Category Archives: Philadelphia Art Shows

Art shows DoN has reviewed for DoNArTNeWs.

MAPnificent! Artists Use Maps

MAPnificent! Artists Use Maps
Curated by Yulia Tikhonova

February 1–March 31
FIRST FRIDAY reception, February 1, 6–9pm
AIGA Philadelphia SPACE, 72 N. 2nd St., Philadelphia, PA 19106
www.aigaphilly.org
Facebook event page

Paula Scher, Joyce Kozloff, Doug Beube, Carole P. Kunstadt, Viviane Rombaldi Seppey, Karin Schaefer, Dahlia Elsayed, Alastair Noble, Aga Ousseinov, Paul Fabozzi, Amy Pryor, Irina Danilova, Robert Walden, Adriane Littman, Jeff Woodbury, Brooklyn Art Library, Hand Map Drawn Association

MAPnificent! Artists Use Maps brings together a group of artists who creatively employ the philosophy and technique of mapping to convey information ranging from sociological data to aesthetic stimuli.

The exhibit features paintings, works on paper and sculpture that reflect the artists’ concerns for the current state of our society, conveyed though charts and diagrams, and their admiration of the map as a symbol of longing and the unknown. The works included either illustrate a scientific research in demographics, or a flow of capital, or distribution of patterns, but also present the artists’ reverence for maps.

For some of the exhibiting artists, mapping is a tool to create interactive visuals with the help of sophisticated tools for image manipulation that arrange numbers into intricate geometrical forms.

Maps are primarily received as directional; a subway or bus map is understood as a tool to get somewhere. In fact, the title of this exhibition borrows from a google-map application, MAPNIFICENT, which calculates the time between places via public transportation. For the artists, however, a map is often an end in itself: a work of art, filled with revelation and delight.

Curated by Yulia Tikhonova, Founder of Brooklyn House of Kulture
Upcoming exhibition at The Center for Book Arts: Brother, Can You Spare…a Stack? 

MAPnificent! Artists Use Maps
February 1–March 31
FIRST FRIDAY reception, February 1, 6–9pm
AIGA Philadelphia SPACE, 72 N. 2nd St., Philadelphia, PA 19106
www.aigaphilly.org

Founded in 1914, AIGA remains the oldest and largest professional membership organization for design, with 66 chapters and more than 22,000 members nationwide. AIGA Philadelphia, the first local chapter, was established in 1981. We represent a variety of professions under the umbrella of communication design, ranging from book and type design to interactive design and experience design. Our annual roster of programs includes lectures, exhibitions, workshops, which both enrich the community (through our new headquarters in Old City, aptly called SPACE) and benefit our local membership of over 600 design professionals, educators and students. AIGA’s mission is to advance designing as a professional craft, strategic tool and vital cultural force.




For more information and press inquiries, contact Gaby Heit: gaby@gabyheit.com646-229-3353
View Jan/Feb Art Events


downSIZED

downSIZED Cheltenham Center for the Arts

Cheltenham Center for the Arts 

Joe Brenman

Justin Duerr

Marybeth Chew

Jeanine Leclaire

Julia Blaukopf

Sarah Hunter

Deborah Gross Zuchman

Philip Zuchman

Colleen Hammond

Anthony C and Karen M

Beth Medoway

Colleen Hammond
A Square Deal
Co-Founder
PO Box 18096
Philadelphia PA 19147
squareartdeal@yahoo.com

artsqs.com

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Twenty-Two Gallery, 22 Artists

Elisabeth Oliver, Twenty-Two Gallery, 22 Artists

Elisabeth OliverTwenty-Two Gallery, 22 Artists

236 South 22 Street, Philadelphia. PA, 215 772 1911, hours Wednesday through Sunday 12:00 – 6:00pm.

“Elisabeth began painting with watercolors at a young age and became very serious about her art in high school. She spent high school weekends and summers studying at Moore College of Art in Philadelphia.” –  Elisabeth Oliver

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The Shoe In: Walk in Our Shoes

Oasis, The Shoe In: Walkin Our Shoes

The Oasis (RHD) community is seeking investment and support in the Shoe In to raise funds, social empathy and awareness for some of our society’s most vulnerable and valueable citizens. Your investment will help create both sustainability and continuity of essential programming for the voices of these Outsider Artists. Support these artists to strive for independence on their own terms.

The ‘Shoe In’ is a political exhibition designed to counteract the erosion of funding for day services for PA citizens with intellectual disabilities.

Oasis is a one-of-a-kind experience for individuals of diverse abilities. The only organization of its kind, located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Oasis offers group instruction in art, technology, literacy and life-skills

About Oasis (RHD)

Oasis (RHD) is a studio art and life skills program staffed by artists that nurtures the talents, skills, and creativity of individuals living with mental illness and/or intellectual disabilities. We offer programs and services that support people with developmental and intellectual disabilities by providing opportunities for employment, community connections, and personal development through the arts. Oasis (RHD) is a part of its parent company Resources for Human Development.  

The Benefits of Our Project: The Shoe In

Every pair of shoes brings with it an opportunity and benefits for the members of the Oasis (RHD) community to study:

  1. Formal academics in a venue that uses the arts to communicate foundational cognitive adaptive skills needed to increase independence. 
  2. Concrete participation in collaboration and planning
  3. Support for development in ‘activities of daily living’ (ADL) 
  4. Opportunity to develop an understanding of Empathy
  5. Participation in the regional art community through exhibitions and partnerships with established innovative artists and institutions.    

Help Us Raise Our Game

The Oasis (RHD) community is seeking investment and support in the Shoe In to raise funds, social empathy and awareness for some of our society’s most vulnerable and valueable citizens. Your investment will help create both sustainability and continuity of essential programming for the voices of these Outsider Artists

How does Oasis (RHD) fit into the Big Picture?

Contributing to Oasis (RHD) to fund ‘The Shoe In’ will assist us to continue essential day programming services for the emerging Outsider Artists we serve. We are a small service provider to over 100 adults whose needs are difficult to meet elsewhere. 

Policy changes, financial miscalculations and proposed budget cuts by the Pennsylvania state government continue to ravage services that fell short of current needs even during fiscally ‘flush’ times. What does this mean for the 2.3 million citizens served and the approximately 16,000 people waiting for services, 4,000 of which are people whose situations are considered emergencies?

Funding cuts hurt all of us. Not just those of us with disabilities.

Whether the shortfalls are attributed to the budget crisis, a shift from county-run to state-run services, and the state’s belief that providers, as a whole, can operate more efficiently, the message is still the same: slashing our funding slashes the quality of service provision needed for the artists that call Oasis home. 

The Shoe In: Walk in Our Shoes Indigogo campaign.

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Philadelphia Photography

Susan Stromquist at Off the Wall Gallery in Dirty Franks

Susan Stromquist at Off the Wall Gallery in Dirty Franks

“One of the best reasons to visit ROADS LESS TRAVELED this weekend — if you didn’t make the Opening Reception — is to experience SUSAN STROMQUIST’s amazing installation. Our 3-D space has rarely hosted an installation that is so expertly integrated, narrating, to the extent possible, the complex path Susan has taken in developing her own brand of experimental art. You can see the unique tools — one person last night likened them “something out of Duchamp” — she has used to turn her body into an art-making apparatus. Three major physical creations, a canvas, a scroll and an accordion book, are on display. And a looping DVD of three videos, available for $20, captures vividly the artist at work on three projects: CLIMB, GIVE & KEEP and DRAWN.” Like Off the Wall Gallery on facebook.

Photo courtesy of Off the Wall Gallery.

DoN is writing a separate post about Susan Stromquist.

Read DoN’s post Photography Philadelphia at the new www.DoNArTNeWs.com Philadelphia Art News Blog 

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