Category Archives: Installation

Out of Hand

Out of Hand, Gina Michaels at iMPeRFeCT Gallery

Blue Fingers, bronze, 22 x 17 x 14″, Rushen (detail), bronze, 20 x 13 x 10″

Out of HandGina Michaels’ solo show at iMPeRFeCT Gallery

October 12 – November 2, 2013, Artist’s Reception Saturday, Oct. 12, 2013 5:00-8:00pm

From the beginning, Gina Michaels sculpture is Out of Hand. Her sculpture practice starts in a sandbox. She presses her hands (and feet) into casting sand, sculpting directly in the mold. She then ladles molten bronze directly into the hollows created by the body. The resulting forms are welded into “Hand Plants,” at once animal, vegetable and mineral. They can be read as lovingly cultivated hybrids, or as random and disturbing mutations. The work is full of visual puns and double entendres, with a dose of slapstick. Sometimes modeled figures perch in trees that grow out of the palm of a hand, adding a narrative, mythic dimension. The work can be as small as a few inches high, or eight feet tall. In addition to creating sculpture, Michaels makes nature prints, which will also be on view.

Gina Michaels work will be at iMPeRFeCT Gallery in Germantown from October 12 – November 2. There will be an artist’s reception on Saturday October 12, 5:00 – 8:00 P.M. iMPeRFeCT Gallery is a not-for-profit alternative art space that is both international and community based. Founders Renny Molenaar and Rocio Cabello bring their experience running alternative spaces in New York, contributing a new voice to the Philadelphia art community.

Gina Michaels artwork has been featured in solo and group exhibitions throughout the United States, including Paula Barr Chelsea Gallery, Ceres Gallery, and the Prince Street Gallery in New York City; Grounds for Sculpture in Hamilton, New Jersey; the Woodmere Art Museum, City Hall, Fairmount Park and Projects Gallery in Philadelphia; and the El Paso in Palm Desert, California. Additional information about the artist and her work can be found at www.ginamichaels.com.

iMPeRFeCT Gallery info: 5601 Greene Street, Philadelphia PA 19144. Gallery hours: Wednesday – Saturday 1:00 – 6:00pm. The gallery will also be open 1:00 – 6:00 on Sunday October 20 for POST 2013,  Philadelphia Open Studio Tours

contact: Renny Molenaar or Rocio Cabello

(917) 957-4504 or  (215) 869-1001

renny@rennymolenaar.com, dewdropNY@aol.com

www.imperfectgallery.com

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Levitate Philly

Levitate Philly, Equality PA, The Attic Youth Center

WOMEN IN THE ARTS AND THE FOLKS WHO LOVE THEM COME TOGETHER FOR AN UPLIFTING EXPERIENCE

This month a special late night Levitate Philly. Join us in this fund-raising event to support Equality PA and The Attic Youth CenterLive performances, body paint, silent art auction and more!

Women in the arts are being brought to the forefront joining forces to share their gifts and let the public inside of their creative minds. Levitate Philly is a monthly roving event that takes place every 3rd Friday and providing spaces all over the city for women in the full spectrum of arts and art performances. The artists, their supporters and the public have a chance to come together to discuss not just arts but a range of issues in an environment that supports interactions and builds camaraderie.

Each event showcases a new line up of visual artists, performers and DJ’s. All female and all unique in their style of craft keeping things fresh and giving attendees a taste of something familiar while exposing them to new sights and new sounds. Past and pending artists range from first time exhibitors to established and well known performers in the Philadelphia scene.

This month’s event on August 16th is a special late night event from 9pm-2am and a fundraiser for both Equality PA and The Attic Youth Center. This event is be an art expose and dance party with body paint, live music, and even a short theatrical presentation by Emmanuelle Delpech. Favorite past artists including American Queen TJD and participants in the Attic’s art program will also showcase and present a piece of art especially themed “What does equality mean to you?” for auction.

To find out more about this and future events or to submit your information to be showcased check, out www.levitatephilly.com or find them on Facebook @LevitatePhilly.

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LandLab

Kept Out, Stacy Levy, LandLab, CFEVA, Schuylkill Center for Environmental Education, DoNArTNeWs

New Visual Art Program to Improve Environment and Educate Public

PHILADELPHIA — The Center for Emerging Visual Artists (CFEVA) and The Schuylkill Center for Environmental Education (SCEE) announced today the launch of an innovative artist residency program designed to address local environmental issues.  LandLab, a joint project of SCEE and CFEVA is funded in part by a grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

The program will bring the artists’ creativity and curiosity to bear on solving environmental problems and promoting environmental stewardship.  Artists will collaborate with environmental scientists to create real solutions to local environmental problems, such as rainwater runoff or habitat loss.  Each art project will also engage the public in meaningful way, either actively involving them in the scientific and creative process or with a strong educational component in the final project.

“The ultimate goal of LandLab is to engage more people in the effort to protect the environment and to foster new ideas,” said Jenny Laden, Director of Environmental Art at the Schuylkill Center.  “By bringing different perspectives to a problem, we gain new ways of looking at it—and new solutions.  Environmental art can also help engage the public with an issue in a very personal and meaningful way.”

Four artists will be granted six-month paid residencies to explore the Schuylkill Center’s property, conduct research, and develop and create installations which intervene with the land and demonstrate ecological solutions.  Residencies will run from April through October of 2014.  The final artworks will be on view to the public at the Schuylkill Center free of charge, and all four projects will be presented at the 2015 Science Festival.

CFEVA will help manage the recruitment and selection of artists and provide expanded exhibition opportunities.

“I’m thrilled to work with CFEVA” said Laden.  “Their stature in the art community and their resources will significantly expand the reach and impact of the project.”

LandLab is one of 48 winners of the prestigious Knight Arts Challenge Philadelphia.

“At its core, great art inspires us, to be better people and to build stronger communities,” said Dennis Scholl, VP for arts at Knight Foundation.  “We hope that by using the arts as a lens to look at our greatest challenges, like the Schuylkill Center is doing, we can draw more people into designing creative solutions.”

About The Schuylkill Center for Environmental Education

The Schuylkill Center for Environmental Education (SCEE) was founded in 1965 as the nation’s first urban environmental education organization.  Its 365-acre sanctuary serves as a living laboratory to foster appreciation, deepen understanding, and encourage stewardship of the environment.  SCEE reaches over 15,000 Philadelphia-area residents each year with an array of educational programs, including standards-based programs for schoolchildren, continuing education for teachers, and a full calendar of events for the public.  The environmental art department sparks awareness of the natural environment with exhibitions of the highest quality that attract, educate and inspire the public.

About the Center for Emerging Visual Artists

The Center for Emerging Visual Artists™, formerly Creative Artists Network, was founded in 1983 by Felicity R. “Bebe” Benoliel to encourage the career development of emerging visual artists. Since then, the organization has worked steadily harder to provide the support essential to talented individuals building careers in the visual arts. The Center dedicates itself to making art careers viable for those who choose them, helping emerging artists reach their audiences, and promoting interest and understanding of emerging visual art among citizens of the community.

About the Knight Foundation

Knight Foundation supports transformational ideas that promote quality journalism, advance media innovation, engage communities and foster the arts.  The foundation believes that democracy thrives when people and communities are informed and engaged.  For more, visit KnightFoundation.org.

Contacts

Schuylkill Center, Jenny Laden, Director of Environmental Art, 215-482-7300 x 113, jenny@schuylkillcenter.org

Center for Emerging Visual Artists, Ann Peltz, Director, Studio Tours & Exhibitions, 215.546.7775 ext. 13, Ann@cfeva.org.

For more information: http://www.schuylkillcenter.org/departments/art/LandLab-Program.html

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Dialogic

Artists explore the internal contradictions, hidden meaning, and implicit ideologies of language Glassboro NJ: Rowan University Art Gallery presents Dialogic a multi-media group exhibition of work by artists that explore the internal contradictions, hidden meaning and implicit ideologies of language as a critical component of their practice from September 3 through October 8 – 8 pm followed by a spoken word event at 8:30 pm. Both events are free and open to the public.

Curated by Gallery Director, Mary Salvante, the exhibition includes work by Jenny Holzer, Glenn Ligon, Jaume Plensa, Lesley Dill, John Giorno, Keith Brand, Erik den Breejen, DataSpaceTime, Bang Geul Han, Barbara Hashimoto, Meg Hitchcock, Dawn Kramlich, Melanie McLain, Ben Pranger, Buy Shaver, Chris Vecchio and Sue White. How language is perceived, communicated, and translated is informed by the visual qualities and symbolic power of the texts, words, and poetic phrasings incorporated into the video, sound-scapes, interactive tech-works, sculpture, paintings and works on paper included in this exhibition.

Works by Jenny Holzer, Glenn Ligon, Buy Shaver, and Dawn Kramlich reproduce text as aphorisms, precepts, and dictums to influence the thoughts and actions of the viewer.  John Giorno’s ground breaking Dial-A-Poem project, Keith Brand’s exterior soundscape, Melanie McLain’s performative video, DataSpaceTime’s  QR code mural, Bang Geul Han’s motion activated video and Chris Vecchios public art action and interactive works focus on the physical and aural complexities of language.  The sculpture, paintings, works on paper, and installations by Lesley Dill, Jaume Plensa, Barbara Hashimoto, Meg Hitchcock, Erik den Breejen, Ben Pranger and Sue White deconstruct  and recontextualize language through reimagining systems of communication found in advertisements, books, braille, poetry, Morse code and scripture.

Admission to the gallery is free and open to the public. Regular gallery hours are Monday – Friday, 10 am to 5 pm (with extended hours on Wednesdays to 7 pm); and Saturday, 12 to 5 pm. For more information, call 856-256-4521 or visit www.rowan.edu/artgallery. Rowan University Art Gallery is located on the lower level of Westby Hall on the university campus, Route 322 in Glassboro, NJ. A public reception will be held on Thursday, September 12, 5:30.

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Faveladelphia

Faveladelphia, Favela Painting, 161 West Gallery

Faveladelphia, Favela Painting, Praça Cantão, Communidade Da Santa Marta, Rio De Janeiro161 West Gallery

161 West Gallery hosted a fundraising event to promote the social practice artists called Favela Painting, Jeroen Koolhaas and Dre Urhahn. The space was darkened a bit so the large light boxes could glow to best effect, the DJ played upbeat grooves and special Brazilian beer and cocktails lightened the hot, sultry night. The pop art punch of color from the glowing photographs and high art festivities accentuated the sociological impact of art in the world community. And not just any communities. Edge cities.

DoN recognized the image of the cheery housing complex from a seminar called Design for the Other 90% presented at the University of the Arts by Smithsonian Cooper Hewitt, National Design Museum. The information packed presentation was about designing for the 90% of the world’s population who live in places like the favelas of Brazil, the barrios of Mexico, and the famous slums of the world.

Dre Urhahn said, “Yeah, this has been in the New York Times, all over the place. This is like our piece de resistance artwork. We made that into the Times and we were so proud, it was – The United Nations put it up on their headquarters!”

Faveladelphia, Favela Painting, 161 West Gallery

FaveladelphiaFavela PaintingPraça Cantão, Communidade Da Santa Marta, Rio De Janeiro161 West Gallery

“The United Nations invited us in and there was this huge banner of this project, so that was something we were really proud of. This is called Praça Cantão, all the information is on our website.

Our dream is to create this (pointing to an illustration of a rainbow hued hillside town) an endless continuation of painting up the hills. And where we painted thirty-four houses, which is our largest project in Brazil, we painted more than fifty storefronts here in Philadelphia. But our dream is to paint hundreds of houses and that’s what we’re fund-raising for. We’re fund-raising to go back to Brazil and fulfill the dream that began almost seven years ago.”

Faveladelphia, Favela Painting, 161 West Gallery

FaveladelphiaFavela Painting161 West Gallery

“The interesting thing is the topography of the favelas is that they’re scattered about the city. Because there’s these beautiful hills and mountains but the rich people live at the base, so when the poor people came, often they work for the rich people as servants in the service industry. They live close to the rich people and they just scattered through all the free space and built their own things on it.” 

Faveladelphia, Favela Painting, 161 West Gallery

FaveladelphiaFavela Painting161 West Gallery

“When I was there I didn’t see people care a lot for these neighborhoods. We’re doing a big Kickstarter campaign to raise money to go back to Brazil, train people, employ people, it’s really like one big job opportunity project with a combination of education and we hire everybody. So everybody, even the boys you can see up there painting, were making more than McDonald’s wage while they’re painting. Some of them were in the drug gangs before and we offer them an opportunity and that’s something for us that’s always been really important.

And that’s also why we’re working will El Sawyer who works with the re-entry system in Philadelphia. He’s made a film about them called Pull of Gravity. For people when they come out of jail because they don’t have any place to go or people to hire them. So it’s really hard to reestablish your validity as a citizen, you know?”

Faveladelphia, Favela Painting, 161 West Gallery

FaveladelphiaFavela Painting161 West Gallery

“They work together with The Guild. The Guild workers worked with us on our project on Germantown Avenue as well. So we have people coming out who really have a tough time to come back into the community again. Through these art projects they actually get a chance to not just be out there, but, to be appreciated as well. You know? It’s great when you come out of jail instead of just hearing a lot of ‘no’ to hear a ‘yes’ here and there. Or even maybe a,’Hey! That’s great.’ Or a, ‘Wow. I’m proud of you!’ That’s something that can do a lot.

I think that where people are sometime a little bit critical that it’s art, it’s paint, what are you really helping? But, deep on the inside, I think, that it does do a lot. It does do a lot of change for people especially on the mental level. It’s important.” – Dre Urhahn

Faveladelphia, Favela Painting, 161 West Gallery

FaveladelphiaFavela Painting161 West Gallery

DoN remembers walking home from the Design for the Other 90% lecture feeling super lucky to have the luxury of space and privacy of home. The map of the world showing edge city hot spots didn’t highlight Philly even though there is a tent city just across the river in Camden. But Germantown Avenue? As it turns out Philadelphia is an edge city for many disenfranchised citizens – Faveladelphia.

El Sawyer, Director of Pull of Gravity said, “The name, the title came out of when you see people get pulled back into the streets. People that do time get home and get pulled back into the streets. The movie follows three people over a year’s period of time and basically from the time they came home: one guy was home three days after doing three years, myself – I’ve been home for ten years after doing eight years and another guy who has been home six years after being in and out for the past twenty-five years. It has a variety of guys and shows their experiences.

The movie has sparked so much attention nationally, I mean people from Minnesota, all over, places you wouldn’t regularly think of. Smaller places like Minneapolis. We were thinking our market might be New York, Detroit, Chicago but smaller place like Kansas City, Pensacola, places like that are really being drawn to the movie. There’s a lot of work being done in those places and and as far as us? I didn’t know there is as much work being done as there is. This movie has been polarizing, bringing together a lot of resources and people doing the same kind of work. – El Sawyer

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Written and photographed by DoN Brewer except where noted.

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