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University of Pennsylvania MFA Forum

8.15.2014

Speleogen, a collective that includes Paige Adair (Former MFA), interviewed in Burnaway.org

 Speleogen and the New Cave Art

Members of Speleogen, (l to r) Devin Brown, Mason Brown, 
Paige Adair, and David Matysiak, 2014. (Photo: Sherri Caudell)

Click on the link below and read the fascinating interview!

 http://burnaway.org/speleogen-new-cave-art/
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Posted by Anonymous at 1:25 PM

7.17.2014

Tra Bouscaren (UPenn MFA Alum) opens July 16, 2014 in Cabo Verde


Apresentação TRA BOUSCAREN, artista multimeios

Julho 14, 2014 by dnartescv Deixe o seu comentário

poster-tra

Convidamos aos artistas, designers, DJs, Vjs, professores e alunos de multimeios, jornalistas, produtores audiovisuais e pessoas interessadas, a assistir a uma palestra e demonstração, conduzidas por Tra Bouscaren, no auditório do Palácio da Cultura Ildo Lobo, dia 16 Julho 2014, às 18h. Durante a palestra os interessados poderão se inscrever para uma oficina intitulada “Tecnologias Creativas”, oferecida pelo artista.

Tra Bouscaren é um artista que usa multimeios para criar instalações físicas e digitais. Trabalha com recursos computacionais para coreografar objectos reciclados, que são modificados fisicamente e digitalmente, ganhando novas significações. Segue a descrição do seu trabalho em inglês


 

Tra Bouscaren is a post-disciplinary artist, university lecturer, and freelance curator. He holds a BA in Philosophy from Yale University, an MFA in Interdisciplinary Fine Art from the University of Pennsylvania, and is working towards his PhD in the Department of Media Study at Buffalo. Currently he is the Artist-in-Residence of the IsolAIR Program in Cape Verde, with institutional support from the Ministry of Culture and the United States Embassy.

Bouscaren’s studio is a mixed-media recycling factory where he creates and then destroys physical and digital artifacts down into abstracted fragments, only then to re-mix those remains into the next generation of artworks. This progressive, anti-precious, and auto-cannibalistic approach builds his own artistic history back into the found material with which he works towards a post-dialectical end-game.

Featured in more than 60 exhibitions in Europe and America, his work has been shown at venues including the Lincoln Center in New York, the Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Philadelphia,, Hallwalls in Buffalo, The Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin, the Maud Piquion & Partner Galleries in Berlin and Weimar, Victor I Fils Gallery in Madrid, and the Centre Cultura Contemporania de Barcelona, where he has been represented by N2 Gallery since 2007.

Following his current commitment here in Cabo Verde, Bouscaren will be engaged as the Artist-in-Residence and Visiting Lecturer of Professional Practices and Critical Theory at the University of Texas, El Paso.

www.tra-boucaren.com

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Posted by Anonymous at 10:33 AM

7.14.2014

Nathan Wasserbauer (Former UPenn MFA) at Lesley Heller Workspace

Hello friends,

I'm proud to be participating in this exciting group exhibition at Lesley Heller Workspace, opening Wednesday, July 23rd 6-8 pm at 54 Orchard Street NY, NY.
I hope to see you there, full details below.

http://nwasserbauer.com/

Lesley
                                                        Heller
                                                        Workspace
Lesley Heller Workspace        54 Orchard Street New York, NY 10002        t: 212 410 6120

Dark Map

July 23 - August 16, 2014
Opening Reception: Wednesday, July 23, 6-8pm
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Posted by Anonymous at 12:23 PM

7.09.2014

Former MFA Demetrius Oliver at S|2 Gallery

S|2 Gallery
Sotheby's 
1334 York Ave.
2nd floor

opening July 8th, 6-8pm

In collaboration with curator Ryan Steadman, S|2 presents Save It For Later, a selling exhibition of paintings and sculpture created for this show by a group of young and emerging American artists working in a consumer environment of disposable goods. The exhibition features artists that work with salvaged materials and incorporate reuse and recycling in their practice. S|2 is proud to exhibit works by Brian Belott, Graham Collins, Rachel Foullon, Dave Hardy, Jo Nigoghossian, Demetrius Oliver, Borna Sammak, Hanna Sandin and Jack Siegel.


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Posted by Anonymous at 2:25 PM

Kasey Short (MFA '15) at Big Medium, Austin, TX

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Contact: Jordan Gentry gentry@bigmedium.org (512) 939-6665


Big Medium Presents
Kasey Short: 5 Plus Hearts


​

Exhibition dates: July 12 - August 8, 2014
Opening reception: Friday, July 12, 7-10pm
Address: 916 Springdale Rd, Bldg 2, #101
Gallery hours: Tue - Sat, 12-6pm and by appointment

5 Plus Hearts explores different approaches in encountering human behavior and survival. The perspective is built from underneath the bleachers to simulate an environment of the minds’ subconscious. The installation navigates through the brain activating seduction, confusion, and sensation. In the process of the installation, my work relies heavily on instinct and humor. 5 Plus Hearts is informed by the notion of Divine Sarcasm, which is a representation of good and evil within American Institutions.

Kasey Short is an American artist from Texas. Short’s artistic output stems from his background in painting, branching off into sculpture, installation, printmaking and video. Short's recent work examines the anti-heroic object, Americana, sporting events, and engages in a playful and at times irreverent dialogue with art historical icons. Rigorously casual and emphatically apathetic, Short's sculptural work presents familiar forms distorted and transformed through both intuitive and counter-intuitive processes involving word play, material shifts and purposefully failed likenesses. In his video works, the artist depicts the scenes adjacent to his other pieces, producing a haunting, comedic and disjointed reality in which clear narrative is disambiguated. The way in which he uses sound and performers invents a world where the behaviors and circumstances are at once familiar and mysterious, furthering the confusion of the artist’s intentions.

Kasey Short was included in the 2013 Texas Biennial, and has shown internationally at venues including Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Teal Art gallery in Breckenridge, CO and University of Texas at San Antonio taking part in the 2010 and 2012 New Art/Arte Nuevo Biennial. Kasey is a MFA candidate at the University of Pennsylvania.

www.kaseyshort.com

ABOUT BIG MEDIUM
Big Medium is a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to supporting and promoting contemporary art in Texas. Big Medium produces the East Austin Studio Tour, the West Austin Studio Tour, the Texas Biennial, and present innovative exhibitions throughout the year. Big Medium provides affordable studio space to artists, and partners with various organizations in Texas to help foster the arts and facilitate an inclusive cultural dialogue between artists and their communities.

Further information is available at www.bigmedium.org or email info@bigmedium.org

Big Medium is supported by generous contributions from private donors and funded in part by the City of Austin through the Economic Growth & Redevelopment Services Office/Cultural Arts Division believing an investment in the Arts is an investment in Austin’s future.
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Posted by Anonymous at 2:21 PM

7.01.2014

Laura Bernstein (MFA'14) earns ISC award

Laura Bernstein was chosen from an exceptional number of nominees; 374 students from over 151 colleges and universities, world-wide. The jury, which included Kathryn Mikesell, Founder of the Fountainhead Residency and Studios, Miami, FL; Stefano Catalani, Director of Art, Craft & Design at the Bellevue Arts Museum in Bellevue, WA; and Donald Lipski, Sculptor, NY, reviewed more than 904 images of student art work to make their selections for this prestigious award.   

Bernstein has been named a 2014 Outstanding Student Achievement in Contemporary Sculpture Honorable Mention.

Laura will be recognized in the 2014 October issue of Sculpture magazine, as well as on the www.sculpture.orgwebsite. Please extend our congratulations to the entire art department of University of Pennsylvania.

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Posted by Anonymous at 10:25 PM

6.24.2014

Current MFA Students at PAFA! Opening June 27 5-7p

Plus One


The Graduate Program at PAFA is pleased to present Plus one, an exhibition that
pairs PAFA MFA students with students from the MFA programs at Tyler School of Art and Penn Design.  

Even under the best conditions, studying art in graduate school can be an insular experience.  Students spend hours behind closed doors making work and don’t always get out to meet artists and students beyond their department or school.  Philadelphia is home to many art schools, but connections aren’t always made, and students with similar interests might work across town from one another without ever sharing their ideas. Plus One was organized with this in mind, as a way for students from different programs to connect and start a dialogue.

Five PAFA MFA students were invited to show work in PAFA’s Gallery 128 for the exhibition. These students were asked to each invite a guest from another Philadelphia MFA program to exhibit with them. The result is a show of ten artists, working in the same city, who have just finished the first year of their graduate studies. No matter which school they attend or what medium they work in, these students have likely shared a similar first year experience of experimentation and trying to find out who they are as artists.  For some, their work may be in a place of transition, but all of them are at an incredibly exciting time where they have cast the net and anything is possible. This exhibition is an opportunity for these students to share their experiences, exchange ideas and start conversations that will hopefully continue long after the show is over.

The PAFA artists and their invited guests are:

Sean Hildreth (PAFA) and Seneca Weintraut (Tyler)
Ruthie Iglesias (PAFA) and Jennifer Nugent (Tyler) Marcelle Reinecke (PAFA) and Kasey Short (Penn) Rebecca Sedehi (PAfA) and Jennifer Berman (Penn) Shane Smith (PAFA) and Natessa Amin (Penn)

Organized by Clint Jukkala, Chair of Graduate Programs, PAFA

Opening Reception:
June 27, 5-­‐7 pm
Exhibition runs through July 27

The exhibition Plus One coincides with the exhibition, Heads and Hearts, The work of Yoni Hamburger and Ashley Wick on display at PAFA’s School of Fine Arts Gallery

For more information go to:  
http://www.pafa.edu/Events-­‐Exhibitions/On-­‐View/1257/
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Posted by Anonymous at 10:22 AM

6.19.2014

Mark Pease (MFA '03) showing at the Soap Factory, Minneapolis


Mark Pease's, 3D animation “Galleria” will be part of the group exhibition “Americana” at the Soap Factory, Minneapolis, opening Friday, June 20th.  
Opening reception: June 20th, 7-11pm 
Exhibition Runs: Jun 20 - Aug 17, 2014

The Soap Factory presents “Americana", a group exhibition featuring the work of 9 emerging artists from across North America. Curated by Executive Director Ben Heywood, Americana features drawing, sculpture, video and installation work.
All the work proposed for this show approaches ways of understanding 'America' and the 'American Experience' through work that directly examines the political aspects of various forms of American society, work that mirrors the transformation of culture through the lens of 'America', or more open poetic re-orgnisations of 'American' tropes. The Soap Factory itself, a 130 year old relic of the conquest, subjugation and industrialization of a continent, is an artifact of the nostalgia, evoked by ‘Americana’, so it is entirely appropriate that its decayed architecture be a setting, a container, for such ideas.
Mark’s piece, “Galleria” is a 25-minute, 3D animation depicting the exterior surfaces of a modern shopping mall recorded by a weightless camera as it slowly traverses its contours and enclosures.
The CGI rendering of the mall parallels its artificiality but also furthers the artificiality by removing imperfections and variation, resulting in a depiction that has a crystal-like clarity. By presenting this at an extremely slow speed, the viewer is confronted with a hyper-synthetic representation of light, shadow, and space. 
More info can be found at http://soapfactory.org/ and also http://www.markpease.com/galleria/



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Posted by Anonymous at 1:02 PM

6.13.2014

Mohammadreza Mirzaei (MFA'14) curated 'This is a true story. This is not a true story.' for Landscape Stories

Mohammadreza Mirzaei (MFA'14) curated 'This is a true story. This is not a true story.' for Landscape Stories

Mohammadreza Mirzaei curated a special issue on Iran for Landscape Stories. This selection of photography looks at imagery by 22 visual artists who tell their own stories about Iran.

Below is the intro to the project:

In recent decades images of Iran in different artistic mediums as well as photography have been contradictory. More than three decades ago, Iran was represented as a beautiful country, the land of the ancient tale of One Thousand and One Nights. Somewhere to fall in love. The country where Agnes Varda made her short film Plaisir d’Amour en Iran, and where Albert Lamorisse made his cinematic poem Le Vent des amoureux. The Islamic Revolution in 1979 suddenly changed everything. Iran became an aggressive country, and a new government that had strong Anti-American and Anti-Israeli sentiments. Those were the years of the Revolution, with its excitement and fluctuations. Soon after that, the invasion of Iran by Iraq caused the 20th century’s longest conventional war. A useless war and bloody years, so many young boys who died to preserve their motherland, a whole generation’s youth stolen form them. Many homes and lives were destroyed and so many opportunities were burnt.

Revolution and war were two important elements helping to form and develop Iranian photography. In the following years Iran became increasingly isolated from the outside world. These years were less bountiful for Iranian photography. What types of images could possibly be representative of all of the contradictions and realities of this new isolated Iran? Shirin Neshat who had left Iran shortly after the Revolution in 1979 to study art at university in the US, came back to Iran for the first time in 1990 and created her series Women of Allah and since has made numerous other bodies of work about Iran. Neshat is Iranian, but having not been witness to those ten tumultuous years of Revolution and War, her gaze, upon return to this completely changed country, had no difference with an outsider. With her talent, she created a mysterious aesthetic to represent a part of Iranian reality to the West. Let’s remember some of her imagery; a group of women walking in front of the ever naked sea. It’s beautiful and poetic, it could be a part of a surrealistic poem. However, since it is done in Iran it addresses issues of identity, women, Islam and other issues dealing with a third world Islamic country. Neshat’s incredible success made a new generation of Iranian artists depict their country as a foreign and strange place. The images had to be simple to be able to have a certain interpretation after seeing them. These artists grew up in Iran, and they were insiders, but they were working for the audience who were outside. As the waves of globalization were transforming the world including Iran, they had to be “local” to be seen in “universal” context.

The new social situation of Iran in 2000s and of course the effect of the internet created a newer image of Iran. Now that I’m looking back, I find images of every subject in this era. From Iranian social life and its contradictions to landscape and urban-scape, photography as a tool to see ordinary realities, as a medium of telling stories, and as a way to criticize the political issues, (of course in a quiet voice). There are also the Iranian photographers living outside of the country, who came back to look at their homeland, with a sense of discovery or nostalgia. Apart from that, we can find a few examples of the life of the Iranian diaspora. Some foreign photographers have also found the opportunity to travel to Iran and see the country through their own personal lens as well. They have reflected different realities, from the beauty of the architecture to the cool contradictions of a post revolutionary Islamic country.

This issue of Landscape Stories sets out to show meaning to all these contradictions and mysteries of Iran through different fragments. We further hope to show some new layers of Iranian photography, and photographers who have had until now, a smaller audience.
Attachments area
landscape-stories-iran.jpg
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Posted by Anonymous at 3:39 PM

6.12.2014

Philadelphia's Hiro Sakaguchi at Nancy Margolis Gallery





FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE FLOWERING A GROUP SHOWNancy Blum, Lynn Braswell, Maya Brym, Ryan Cobourn, Eloise Corr Danch, Lucy Fradkin, Meghan Howland, Hir

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

title
front
FLOWERING A GROUP SHOW

Nancy Blum, Lynn Braswell, Maya Brym, Ryan Cobourn, Eloise Corr Danch, 
Lucy Fradkin, Meghan Howland, Hiro Sakaguchi
6/19 - 8/1/2014
RECEPTION 6/19 6-8PM
Nancy Margolis Gallery is pleased to announce its summer exhibition, FLOWERING, will open to the public Thursday, June 19 from 6-8pm through August 1, 2014. FLOWERING defined literally is a plant in bloom, metaphorically rich, in a full stage of development. The paintings by the eight accomplished artists in this exhibition fit these definitions, and were selected for their engaging personal expression and styles. Their genre, unalike and varied, runs from realism, abstraction, narration, decoration, patterning, and embellishment. Flowers throughout history have been a universal mode of expression to convey feelings of love, grief, forgiveness, pleasure, joy, and celebration, so it is fascinating to see how each artist in his and her individual voice integrates the FLOWERING theme into their work.
Interweave
Nancy Blum, inspired by 17th century botanical drawings, is known for her obsessive wonderlands of bold, monumental flowers rendered on paper in ink, colored pencil, graphite and gouache, either as floral clusters or single huge erotic blooms. Blum received a M.F.A.f rom Cranbrook Academy of Art, Bloomfield Hills, MI; BA, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI. The artist has participated in many solos and group exhibition in the US, and has work in important public and private collections, including The Boise Art Museum, Boise, ID, and The Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art, Scottsdale, AZ.
2 Evidence - Cold Wax   Oil On Panel 23.5  x 23.5  - 2011
Lynn Braswell mixes luminous reds, oranges, bright blues, yellows, and carefully crafted subtle contrasting tones to make her floral compositions. The paint, layered onto the canvas with short staccato strokes sets up a gavotte of color and form. From a distance the canvas reveals an array of floral that gradually molt into abstraction as the eye moves closer to the painting on the canvas. Braswell received her MFA from City College, CUN2, New York; Attended the New York Studio School; BFA, and from Pratt Institute, New York. Braswell divides her time between New York City and Maine, exhibiting in both locations, and placing her work in many of the private collections in these two areas.
Bryant01 60x46
Traditionally trained, Ryan Cobourn works from observation, memory and intuition. His subject is not about specificity as much as an idea, or thought, executed with dreamy colors, free gestural brushwork ultimately evolving into luscious reconstructed abstract expressionist paintings. Cobourn received his BFA from the University of the Arts in Philadelphia and MFA from Indiana University. He is currently living and working in Brooklyn, New York. He has exhibited in New York, California, Georgia, and Louisiana in group and solo shows. His work has been featured in numerous publications including, Painting Perceptions, Painters-Table, Hyperallergic, Zagat and John Yau’s essay, “Twenty-Five Painters Under Thirty-Five”.
Brym 1
Maya Brym Spanning the genres of still life painting, and abstraction, Brym’s paintings intertwine artificial elements to reveal an uneasy beauty in the synthesis. Nature and the way humans interact with it remains the artist’s major source of inspiration. Brym received a MFA in painting from the University of Pennsylvania; BA in Art, Yale University, New Haven, CT. The artist has participated in many group exhibitions in the Metropolitan, New York, and Brooklyn areas.
ELOISE Detail
Eloise Corr Danch, born and raised in Chicago, is a versatile freelance artist who now lives and works in New York City. After an early focus on painting and illustration, she has expanded into paper sculpture, creating paper flowers, paper dresses and a various other paper props and sets for a variety of clients and publications. Eloise graduated with a Master of Arts in Illustration from the Fashion Institute of Technology in 2007. Before FIT, she studied at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago and studied fashion illustration in France at the Paris American Academy. Eloise received a BFA in Painting and Drawing from The University of Montana-Missoula.
MegH3
Meghan Howland’s remarkable figurative paintings have a knock your socks off punch. Coalescing an edgy mood, idiosyncratic theme and composition with beautiful sultry painting the artist’s subjects suggest yearning, loss, and disaster. Relying on shocking contrasts as oppositional foils the artist births fresh pink toned female beauties surrounded by voluptuous pastel flowers, and ominously present, scary black birds. Meghan Howland lives and works in Portland, Maine. She received her BFA from New Hampshire Institute of Art, and exhibiting widely has established herself as an up and coming artist.
361 Van Duzer-e
Lucy Fradkin explores color, pattern, and diversity in her luminous portraits. Lush rich colors, intricate ornamentation, collage, and pencil blend together characteristically in her work. Contemporary, yet stylistically naive, she takes influence from folk, Indian and Persian miniature painting. Fradkin’s interiors of intimate domestic settings convey and depict stories of daily life. Self taught, Fradkin has shown in galleries in the United States, and abroad including Italy, China, and Japan. She is a 2011 recipient of the prestigious Marie Walsh Sharpe Art Foundation Space Grant and the 2009 Pollock-Krasner Grant.
HS crocus
Hiro Sakaguchi’s work is influenced by two diverse cultures, Japan where he grew, and the US, where he now resides. The paintings depict autobiographical elements, an amalgam from memory and everyday life, creating a story in which emotions can dwell and depart. Hiro Sakaguchi lives and works in Philadelphia, PA. He received his MFA in 1996 from Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art and BFA in 1993 from the University of Arts in Philadelphia. He has exhibited paintings in a number of galleries throughout the United States.

Please contact the gallery for more information at margolis@nancymargolisgallery.com
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©2014 Nancy Margolis Gallery | 523 West 25th St. New York NY 10001
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Posted by Anonymous at 5:47 PM

5.24.2014

Naomi Reis, class of 2005, at Mixed Greens NYC

"Planted," a new window project, opens next Thur May 29 at Mixed Greens. There will be some painted silhouettes of non-native foliage, real non-native foliage, and fake non-native foliage staged together (a bit awkwardly, as in life.) And some new collages will be available in the Flat File. Up through Aug 29 - please come say hello. 

Coming up this summer, "Back to Eden," a group show with many artists I admire, opens Thur June 26, 6-8pm, at the Museum of Biblical Image. On Tue Aug 5 at 6:30pm, Lina Puerta and I will talk with curator Jennifer Scanlan about "The Garden as Symbol." Participating artists: Lynn Aldrich, Anonda Bell, Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, Mat Collishaw, Sean Capone, Jim Dine, Mark Dion, Barnaby Furnas, Adam Fuss, Rona Pondick, Lina Puerta, Naomi Reis, Pipilotti Rist, Alexis Rockman, Dana Sherwood, Mary Temple, and Marina Zurkow,  and Fred Tomaselli. 

Links and press release below for more info. Thank you for your support and please keep me updated with your news! 

Planted
May 29 - Aug 29, 2014
Opens Thursday May 29, 6-8pm
Windows Project at Mixed Greens
531 West 26th Street, New York, NY

Back to Eden: Contemporary Artists Wander the Garden
June 27 - Sept 28, 2014
Museum of Biblical Art
1865 Broadway, New York, NY


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Posted by Anonymous at 9:24 AM
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The University of Pennsylvania MFA Forum (also known as the PennDesign MFA blog) is a resource for current students enrolled in UPenn's MFA program as well as for alumni and other artists. Announcements of events, lectures and exhibitions, as well as student, alumni and faculty activities are an important part of this blog's mission. The University of Pennsylvania MFA Forum is independently run by students. To write for the blog, please email

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