Tag Archives: Philadelphia Art Shows

Three Perspectives

Three Perspectives, Frank Rausch, Robert Reinhardt, Ed Snyder

Three Perspectives: Frank RauschRobert ReinhardtEd Snyder at The Plastic Club through October 27th, 2013. Closing reception Sunday, October 20th, 2:00 – 5:00pm.

Three accomplished photographers have taken over the historic galleries of The Plastic Club filling each room with a broad range of photographic art. Each photographer is known for their documentary work regarding cemeteries, in fact the trio have a show in the Free Library of Philadelphia on the Parkway focused on the historic cemeteries of Philadelphia: Mount Mariah Cemetery, Laurel Hill Cemetery and Woodlands Cemetery titled Sacred to the Memory.

Although the Three Perspectives show does include cemetery photographs, each artist is displaying a wide range of subjects from landscapes and still life to abstract and documentary images. The exhibit is beautifully displayed and offers each artist’s work a space of it’s own, hung gallery style as opposed to the salon-style exhibits of juried art shows for which The Plastic Club is recognized. Displayed throughout the Main Hall, the Tea Room, the Bob Jackson Gallery and the Sheikman Studio/Gallery the range and distinct styles is inspiring and often astonishing.

Three Perspectives, Frank Rausch, Robert Reinhardt, Ed Snyder

Three Perspectives at The Plastic ClubEd Snyder

“Using film, digital, and toy cameras, I create something out of nothing. The large part of my work, which utilizes cemetery statuary as subject, merges art and photography with society’s desire to come to terms with death and dying. It is an attempt to reacquaint us with Victorian mourning arts. My latest work is a bit lighter –images created with toy cameras. The creative processes of photography have always helped me deal with the world, with personal issues, and even to judge myself. In retrospect, psychiatry would’ve been cheaper. However, I believe that spending time in cemeteries has helped me to prepare myself for the loss of loved ones. Seeing others find meaning in the work is an unexpected gift.” Ed Snyder artist’s statement

Three Perspectives, Frank Rausch, Robert Reinhardt, Ed Snyder

Three Perspectives at The Plastic Club,  Robert Reinhardt

Three Perspectives, Robert Reinhardt

Three Perspectives at The Plastic Club,  Robert Reinhardt

“The reason we exhibited together is because besides our obvious overlap with cemetery photography we share many of the same aesthetic concerns for the images within our photographs. The interesting part is how we mine it from our own creative expression. I felt that all three of us visually completes the sentence the other starts. Frank may be more painterly, Ed has solid documentation strength, and I hover over texture/surface/composition. I am honored to be the in same space as the other two.” – Robert Reinhardt

Three Perspectives, Robert Reinhardt

Three Perspectives at The Plastic Club,  Robert Reinhardt, photograph provided by the artist.

Three Perspectives, Frank Rausch, Robert Reinhardt, Ed Snyder

Three Perspectives at The Plastic Club, Frank Rausch, Robert ReinhardtEd Snyder

Three Perspectives, Frank Rausch, Robert Reinhardt, Ed Snyder

Three Perspectives at The Plastic Club, Frank RauschEd Snyder

” Thanks to all who helped promote the ‘Three Perspectives’ Show. The support we received from family and friends on our opening reception was very humbling . Thanks to my friends Ed and Bob for putting up with my computer illiteracy this last couple of months. The best is yet to come , both the library show “Sacred To The Memory -Historic Cemeteries Of Philadelphia” and “Three Perspectives” at The Plastic Club are still going strong. Ed, Bob and I invite all to attend our second reception at The Plastic Club on October 20, 2013 from 2:00 – 5:00pm. Help us finish off our BEER and WINE ,see some great photography and better yet do some early holiday shopping and pick up some beautiful photos as gifts.” – Frank Rausch

Three Perspectives.Frank Rausch

Frank Rausch was born and raised in Connecticut. His love of nature and the outdoors was nurtured by his rural upbringing and from the many fishing and hunting excursions he took with his father and a neighborhood best friend.

His passion for photography blossomed later in life when he decided to capture some of the inspiring images through the lens of a camera. His use of color, composition, and light come from years of being a flower shop owner and designer. His photographic diversity is reflected in his choice of subjects- from landscape to abstract images where he captures different moods, textures and geometric designs. Being able to share with you through his photographic art those special moments in time is a privilege he hopes to continue for a long long time. – Frank Rausch bio

Three Perspectives, Frank Rausch, Robert Reinhardt, Ed Snyder

Three Perspectives at The Plastic Club, Frank Rausch, Robert ReinhardtEd Snyder

Three Perspectives, Frank Rausch, Robert Reinhardt, Ed Snyder

Three Perspectives at The Plastic ClubEd Snyder

Three Perspectives at The Plastic Club is an opportunity to view photographic art by three of Philadelphia’s most dedicated and accomplished photographers. As well as their photography, the trio participates in Social Practice art activities such as restoring cemeteries. Ed has been leading the restoration efforts at Mount Mariah in Philadelphia, Robert travels to Edinburgh, Scotland to work on cemetery restoration and Frank was the former grounds foreman at Laurel Hill Cemetery and still resides in the grand entrance building.

Thank you to Frank RauschRobert Reinhardt, and Ed Snyder for providing images for this blog post.

The Plastic Club is located on the Avenue of the Artists at 247 South Camac Street, Philadelphia, PA, 19107.

Frank Rausch:

Robert Reinhardt:

Ed Snyder:

The Plastic Club‘s home is a historic double townhouse located on one of Philadelphia’s “little streets” in the heart of the city. Built in 1824, it houses the club’s spacious studio, gallery spaces, offices and dining facilities. The club purchased the property in 1909, and expanded it to include the house next door in 1910. In the past ten years the building has undergone many rennovations so that it now functions like a 21st century building, but still retains its 19th century charm. – The Plastic Club website

Written and photographed by DoN Brewer except where noted.

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Francis C. Tucker

Francis C. Tucker, The AlchemistThe Voice of the Turtle is Heard in Our Land, 2010, egg and size, 13″ x 19.75″, Francis Courtland Tucker 

Francis C. Tucker, The Alchemist, Exhibition of Paintings, October 21st through December 20th, 2013. Opening Reception: November 4th, 2013, 5:00 – 7:00pm

President’s Office Gallery, University of the Arts, 1st Floor, 320 South Broad Street, Philadelphia PA, 19102, 215-717-6564

francistucker.blogspot.com

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Philadelphia Fashion Incubator

Design Philadelphia 2013. Fashion Incubator

As part of this year’s DesignPhiladelphia 2013 festival, the Office of Arts, Culture and the Creative Economy (OACCE) is proud to host an exhibit introducing the Designers-in-Residence (DIR) program from The Philadelphia Fashion Incubator at Macy’s Center City.  Nine designers from the 2012 and 2013 residencies will showcase their wearable designs and accessories, including some eco-friendly works.  The exhibit is located in Art Gallery at City Hall, Room 116, first floor nearest the East Portal Market St. entrance.  A reception is scheduled for October 17th, 5-7 pm.

Design Philadelphia 2013, Philadelphia Fashion Incubator

Photograph by Jim Cottingham

Additionally, each Wednesday, starting on October 16th at 12 pm, visit the gallery for a Meet-and-Greet with one of the Designers in Residence from the program.  Here’s a schedule for the gallery visits:

Oct. 16 – Trisha Williams – Trisha Will

Oct. 23 – TBA

Oct. 30 – Melissa Choi and Pia Panaligan – Senpai + Kohai

Nov. 6 – Leah Delfiner – Pretty Pretty Rebel

Nov. 13 – Annina King – Granate Pret

Nov. 20 – Melissa D’Agostino – D’Agostino Fashion Textile Design

Nov. 27 – Moriamo Johnson and Latifat Obajinmi – Aso Damisi

Dec. 4 – Devin Pauley – Morgia Bridal

To learn more about each designer, please visit: http://www.philadelphiafashionincubator.com/designers-main/

For more information on The Philadelphia Fashion Incubator at Macy’s Center City, please visit: www.philadelphiafashionincubator.com

For more information on DesignPhiladelphia, a festival of the Center for Architecture, please visit: www.designphiladelphia.org.

Follow OACCE on twitter and facebook.  www.facebook.com/creativephl , www.creativephl.org , www.facebook.com/artincityhall

Tu Huynh, City Hall Exhibitions Manager, Office of Arts, Culture and the Creative Economy, 116 City Hall, Philadelphia PA 19107, 215.686.8446 (Office) | 215.686.9912 (Direct), www.creativephl.org

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Autodidactic Ingenuism

Autodidactic Ingenuism, Coalition Ingenu

In 1995, Robert Bullock volunteered to help set up an art show for a non-profit organization that helped to provide creative outlets for people with histories of mental illness. After much research, he found a gallery that would agree to host the exhibit under one condition:  everything had to be framed. As he collected the artwork from the people who wanted to participate, Bullock began to realize two things: 1) It would not be enough work to fill the gallery and, 2) None of it would be framed.

For the most part, he was dealing with people who had not been formally trained or significantly exposed to fine art. Most of them were living in small apartments on social security benefits. They didn’t have any money for art supplies or framing. And yet, Bullock thought that some of the work had a very unique and original quality to it. It wasn’t pretentious. It didn’t take itself too seriously.

He went to framing shops and asked for donations of discarded frames. He bought glass and mat board and made some of the molding from scratch using cheap wooden firring strips from Home Depot. He researched and contacted other community art programs in homeless shelters and mental health centers to find more artwork. By the time the show opened in May of 1995, Bullock was able to fill one of the largest galleries in Olde City with art from several different programs, only one of which was able to contribute a very small amount of money to help defray his personal costs. At the time, he was unemployed and living in a carriage house rent-free, in exchange for his agreement to work on the property.

The show was a success. In those days, first Friday openings in Olde City involved food, beer, wine, and live music – and this one was packed. The art was also inexpensive and accessible. The gradual emergence from the shadows of a thing called “Outsider Art” was reaching the collective consciousness. Even people, like Bullock himself, who had never even heard the term before, were searching for something raw and genuine — something not deliberately different or contrived, but essentially different, and deeply ingenuous.

The first use of the term “Outsider Art” was in a book by Roger Cardinal published 20 years earlier. It described art made by people from “outside” of the mainstream art community. People who had not gone to art school or college, but also who were not aware of all the trends in fine art as defined by academic tradition. Bullock, too, was a person who had never gone to art school. A person who had always enjoyed doodling, and had recently done a great deal more of it during a two and half year trek throughout Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, and Southeast Asia. He had decided, upon his return, to further explore his interest in art, but had no idea where to go with it. Most of the modern conceptual art confused him and left him feeling disconnected from his emotional instincts. Abstract impressionism seemed too limited and too “safe” in its’ deliberate rejection of representational content. Frankly, he didn’t know very much about any of it.

That first exhibit in 1995 established the foundation of an enduring passion for Bullock. In 1996, he chose the name Coalition Ingenu for his second group exhibit in Olde City, entitled “Philadelphia Self-Taught”. He continued to search art programs and seek out individual artists for the next 18 years, and gathered like-minded friends and volunteers to help with his efforts. Coalition Ingenu received non-profit status in 2001, but deliberately remained very small and true to the original concept. Its’ mission was to encourage exploration of the imagination and promote appreciation for the creative process independent of results. To cultivate self-esteem and confidence, generate motivation and passion, and encourage the use of creativity as a tool for the gradual healing of emotional and psychic wounds. To build a community of mutual support among self-taught and self-motivated artists precluded from formal training or significant exposure to fine art as defined by cultural bias. To establish an alternative to art built upon layers of academic tradition and affirm the value of inviolate creativity in all its’ many forms and expressions.

Over the next 18 years, the collective would assemble over 180 exhibits and display over 6000 pieces of art by hundreds of different artists from mental health centers, hospitals, prisons, senior centers, retirement communities, physical rehabilitation facilities, substance abuse programs, and homeless shelters. The would also discover, by word of mouth, many individuals who made art on their own, independent of any formal program.

In 1997, Coalition Ingenu had begun to conduct open studio art programs in various locations, but went beyond just providing the participants with something to do. They respected the work that was made in these programs, and considered it just as beautiful, inspirational, important and thought provoking as anybody else’s artwork. They believed that the extraordinary life circumstances experienced by each artist were a more direct and original source of inspiration than the exhaustive study of academic tradition. And they believed that artwork by lower income, less visible, and less formally educated people deserved equal opportunity to be displayed in mainstream art galleries by virtue of its’ validity as uniquely inviolate expressions of real-life people in an often difficult and disappointing world.

Bullock invested the past 18 years of his life in pursuit of this belief, and his wife supported him in doing this, even as the couple began to experience a long string of financial difficulties. For the most recent half of the its’ 18 year history, the Coalition Ingenu funding stream has grown increasingly dryer, while a 2004 layoff forced Bullock’s wife to eventually take a job making less than half as much money. But the exhibits only got better. As some of the members became better known and the group attracted new and more accomplished artists, and the collective adapted and evolved into a respected arts organization. Their growing reputation earned the attention of higher profile venues from New York NY to Pittsburgh PA — and as far south as Washington DC and Durham NC. But this is where it will end:

In less than two months, Bullock and his wife will be moving to Florida for family reasons. If resources permit, the Coalition Ingenu Self-taught Artists’ Collective will eventually resurrect and pick up where it will leave off when it departs Philadelphia this December. The groups’ final exhibit is, very appropriately, at the gallery within the visionary masterpiece of local artist Isaiah Zagar. The exhibit features nine of the groups most popular and renowned artists, and is entitled Autodidactic Ingenuism, which essentially means self-taught and without restraint.

The opening reception is this Friday, October 11 from 6 – 9 pm, at the Philadelphia Magic Gardens, 1020 South Street. It runs until Friday, Nov. 15.

Written by Robert Bullock, Coalition Ingenu

2013 Autumn Invitational

Off the Wall Gallery, 2013 Autumn Invitational

Off the Wall Gallery at Dirty Frank’s, 2013 Autumn Invitational Art Show and Sale. through November 22nd, 2013. Opening Reception: October 3rd, 2013, 7-10:00pm.

Jim Biglan, Bob Gorchov, Anders Hansen, Yeoun Lee, Jesse r Lentz, Bill Myers, Lance Pawling and Syd Torchio present new work from Off the Wall Gallery‘s award-winning and top-selling artists.

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