Category Archives: Light

Art involving light as it’s subject or medium.

SIMULATE – PERMEATE

Simulate - Permeate, Rowan University Art GalleryInstructions to the Internet, Christopher McManus

SIMULATE – PERMEATE

Exhibition examines materiality, experience, and authorship in technology-based art.

Glassboro, NJ – Rowan University Art Gallery presents Simulate – Permeate from January 20 to March 7, 2015 with a reception and artist’s talk on Wednesday, February 11 from 5:00 to 7:00 pm.

Curated by Mat Tomezsko, Curator and Program Manager at InLiquid Art & Design, the exhibition features the work of eight Philadelphia-based artists and artist groups making innovative use of new media that collectively examine concepts of materiality, experience, and authorship in technology-based contemporary art.

  • Lyn Godley makes use of naturally occurring responses to particular light wavelengths and imagery in her photographs of water, which are altered digitally and threaded (by hand) with optic fiber and lit with LEDs to achieve an undulating effect.
  • Juggling Wolf, a multidisciplinary collective dedicated to creating video and animation that is technically challenging and visually rewarding, offers two versions of a new video: one full length playing in the gallery and a shorter version broadcast across campus using the technological infrastructure of the university.
  • Christopher McManus’ work is a sculpture and a 20 second video that plays in reaction to the audience’s interaction with the sculpture, which is a piece meant to be a physical representation of the internet: friendly, cute, and enticing while simultaneously being completely repulsive, mean-spirited, and horrifying.
  • A collective of artists, engineers, and designers dedicated to bringing engaging and empowering art to the public, and to encouraging a sense of ownership to community spaces, New American Public Art has created an encounter with a monitor of a live video feed with a temporal delay. The delay is just long enough to create a disconnect, yet remain familiar as viewers are faced with images of themselves from the near past, but just beyond immediate memory.
  • Maria Schneider’s work begins with a pencil on paper drawing, which is then scanned and laser printed onto layers of polycarbonate and illuminated with LED light. The drawings evoke a common experience and a familiar medium, but are transformed by the technological process to become something new.
  • Jody Sweitzer’s outdoor sound and video installation is triggered by the movement of pedestrians on the patio after dark. The seemingly sinister messenger subverts the familiar recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance and emphasizes the tendency to insert religion into what is supposed to be a secular context.
  • Chris Vecchio’s work is about interaction and meant to be touched, and contains more than 500 samples of audio that can be triggered by the angle of movement, ensuring that every interaction between the viewer and the sculpture is unique and questions the traditional role of the art object.
  • TangenT is an artist collective dedicated to mixed-media, project-based immersive art environments exploring socially relevant and politically current themes. At Rowan, their immersive installation of disparate physical, visual, and sound elements seeks to examine the simultaneous connection and disconnection of experience, perception, and knowledge using government reporting on individuals and institutions as a meditation on information control, privacy, and truth.

Simulate - Permeate, Lyn GodleyLyn Godley, Waterwall

InLiquid Art & Design is a nonprofit organization committed to creating opportunities and exposure for visual artists while serving as a free, online public hub for arts information in the Philadelphia area. By providing the public with immediate access to view the portfolios and credentials of over 280 artists and designers via the internet; through meaningful partnerships with other cultural organizations; through community-based activities and exhibitions; and through an extensive online body of timely art information, InLiquid brings to light the richness of our region’s art activity, broadens audiences, and heightens appreciation for all forms of visual culture.

Admission to Rowan University Art Gallery, talks and reception 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.

Rowan University Art Gallery is located on the lower level of Westby Hall on the university campus, Route 322 in Glassboro, NJ. Directions can be found on the gallery or university websites. For more information, call 856-256-4521 or visit www.rowan.edu/artgallery.

This program is made possible in part with funds from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts.

Thank you to Mary Salvante for the content of this blog post.

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Time

Responce Time, Scott McMahon & Ahmed Salvador

The University of the Arts Presents Photographers Scott McMahon ’95 & Ahmed Salvador ’95: Response Time

January 9 – February 6, 2015, The Sol Mednick Gallery of Photography, Terra Hall, 15th floor, 211 South Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa.

With “Response Time”, University of the Arts alumni Scott McMahon & Ahmed Salvador (both ’95) continue to refine their collaborative photographic explorations. The process involves one of them sending to the other bits of traditional silver based photographic paper or film in the mail and in the process exposing them for days. Once the parcel is received, it is opened, developed, and the results sent back to the sender. At times, initial lens exposures were made, but the material and/or packaging was later subjugated to light leaks from violently made drill holes or cutmarks. In a way, these perverse techniques push these factory-made films and papers to the end of their silver tether, and also squeeze the true nature of ‘writing with light’ out of them. However brutal, the end result is still a vestige of the first 150 years of traditional photography’s innovation grasping, but not gasping, for relevance. Their performative approach argues against the strict engineering controls that photographic media is designed to adhere to, with results that are always unique, and whose humor and capricious intent are infectious.

Ahmed Salvador received his MFA from Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan and his BFA in Photography from The University of the Arts in 1995. Salvador’s work has been exhibited in solo and collaborative shows in Philadelphia, at venues including The LightroomBridgette Mayer Gallery, The University City Arts League, The Philadelphia Art Alliance, Nexus Foundation for Today’s Art, and a Challenge show at Fleisher Art Memorial. Most recently his work was exhibited at Space 1026, and a solo show at Columbia College’s Hardwick Gallery in Missouri. He is an exhibitions preparator at the Philadelphia International Airport Art & Exhibitions Program and a wet-process photography instructor at the Fleisher Art Memorial in Philadelphia.

Scott McMahon received his MFA from Massachusetts College of Art in Boston and his BFA in Photography from The University of the Arts in 1995. Recent exhibitions include the Palace of the Governors New Mexico History Museum, Santa Fe, NM; PS Gallery, Columbia, MO; Galeria Pusta, Katowice, Poland; Three Columns Gallery, Harvard University; Bridgette Mayer Gallery, Philadelphia (collaborative) and The Bioluminescent Firefly Experiment, University City Arts League, Philadelphia (collaborative). McMahon’s work has been published in Pinhole Photography: Rediscovering a Historic Technique by Eric Renner, The Book of Alternative Photographic Processes by Christopher James, Anthotypes by Malin Fabbri, and Poetics of Light –Contemporary Pinhole Photography by Eric Renner and Nancy Spencer. He was a resident artist at Haystack Mountain School of Crafts in Deer Isle, Maine; çin East Haddam, CT; and Border Art Residency in La Union, New Mexico. He is an Assistant Professor of Art at Columbia College in Missouri.

There will be a reception for the artists from 4:00 to 7:00pm for “Response Time” in the Mednick Gallery on Thursday, February 5th.

The Sol Mednick Gallery offers a year-round regular schedule of exhibitions of contemporary photography. This exhibition is concurrent with “Tom Young: Timeline: Learning to See with My Eyes Closed” in Gallery 1401 (the Sol Mednick Gallery’s sister space) on the 14th floor of Terra Hall. The UArts Photography program operates both galleries.

2015 is The Sol Mednick Gallery’s 37th year of operation and Gallery 1401’s 17th year. The only endowed gallery in Philadelphia dedicated solely to the exhibition of photography, the Mednick Gallery earned the Photo Review Award for service to photography. Associate Professor and former director of the Photography program Harris Fogel has been director/curator of both galleries since 1997 and founded Gallery 1401 in 1999. Gallery hours are Monday through Friday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Saturday and Sunday by appointment. Call 215-717-6300 for more information. Images are available upon request.

About the University of the Arts

The University of the Arts is one of the nation’s only universities dedicated to the visual and performing arts, design, and writing. More than 1,800 students are enrolled in undergraduate and graduate programs on its campus in the heart of Philadelphia’s Avenue of the Arts. The institution’s roots as a leader in educating creative individuals date back to 1868.

Thank You to Harris Fogel for the content of this blog post.

CONTACT: Harris FogelUniversity of the Arts

Tel: 215-717-6301 Email: hfogel@uarts.edu

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light being (Kurt)

light being (Kurt), Absolutely Abstract 2013, Philadelphia Sketch Clublight being (Kurt), digital photograph, archival inkjet print on glossy paper, 11 x 14″, 16 x 20″ framed, $300.00, DoN Brewer, Absolutely Abstract 2013, Philadelphia Sketch Club



When the sole juror for Absolutely Abstract 2013 at the Philadelphia Sketch Club, appreciates your work enough to select it to be in an art show the sense of accomplishment is extraordinarily gratifying. The digital photograph of an acid green wall combines several contemporary styles like color field, minimalism, performance, street art and computer art and even though it is a representative image the bold color takes over the narrative. The light becomes the environmental paint, the reflections on the surface interact softly with the hard grid of the cinder block. To know that someone else gets it, another artist, understands the underlying concept, and recognizes the inspiration reinforces my determination to continue the exploration of the abstract landscape theme.

How can a photograph be abstract? Because photography doesn’t really represent reality, it is a simulacra of a moment in time and therefore can be whatever the artist wants. An inkjet print is so different from darkroom photography, it’s more like painting with dots of ink than the chemical reactions of film development in the lab.

Thank you Philadelphia Sketch Club for the opportunity to be part of this exciting exhibit of contemporary abstract art by regional and international artists.

An Artists’ Reception will be held on Sunday, August 11, from 2 to 4 PM.  Gallery hours are Wednesdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays from 1 to 5 PM.  Admission is free.

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Ken Jacobs at The Plastic Club

Ken Jacobs at The Plastic Club

Ken Jacobs at The Plastic Club

On Saturday, April 6, The Plastic Club will host a screening and discussion with award-winning, iconoclastic filmmaker Ken Jacobs as part of its monthly Salon series. The event is scheduled for 6:30-8:30 pm, at The Plastic Club, 247 South Camac St. in Center City Philadelphia. It’s open to the public, but reservations are required, and there is a $10.00 fee. To reserve a place(s) and for payment information e-mail The Plastic Club at plasticclub@att.net Ken Jacobs created and directed the Millennium Film Workshop in New York City (1966-68) and in 1969 started the Cinema Department at SUNY Binghamton, where he taught until 2003. He is the recipient of AFI’s Maya Deren Award, Guggenheim and Rockefeller fellowships, and many other honors. His work has been admitted to the National Film Registry, included in art and film festivals and museums around the world, and featured in retrospectives at The Museum of Modern Art, The American Center, Paris, and The American Museum of the Moving Image.
Star Spangled to Death“, Jacobs’ epic history of the United States, premiered at the 2004 New York Film Festival and won the Douglas Edwards Experimental/Independent Film/Video Award at the 2004 Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards.
At the Plastic Club, Ken Jacobs will be showing and discussing:
CAPITALISM: SLAVERY (2007, 3 1/2 minutes)
CAPITALISM: CHILD LABOR (2007, 15 minutes)
ANOTHER OCCUPATION (2011, 15 minutes)
SEEKING THE MONKEY KING (2011, 39 minutes)
WARNING: Some material may not be suitable for those with epilepsy or seizure disorders.

 

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The Natives – Salt Print Project

” The Natives – Salt Print Project ”  by Joshua Marowitz

March 22 – April 28, 2013

On the heals of a two month motorcycle trip to document native plants through different eco-regions across the United States, artist Joshua Marowitz brings forth an exhibition not to be missed.  Using the oldest photographic process know as “salt printing”, the artist captures the exquisite, almost regal tone of these important botanical specimens by providing infinite detail and hand applied color to the image. Join the Light Room for an exhibition of art inspired by historic photography and bio-diversity conservation.

The Light Room Gallery


2024 Wallace Street Philadelphia, PA 19130

Gallery Hours: Saturdays, 12-4 PM or by Appointment

www.thelightroom.org

Contact Info:
Al Wachlin Jr 
215-828-1661 awachlinjr@thelightroom.org www.thelightroom.org

Amorpha canescens - Lead Plant

Joshua Marowitz, Amorpha canescens – Lead Plant