Friday, January 17, 2014

ViV












































Sandra Cushman, Charlottesville, VA



































Rachel Reese, Atlanta, GA

Thursday, January 9, 2014

ViV



Justin Witte and friends, Chicago. Installation view of It Varies, an exhibition in collaboration with Variance Invariance.



Artist, Cecelia Kane made a lovely animation while she had ViV, in which one of her paintings gives my paintings a big hug. I wish I could post the mp4 here but Wordpress doesn't want me to. Variance Invariance: A Love Story by Cecelia Kane


Saturday, December 21, 2013

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

(ViV)





Jesse Harris, Atlanta, GA





Sue O'Donnell and Doug Michael, Bloomsburg, PA





Matt Smith, Berkeley, CA




Chalet Comellas and Christina Poindexter, Tampa, FL
















































Chalet Comellas





 Chalet Comellas and Christina Poindexter


Dale Child and Caroline Howell, Savannah, GA


























































Preston and Lena McLane, Tallahassee, FL





Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Terrain

Terrain and its neighbors invite you to Oak Park on Sunday, September 15th to celebrate two years of dedication to infusing suburban space with Contemporary Art...



Founded in October of 2011 by artist Sabina Ott, Terrain is a public exhibition space in Oak Park, IL. With the help of Assistant Director, Chelsea Middendorf, Terrain is dedicated to featuring interventions into the conventional landscape of a front yard by emerging as well as established artists who have been invited to create a site - specific work. Artists are chosen for their ability to make artworks that challenge the space between public and private, decoration and function, figure and ground. Visitors, neighbors, school children, teachers and their parents are exposed to challenging contemporary art, offering the experience of discovery and surprise to the community. Terrain exhibits work that expands, both, the audience of an artwork and the function of a suburban front yard.




Terrain Exhibitions Biennial
September 15 - October 19, 2013
Opening Block Party: September 15, 1 -10 PM

Utilizing multiple homes on the 700 Highland Avenue block, nine artists have created site-specific interventions for this month long event.

Exhibiting Artists: 
Alberto Aguilar
Stephanie Barber
Tom Burtonwood
Robert Gero
Gunnatowski
Ames Hawkins
Alexandra Noe
Megan Taylor Noe
Judy Rushin

Opening Block Party: 
Terrain artist Claire Ashley will produce an event featuring her inflatable sculptures. Ellen Butler, neighbor, will exhibit her paintings and Elizabeth Rexford’s The Harmonia Quartet will play on the Longfellow Elementary school steps. A reading from Ames Hawkins' Paper Violets will be performed in addition to Paul Hertz conducting the interactive “Ignotus the Mage” at intervals throughout the afternoon. There will be a plethora of activities and constructive projects for the whole family, such as bookbinding, fluxkit exchanges, Exquisite Corpse drawing games, and a chance for all to participate in creating a surrealist poem imagined by Stephanie Barber. The Taco Bernardo Food Truck will be in Oak Park serving dinner from 5:30 – 8:00PM, an assortment of treats will be provided by neighbors and all are welcome to add to the potluck! The day’s activities will be accompanied by the DJ styles of Rae Chardonnay then followed by neighbor Ryan Todd's band Officer Friendly. Terrain artist and Director of Aspect Ratio Gallery, Jefferson Godard, will wrap up the event with a curated video program that will be shown from dusk until 10PM.

Who's Who// Artist Bios: 

Alberto Aguilar was born in Chicago Illinois in 1974, the city in which he currently resides. He has three brothers and one sister. In 1976 his parents opened the first Mexican grocery store in Cicero Illinois which they named La Grande. In 1997 upon receiving his BFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) he married Sonia Leticia Guillen. Together they have four children, half of which are girls. Four years later Alberto received his MFA also from SAIC. Currently he is an instructor of studio art at Harold Washington College- one of the City Colleges of Chicago. There he coordinates Pedestrian Project an initiative devoted to making art accessible to people of all walks of life. Aguilar’s current practice merges his various life roles and attempts to capture fleeting moments, personal discoveries, and his interaction with others using whatever medium is at hand. On the rainy day of March 18, 2013 at 1:46 pm he sat in his minivan drinking English breakfast tea, editing this bio by adding this final line. http://albertoaguilar.org/

Claire Ashley is from Edinburgh, Scotland. Her work has been shown in such venues as The Museum of Contemporary Art, The Hyde Park Art Center and The Chicago Cultural Center in Chicago, IL; nationally at Art Santa Fe; and Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions in Los Angeles, CA; and internationally at The Highland Institute for Contemporary Art in Inverness, Scotland among others. She currently teaches at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Ashley creates objects that engage in intellectual play, testing the boundaries and expectations of modernist painting. http://claireashley.com/

Stephanie Barber, having produced and shown work in many media such as music, performance and text, is best known as an experimental filmmaker, video artist and writer whose films include catalogdogstotal power:dead dead deadshipfilm "dwarfs the sea" "the inversion, transcription, evening track and attractor", "flower, the boy, the librarian", "BUST CHANCE", "the visit and the play" and many other short films and videos. She is currently the resident artist at the Mt. Royal School of Interdisciplinary Art at Maryland Institute of Contemporary Art in Baltimore, MD. http://www.stephaniebarber.com/

Tom Burtonwood, born Manchester, UK, is an artist and educator living and working in Chicago, IL. He teaches at Columbia College and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Burtonwood is a founding member of “The 3D Printer Experience” a hybrid makerspace / retail store in Chicago. His work has been exhibited at Pierogi Gallery, Brooklyn; Front Room Gallery, Brooklyn; Fountain Art Fair, Miami; The Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago; Systema Gallery, Osaka, Japan; La Luz de Jesus, Los Angeles; Aqua Art Miami, Miami Beach; and the Evanston Art Center, Evanston. Burtonwood has demonstrated 3D printing and scanning at Expo Chicago, Chicago Ideas Week, the Southside Hub of Production, The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, The Art Institute of Chicago, The Green Exchange with Dabble, Fluevog Shoes and What It Is Gallery. In 2012 he participated in the Makerbot MET#3D Hackathon at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Burtonwood also co-founded Improbable Objects, a project to 3D print artists editions and multiples. http://tomburtonwood.com/

Ellen Butler graduated from Northeastern University in Chicago and began her adventures in teaching in the Chicago Public Schools. Upon retirement she pursued her love of painting and created a series of beautiful works that have been juried into several local exhibitions. Her paintings will be on display during the opening of the Biennial in her front yard on Highland Ave.

Rae Chardonnay is a recent graduate of Columbia College Chicago with a degree in Arts, Entertainment and Media Management.  She has had the pleasure of maintaining consistent projects and opportunities in the fields of event planning, music consultation, live show production and performance art management. She has specialized in sound selecting for just over one year and is working toward developing the skill level of her most esteemed DJs. Chardonnay believes in doing the most good as frequently as possible.

Robert Gero is an artist living and working in New York, whose art resides at the intersection of art, philosophy and architecture. His most recent work explores the theoretical and physical possibilities of temporal structures. These are structures in which the interiors are continuously expanding, folding and unfolding while the exteriors remain stable. Gero holds an MFA in fine art and a PhD in Philosophy. His work has been featured in numerous shows including The Santa Monica Museum of Art, Santa Monica, Holly Solomon Gallery, New York, Artist Space, New York, The 45th Venice Biennale, Venice, 92nd St Y-Makor Gallery, New York, The McDonough Museum of Art, Youngstown, UICA, Grand Rapids, He is a member of the New York artist collaborative Archicule. http://www.robertgero.com

Jefferson Godard received his MA in Architecture, and teaches architecture at Columbia College Chicago. His passion for video art has led him to collecting and curating video exhibitions internationally. Godard has opened one of the first commercial galleries in Chicago dedicated to video art: Aspect Ratio.http://jeffersongodard.com/

Gunnatowsk is the collaborative art practice of Karolina Gnatowski and Dan Gunn. Karolina Gnatowski received her MFA in Fiber and Material Studies from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2007. Dan Gunn also received his MFA in Painting and Drawing from SAIC in 2007. Gunnatowski makes site-specific interactive installations of hard and soft sculpture. The installations often reference the social use of the site humorously mixing functional, aesthetic and social categories. Gunnatowski has exhibited in their own home, transforming each room into a fully immersive environment titled “Territory”. “Territory” also invited visitors to spend the night and write about their experiences for a companion publication. http://dangunn.com/gunnatowski.html

Ames Hawkins, an Associate Professor at Columbia College Chicago, is a trans-genre writer and art activist whose most recent publications appear in Interdisciplinary HumanitiesPolari,Water~Stone Review, and Resilience: Stories, Poems, Essays, Words for GLBT Teens. Her essay, “Optickal Allusion,” was selected by Robert Atwan as a notable essay of 2011. In 2006, she was the inaugural Faculty Fellow for Critical Encounters, the collaborative art activism initiative at the college, and has since been integrally involved with international art activist projects such as The Cradle Project and One Million Bones. Hawkins also loves to get the written word off the page and onto the stage and has engaged in drag/queer/story performance in Chicago with 2ndStory, Gender Fusions, Northern Lights, and The Chicago Kings.

Paul Hertz is an independent artist and curator who teaches new media art history and studio courses at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He has worked with computers for nearly thirty years. His curatorial work includes "Imaging by Numbers" at the Mary and Leigh Block Museum, Northwestern University, 2008, a chronological survey of algorithmic art that established a significant digital print collection. In his art, he delights in code sourcery, intermedia, glitching and social interfaces. His work has been exhibited in many international media festivals and symposia. http://paulhertz.net/

Alexandra Noe recently completed her BFA in Studio Art at Columbia College Chicago. Noe has participated in various group shows including “30/30” at One Strange Bird, Chicago IL and two of the “Annual Hokin Honors” Exhibitions at C33 Gallery, Chicago IL. Her gallery space, Goose n’ Goose Gallery, Oak Park, IL. Will open this coming fall. Noe currently lives in Oak Park, IL and runs her studio practice in Chicago, IL. http://www.alexandranoe.com/

Megan Taylor Noe, who received her BFA in Photography from Columbia College Chicago in 2013, has exhibited most recently at New Capital, Chicago Art Department and Roxaboxen Exhibitions in Chicago. Her photographs and sculptures capture the mutability of objects and the transience of time. www.megtnoe.com.

Elizabeth Rexford, in addition to being a member of Symphony of Oak Park and River Forest, plays the violin in The Harmonia Quartet, which is made up of Rexford, along with Melody (Violin), Sandra Korelc (Viola) and Valerie Meineki (Cello).http://symphonyoprf.com/performances.php,

Judy Rushin’s work explores relationships between people and spatial environments through painting, sculpture, and installation. Rushin's work has appeared across the US and in Korea including the Art and Literature Laboratory, Cambridge, MA; Prospect 1-Satellite at Trumpet. New Orleans, LA; ThreeWalls, Chicago, IL; Co-Lab Projects, Austin, TX and the The Orlando Museum of Art, Orlando, FL. She lives and works in Tallahassee, FL.http://swallowawindchime.com/


 
Copyright © 2013 Terrain Exhibitions, All rights reserved.

Terrain Exhibitions 
704 Highland Ave
Oak Park, IL 60304
Email Marketing Powered by MailChimp

Thursday, August 22, 2013

At Small Craft Advisory Press

Last week I printed the *instruction sheet* that will go into the ViV boxes. At SCAP (Small Craft Advisory Press, Tallahassee, FL)












Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Inching Through/Towards Something

I've made a little more progress on Night See. A process shot:



The learning curve is high and I'll be relieved to see this piece working and completed. 

Meanwhile, progress has also been slow but steady for the tenure binder, my collab with Joelle Dietrick, and Variance Invariance; and as I watch paint dry and patiently mask new areas for thin stripes of color I've been thinking about Ben Davis' 9.5 Theses. Even though my relationship to production is in some ways independent, I can't deny I've got that working stiff feeling this summer. 

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

More ViV

Variance Invariance works on 3 levels: the sets I will be sending out to participants; the mini-versions, which will be produced as book editions (late 2013); and a downloadable paper version available to everyone for free. Here is the paper version in its beginning stages:




Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Embracing Collaboration and Relinquishing Control

Embracing collaboration: I'm honored to be working with poet, Jay Snodgrass and artist, Denise Bookwalter on the instruction sheet for Variance Invariance.

Embracing collaboration: Joelle Dietrick and I are beginning our work for an exhibition at the Alexander Brest Museum. We interviewed each other for Burnaway, coming soon.

Relinquishing control: I found fabrication help for the metal work on Night See. Bless you Bill Rice for bringing me out of paralysis.

Relinquishing control: I found design help for the Variance Invariance website. Thank you thank you, Jay Corrales.


Wednesday, June 12, 2013

The Ease Of The Familiar

While many of you are traveling to residencies and exotic places this summer, I am working in the studio, growing things, enjoying my family and animals, and feeling the rhythms of home. This inward turn has been a lovely shift after a stressful and busy academic year. With my three projects in midstream, I still don't have a lot to show -- even in process shots. But this pv panel arrived yesterday.










































Wednesday, June 5, 2013

More Night See

The designs for Night See are slowly coming together. Slowly, because I'm switching back and forth a lot between projects. I spent the morning sourcing materials and designing the light boxes and cradles. Here is an updated version:
I'm getting excited about fabricating this piece. PV panel will arrive early next week, at which point I'll start on the light boxes.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

at FAR

I'm posting from aFAR (the Facility for Arts Research) at FSU where I'm cutting the frames for Variance Invariance (working title that I'm finding does not roll easily off the tongue). Here are some photos from yesterday and today. Thank you to Noah, Ashley, and Richard for making my experience at FAR easy and fun.




Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

New Project In The Works




Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Drawing Class at Spring House Today!

Tallahassee is the location of the only Florida residence designed and built by Frank Lloyd Wright. The home was designed and built for George Lewis II, his wife Clifton Van Brunt Lewis, and their four children - George Edward, Van, Byrd, and Ben. She and George worked for more than thirty years together, at different times with different institutions and people, to turn their dream of having Spring House become a teaching institute for use by FSU, FAMU, TCC, UF and other interested organizations into a reality. Clifton started the non-profit, tax-deductible Spring House Institute after George's death in 1996, and is working to raise money to restore and finish Spring House for use as the institute, which remains their goal. Today, I took my drawing class to Spring House for some pre-spring break inspiration. 


 Byrd Lewis in the window reflection