Category Archives: New Jersey Art Galleries

Common interests: mobility and transformation of public life

— Glassboro, NJ: Rowan University Art Gallery is pleased to announce its upcoming exhibition Common interests: mobility and transformation of public life, which examines how public spaces – from hardscapes to natural landscapes – inform our everyday lives begins January 22 through March 16, 2013 with a reception and gallery talk on Wednesday, January 30, 5 – 7 pm. Working with sculpture, interventions, social practice, drawing, performance, and video, the artists in the exhibition reflect on the limitations and possibilities of public space, proposing new ways of accessing, navigating, and improving our shared spaces and resources.

Curated by Sara Reisman the exhibition features work by Pierluigi Calignano, Sue Jeong Ka, Jonggeon Lee, Mary Mattingly, Diego Medina, Francesco Simeti, Tattfoo Tan, Lan Tuazon, and Alex Villar. Villar and Tuazon’s projects – video installation and sculpture, respectively – highlight the tensions created by the boundaries that limit and restrict access to public spaces. As if in response to these kinds of limitations – fences, curbs, and imposing facades – Pierluigi Calignano and Diego Medina’s drawings and sculptures suggest abstracted yet expansive architectural concepts that can be read as proposals for public art, architecture, and monuments. Working with memory of both public and domestic spaces, Jonggeon Lee’s artworks reposition fragments of historic architectural details and monuments to evoke the time, place, and textures of their original existence.

Undermining the implied stability of architecture, Francesco Simeti and Mary Mattingly have both produced works that are designed as mobile structures. Simeti’s sculptural installation entitled Rubble (2007) is based on Charles Eames’ House of Cards printed with close up images of ruins and debris that is a theoretical kit designed to rebuild from the remains of destruction. Mattingly’s recent projects The Waterpod (2009) and Flock House (2012) are both human-tested mobile living systems that serve as models for living with (and surviving) the threat of rising water levels and flooding.

Both Tattfoo Tan and Sue Jeong Ka offer up ways to improve our shared resources in the form of two very different libraries that sustain our health and intellect. Tan’s Free Seeds Library provides the public and gallery visitors with access to free seeds as a means of controlling the destiny of our food and promoting ecological diversity. Ka’s Refresh Library is an interventionist approach to book conservation in which she has developed a method for restoring broken and incomplete books in the public library.

Common Interests: mobility and transformation of public life is a small survey of artist projects that call into question how public space and assets are managed, offering ideas and means for reclaiming autonomy in public space.

Reisman has curated exhibitions and projects for numerous institutions, non-profits, and other art spaces including The Cooper Union School of Art, New York; Smack Mellon, New York; Queens Museum of Art, New York; Socrates Sculpture Park, New York; Philadelphia ICA; Museum of Contemporary Art, Banjaluka, Bosnia and Herzegovina; and Kunsthalle Exnergasse, Vienna, Austria, among others. She was the 2011 critic-in-residence at Art Omi, an international visual artist residency in upstate New York. She is currently the Director of New York City’s Percent for Art program that commissions permanent public artworks for newly constructed and renovated city-owned spaces, indoors and out.

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.

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This Is My Home

This Is My Home, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Dance Macabre, Jay Helfrich, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Dance Macabre (Diptych), Jay Helfrich, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Ghost of a Broken Home, Carl B. Johnson, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Ghost of a Broken Home, Carl B. Johnson, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, True Romance, Liz Nicklus, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, True Romance, Liz Nicklus, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Kater Street, Lilliana Didovic, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Kater Street, Lilliana Didovic, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Skippy, Liz Nicklus, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Skippy, Liz Nicklus, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Empty Nest, Yvonne Smith, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Empty Nest, Yvonne Smith, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Blue House and Barn, Susan Hanna Rau, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Blue House and Barn, Susan Hanna Rau, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

This Is My Home, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts, Millville NJ

The Witt Gallery in the Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts created an art challenge and collaborative effort for artists to take a standard shape, an elongated pentagon of wood, and create their vision of home.

Millville celebrated the tenth anniversary of their monthly Third Friday art crawl, a community event that is a model for invigorating small town down-towns with art, culture and fun.  DoN is a born and raised South Jersey swamp-stomper, it feels real good to go back home and see art made by friends.

“I’m the type who’d be happy not going anywhere as long as I was sure I knew exactly what was happening at the places I wasn’t going to. I’m the type who’d like to sit home and watch every party that I’m invited to on a monitor in my bedroom.
Andy Warhol

DoNArTNeWs Philadelphia Art News Blog

Photographs by DoN

Books by artists in This Is My Home at Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

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Third Friday

Yas Reven, Dan Eells, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

Yas Reven, collage giclee, Dan Eells, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

Untitled, Zach Whitehurst, ink on paper, Riverfront Renaissance Center fot the Arts

Untitled, Zach Whitehurst, ink on paper, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

Cube, Max Lefko-Everett, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

Cube, Max Lefko-Everett, cast glass and found object, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

Lilliana Didovic, paintings, Sarah House, porcelain, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

Lilliana Didovic, Something Red 1, Something Red 2, acrylic on canvas paintings, Sarah House, Mimic, porcelain, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

Wes Valdez, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

Wes Valdez, Blur, blown and mirrored glass, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

Raphael Fenton-Spaid, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

Raphael Fenton-Spaid, Ode to Bernini’s Rape of Proserpina #1, acrylic on mylar adhered to masonite, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

Raphael Fenton-Spaid, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

Raphael Fenton-Spaid, Ode to Bernini’s Rape of Proserpina, detail, acrylic on mylar adhered to masonite, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts

Third Friday in Millville NJ is ten years old, the art crawl has become a nexus of art and culture in South Jersey.  A model for other towns using art to revitalize the downtown, Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts is a multi-use art space with galleries, gift shop and artist studios creating a hub of artistic activity.  Liz Nicklus, the interim Director of RRCA, and a founding board member said to DoN, “I was very honord when the board asked me to come back and be the interim director here and it’s working out to be wonderful so far.” Emergence is the first show at RRCA since Nicklus has assumed leadership, she says, “I have a wonderful Assistant Director who curated most of the show in the main gallery, Brandon Smith, a glass artist from Wheaton Arts so he has assembled a lot of artists that he knows.  Of course, we have Lilliana Didovic from Philadelphia, as well.  On the other side we have the center’s member artists and I think it’s a very successful show.  The artists in the main gallery are from all over from as far as New York and Philadelphia, in the other gallery are artists from all over South Jersey, they’re our Center artists, some are from Millville, some are from farther away.  This gives them an opportunity to show what they’ve been working on.”

“Benefits to joining include, besides getting to show, you have opportunities to take classes, reduced rates on entries to other shows, a reduced commission, there are a lot of benefits to being a Center member.  It’s a good place for people to get their feet wet if they’re just starting out in the art world.  Folks say ‘How do I get a chance to show my stuff?’  Well, here’s a place to start, and Center membership is not as expensive as being an associate member and also you don’t have to be juried in.”

Liz says, “I’m a big fan of mixed media and I love to see what people do with found objects.  That’s my first love anyway.  Every piece in Emergence you can walk up to and become absorbed in whether it’s because of the process, or just the reflections, or the detail, it’s a very captivating show.”

 

DoNArTNeWs Philadelphia Art News Blog

Photographs by DoN Brewer

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Jeff Stroud, Photographer @ Galleria Deptford

Jeff Stroud, Spring Bud, Photographer @ Galleria Deptford

Spring Bud, photograph, Jeff Stroud, Galleria Deptford, Deptford Municipal Building, 1011 Cooper St., Deptford, NJ, December 2011.

“I just started to notice how intricate the buds are on the trees as I was passing them by while I was walking, I didn’t realize.  So, I was walking with the camera and as an artist, I thought these are worth taking pictures of, it’s very detailed, there’s a lot of detail that we don’t see on a normal basis.”  Jeff Stroud‘s photograph, bathed in natural light from a convenient skylight is at once impressionist and representational, a sense of the end of Winter and the beginning of Spring. “This is actually shot at my home in Magnolia, there’s woods that surround the house and the energy of it, Nature’s always changing.  I was using an 18 to 55mm lens and I just get very close to the shot.”

Jeff Stroud‘s photography is part of a group show in the halls of the Deptford Municipal Building in South Jersey, he is represented by eleven photographs.  Jeff brought an extra photograph with him to get help from curator Pauline Jonas in editing and she decided to include them all. The annual photography show brings together work from a diverse group of regional artists that Jonas intuitively pulls together from her wide network of resources. “I met Pauline through the Salem County Arts League, I showed with them a couple years ago, which is all kinds of artists and I met Pauline through them.  People that I know from the Salem County Arts League had show’s here (at Galleria Deptford) and I came to see them.”, said Jeff.  “And then Pauline invited me to be in this show.”

Jeff Stroud, Born With, Photographer @ Galleria Deptford

Born With, Jeff Stroud, photograph.  Jeff is a member of the Photographic Society of Philadelphia and will be a featured artist at the group show in Cafe Twelve in early 2012.

Jeff Stroud, Born With, Photographer @ Galleria Deptford

Jeff Stroud, Photographer @ Galleria Deptford

December 5 – February 1, 2012 – Reception December 11
Photography by:
Nancy Fogel and Diane Abell of www.dustydogdigital.com, Rona Golfen, Derek Jecxz, Kelly Lynd, Jeff Stroud, Arlene Wilson and her husband, Tony Wilson
.  And Design Concepts by David Smith.

Read more about Galleria Deptford at Philly Side Arts.

Read more about Jeff Stroud at Side Arts.

Photographs by DoN Brewer shot exclusively with
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Erin Rose-Boyle, This is Not My Home – 3 Rooms 3 Views @ Hopkins House Gallery of Contemporary Art

Erin Rose-Boyle, This is Not My Home3 Rooms 3 Views @ Hopkins House Gallery of Contemporary Art The gallery in the park on the beautiful Cooper River provides opportunities for artists to create site specific work like Erin Rose-Boyle’s installation of 3 sculptures occupying their own room.  Rose-Boyle mashes metaphors and memes into evocative constructions of simple materials like paper, foam and tape that speak of home, isolation and self awareness.  DoN asked Erin about the all the feet in her installation? “They’re mine, I made a mold…they ground me.”

Photographs & video by DoNBrewerMultimedia