

http://micahdanges.org/

LECTURE: Terry Winters, Painter. Friday April 24th at 5pm...Meyerson Hall, B3.

GRADUATE FINE ARTS LECTURE

TERRY WINTERS
, painter

Friday, April 24th at 5:00pm

MEYERSON HALL, Room B3
University of Pennsylvania
210 S. 34th St.
Philadelphia, PA 19104

Lecture Open to the Public

Born in Brooklyn, NY, in 1949, Terry Winters attended the High School of Art & Design in New York and continued formal training at the Pratt Institute, receiving a BFA in 1971. His early paintings are influenced by minimalist, monochromatic paintings, like those of Brice Marden. Winters' love of drawing led him to introduce schematic references to astronomical, biological and architectural structures as the subject matter of his paintings. He began exhibiting work in 1977, and by the early 1980s his ideas had developed into loose grids of organic shapes beside lushly painted fields.
His has been included in numerous Whitney Biennials of 1985, 1987 and has held solo shows at the Tate Gallery in London and the Sonnabend Gallery in New York. His work has been exhibited at the Corcoran Gallery of Art as well as with many international museums. Bill Goldston invited Winters to print at the Universal Limited Art Editions studio in 1982. Mr Winters lives and works in New York and Geneva, Switzerland.

See more of Terry Winter's work here: http://www.matthewmarks.com/

4.21.2009

Caelum: MFA Sculpture Seminar Exhibit Opens at the Rotunda, Fri. April 24 6-9pm


Caelum: Work in Response to The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928) and the Rotunda's Sanctuary Space

Work by Students in the MFA Sculpture Seminar: Chris Lawrence, Kyle LoPinto, Evi Numen, Maria Rajewski, Heather Ramsdale, Jacolby Satterwhite, Christie Whisman.

Color Organ by Sonic Measures

April 17-23, 2009
Reception: Friday April 24, 6-9pm

The Rotunda
4014 Walnut Street
Philadelphia, PA
www.therotunda.org

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.

4.16.2009

LECTURE: Stanley Lewis, painter. FRIDAY, April 17th at 4:30pm...Morgan Bldg. White Room

STANLEY LEWIS, Painter

Friday, Apr 17th at 4:30pm

WHITE ROOM

Morgan Building
205 s. 34th street, Philadelphia, PA

After receiving a BA from Wesleyan University, Lewis went on to receive a BFA and MFA from Yale and was a Danforth Fellow. Solo exhibitions have included Dartmouth College, NH; the Bowery Gallery, NY and the Dorry Gates Gallery, MO. A major retrospective of his work was shown at the American University Museum, Washington D.C. in 2007. Group shows include the Delaware College of Art and Design; the Commission for Arts and Humanities in Washington D.C., and Swarthmore College, PA. His work is in the collections of the Albrecht Gallery, MO and the University of Indiana among others. Lewis' teaching experience includes The American University in Washington D.C.; Smith College MA, and Parsons School of Design, NY. Awards include both the Altman Prize and a Henry Ward Ranger Fund Purchase Award from the National Academy of Design, and a Guggenheim Fellowship.

For more info see: Midwest Paint Group

4.15.2009

LECTURE: Alec Soth. Thurs., April 16th at 5:30pm...B-1 Meyerson Hall

(click image for bigger view)

ALEC SOTH, Photographer
Thursday, April 16th at 5:30PM

B-1 Meyerson Hall
210 S. 34th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104

Alec Soth’s work is rooted in the distinctly American tradition of ‘on-the-road photography’ developed by Walker Evans, Robert Frank and Stephen Shore. From Huckleberry Finn to Easy Rider there seems to be a uniquely American desire to travel and chronicle the adventures that consequently ensue. He has received fellowships from the McKnight, Bush, and Jerome Foundations and was the recipient of the 2003 Santa Fe Prize for Photography. His photographs are represented in major public and private collections, including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and the Walker Art Center. His work has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions, including the 2004 Whitney Biennial and a career survey at the Jeu de Paume in 2008. His first monograph, Sleeping by the Mississippi, was published by Steidl in 2004 to critical acclaim. Since then Soth has published NIAGARA (Steidl, 2006), Fashion Magazine (Magnum, 2007), and Dog Days, Bogotá (Steidl, 2007). He is represented by the Gagosian Gallery in New York and the Weinstein Gallery in Minneapolis.

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.

NOTE: Admission is free, but tickets are required for this event. Tickets will be available one hour prior to the start of time in the lobby of Meyerson Hall.

http://www.alecsoth.com/

4.13.2009

Tetsugo Hyakutake (MFA '09) in group exhibition at Alan Klotz Gallery ... Opening Thurs, April 23 6-8pm


Tetsugo Hyakutake, Limestone Quarry, Tokyo, Japan 2007

Cosa Nostra : (Our Thing)

Opening Reception: Thursday April 23rd, 6 - 8 PM
Exhibition Dates: April 9th - May 2nd 2009

A selection of work by the gallery's artists, plus some invited guests.

The show features work by:

Pavel Banka
Carolyn Marks Blackwood
William Christenberry
Rebecca Cummins
Alyson Denny
Gilbert Fastenaekens
Terri Garland
Tetsugo Hyakutake
Melissa Ann Pinney
Robert Richfield
Charles Schwartz and Bill Westheimer
Aaron Siskind
Andrew Thompson

Alan Klotz Gallery
511 West 25th Street, Suite 701
New York New York 10001
212 741 4764
info@klotzgallery.com
www.klotzgallery.com

4.11.2009

Lecture Review: Pasolini

Atmospheres

Fear of an answer, that it crouches in the lecturer’s mouth. The Cinema Studies Colloquium opened only gaps. Every explanation couched itself in these terms. Nothing was settled in locus Pasolini. By moving him to inhospitable plains, in driving the poles further apart, much was accomplished. Turns out there are more than seven hills to roam, more space. Possibly we can all have a mansion here. The winds that are coming are great, the moon the only warmth.

The focus was Teorema, originally a novel. Pasolini turned it into a film with less than a thousand words, a mostly silent drift through bourgeois Milan, centered on a single family. Not much can be done to explain it. The book took these expository steps, even though it precedes the film, and it was abandoned. Can this be said, that a beginning explains its end? Not even Aquinas has an answer.

Teorema the book dissolved into Teorema the film, bringing to the screen a subsistence economy of gaps, cuts, and inexplicable gulfs. The method is reductive, erosive, destructive. Juan Rulfo, in explaining the similar atmosphere of his book Pedro Paroma, said he had to carry the narrative around in his head for years until it was shattered and shuffled enough to fit his sense of its form. But what shattered it? Why was the form different?

In its title the lecture hinted that it might follow Pasolini in his method: “The Obliteration of the Children of the Bourgeoisie in Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Vision (Part 1).” Destruction stimulated Pasolini, any violence aimed at generation. Indeed, no “Part 2” is scheduled.

She discussed another film, Porcile, a diptych contrasting a Nazi’s son with a starving cannibal who occasionally assails a victim in a medieval wasteland. The title refers to pork, more specifically capitalist societies which consume, defecate, consume. Such films, even divorced from any theoretical underpinning (any attempts to connect them with sterile Marxist concepts only emphasized this), still speak of irresistible corrosion, of some weight. Who knows what drives it. Medieval cannibalism might not be too far. We can’t account for it any more than we can account for the way books die from exposure. George Oppen, of the poets, forever:

……they feel themselves
The end of a chain

Of lives, single lives
And we know that lives
Are single

And cannot defend
The metaphysic
On which rest

The boundaries
Of our distances.
We want to say

(Of Being Numerous, 26)

Whether or not Marxism is still with us, whether it has acceded to its spectral status or persists as a presence which talks and talks and talks of anything anything anything- (who knows anymore?)- or whether another concept has succeeded it, itself frail and fading, does not seem to matter for Pasolini, the colloquium, or ourselves. What does matter is this visceral sense of some insistent gnawing at the present foundations. It was illumined in the scenes of Teorema which juxtapose the clenched fist of an eerily traumatized beautiful young Milanese girl with small drifting tufts of cottony smoke upon the black sands of Mt. Etna.

By such means Pasolini evokes his idea of the “eruption of the sacred,” that something which strains against the dead walls of the Milanese home, which rages within or against the closed fist of the young girl as she lay in bed surrounded by her sated, clinical family. This is familiar, and it hardly accounts for the effect of those drifting clouds, so close to the rare black ground.

What of the film if its ideas are lost? Would it become nothing? What of Teorema the book if Teorema the film is thus? What of Juan Rulfo’s original narrative if Pedro Paroma is thus? Why did they erode, cut? The lecture too worked in this valence.

If Teorema retains value, it will not be by its sources and referents, whether imaginative, societal, conceptual, or biographical. A work is none of these. They fade, and still some substance persists. Every investigation, the lecture included, works wittingly or unwittingly to exclude itself as a possible explanation. Something becomes fixed and evident only when it is wrong. A film, a book, a lecture can fight this, or use it. They float freely, though still bounded. By the end of the colloquium some hideous interval had been cleared, leaving the desert a little north.

Critical thought, taken in this sense, seems but a cutting of the ropes. Marxism excluded itself by exhausting itself. But something substantive still weighs on us, this thing it indicated. It erupts sometimes from Teorema or the rattling of a trolley at night. It floats freely in the smoke-filled air, shadowing the silver ashes, a makeshift balloon in medieval Russia. The lecture demonstrated the value of an erosive method; “rain also is part of the process” (Pound, Canto LXXIV). The film, turning its back on the book, only accumulates treasure. Those who do not seek the world shall gain it. Those who seek the world shall lose it.

4.10.2009

LECTURE: Matthew Ritchie, Painter/Installation Artist. Mon. April 13 5:30pm. Meyerson B1


MATTHEW RITCHIE: Painter/Installation Artist

Monday, April 13, 5:30pm

Matthew Ritchie's installations of painting, wall drawings, light boxes, sculpture, and projections are investigations of the idea of information. Explored through science, architecture, history and the dynamics of culture, his works are defined equally by their range and their lyrical visual language.

In 2001, Time magazine listed Ritchie as one of 100 innovators for the new millennium, for exploring "the unthinkable or the not-yet-thought." More omnivorous than omnipotent, encompassing everything from cutting-edge physics, ancient myth, neo-noir short stories and medieval alchemy to climate change, contemporary politics and economic theory, his installations fuse unique narrative forms with our constantly changing factual understanding of our universe. Typically, for his exhibition "We Want To See Some Light" at Portikus, Frankfurt, in 2005, he collaborated with a visual neurologist, an architect, a group of students and a philosopher to examine the physical limits of generated knowledge.

His work has been shown in numerous exhibitions worldwide including the Whitney Biennial, the Sao Paulo Bienal and the Sydney Biennial. Solo shows include the Dallas Museum of Art; the Miami Museum of Contemporary Art; the Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston; the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, Portikus, Frankfurt and The Fabric Workshop and Museum. A major permanent installation; designed in conversation with Pritzker prize-winning architect Thom Mayne, opened in December 2006 in a new Federal Courthouse in Eugene, Oregon.


Meyerson Room B1
University of Pennsylvania
School of Design
210 South 34th Street
Philadelphia, PA
215.898.8374
www.design.upenn.edu/fine-arts

MFA Photo Seminar Exhibit Opens in Meyerson Gallery, April 10


Film Still, La Jetee, 1962.

La Jetee: The Response.

Work by students in the MFA Photography Seminar: Edward Carey, Matthew Thomas Cianfrani, Jessica Clauser, Tia-Simone Gardner, Tetsugo Hyakutake, Nsenga Knight, Antonio McAfee, Joe Ovelman.

April 10th - 17th, 2009
Closing Reception Friday April 17, 5:30 - 7:30

Meyerson Gallery
University of Pennsylvania
School of Design
210 South 34th Street
Philadelphia, PA
215.898.8374
www.design.upenn.edu/fine-arts

Gallery Hours Monday - Friday 9am - 5pm

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/

4.09.2009

LECTURE TONIGHT: Jenelle Porter, ICA associate curator...Thurs., April 9th at 6PM...Morgan White Room









The Real World Lecture Series Presents…

JENELLE PORTER: associate curator, Institute of Contemporary Art
THURSDAY, April 9th at 6:00 PM

Jenelle Porter is associate curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, where she has most recently organized “Dirt on Delight: Impulses That Form Clay,” “Joshua Mosley: dread,” “Trisha Donnelly,” “Locally Localized Gravity,” and “Gone Formalism,” among others. From 1998-2001 she was curator at Artists Space in New York where she organized over twenty exhibitions, including a re-creation of the seminal 1977 Artists Space exhibition “Pictures.” She was a curatorial fellow at the Walker Art Center (1997-98) and a curatorial assistant at the Whitney Museum of American Art (1994-1997). She has written essays for several catalogues and magazines, and books on artists Trisha Donnelly, Joshua Mosley, Stephen Prina, Matthew Ritchie, and Uri Tzaig.

White Room
Morgan Building
205 S. 34th Street

fine-art@design.upenn.edu
http://www.design.upenn.edu/new/finar/

4.08.2009

Interesting new website for art/artist videos launched by the Indianapolis Museum of Art

An article in the New York Times recently introduced a new web resource for art focused media. Artbabble will feature such hard to find material as artist interviews and short profiles of curators and art handlers. This could be a great way for artists to get a behind-the-scenes sense of how arts institutions function. The website opens with links to videos featuring Brice Marden, Maya Lin, and a preview of the 5th Art:21 season.

Here is an excerpt from the article written by Kate Taylor (3/6/2009):

"In the last few years, as museums have tried to take advantage of the Internet to connect with young audiences, they have produced an increasing number of online videos, from artist interviews and time-lapse shots of exhibition installations to short profiles of curators, art handlers, and even museum guards. Most institutions feature these videos on their own Web sites, as well as uploading them to sites like YouTube or blip.tv. But until now, there has been no dedicated place on the Web for art videos...
Maxwell Anderson, the museum's director, said the goal behind ArtBabble, and the museum’s own video production, is to allow visitors to 'experience the life of museums,' whether through employee profiles, studio visits with artists or videos of conservators restoring objects. The advantage of making the new video site a collaborative one was obvious, he said: 'The strength and potency of this as a shared site is much greater than one museum at a time'.”

Here is a link to the NYT article: www.nytimes.com/2009/04/07/arts/design/07babb.html

Check out Artbabble: www.artbabble.org

4.07.2009

John Moore (MFA Senior Critic) exhibition opening at Arthur Ross Gallery...Wed., April 8th from 4-7pm

A Fine Fall Day, 2008 (detail)

Marilyn Jordan Taylor, Dean of the School of Design
invites you to preview…

John Moore

Thirteen Miles From Paradise


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8, 2009
Gallery talk by the artist at 4.00 pm
Reception to follow from 5.00 – 7.00 pm

Exhibition continues through June 14, 2009

ARTHUR ROSS GALLERY
University of Pennsylvania
220 South 34th Street
Philadelphia, PA

Opening co-sponsored by the Arthur Ross Gallery and the School of Design

4.05.2009

Chris Lawrence (MFA '10) in group exhibition at Crane Arts Center...OPENING Thurs., April 9th 6-9pm

DIVERSE PATHS

Opening Reception
: April 9th 6-9pm
Exhibition Dates: April 9 – May 7, 2009 (Wed-Sun:12-5pm)

SEA: Space for Experimental Art
Crane Arts Center
1400 N. American Street
Philadelphia, PA

For more info: www.cranearts.com

MONDAY: Talk with Michael Brenson (MFA Senior Critic) on "The MFA Question"...Morgan Building White Room at 8PM

$K6?: THE MFA QUESTION

with Michael Brenson

MONDAY April 6th at 8pm
White Room, Morgan Building

Informal discussion about art education and that which is The (your) MFA.

Essays available online:

· Thierry De Duve's essay on what art education could/should be
· Essays from the avant garde school in Frankfurt
· Revision Number 6 ADDICTIONS by Dave Hickey from Art in America

You can download the essays in our course folder by logging in with your penn key here: http://www.design.upenn.edu/remoteaccess
Navigate to FNAR and then the “distribution” folder

4.03.2009

THIS FRIDAY: Women in Fine Arts Panel Discussion featuring MFA Alumni...Morgan Building White Room 4PM

(click image for bigger view)

Friday, April 3, 4-5:30pm

Morgan Building, White Room

Panel discussion on gender and careers in fine arts with…

Carson Fox, Penn BFA, multi-media, www.carsonfox.com

Jill Sablosky, PennDesign MFA '79, sculptor, www.inliquid.com/artist/sablosky_jill/sablosky.php

Marjorie van Cura, PennDesign MFA '02, painter, www.marjorievancura.com

All PennDesign students--men and women, undergraduate majors and grad students--are welcome. Refreshments and hors d'oeuvres will be served. RSVP if attending to Rachel at rlburk@upenn.edu.

Series sponsored by the Trustees’ Council for Penn Women and organized by Career Services.