Art & Development

More Art Competition Odds

The Space Program of The Marie Walsh Sharpe Art Foundation received over 1,100 applications this year for 17 finalists.

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or 1:64, or 1.5%

The Keyholder Residency Program of The Lower East Side Printshop received over 200 applications this year for 4 resident spots.

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or 1:50, or 2%

See more art competition odds.

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Community

Everyday UFOs & Shame the Devil

I’m pretty excited about these two openings coming up this week. The first features some really fun and funny photos, and the second is curated by a friend and hardworking curator from CCA.


March 16 – April 23, 2011
Gregg Louis: Everyday UFOs
Nohra Haime Gallery
730 Fifth Avenue, between 56th & 57th Streets, NYC, NY
Opening: Wednesday, March 16, 6 – 8 PM

Everyday UFOs, an exhibition of recent photography by artist Gregg Louis will be on view in the project room at the Nohra Haime Gallery from March 16th through April 23rd.

In his first solo exhibition in New York, Louis uses photography to construct uncanny images of UFOs out of found household objects such as light bulbs, TV antennas, dishes, plungers, ect. His process of arranging, stacking, and transposing these mundane objects against a black backdrop creates surreal images that humorously and sometimes eerily re-imagine everyday reality. By transforming these ubiquitous objects that typically fade into the background of our daily lives, Louis creates playful images that at once feel unique, familiar, and otherworldly.

Everyday UFOs mediates between an optimistic child-like playfulness and a skeptical investigation into projections and blind faith in phenomena beyond the earthly realm. The work blurs the line between belief, imagination and reality, and explores the potential we have to knowingly or unknowingly redefine our everyday perceptions for better or worse.

Gregg Louis, a multidisciplinary artist, was born in St. Louis, Missouri. He moved to New York and received his Master of Fine Arts from School of Visual Arts in 2009. Louis was a participant in the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture Residency Program in 2009. His work has been exhibited in both the US and abroad. Louis currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

BAZIN_WIN11_large.jpg

Photo: Kenya (Robinson)


March 17–April 30, 2011
Shame the Devil
The Kitchen
512 West 19th Street, between 10th and 11th Avenues, New York, NY
Opening: Thursday, March 17, 6-8pm
Exhibition Hours: Tues-Fri, 12-6pm; Sat 11-6pm
FREE

Curated by Petrushka Bazin

The genre of comedy, in all its various manifestations in stand-up, theater, literature, television, and movies has long provided rich and valuable inspiration for artists seeking to critique contemporary society using parody, satire and dark humor. Inspired by the parallel ability of both the stand-up comedian and the artist to play the role of cultural observer and provacateur, this exhibition presents new sculpture, video, installations, and photography by artists, who strategically examine, with their frank observations and dry wit, the socio-political dimensions of power associated with cultural, racial, and economic issues. Titled after the longer idiom “tell the truth and shame the devil,” which means to speak honestly and without censor, these artists, following the long traditions of political caricature, offer up wry send-ups of political commentary on such critical issues as global poverty, racial profiling, anti-terrorist paranoia, and right-wing extremism. Artists include: Jabari Anderson, Elizabeth Axtman, Michael Britto, Wayne Hodge, My Barbarian, Huong Ngo, Jessica Ann Peavy, Sara Greenberger Rafferty, Jimmy Joe Roche, and Kenya (Robinson).

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Art & Development

The International Award for Participatory Art

Forgive my stroppiness of late. It’s not all doom and gloom in the world of art competitions. There is some good news, such as the announcement of a new prize with exciting criteria.

Pablo Helguera has won the first edition of the International Award for Participatory Art. The Award, a biennial project promoted by the Legislative Assembly of the Region Emilia-Romagna, is dedicated to artists with an outstanding experience in participatory art projects. The three finalists of the award, chosen from a list of 18 artists nominated by curators, critics and artists from all over the world, had to develop a project idea to be realised in the city of Bologna, Italy in 2011. Helguera’s project was chosen from a short list of three proposals submitted by the winner and the other two finalists Mel Chin and Jeanne van Heeswijk. The award consists in the prize of 15,000 EUR and a budget of 30,000 EUR to create the project. 

Pablo Helguera (Mexico City, 1971) is a New York based artist whose work focuses on history, pedagogy, sociolinguistics and anthropology in formats such as lectures, museum displays, performance and written fiction. His project The School of Panamerican Unrest, a nomadic think-tank, physically crossed the continent by car from Anchorage to Tierra del Fuego. He has exhibited widely and has been recipient of the Guggenheim Fellowship and the Creative Capital grant. He is the author of several books including The Pablo Helguera Manual of Contemporary Art Style, Theatrum Anatomicum (and other performance lectures), and What in the World.

Helguera’s project for Bologna, called Ælia Media, consists in creating a nomadic cultural journalism institute and broadcast center, as an alternative arts multimedia channel. The project will function in two capacities: one, as a training ground for currently active and aspiring cultural producers, and second, as a temporary broadcast program in a variety of media (video, radio, print and web) with a primary emphasis on user-generated content (consumer-generated media) using live participation methods as well as online social networks.

The project will derive its strategies from processes of learning, self-organization, and media production that have local roots but with a contemporary emphasis and outlook. The “Ælia Media Corporation” will try to be a cabinet of curiosities of cultural journalism, searching for the extraordinary in the ordinary, rediscovering the wealth of cultural production in Bologna, and juxtaposing opinions on specific issues, tying them with larger issues internationally.

“The idea of the kiosk”, explains Helguera “is firstly to provide visibility of the project in the city and secondly to create a location in the form of a ‘third place’. Occasionally the kiosk will “travel” to other parts of the city to reach other communities and to draw attention to particular issues in the city”.

The award was announced by an international jury comprising Julia Draganovic, award curator, Rudolf Frieling, curator at the Media Arts Department at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Alfredo Jaar, one of the most influential artists on the international contemporary art scene, Bert Theis, artist, curator and co-founder of out-Office for Urban Transformation and Isola Art Center, Milan and Luigi Benedetti, Director General of the Legislative Assembly of the Region of Emilia-Romagna. The jury announced the winner at Arte Fiera – Bologna Art Fair and gave a preview of the winner’s participatory project, the first of its kind, to be created at Bologna in the course of 2011.

The International Award for Participatory Art is launched by the Legislative Assembly of the Emilia-Romagna Regional Government in collaboration with
LaRete Art Projects and goodwill.

The Award is curated by Julia Draganovic assisted by co-curator Claudia Löffelholz.
For further information and to be constantly updated about the project see: www.artepartecipativa.it

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News

Art Practical: Talking Shop / Review of Curtain Call

The latest Art Practical is online, and it features a new collaboration with SFMOMA.

Have a look at Zachary Royer Scholz’ essay, “San Francisco and the Art World of Tomorrow” and Christian L. Frock’s “Notes on Alternative Autonomy.” While you’re there, you can also read my latest art review: “Curtain Call”, by sculptor Robert de Saint Phalle at Dodge Gallery, NYC.

Over at SFMOMA’s Open Space (where I posted Positive Signs #2 yesterday), you’ll find “Shadowshop: Recipe for Boiling Water,” by Renny Pritikin, posing a series of questions inspired by Stephanie Syjuco’s Shadowshop project at SFMOMA.

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Art & Development, Research

Art Fairs: Armory, Independent, Pulse, VOLTA: What caught my eye

Among so many gallery booths, the artwork at art fairs suffers from little context, quietude, and time for reflection–but I still managed to enjoy myself at Armory, VOLTA, Independent, and Pulse (I missed Scope and the others; sorry). I assessed galleries rather than artwork, and looked at art to learn about artists and techniques. In short, I went as an artist, not a critic.

What caught my eye?

Recent Works by Artists I Like:

Kerry James Marshall, Jack Shainman Gallery, Armory

A painting by Kerry James Marshall at Jack Shainman Gallery, New York (Armory).

Kerry James Marshall (detail), Jack Shainman Gallery, Armory

I love this stylish signature for this narrative “period” painting.

A lightbox by Kota Ezawa at Murray Guy, Armory

A lightbox by Kota Ezawa at Murray Guy, New York (Armory). He’s got a solo show at the gallery through April 9th.

Brion Nuda Rosch, DCKT Contemporary, Armory

Brion Nuda Rosch‘s collages, which I have seen around San Francisco, looked nice at DCKT Contemporary (Armory). They remind me of Ed Ruscha‘s work, while remaining their own discrete investigation.

Anne Collier, Marc Foxx Gallery, Los Angeles, Armory

Photo by Anne Collier from Marc Foxx Gallery, Los Angeles (Armory). I saw another photo from this series of handouts at another booth at Independent. The list of questions are fitting for art fairs—the second question here is, “Where have I seen this before?”

Mel Bochner, Two Palms, New York, Armory.

High-relief, impasto monoprints by Mel Bochner from Two Palms, New York (Armory).

Artists who piqued my curiosity:

Claudia Weiser, Seis and Höke, Armory

Mirrored installation and colored pencil drawings on black paper by Claudia Weiser from Sies and Höke, Düsseldorf (Armory). I think a lot of my neo-hippie/Romanticist/mystic artist friends in California would love this work.

Gel pen drawing, Claudia Weiser

A nice colored pencil drawing by Claudia Weiser.

David Kramer, Galerie Laurent Godin, Armory

Cheeky illustration-inspired watercolor by David Kramer from Galerie Laurent Godin, Paris (Armory). The text reads, “I always like it better… when things are shiny and new.”

David Kramer, Galerie Laurent Godin, Armory

More Kramer.

A second look: Lots of pictures, including some glorious Mad Men meets Flintstones installations. Colorful, ironic, likable pathetic-aesthetic. I can see why this work would be popular, in a Judd Apatow sort of way. Tongue-in-cheek tropes of male identity means you can have your bar cart and wink-wink humor too.

Fabio Viale, The Pool, NYC, Volta

A milk crate carved of black marble by Fabio Viale from The Pool, NYC (VOLTA).

A second look: Rendering everyday objects in luxe materials is not very original, but the inanity still struck me. Craft suggests time and labor—human energy—thus imbuing objects with meaning (or the idea of meaning). Yet does meaning always equate to significance…?

Jorge Perianes, Galeria Adhoc, Vigo, Volta

You would think that only a few days after seeing the biggest cockroach in my life that I wouldn’t enjoy these pest-infested paintings by Jorge Perianes from Galeria Adhoc, Vigo (Volta). But fake bugs that don’t move are much more fun and funny than real NYC bugs. [The gallery’s site uses frames, so links to the artist’s page are not available.]

Juliao Sarmento, Pilar Corrias Gallery, London, Armory

Installation by Julião Sarmento from Pilar Corrias Gallery, London (Armory).

A second look: A quick glance at the gallery site suggests that this type of surrealist installation is atypical for the artist. Perhaps more is forthcoming.

Willem Andersson, Gallery Niklas Belenius, Volta

Paintings of bandaged and decorated military officers by Willem Andersson from Gallery Niklas Belenius, Stockholm (VOLTA). Of course these are of grave implications, but there’s something comical about the proliferation of the medals. The complete bandaging is also reminiscent of Georgio de Chirico‘s canvas-covered manequins, and The Invisible Man TV series.

Peter Liversidge, Ingleby Gallery, Edinburgh, Armory

A project by Peter Liversidge from Ingleby Gallery, Edinburgh (Armory). Yes, that is a neon ampersand and a two-way mirror. And 10 proposals for projects.

Peter Liversidge, Ingleby Gallery, Edinburgh, Armory

Not more than three days had passed since I told RR how no one actually types out their conceptual projects on a typewriter anymore. Above, Liversidge proves me wrong. To boot, the gallery’s site states that Liversidge types these at his kitchen table.

Peter Liversidge, Ingleby Gallery, Edinburgh, Armory

Per the typewritten instructions above, I stood before and read the proposal, presented a dollar bill to the gallery staff, who embossed my bill with the text. I love the site-specific, limited-duration aspect of the project. And I’m eager to learn more about Liversidge, to gain insight on the possible explanations for the text.

Will history be kind to me? Will I write history? And since the project is limited to the Armory Fair, and only US dollar bills were proscribed, What are the consequences of how I spend my money on writing history?

A second look: As it turns out, Liversidge makes text installations that completely appeal to my tastes. We’ve even used similar, ambivalent/psychological texts; the same maxim inspired his project, The Darkest Hour is Just Before the Dawn and my installation, Binary Pair. He also uses flowers to spell out advice that positive psychologists would agree with. Fantastic!

[Also, Ingleby Gallery also represents Ian Hamilton Finlay’s estate and Iran do Espírito Santo (check out this lovely photogram).]

Valeska Soares, Eleven Rivington, NYC, Armory

A flame-worked tube glass conversation chair by Valeska Soares from Eleven Rivington, NYC (Armory).

Valeska Soares, Eleven Rivington, NYC, Armory

A collage of book dedications also by Valeska Soares from Eleven Rivington, NYC (Armory).

Valeska Soares, Eleven Rivington, NYC, Armory

Soares detail: “For KATHERINA v. F. who taught me / that love is more / than the longing / to be together.” A brilliant project that compiles uses a few words to convey unknowable authors’ love and gratitude.

Artworks relating to themes in my current work—happiness, exuberance, decoration, cheap plastic, mythologized interiors:

Alex McLeod, Angell Gallery, Toronto, Armory

Photo by Alex McLeod from Angell Gallery, Toronto (Pulse: Impulse). This is like a still-life equivalent of Owl City—super cute verging on twee, appealing to many and possibly grotesque to cynics. I think it’s adorable, and also interesting in how it balances extraordinary cuteness and good taste.

Birgit Verwer, Livingstone Gallery, The Hague, Pulse

A mirror and text by Birgit Verwer from Livingstone Gallery, The Hague (Pulse).

Cassandra C. Jones, Baer/Ridgeway, San Francisco, Pulse

Rainbow balloon prints by Cassandra C. Jones from Baer/Ridgeway, San Francisco (Pulse).

Eric Beltz

Image Source: Artist’s section at MorganLehmanGallery.com

Drawing of an embroidery by Eric Beltz from Morgan Lehman, NYC (Pulse).

Joseph Burwell, Miyako Yoshinaga, Tokyo, Pulse/Impulse

Garage-inspired installation by Joseph Burwell from Miyako Yoshinaga Art Prospects, Tokyo (Pulse: Impulse). Though there is a high proportion of 2-D art in the installation, it appeals to my interest in the domestic and decoration—what is art and not art, why, and how each functions to provide pleasure or happiness.

Kara Kim, Kukje Gallery/Tina Kim Gallery, Seoul/NYC, Armory

Color-shifting LED signage by Kira Kim from Kukje Gallery/Tina Kim Gallery, Seoul/NYC (Armory). Cursive scripts were never meant to be set in all capitals like this. The typographic awkwardness is part of the ridiculousness of such a sign.

A second look: Oddly, Kim’s work is completely different on the site. No textual works or signs and no discernable ties to love.

Katrin Strobel, Galerie Heike Strelow, Frankfurt, Volta

Hand-drawn plastic bag installation reflecting Paris’ diversity, by Katrin Ströbel from Galerie Heike Strelow, Frankfurt (VOLTA).

Nelson Lierner, Galerie Gabrielle Maubre, Paris, Armory

A map made with stickers by Nelson Lierner from Galerie Gabrielle Maubre, Paris (Armory). [I’d link to the artist’s page, but there isn’t one.] That’s Micky and Minnie Mouse on North America, kangaroos on Australia, and—yes—gorillas on Africa.

A second look: I’m all for experimentation, but when the results go horribly wrong, as it did with the gallery’s ugly Google-based website, conventional HTML seems not so bad.

nelson lierner gabrielle maubre armory

Detail.

Kelty Ferris, DCKT Contemporary, NYC, Armory

Keltie Ferris seems like primarily a painter, but I liked these framed hot pink spaces from Horton Gallery, NYC (Armory).

Sarah Pucci, Air de Paris, Paris, Armory

Beads, sequins and styrofoam by Sarah Pucci from Air de Paris, Paris (Armory). [Frame-based site—no link to artist’s page available. From the home page, click on news to access main navigation.]

Sarah Pucci

Another Pucci. I like how it looks so ornate and rich with such common materials. In viewing her other work, she seems to reference the Baroque, but there’s something crafty that speak to heavily beaded garments from many cultures too.

Fiona Rae, Buchmann Gallery, Berlin, Armory

I like these funny “gift” collages by Fiona Rae from the Buchmann Gallery, Berlin (Armory). They both feature bows of ribbon.

Unknown, Seventeen Gallery, London, Armory

No labels identified these holographic sticker sheets from Seventeen Gallery, London (Armory). It was adjacent to Abigail Reynold’s collages, however.

Conceptual and textual works:

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Antoni Muntadas’ Project involved framed texts with the 5W’s and other basic questions. Gabrielle Maubrie, Paris (Armory).

Fia Backstrom, Murray Guy, NYC, Armory

Text panels by Fia Backström, Murray Guy, NYC (Armory).

Gustavo Artigas, Caja Blanca, Mexico City, Armory

Paintings (not vinyl) describing toxic properties of the pigments by Gustavo Artigasi from Caja Blanca, Mexico City (Armory).

gustavoartigas-inst_cajablanca_armory

Assorted toxins. Gustavo Artigasi.

Ulrik Weck, Galleri Christina Wilson, Armory

Textual by association: bookcase of wood planks by Ulrik Weck from Galleri Christina Wilson, Copenhagen (Armory). [This idea of planks standing in for books will be echoed in Re-Covering, a group exhibition curated by Mike Chavez-Dawson at Untitled Gallery in Manchester this summer.]

Unknown artist, Sutton Lane, London/Paris/Brussels, Independent

Thick felt letters by an unidentified artist, Sutton Lane, London/Paris/Brussels (Independent).

Artist unidentified, Untitled Gallery, NY, Armory

Oversized prints/posters on a tiled penny floor. Artist(s) unidentified, Untitled Gallery, NY (Armory).

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Nice materials:
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Projector with a loop that shows only light, on a silver metallic canvas. Artist unknown, from Sprueth Magers,  Berlin/London (Independent).

albertoborea_isabelhurley_volta

Screenprint on brushed metal by Alberto Borea from Isabel Hurley, Málaga (VOLTA).

damienhirst_othercriteria_armory

In commercial printing, foil printing has been around a long time, but only recently has it been developed for fine art printmaking workshops. If you’re Damien Hirst or Other Criteria, however, you can employ commercial printing techniques for fine art editions.

andrewlewicki_charlesjamesgallery_armory

Gold brick crayons by Andrew Lewicki from Charles James Gallery, Los Angeles (Pulse).

Ken Matsubara, MA2 Gallery, Tokyo, Volta

Installation view of assorted works by Ken Matsubara from MA2 Gallery, Tokyo (VOLTA).

kenmatsubara2_ma2gallery_volta

Detail of a Matsubara sculpture. Video displayed beneath a cup of water.

Source: MA2 Gallery website.

Black and white video of a ring of fire. What you can’t see from the photo is that the video is behind a piece of two-way mirror. In a white gallery, it’s only when dark reflections—such as the viewer’s face—appear in the mirror that the video becomes visible. Matsubara’s work is impressively slick—few pieces had visible electrical leads, and it’s evident that many of his pieces use the latest, thinnest and smallest screen technologies. There was a Gothic/cabinet of curiosity/black mirror feel to the works that would appeal to many people.

michaelwilkinson_themoderninst-tobywebsterltd_armory

By Michael Wilkinson from The Modern Institute/Toby Webster Limited, Glasgow (Armory).

I’m thoroughly perplexed by this piece. The wall label ascribes the material as “etched mirror,” but etching is done with acid, which would leave a frosted surface, which the glass does not have on either side. The pattern suggests that the hot, liquid silvering was dripped or thrown at the glass. Typically, glass is not meant to withstand sudden changes in temperature, so that it might survive partial silvering is really interesting…

[A look at the gallery site brought me to this installation…

Source: Jim Lambie’s secion on themoderninstitute.com.

…by Jim Lambie. Those papery things are aluminum sheets with fluorescent paint. Love it!]

charlesavery_pilarcorriasgallery_armory

Hand-drawn posters by Charles Avery from Pilar Corrias Gallery, London (Armory).

patrickaarnivaara_gallericharlottelund_armory

A sculpture with Plexiglas Radiant, whose colors change upon reflection and transparency, sort of like Golden Paint’s Interference Colors. By Patrick Aarnivaara from Galleri Charlotte Lund, Stockholm (Armory).

unk3_casatriangulo_armory

More Plexiglas Radiant. Artist unidentified, Casa Triângulo, Saõ Paulo (Armory).

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Another unidentified artist, I believe, from Casa Triângulo, Saõ Paulo (Armory).

Unknown Artist, Casa Triangulo, Sao Paulo, Armory

The installation featured a flash of projected light onto kinetic crystal sculptures.

Sebastiaan Bremmer, Hales Gallery, London, Pulse

This made me want to paint on photos. I’ve done it in the past, but adding only a layer of colorful dots is really sweet and playful. Photo with paint and ink by Sebastiaan Bremmer from Hales Gallery, London (Pulse). Hales’ site features other photos with dots by Bremmer.

Simon Schubert, Patrick Heide Contemporary Art, London, Armory

Realist interiors rendered only in subtly-folded paper by Simon Schubert from Patrick Heide Contemporary Art, London (Pulse). Looks like Heide doesn’t represent Schubert. For more pics, visit the artist’s site.

Artist unknown, Galeria Casas Riegner, Bogota, Armory

Paper sculptures of paper crafts. Artist unknown, Galeria Casas Riegner, Bogotá (Armory).

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The binder clip is made of paper. Artist unknown, Galeria Casas Riegner, Bogotá (Armory).

unk_det2_galeriacasasriegner_armory

The triangle and stool is made of wood. But the tapes, razor and eraser are made of paper. Artist unknown, Galeria Casas Riegner, Bogotá (Armory).

Interesting display strategies:

peterliversidge_inglebygallery_armory

Illuminated signage, “The Thrill of it All,” tucked behind two partial walls. By Peter Liversidge from Ingleby Gallery, Edinburgh (Armory).

Etienne Chambaud, Bugada Cargnel, Armory

Etienne Chambaud, Bugada Cargnel, Armory

Using frames-as-unordered-vitrines is super smart. By Étienne Chambaud from Bugada & Cargnel, Paris (Armory).

Etienne Chambaud, Bugada Cargnel, Armory

Glass: slimmer and cheaper than a vitrine; the object is not encased, but its surface is protected. There’s something nice, too, about how it’s flattened into an image. Étienne Chambaud from Bugada & Cargnel, Paris (Armory).

Apologies to artists and their galleries for the quality of my snapshots. I know many artists dislike poor documentation of their work (myself included), but bear in mind that the purpose of my posts is to share my enthusiasm. Linking to galleries’ websites is a time-consuming task I could do without, but I do it so that readers can learn more about the artists, and hopefully, see more photos of the works, or perhaps even see the work in person one day.

I collected information from wall labels, which were not always available. Booth signage was sometimes confusing. Sorry for any incomplete or incorrect information. Corrections welcome.

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News, Projects

Positive Signs Begins! at Open Space on sfmoma.org

It’s official! I’m a contributor to Open Space, the lively, critical blog on the website of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Every Wednesday through June, I will publish Positive Signs, a series of interpretive diagrams, quotes, and speculations on creativity, optimism and the lives of artists, notwithstanding brief forays into the nature of space, stuff, experience, and cognition. Positive Signs take the form of drawings in glitter and neon pen with occasional foil prints on gridded vellum. While I’ve been publishing critical writing and essays elsewhere, I’m excited to see what kind of dialogue a series of drawings and diagrams can inspire on Open Space.

Visit Open Space to view Positive Sign #1.

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News

Through 4/1/11: Portraiture: Inside Out @ Walsh Gallery, Seton Hall University

I’ll unveil a new cutout text installation at this group show. It will be an optimistic, exhuberant update to my copper and elastic installation, Cloud. The exhibition includes two members of the collective, Brolab.

February 28 – April 1, 2011
Portraiture: Inside Out
Opening Reception: Thursday, March 3, 5–9pm
Walsh Gallery at Seton Hall University, South Orange, NJ
Gallery hours: Monday–Friday, 10:30am–4:30pm

Portraiture: Inside Out examines public expressions of private identity through the display of multi-media works including performance and installation. Featured artists include Sarah Bliss, Dominic Guarnaschelli, Gwen Hardie, Jenny Hyde, Pat Lay, Greg Leshé, So Yoon Lym, Ryan Roa, Steve Rossi, Jesse Eric Schmidt, Travis LeRoy Southworth, Tonja Torgerson, Peter Whittenberger, Christine Wong Yap and Raphael Zollinger. Artist Ryan Roa will stage a public intervention throughout the opening and documentation of the event will be on view for the remainder of the exhibition.

A full color exhibition catalogue will be available.

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