Showing posts with label GA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GA. Show all posts

05/10/24

Dawn Black, Victoria Dugger, Raheleh Filsoofi, Jiha Moon, Judy Rushin-Knopf, Tori Tinsley, Mie Yim - "emotion" Exhibition Curated by Jiha Moon & Veronica Kessenich @ Laney Contemporary, Savannah

emotion
Dawn Black, Victoria Dugger, Raheleh Filsoofi, Jiha Moon, Judy Rushin-Knopf, Tori Tinsley, Mie Yim
Curated by Jiha Moon & Veronica Kessenich
Laney Contemporary, Savannah
September 17 - November 2, 2024

Courtesy Laney Contemporary

Laney Contemporary presents emotion, a group exhibition guest curated by artist Jiha Moon and art historian and curator Veronica Kessenich, founder of CARCIOFI and former director of Atlanta Contemporary.

The selected artists, named below, are Moon and Kessenich’s response to an oft-spoken truism that women are emotional ... and not in a good way. Effectively, the friendship of these two curators – and their shared histories of having to be quietly demonstrative – inspired a collaboration to exhibit art by women at a woman-owned gallery, that astutely plays to the clichés while eviscerating women’s socially prescribed ‘role.’

In September of 2022, Jiha Moon and Veronica Kessenich talked about a not-so-distant past when their lives were fundamentally different. Marriages and moves, departures and opportunities (and the need to remain ‘professional’ through it all) highlighted the fact that women often ‘suppress’ to ‘succeed.’ Jiha Moon soon identified seven artists (a number which is linked to intellect and not emotion) who represent the duality of what it means to exist today.

Empowering both individuals and groups is of special interest to Dawn Black. Her use of collected source material, as seen in her Conceal Project: For and Against Grabbers and First Rebels Descending, takes on perceived gender roles, the mythology of women (as creators and destroyers), and the necessity to transcend proscribed constraints. Utilizing gouache, ink, and watercolor, her works on paper invoke a thunderously quiet protest.

Mirrors and the human gaze offer Victoria Dugger the opportunity to present viewers with newly perceived realities. Her worldview as a disabled Black woman informs her richly layered surfaces, beautifully rendered anthropomorphic figures, and lumpy sculptures adorned with the trappings of femininity. The strength of Victoria Dugger’s imagery emerges from her visions of alternate worlds, ones in which ambiguity and experience lead the audience to places where the grass may be a little greener.

The physical bite of artist Raheleh Filsoofi is her act of resistance and resilience. She uses her own body, hands, and mouth to transcend the colonialism, history, and labor of clay. She slowly, methodically, sinks her teeth into clay artifacts that she makes, leaving a permanent mark as protagonist, antagonist, observer, and participant in the narrative of life.

Reappropriating and reconsidering Eastern and Western motifs, including Keanu Reeves, the color yellow, Roy Lichtenstein’s brush stroke, Buddhas, peaches and fortune cookies, is both a modus operandi and an oversimplification of the technical genius in Jiha Moon’s work. Her paintings and ceramics do not fit within any defined canon. Jiha effectively acts as cartographer, charting her own journey from immigrant to citizen, daughter to mother, student to teacher. Her playfully fierce works resist simple definitions – getting to know her is akin to finding the key on the map.

Instability, balance, and the energetic continuum are represented through three textile works by artist Judy Rushin-Knopf. Her Vital Signs series came about at a time of suspended reality where the illness of a loved one, combined with the trauma of the pandemic, necessitated an exploration in materiality. Using cloth, which can be read as both comforting and oppressive, her works evoke the importance of time and its numerous stages.

Often using imagery from her children’s drawings, Tori Tinsley’s paintings and sculptures traverse childhood innocence alongside the caregiving roles essential to daughter and mother. Her Sleepers series, presented in this exhibition, utilizes bold and expressive painting techniques to represent the uninhibited demands of giving, receiving, and the ultimate loss of love.

Mie Yim’s paintings navigate abstraction and representation, her imagery seemingly lacking focal points while achieving connections. Her visual vocabulary is informed by her childhood trauma as an immigrant. Her iconography of bubbles, crevices, excavations, and blankets, combined with gutsy color choices and supernatural creatures, are intended to overwhelm and disorient. By extending her marks to the edges of the paper she allows no room to breathe, no space to relax. Just a fascinating discomfort.

These seven artists are expressive, aggressively colorful, and boldly shy. Their emotion vibrates with the energy of who they are as mothers, daughters, teachers, people of color, and immigrants.

About the Curators:

Veronica L. Hogan (née Kessenich) is a museum director, curator, art historian, educator, collector, former art dealer, fundraising consultant and writer. Drawn to the history of art at a young age, she became fascinated with the language of art (color, line, shape, form … ) and the inspiration behind artists and their works. She earned an M.Phil in Art History from the University of St. Andrews, Scotland (2004) and her BA in Art History from Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame, IN (2001) and has taught since 2006 at Agnes Scott College (Atlanta), SCAD-Atlanta, the Art Institutes of Atlanta and Decatur, and has lectured at the University of Georgia, Emory University, Oglethorpe University, and others.

Jiha Moon is from DaeGu, Korea and lives and works in Tallahassee, Florida. She received her MFA from the University of Iowa and is currently Assistant Professor of Art at Florida State University. Her works have been acquired by Asia Society, the High Museum of Art, the Mint Museum of Art, Smithsonian Institute, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Weatherspoon Museum of Art, and the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. She has had solo exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia, the Taubman Museum of Art, the Mint Museum of Art, and the Cheekwood Museum of Art, among other places. She has been included in group shows at the Kemper Museum, the Fabric Workshop and Museum, the Atlanta Contemporary Art Center, Asia Society, The Drawing Center, White Columns, Smith College Museum of Art, and the Weatherspoon Museum of Art. She was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2023.

LANEY CONTEMPORARY
1810 Mills B. Lane Blvd, Savannah, Georgia 31405

22/09/24

Isabel Toledo @ SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah - "A Love Letter" Exhibition

Isabel Toledo: A Love Letter
SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah
August 14 – December 16, 2024

Honoring beloved Cuban-born, American fashion designer ISABEL TOLEDO, A Love Letter is a posthumous homage to the enduring resonance of her work, curated in close collaboration with her husband, artist and fashion illustrator Ruben Toledo. An innovative spirit, Isabel Toledo engineered shapes and patterns to cocoon the body, providing comfort, structure, and ease of movement. Her designs were guided by emotions, rather than concepts, which she translated into elegant, impeccably crafted garments — radical in their construction yet supremely wearable. For more than three decades, the Toledos intertwined their creative processes, acting as each other’s muse, advocate, confidant, and collaborator. The friction between Isabel Toledo’s impassioned functionalism and Ruben Toledo’s fantasy-prone humor was inspirational, pushing both to greater heights. A Love Letter features a selection of Isabel Toledo’s designs displaying her mastery of technique, fabric, shape, and color, complemented by new works by Ruben Toledo created exclusively for the exhibition and a short film highlighting Isabel Toledo’s practice and memorializing their unique relationship.

SCAD MUSEUM OF ART - SCAD MOA
Savannah College of Art and Design
601 Turner Blvd., Savannah, Georgia

17/09/24

Anthony Olubunmi Akinbola @ SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah - "Good Hair" Exhibition

Anthony Olubunmi Akinbola
Good Hair
SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah
August 23 – December 23, 2024

Nigerian-American artist ANTHONY OLUBUNMI AKINBOLA (b. 1991, Columbia, Mo.) presents recent works that repurpose everyday objects associated with Black hair to convey the intersection of commodities and their broader sociopolitical implications. In his most ambitious "Camouflage" painting to date, Anthony Olubunmi Akinbola stitches durags into a 48-foot-wide composition, invoking Modernist painting tropes while critically underscoring the ubiquity of gestural abstraction. The Price of Oil, an installation of pomade cans on retail shelving, signifies the dynamic history of Black hair within the American economy, where abundance paradoxically connotes the celebration yet sterile commercialization of culture. His newest sculpture Spinnin’ is a monument to barbershops — the earliest sites of Black commercial enterprises and civil rights organizing — recognizing their part in fostering Black political mobility and financial independence in an ever-resistant environment. Exemplifying Akinbola’s yearslong practice of mediating between sculpture and painting through material, "Good Hair" draws attention to the nuanced roles of everyday objects within Black life, individuation, and joy.

SCAD MUSEUM OF ART - SCAD MOA
Savannah College of Art and Design
601 Turner Blvd., Savannah, Georgia

15/09/24

Jiten Thukral & Sumir Tagra @ SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah - "Arboretum" Exhibition

Jiten Thukral & Sumir Tagra
Arboretum
SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah
July 31 – December 23, 2024

"If a tree falls in the Metaverse, does it make a noise?" Posing this question in their ongoing project Arboretum, artist collaborators JITEN THUKRAL (b. 1976, Jalandhar, Punjab, India) and SUMIR TAGRA (b. 1979, New Delhi, India) contemplate the intersection of the digital and natural worlds. The series was sparked by the global isolation of the Covid-19 pandemic and the subsequent escalation of virtual mediation between people and their physical world. Amassing a collection of digital images of flora in their immediate environment, the artists used select photos as the basis for hyperrealistic paintings on shaped canvases. The resulting works resist the instant gratification of digital technology, favoring hands-on, labor-intensive techniques that require months to complete. By incorporating analog representations of pixels and glitches, the artists remind the viewer of the inescapable intervention of data and algorithms that inform our daily choices and the ways we see and interpret the world.

SCAD MUSEUM OF ART - SCAD MOA
Savannah College of Art and Design
601 Turner Blvd., Savannah, Georgia

Olimpia Zagnoli @ SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah - "Multifaceted" Exhibition

Olimpia Zagnoli: Multifaceted
SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah
July 31 – December 23, 2024

Artist and designer OLIMPIA ZAGNOLI (b. 1984, Montecchio Emilia, Italy) is world-renowned for her iconic Pop-Deco illustrations that frequently appear in major magazines, books, merchandise, and advertisements. Zagnoli’s process begins in the sketchbook, where her drawings take inspiration from her everyday surroundings and happenstance encounters, sharpening into stylized shapes imbued with vibrant colors that enhance their communicative power. For her site-specific installation in the museum’s public-facing Jewel Box vitrines, Olimpia Zagnoli transposes her bold images from their two-dimensional format into large-scale sculptures with careful consideration of every line, angle, and hue. Olimpia Zagnoli populates each space with a portrait of an invented character enshrined in a layered composition that plays with the rules of the grid. Inviting passersby into her technicolor universe, she creates a trail of graphic vignettes along the museum’s façade, imparting the impact of image-making while celebrating the elasticity of our identities.

SCAD MUSEUM OF ART - SCAD MOA
Savannah College of Art and Design
601 Turner Blvd., Savannah, Georgia

01/03/24

Holly Hendry: Watermarks @ SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah

Holly HendryWatermarks 
SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah 
February 26 – June 24, 2024

Sculptor HOLLY HENDRY approaches the SCAD Museum of Art’s historic edifice as a porous network of passages and conduits. Framed within the glass vitrines on the building’s façade, the artist’s new diorama-like installations offer imagined cross-sections of the museum’s inner workings and infrastructure. Each work evokes looped industrial pipes, deflated mechanical gears, and strange anatomical forms to encourage reflection on the relationships between sculpture, the human body, and the built and natural environment.

In particular, Holly Hendry focuses on the theme of flowing water, referring both to the liquid movements found across Savannah’s aquatic landscape and to our human anatomy. Some of her caricature-like sculptures appear to be inundated by floods, while others undulate and tumble in wave-like formations or leak teardrop-shaped blown glass drips. The artworks’ titles also reiterate this intermingling of body and water, referencing lines from Ovid’s story of the water nymph Cyane, who dissolves in her own tears — an apt metaphor for the effects of the global climate crisis and rising sea levels. Hendry’s richly detailed creations give life to the hidden aspects of our surroundings — elements that might be concealed from our view yet nevertheless undergird our reality.

SCAD MUSEUM OF ART - SCAD MOA
Savannah College of Art and Design
601 Turner Blvd., Savannah, Georgia

29/02/24

Ivan Argote: The Burden of the Invisible @ SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah

Iván Argote 
The Burden of the Invisible 
SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah 
February 21 – July 29, 2024 

In The Burden of the Invisible, multidisciplinary artist IVAN ARGOTE presents critical yet playful works that challenge collective memories and the narrow, dominant histories commonly presented in public spaces. Through sculpture, film, painting, and photography, the artist reimagines historical monuments in Savannah and around the world, reflecting on their purpose and proposing alternate realities. Argote’s new installation Señores creates an uncanny scene, grouping archetypal statues in states of decay and overgrown with various plants. His film Levitate and recent series of concrete paintings also contend with monuments’ supposed permanence and their militaristic iconography, revealing how notions of power and domination are present within our history and daily lives. By representing real sites of commemoration, albeit fictitiously and satirically, Argote advocates for decentralized, constantly evolving public spaces that acknowledge other narratives.

SCAD MUSEUM OF ART - SCAD MOA
Savannah College of Art and Design
601 Turner Blvd., Savannah, Georgia

28/02/24

Awol Erizku @ SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah

Awol Erizku: X 
SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah 
February 26 – July 3, 2024

In his debut solo museum exhibition, AWOL ERIZKU focuses on pioneering American Muslim human rights activist El Hajj Malik El-Shabazz (Malcolm X) as a subject of personal inspiration and complex cultural significance. Awol Erizku views the historic figure as a metaphorical prism of faith, masculinity, transformation, and a vessel for truth. This ambitious exhibition is composed of new and recent works by Awol Erizku, including iconic photographs, sculptures, works on paper, a powerful film, and an installation of a rare historic manuscript. Together, they collectively convey the artist’s multidisciplinary practice and dynamic approach to a diverse range of media. Presented in the SCAD Museum of Art’s Walter and Linda Evans Center for African American Studies, the exhibition critiques the Eurocentric canon of art and history, with Malcolm X serving as a key figure connecting the U.S. and Africa. Awol Erizku posits his singular aesthetic as a means to link ancient mythology, diasporic tradition, and contemporary culture as an antidote to closed-mindedness — striving toward Malcolm X’s late-life universalism and dedication to the “overwhelming spirit of true brotherhood.”

SCAD MUSEUM OF ART - SCAD MOA 
Walter and Linda Evans Center for African American Studies
Savannah College of Art and Design
601 Turner Blvd., Savannah, Georgia

Cao Fei: At the Edge of Superhumanity @ SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah

Cao Fei
At the Edge of Superhumanity 
SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah 
February 26 – July 29, 2024

Since the early 2000s, SCAD deFINE ART honoree CAO FEI has produced forward-thinking work that acutely responds to and reflects on — in real time — shifts in our perception and experience of reality during periods of rapid globalization, urban development, and technological advancement. A pioneer of creating digital worlds, Cao Fei transforms two galleries at the SCAD Museum of Art into an immersive multimedia installation featuring live-action films, as well as virtual, augmented, and mixed-reality environments for visitors to explore. Blurring distinctions between the terrestrial and the cyber, the familiar and the futuristic, Cao Fei reveals how the spaces we inhabit shape our identities and social interactions, and ultimately redirect our search for meaning and purpose in life.

SCAD MUSEUM OF ART - SCAD MOA
Savannah College of Art and Design
601 Turner Blvd., Savannah, Georgia

29/11/23

Amy Pleasant @ Lanay Contemporary, Savannah- "FragmenT FOLD bloom" Exhibition + Biography

Amy Pleasant: FragmenT FOLD bloom
Laney Contemporary, Savannah
November 10, 2023 – January 13, 2024

Amy Pleasant
AMY PLEASANT 
Folding I, 2023 
Oil on canvas, 72 x 108 in 
© Amy Pleasant / Courtesy Laney Contemporary

Laney Contemporary presents FragmenT FOLD bloom, the second solo exhibition at the galley in Savannah, of Birmingham-based artist AMY PLEASANT. This selection of work is physical; it fragments and folds and allows the body to bloom into what feels like an ancient alphabet of gestures. The work ranges in material expression and engages the whole and the fragmented form in solitude or in serene connection. 

Through a variety of shapes, Amy Pleasant’s figures embody gestures and silhouettes of stillness or dynamic interplay. Some fold into themselves while others duplicate into a twin. Still others “bloom” outward into X shapes embracing as much space as they can claim. Throughout Pleasant’s practice, bodies are distilled into shapes that perceptually shift between foreground and background, positive and negative spaces. The body merges with the letter X in Amy Pleasant’s visual vocabulary as both affirmation and negation, holding place as the “I am here” gesture. They are figurative shapes with both qualities, expressing the full capacity of human form and the incredible potential of the body. But X is just one expression as Amy Pleasant’s work explores its own language of shape and gesture, curve, and corner. It undertakes a kind of poetic alphabet of the body in a visual form. It appears these forms have always existed, as if hieroglyphic and timeless.

The exhibition encompasses many facets: painted ceramic sculptures, works on paper in ink and gouache, and oil paintings in a variety of sizes. Color plays an important, though subtle, role in Amy Pleasant’s figures. Shades of color are in conversation with one another, so soft and nuanced they could be missed. Colors and shapes establish patterns providing a playful commentary on human emotions - visualizing how it feels to “run in circles.” These repetitive forms are at times illusions of space and movement, establishing bold contrasts and emotive connections.

Amy Pleasant’s work induces the body to feel something: a stirring, a slouching, a bending, a leaning toward or leaning away. Her work explores the subtleties of the human gesture indirectly asking questions such as: What is universal about a body? Can we move closer to seeing ourselves in one another, folding, fragmenting, and blooming toward bodies and spaces of empathy? Her compositions encourage awareness of our own “micro-movements with meaning,” nudging us to lean in with more curiosity and elegance, and perhaps, even with grace.

AMY PLEASANT - BIOGRAPHY

Amy Pleasant (b.1972) received a BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (1994) and an MFA from the Tyler School of Art (1999). Pleasant is a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellow (2018) and received the South Arts Prize for the State of Alabama (2018). Other awards include a Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters and Sculptors Award (2015), Cultural Alliance of Birmingham (2008) and the Alabama State Council on the Arts (2019/2003).

Solo exhibitions include the Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham, AL (2023), Hunter Museum of American Art, Chattanooga, TN (2022), Brackett Creek Editions, NYC (2022) Geary Contemporary, Millerton/NYC (2021, 2019), Laney Contemporary, Savannah, GA (2020), Institute 193, Lexington, KY (2019), Jeff Bailey Gallery, Hudson/NYC (2016, 2015, 2011, 2009, 2005, 2004), whitespace gallery, Atlanta, GA (2017, 2014), Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art, Indianapolis, IN (2016), Atlanta Contemporary, Atlanta, GA (2009) among others. Her work has been included in numerous two person and group exhibitions at venues such as Pamela Salisbury Gallery, Hudson, NY (2022), Knoxville Museum of Art, Knoxville, TN (2022), Zuckerman Museum of Art, Kennesaw, GA (2022, 2016), Brackett Creek Editions, Bozeman, MT (2022, 2021), Hesse Flatow, NYC (2021), SEPTEMBER, Hudson, NY (2020), Mindy Solomon Gallery, Miami, FL (2019), Tif Sigfrids, Athens, GA (2019), Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, Montgomery, AL (2017), Adams and Ollman, Portland, OR (2017), Lamar Dodd School of Art, Athens, GA (2015).

Her work has been reviewed in Art in America, Art Papers, Artforum, The Brooklyn Rail, Burnaway and Sculpture.

Pleasant’s first monograph, The Messenger’s Mouth Was Heavy, was released in 2019, including essays by Daniel Fuller and Katie Geha, and was co-published by Institute 193 and Frank.

LANEY CONTEMPORARY
1810 Mills B. Lane Blvd, Savannah, Georgia 31405

19/05/23

Marcus Kenney @ Laney Contemporary, Savannah - Desolation Row

Marcus Kenney: Desolation Row
Laney Contemporary, Savannah
 April 4 - June 10, 2023

Marcus Kenney
Marcus Kenney
riot squad, 2023
Oil on canvas, 72 x 60 in
© Marcus Kenney, courtesy Laney Contemporary

Launey Contemporary presents Desolation Row, a solo exhibition of new paintings and a video-based sculptural installation by Savannah-based Marcus Kenney. This is Kenney’s second solo show at Laney Contemporary and his first solo exhibition in Savannah in five years. 

Bob Dylan’s song Desolation Row portrays an epic series of vignettes of 1960s America. Vivid and acerbic, it suggests and encounters without moralizing. Marcus Kenney’s brave body of work borrows Bob Dylan’s title, producing a kaleidoscopic vision that confronts the ugliness of humanity that exists today: our sadness, our tragedies, and our desires. 

The iconography of Marcus Kenney’s Desolation Row sits comfortably among the faces of Goya and Bosch. The paintings establish a parade of characters, raucous, abject, and dangerous, each more odd and unusual than the next. His giddy use of color and simplicity of form belie a deeper tragic longing for civility and the difficulty of existing in a world that we desperately want to believe in. Everywhere, ignorance runs amok, yet there are still signs of hope and possibility. 

Bob Dylan’s Desolation Row has been called a folk song of the absurd. Marcus Kenney’s paintings inhabit a similar space, confronting all that stares out at us, all that mirrors our times: the true, the violent, and the raw. It’s both of the 1960s and of today, timeless in its circus of humanity. Like Dylan’s lyrics, the paintings ask for an interpretive openness. The difficulties of being human, whilst maintaining compassion in our age of global crisis, and rampant self-indulgent behavior is at the heart of this fearless work. The paintings do not tell us what to think; they are more demanding. They require us to think.

Marcus Kenney (b. 1972) was born and raised in rural Louisiana and lives and works in Savannah, Georgia. Kenney earned an M.F.A. in photography from the Savannah College of Art and Design. He works in many mediums, including sculpture, painting, photography and neon. Marcus Kenney's narrative works present a tumultuous clash of imagery reflecting America’s melting pot of culture, considering issues including consumerism, environmentalism, religion, mortality, identity, race relations, and authority. Marcus Kenney has exhibited in museums, institutions, galleries and art fairs internationally, including Tel Aviv, Paris, London, Montréal, New York, Boston, Chicago, Kansas City, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Miami and Portland, Oregon. His work has been featured and reviewed in Art in America, New American Painting, Artpapers, New York Times, Boston Globe, ArtVoices, Atlanta Journal Constitution, New York Art Magazine, and Art News.

LANEY CONTEMPORARY
1810 Mills B. Lane Blvd, Savannah, GA 31405

15/04/21

David Driskell @ High Museum of Art, Atlanta - Icons of Nature and History

David Driskell: Icons of Nature and History 
High Museum of Art, Atlanta 
Through 9 May 2021 

David C. Driskell
DAVID C. DRISKELL (American, 1931–2020) 
Self-Portrait, 1953 
Oil on board 
Collection of the Estate of David C. Driskell, Maryland 
© Estate of David C. Driskell. 
Courtesy DC Moore Gallery, New York 
Photograph by Luc Demers 

The High Museum of Art presents the exhibition “David Driskell: Icons of Nature and History,” celebrating the breadth of the renowned American artist’s oeuvre and marking the first major survey of his work since his death in April 2020. David C. Driskell (1931-2020) is recognized for his painting and printmaking practices, often characterized by the use of collage, which combined the Black American experience with his keen observations of the American landscape and the imagery and aesthetic innovations of the African diaspora. In partnership with Portland Museum of Art, Maine, the exhibition brings approximately 60 artworks together to present highlights of David C. Driskell’s career. After the High (Feb. 6-May 9, 2021) the exhibition will travel to the Portland Museum of Art (June 19-Sept. 12, 2021) and The Phillips Collection (Oct. 6, 2021-Jan. 9, 2022).

“Beyond David’s prolific career as an international artist and scholar, he was a dear friend of the Museum, in fact a life trustee.  Without question, his work, as well as his generosity of spirit and intellect, have been transformational for the field,” said Rand Suffolk, the High’s Nancy and Holcombe T. Green, Jr., director. “We are honored to celebrate his incredible legacy through this exhibition.” Mark Bessire, the Judy and Leonard Lauder director of the Portland Museum of Art, added, “This exhibition is a unique opportunity to gain a deeper understanding and appreciation of David’s widespread influence. The contemporary significance of subjects that David explored throughout his career are more salient than ever, and we are looking forward to highlighting this remarkable American artist.”

The High has a long history of collaboration with David C. Driskell, who in addition to his work as an artist was one of the world’s leading authorities on the history of African American art. In 1977, the High hosted Driskell’s landmark exhibition “Two Centuries of Black American Art.” In 2005, the Museum established the David C. Driskell Prize, the first national award to honor and celebrate contributions to the field of African American art, including distinctions for both artists and scholars. The most recent recipient is artist Jamal Cyrus, with past honorees including Amy Sherald, Naima J. Keith, Mark Bradford, Andrea Barnwell Brownlee, Rashid Johnson and Valerie Cassel Oliver. Funds raised through the prize’s annual dinner have supported the acquisition of 48 works by African American artists for the High’s collection.

“What remains steadfast in Driskell’s work is a commitment to his ‘icons,’ which elevate the mind and the spirit above that which exists in the physical world,” said guest curator Julie McGee, associate professor of Africana studies and art history at the University of Delaware. “Among the many gifts Driskell bequeaths to us is the delight of seeing the world through his eyes, and it is a journey of immeasurable beauty and grace.”

Added Michael Rooks, the High’s Wieland Family curator of modern and contemporary art, “Driskell’s command of vibrant color and line, and his attentiveness to what he called ‘the symbolic presence of form,’ endowed his subjects with a kind of frisson like that of an electrical charge, which made his work esthetically vigorous, bold and spirited.”

“Icons of Nature and History” is the first posthumous survey of Driskell’s work, spanning seven decades of his artistry, from the 1950s to the 2000s, with works drawn from museums, private collections and the artist’s estate. The exhibition includes key works from the High’s collection, including one of Driskell’s self-portraits. In addition, the exhibition follows the course of his career, from Howard University and the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture to Talladega College and his studio in Falmouth, Maine, and features recurring motifs such as still lifes, pine trees, aspects of the natural world, African masks, and iconographies drawn from his Christian and Southern roots and the Black experience. Works in the exhibition, including paintings, drawings and prints, will reveal Driskell’s mastery of materials and his indefatigable spirit of invention, which led to the development of a hybrid technique he called “collage-painting.”

DAVID C. DRISKELL (1931-2020)
A Georgia native, David C. Driskell graduated from Howard University in 1955 and received a Master of Fine Arts from The Catholic University of America in 1962. In 1953, he attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine. A lifelong educator, Driskell honed his teaching repertoire at historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) between 1955 and 1976, teaching at Talladega College, Howard University and Fisk University. From 1977 through 1998, he taught at the University of Maryland, College Park, which is now the home of the David C. Driskell Center, an exhibition space and research institute that houses Driskell’s archive. In addition to a growing collection of African American art, it serves as a study center for the history of African American art and art of the African diaspora. While Driskell built a distinguished career as a scholar, he simultaneously maintained an active and distinguished artistic practice, regularly presenting his work in both solo and group exhibitions at museums and galleries including the High, the Center for Maine Contemporary Art, The Phillips Collection, Tate Modern (London), DC Moore Gallery and Kunsthal KAde (Amsterdam).

Exhibition Catalogue
“David Driskell: Icons of Nature and History” is accompanied by an expansive and fully illustrated catalog of approximately 224 pages, published by Rizzoli Skira. The book will feature a lead essay by Julie L. McGee with contributions by Renée Maurer, Sarah Workneh and Katie Sonnenborn, Shaun Leonardo, Keith Morrison, Jessica May, Thelma Golden, Lowery Stokes Sims, Richard Powell, and Michael Rooks. It also includes a selection of David Driskell's writings, edited by Richard Powell, and a timeline assembled by Monet Timmons.

HIGH MUSEUM OF ART
1280 Peachtree Street, N.E., Atlanta, GA 30309

03/06/20

Monir Farmanfarmaian @ High Museum of Art, Atlanta - A Mirror Garden

Monir Farmanfarmaian: A Mirror Garden
High Museum of Art, Atlanta
August 14, 2020 - January 3, 2021 
(dates to be confirmed)

MONIR SHAHROUDY FARMANFARMAIAN
(Iranian, 1924-2019)
Untitled (Muqarnas), 2012
Mirror, reverseglass painting, plaster on wood
High Museum of Art, purchase with funds from
the Farideh & Al Azadi Foundation, 2019.174

Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian (1924-2019) was one of Iran’s most celebrated and revered visual artists, known internationally for her geometric mirror sculptures that combined the mathematical order and beauty of ancient Persian architectural motifs with the forms and patterns of hard-edged, postwar abstraction. The High Museum of Art will present the first posthumous exhibition of her work in an American museum with “Monir Farmanfarmaian: A Mirror Garden”.

The exhibition was inspired by the High’s 2019 acquisition of Monir Farmanfarmaian’s cut-mirror sculpture titled “Untitled (Muqarnas)” (2012) as well as her 2014 drawing “Untitled (Circles and Squares).” Muqarnas was acquired with funds from the Farideh & Al Azadi Foundation as part of a significant gift to The Woodruff Arts Center, of which the High is an arts partner, to present work by Persian artists and to engage the Persian community.

“We are honored to present Farmanfarmaian’s work at the High and to recognize her importance as a singular creative force,” said Michael Rooks, the High’s Wieland Family curator of modern and contemporary art. “For generations of artists in post-revolution Iran, Farmanfarmaian represents the paradigm of an independent artist whose work was unfettered by the histories and customs of its context but existed in conversation with contemporary art practices across cultures. At the same time her work reflects a deep understanding and reverence for Iranian culture.”

The exhibition’s title is borrowed from Monir Farmanfarmaian’s 2007 memoir, co-authored by Zara Houshmand, which evokes the visual splendor of the artist’s mirror-mosaic sculptures. Objects on view will include a selection of sculptures, drawings, textiles and collages spanning four decades, from 1976 to 2019. Drawings from the late 1970s such as “Untitled” (1977), featuring a composition based on the hexagon, provide examples of her early investigations of geometric form and pattern, while later drawings such as the High’s “Untitled (Circles and Squares)” (2014) are painstakingly crafted, demonstrating the artist’s conceptual and technical virtuosity and her use of repetition and pattern.

Sculptures from 2009 to 2019 unite fragments of mirror and colorful painted glass in resplendent mosaic patterns. “Untitled (Muqarnas)” (2012) is composed of identically opposite, wing-like forms. The title refers to the honeycombed ceilings in Persian shrines and palaces while also recalling the wings of the Faravahar, an ancient Zoroastrian symbol tied to Persian cultural identity. Another work, titled “Gabbeh” (2009), features a triangular pattern formed by overlapping hexagons that serves as the foundation for an irregular combination of colorful polygons, arcs and diagonals. Its title refers to a type of Persian carpet produced by Nomadic weavers. The exhibition also includes four silk carpets designed by Monir Farmanfarmaian.

Monir Farmanfarmian often grouped her work in series she called “families,” suggesting a familial affinity of form, dimensionality or structure between works in each group. The exhibition will include several examples of these “families,” most notably all eight members of “Third Family,” which is based on the first eight regular polygons in Euclidian geometry. Shown together, the entire group of works will demonstrate the complete progression of the artist’s concept for the series. Another special feature of the exhibition includes two works from the artist’s “Convertible” series in which component parts of the sculpture may be rearranged in multiple configurations demonstrating the fluidity of geometric structure.

The galleries will also feature several intimately scaled collaged boxes that the artist called “Heartache Boxes,” which were produced after the death of her husband Abol-Bashar Farmanfarmaian in 1991. Recalling Joseph Cornell’s boxes arranged with objects related to longing, memory and dreams, as well as the art of Persian miniature painting, these elaborately crafted assemblages are arranged with prints, photographs and a variety of objects that refer to the artist’s life and career, including images of her early work and references to her “lost” life in Tehran before the Islamic Revolution.

The exhibition will be presented on the second level of the High’s Anne Cox Chambers Wing.

Born in Qazvin, Iran, in 1924, MONIR FARMANFARMAIAN studied at the College of Fine Arts at the University of Tehran in the early 1940s, later traveling to New York to further her education. There she attended Parsons School of Design, Cornell University and the Arts Student League. In New York, Monir Farmanfarmaian absorbed the development of geometric abstraction and observed its burgeoning permutations in contemporary art. Her community of artist friends and colleagues there included Milton Avery, Alexander Calder, Joan Mitchell, Louise Nevelson, Frank Stella, Andy Warhol and others. These experiences, combined with her deep knowledge of Iranian arts and crafts, resulted in her personal vision for a truly global modernity.

Following her marriage in 1957, the artist returned to Iran, where she began to study, collect and preserve the traditional decorative arts of her home country. However, the 1979 Islamic Revolution led Monir Farmanfarmaian and her family back to New York, where they would remain in exile for the next 26 years. In 2004, Monir Farmanfarmaian moved back to Tehran, reestablishing a studio where she worked with some of the same craftsmen she had known in the 1970s.

The artist first received significant attention in 1958, when she was awarded a gold medal for her work in the Iranian Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, leading to exhibitions in Tehran, Paris and New York. Since then, her work has been shown at major institutions and in exhibitions worldwide. Most recently, major retrospective exhibitions of her work have been presented by the Sharjah Art Foundation, UAE; the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin; the Guggenheim Museum, New York; and the Fundação de Serralves, Museu de Arte Contemporânea, Porto.

Farmanfarmaian’s work is included in important public collections around the world including the Guggenheim Museum, New York; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the High Museum of Art, Atlanta; the Museum of Modern Art, Tehran; Tate Modern, London; and the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

She is the subject of the monograph “Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian: Cosmic Geometry,” edited by Hans Ulrich Obrist, and is the co-author of her autobiography, “A Mirror Garden” (Knopf, 2007). In December 2017, the Monir Museum opened in Tehran, the only museum dedicated to a single female artist in Iran.

HIGH MUSEUM OF ART
1280 Peachtree St NE, Atlanta, GA 30309
www.high.org

16/06/19

Masao Yamamoto, Carolyn Carr, Fallen Fruit @ Jackson Fine Art, Atlanta

Masao Yamamoto: Bonsai
Carolyn Carr: Out of the Studio
Fallen Fruit
Jackson Fine Art, Atlanta
Through June 29, 2019

Jackson Fine Art presents exhibitions of new work by Masao Yamamoto and Carolyn Carr, two artists whose innovative interpretations of the cultivated landscape usher one of photography’s foundational subjects into the 21st century. Photography and florals have a rich history, with early artists depending on florals to communicate symbolism and convey beauty; Carr and Yamamoto, in turn, draw on their surrounding environments to offer cultural signifiers of beauty and calm increasingly invaluable in a tumultuous time.

Also on view is an installation from the L.A.-based art collaborative Fallen Fruit, whose unique wallpapers and narrative photography are informed by their experiential and community-driven public projects, for which they always use indigenous fruit as either material or inspiration. 

Masao Yamamoto’s latest series, Bonsai, is singularly focused on the tradition of Japanese “tray planting,” a contemplative practice of maintaining small trees that mimic the shape and scale of full-size trees. To these photographs of the trees themselves, Masao Yamamoto adds his characteristic surrealist touch by manipulating the backgrounds and perspectives of his compositions — a tree is larger than the moon, a bonsai teeters on a cliff, dwarfing a mountain range. Viewers are drawn in by Masao Yamamoto’s insertion of a cultivated, “indoor” object into a seemingly outdoor setting and then back into the studio. The trick of Masao Yamamoto’s practice is his blurring of these lines.

In her newest series, Out of the Studio, Carolyn Carr similarly conflates the natural world with artistic construction. Known for her multimedia installations and experimental Carolyn Carr’s work addresses the battle and attendant healing inherent in the struggle to establish personal identity within a cultural landscape. In this series, Carolyn Carr takes a formalist turn, photographing plant life native to the Blue Ridge Mountains en plein air, nodding to the past by utilizing a box easel and employing natural light and shadow to capture still lifes at turns delicate and ominous.

MASAO YAMAMOTO
Masao Yamamoto (b. 1957, Japan) is known for evoking emotional power in the form of small-scale photographs. His early background in painting is apparent in his works’ painterly look, incorporating blurs and experimenting with printing surfaces; with many photographs, Masao Yamamoto manipulates silver gelatin prints through means such as staining the images with tea or actual paint, or tearing them. His subjects vary wildly, ranging from the Japanese countryside to nude female bodies. Many liken Masao Yamamoto’s art to haikus, due to his mastery of brevity and focus on everyday details. Masao Yamamoto is based in Yamanashi, Japan. His work has been exhibited in numerous international institutions including High Museum of Art, Atlanta; George Eastman House, Rochester; Carrousel du Louvre, Paris; Galerie de Moderne, Munich; and Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego. Yamamoto’s photographs are included in the collections of the Victoria & Albert Museum, London; the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the International Center of Photography, New York; and the Sir Elton John Collection, among others. His monographs include Tori, Radius Books, 2016; Fujsan, Nazraeli press, 2008; é, Nazraeli Press, 2005; Omizuao, Nazraeil Press, 2003; Nakazora Nazraeli Press, 2001; and A Box of Ku, Nazraeli Press, 1998. This is his fourth solo exhibition at Jackson Fine Art.

CAROLYN CARR
Carolyn Carr (b. 1966) is a multi-media artist based in Atlanta, Georgia. Carr received her BFA from the Atlanta College of Art. Her work, exhibited in numerous solo and group exhibitions in the United States, Asia and Europe — including the High Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA; BIG POND Artworks, Munich, Germany; Artists Space, New York, NY; 10 Chancery Lane Gallery, Hong Kong; the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC; and the High Museum of Art and Atlanta Contemporary Art Center, Atlanta, GA. — has been critically received and reviewed in numerous publications. In addition to Out of the Studio, Carolyn Carr’s recent and upcoming exhibitions include the Untitled Fair with Marisa Newman Projects, Miami; City of Atlanta Gallery 72, curated by Kevin Sipp; and an appointment as Visiting Artist of the Tbilisi, Georgia Art Fair. This is her third solo exhibition at Jackson Fine Art.

FALLEN FRUIT
Fallen Fruit is an art collaborative originally conceived in 2004 by David Burns, Matias Viegener and Austin Young. Since 2013, David Burns and Austin Young have continued the collaboration. Fallen Fruit's photography developed by mapping fruit trees growing on or over public property in Los Angeles, and has since expanded to include serialized public projects and site-specific installations and happenings in various cities around the world. By always working with fruit as a material or media, the catalogue of photography projects and works reimagine public interactions with the margins of urban space, systems of community and narrative real-time experience. Public Fruit Jams invites a broad public to transform homegrown or public fruit and join in communal jam-making as experimentation in personal narrative and sublime collaboration; Nocturnal Fruit Forages, nighttime neighborhood fruit tours, explores the boundaries of public and private space at the edge of darkness. Fallen Fruit’s photography and visual work includes an ongoing series of narrative photographs, wallpapers, everyday objects and video works that explore the social and political implications of our relationship to fruit and world around us. Recent and upcoming projects include Aki Aora 2019, Tulum; Food: Bigger than the Plate at the Victoria & Albert Museum, London (May, 2019); and a solo installation at Kunsthall 3.14, Bergen, Norway (June, 2019). This is their first exhibition at Jackson Fine Art.

JACKSON FINE ART
3115 East Shadowlawn Ave. NE, Atlanta, GA 30305
www.jacksonfineart.com

27/01/11

French Film Festival 2011 Atlanta - Bienvenue au 12th French Film Yesterday and today series organized by the High Museum of Art at the Richard H. Rich Theatre

2011 French Film Yesterday & Today Festival
Festival du film français d'Atlanta 2011
High Museum of Art, Atlanta
At Richard H. Rich Theatre
February 5  26, 2011


Paris view from MontmatrePhotograph by Gautier Willaume (c) 2005

The High Museum of Art will host the 12th annual FRENCH FILM YESTERDAY AND TODAY series from Saturday, February 5, through Saturday, February 26. The four-film festival will include three contemporary releases—“Queen to Play,” “Kings of Pastry” and “Henri-Georges Clouzot’s Inferno”—as well as the classic production “The Rules of the Game.” This annual series is made possible with support from the Embassy of France Cultural Services and the Consulate of France in Atlanta.

“The theme of mastery that is integral to the idea of creating a masterpiece ties together the four films in this year’s ‘French Film Yesterday and Today’ program. Both ‘Queen to Play,’ a fiction film about a novice chess player, and ‘The Pastry Kings,’ which follows professional pastry chefs seeking France’s highest honors for their craft, explore the rewards and torments of seeking perfection,” said Linda Dubler, curator of media arts at the High. “‘Henri Georges Clouzot’s Inferno’ looks at the pitfalls and eventual madness that accompanies the self-conscious creation of a masterpiece. The series concludes with an undisputed masterpiece, Jean Renoir’s ‘The Rules of the Game,’ a film often listed among the top ten of all time.”

The festival begins Saturday, February 5, with “Queen to Play,” the debut film from Caroline Bottaro. Set on the island of Corsica, it tells the story of wife and mother Hélène, who works as a maid for a standoffish American ex-pat, Dr. Kroger. Hélène is used to being taken for granted and wanting little for herself, but one day she finds the nerve to ask Kroger to teach her chess after noticing a board in his study. Before long, Hélène is envisioning the black-and-white tiled floor she is mopping as a chess board and the tallest perfume bottle on her vanity as the almighty queen. On the website filmsdefrance.com, James Travers called Bottaro’s debut “an intensely moving, imaginatively crafted piece of cinema, which uses the chess motif intelligently and unpretentiously as a potent allegory for life.”

On Saturday, February 12, “Kings of Pastry” from celebrated documentarians D.A. Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus explores the quest and competition to be named “Meilleur Ouvrier de France” (Best Craftsman in France), a title that is awarded to one pastry chef after a grueling three-day contest that tries the nerves, talent and luck of its participants. The film follows to Lyon three aspiring contestants—Jacquy Pfeiffer, co-founder of Chicago’s French Pastry School; Regis Lazard, competing for the second time; and Philippe Rigollot, from Maison Pic, France’s only three-star restaurant owned by a woman—as they measure themselves against their peers. For those who labor in the kitchen making exquisite desserts, the coveted title is the ultimate honor, dream and obsession. The film was hailed by the Los Angeles Times as “marvelous” and led the Herald Scotland’s critic to declare, “This is the culinary ‘Hurt Locker.’”

Showing on Saturday, February 19, is Serge Bromberg’s César-winning documentary “Henri-Georges Clouzot’s Inferno.” In 1964, Clouzot, maker of such masterpieces as “Diabolique” and “The Wages of Fear,” made a hallucinatory psychological thriller about a man driven mad by jealousy. The unfinished project, “Inferno,” starred the gorgeous Romy Schenider as a water-skiing vixen and Serge Reggiani as her possessive husband. Bromberg’s film resurrects a treasure trove of footage shot by Clouzot and tells the story of how badly things can go wrong for even the most gifted directors. In Eye Weekly Jason Anderson wrote, “The glimpses of the dazzling, op-art inspired effects and Romy Scheider at her dishiest will provoke paroxysms of pleasure among cinephiles.”

The series closes on Saturday, February 26, with “The Rules of the Game,” both a comedy of manners and a scathing look at a corrupt society under the shadow of war. In “5001 Nights at the Movies,” Pauline Kael called it, “Perhaps the most influential of all French films, and one of the most richly entertaining. [Director] Jean Renoir’s legendary . . . masterpiece is a farce about a large house party, gathered for a hunt, where the servants and masters begin to chase and shoot each other. The party at the country chateau is a tragicomic world in motion.” Robert Altman famously said that “‘The Rules of the Game’ taught me the rules of the game,” and surely photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson, who served as second unit director on the production, was enriched by the experience.

Film Series Schedule
Unless otherwise noted, all films begin at 8 p.m. and are screened in the Richard H. Rich Theatre. The theatre is located in the Memorial Arts Building, adjacent to the High at Peachtree and 15th Streets in midtown Atlanta. All films are in French (eh oui! :)) with English subtitles (oh yes! :)). “Kings of Pastry” is in French and English (en stereo!) with subtitles.

Queen to Play > Saturday, February 5

Kings of Pastry > Saturday, February 12

Henri-Georges Clouzot’s Inferno > Saturday, February 19

The Rules of the Game > Saturday, February 26

Support: This program is made possible with support from the Embassy of France Cultural Services department and the Consulate of France in Atlanta. 35mm projection facilities in the Rich Auditorium were provided by a gift from George Lefont.

19/09/04

Marco Breuer, Hanno Otten, Heinz Hajek-Halke: Cameraless Photographs 1950 – 2004 at Marcia Wood Gallery, Atlanta

Marco Breuer, Hanno Otten, Heinz Hajek-Halke: Cameraless Photographs 1950 – 2004
Marcia Wood Gallery, Atlanta
September 18 – October 30, 2004

Marcia Wood Gallery presents an exhibition of photographs made without a camera by three German photographers well known for their work in this particular aspect of the medium. Each artist uses the form to make direct abstracted images that recall the most radical experiments by the Surrealists and Bauhaus artists, among others. This exhibition brings together the work of two contemporary German photographers, Hanno Otten and Marco Breuer, with vintage prints by Heinz Hajek-Halke, a leading practitioner of cameraless work in Germany from the wartime era through the 1950s and 60s. Although cameraless work has been increasingly prevalent among contemporary photographers, this exhibition will examine how the continued celebration of abstract photography in postwar Germany has affected the work of these younger artists.

HEINZ HAJEK-HALKE (1898-1983) was very active in the development of experimental photography in Germany from the 1920s until his death in 1983. Although he studied art in both classical and experimental venues, Heinz Hajek-Halke spent most of his professional and artistic career in photography. Picture editor, press photographer and graphic designer, he also made important experimental photocollages and photographs inspired by film, abstract art, and biological forms that were reproduced in several photographic journals. In the 1950s, he taught photography and actively exhibited in important exhibitions, including Otto Steinert’s Subjective Photography. In 1957, he published a book on his techniques for cameraless photography.

HANNO OTTEN (born 1954) has been photographing since the 1980s. His early work included black and white abstractions, but for many years, color has been at the heart of his art. He has been making color studies, in sculpture and straight photographic prints since the 1990s. The more recent photograms, large abstract compositions of rectangular forms in panorama format, are the purest form of color study. By manipulating large blocks of pure color and geometric form in his ever more complex compositions, Hanno Otten reconsiders basic tenets of modernism, allowing color and light to suggest musical themes or monumental architecture. Hanno Otten has exhibited widely in Europe and in New York. He lives in London and Cologne.

MARCO BREUER (born 1966) has several degrees in photography and has made cameraless photographs since the early 1990s. His current images result from direct physical contact with the photographic paper itself and record performance-like rituals in the darkroom. In his abstract images of striated patterns from the Tilt and Pan series, based on film techniques, Marco Breuer embraces experimental practice in the spirit of his mid 19th century forbearers. He teaches in the MFA program at Bard College. He has published and exhibited widely in the United States and Germany and is represented in widely represented museum collections. Marco Breuer currently lives in upstate New York.

This exhibition has been curated/organized by LISA KURZNER for Marcia Wood Gallery. Lisa Kurzner is a freelance curator and critic who recently relocated to Atlanta from Europe. She organized Under Different Circumstances at the Atlanta Contemporary Art Center last winter. Previously she was the Newhall Curatorial Fellow in the Museum of Modern Art’s Department of Photography, and has worked with several international agencies supporting contemporary art.

MARCIA WOOD GALLERY
263 Walker Street, Atlanta, GA 30313
www.marciawoodgallery.com

17/07/04

Juan Perdiguero, Marcia Wood Gallery, Atlanta - Canes

Juan Perdiguero: Canes
Marcia Wood Gallery, Atlanta
July 16 - August 14, 2004

Marcia Wood Gallery presents it’s first solo exhibition with Spanish artist, Juan Perdiguero. A Madrid native, Juan Perdiguero earned degrees in painting and art conservation in Spain and S.U.N.Y., Buffalo, NY, where he currently lives and works. He has lived in the U.S. and exhibited internationally for the past fourteen years. He had a solo exhibition in 2002 at the Atlanta College of Art Gallery.

The word “Can” is the Spanish zoological/ scientific name for dog (perro); “Canes” is the plural form and means dogs. As the title suggests, Juan Perdiguero’s paintings of mixed media on photo emulsion are renderings of dogs, primarily greyhounds. Larger than life size silhouette’s race around the gallery walls with a startling intensity. The animal’s form is cut out of the picture plane and mounted directly onto the gallery walls which unleashes the image from the traditional ground and creates a vivid frozen moment of action as the dogs seem on the verge of leaping off the wall and into the room. In translating his training and regard for Baroque painting into a contemporary practice of mixed media the artist adheres to the appreciable importance of the dramatic rendering of motion in Baroque art. As well, Baroque works are the opposite of minimal and often considered productions in themselves. Perdiguero has derived a complex process that relies heavily on chiaroscuro to define the 3-dimensional quality of the dogs. Using photographs of hounds, he draws the dogs’ contours on acetate and makes cutouts onto which he collages images of flowers, lichen and other organic material he has photographed. Each patch, a wide range of vibrating color, size, and depth is placed to describe the precise form of a dog in action. He then covers the image with etching ink and linseed oil which is then carefully wiped off - reductively drawing the dogs features. The resulting chiaroscuro effect defines the dogs musculature and features by pulling out the darks and using the underlying photographs that are uncovered as the lights.

Juan Perdiguero is interested in the duality of the dog’s animal nature and the human qualities that we project onto them as well as the instinctive, subconscious animal qualities that are a part of human psychology. The artist states, “The energy in this new work is shifting. The greyhounds are part of a larger universe of images where emotions are diverse, isolation and alienation coexist with nostalgia and with curiosity always threatened by a sense of vulnerability…they speak about the animalistic side so much a part of their nature (the one they project onto us so we acknowledge the inner animal that lives in us) but also of a subtle human quality ( the one we project on to them).”

MARCIA WOOD GALLERY
263 Walker Street, Atlanta, GA 30313
www.marciawoodgallery.com

06/03/04

Joanne Mattera, Marcia Wood Gallery, Atlanta - New Paintings

Joanne Mattera: New Paintings
Marcia Wood Gallery, Atlanta
March 5 – April 17, 2004

In her second solo show at the Marcia Wood Gallery, New York artist Joanne Mattera offers the newest paintings from her Uttar series. Inspired by the brilliant palette of illuminated manuscripts and Persian miniatures, Joanne Mattera works in a vein that is succulent in hue while reductive in image. She describes her work as “lush minimalism.” Indeed, it is the color—luminous, dense and optically invigorating—that charges an orderly geometric field.

Key to the color is her medium: encaustic—pigmented wax—which has a refulgence and materiality like no other paint. The reductive component is assembled via a simple vocabulary of blocks or stripes. “I begin each new painting with a selected palette, typically saturated colors mitigated by the translucency of the wax, and a specific geometric element. Beyond that, there is no direct plan,” says Joanne Mattera. Her method is to repeat the chosen element, to stack it, crowd it, layer it into a dense aggregate, often scraping into the surface of the wax to release colors previously laid down.

The Uttar series, begun in late 2000, consists of some 240 paintings that range from 12 by 12 inches to over 48 by 48 inches. As with serial work, each painting provides both a capitulation of its predecessors as well as a suggestion of the ones to come. “There’s a lot of visual cross referencing,” Joanne Mattera acknowledges. Followers of her work will recognize familiar elements, such as the three-by-five-block grid and the packed columns or rows of stripes. At the same time, anyone new to her work will find much to discover, for each new painting, with its particular combination of color and geometry, offers a unique visual experience as well as a conceptual entry into the series.

The midsize paintings in this exhibition, while revisiting some of Joanne Mattera’s familiar themes, offer yet a new one: a broad horizontal stack shot vertically with translucent swipes of color. The cross-layered image references both the rigor of the grid as well as the richness of a textile. Joanne Mattera states, “These new paintings are a little more lush, a little less minimal.”

Joanne Mattera is a nationally acknowledged master of encaustic, and her book, The Art of Encaustic Painting: Contemporary Expression in the Ancient Medium of Pigmented Wax (Watson-Guptill, 2001), has become the standard reference on the subject.

MARCIA WOOD GALLERY
263 Walker Street, Atlanta, GA 30313
www.marciawoodgallery.com

01/11/00

James Herbert, Atlanta Contemporary Art Center - Paintings, Films, Videos and Stills

James Herbert
Paintings, Films, Videos and Stills
Atlanta Contemporary Art Center
November 4 - December 30, 2000

Atlanta Contemporary Art Center (The Contemporary) presents a comprehensive, retrospective exhibition of James Herbert’s paintings, films, videos and stills. This exhibition, organized by Teresa Bramlette, marks the first occasion upon which the entire oeuvre of James Herbert’s work has been presented in one space at one time.

James Herbert has worked in Athens, GA since the 1960s. An accomplished painter and filmmaker, he has been awarded numerous grants in both mediums. He has been honored with film screenings at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, where this fall he will premiere his new film Jumbo Aqua. His paintings are large in scale and reflect both his abstract expressionistic roots and his interest in the outsider art prominent in the southeast. Herbert’s films are sensual and poetic depicting dream-like sequences by using various illusory effects--shooting, rephotographing footage, slowing projection speeds, and reversing motion.

James Herbert has been an influential teacher for several generations of young painters. He has not shown a group of his paintings in this area since a solo exhibition at the High Museum of Art, Atlanta, in the late 1970s. His films, shown primarily within the context of independent film festivals, are also rarely screened for southern audiences.

Although this exhibition should in no way be considered a retrospective, it is important to recognize James Herbert’s contributions and his accomplishments at this point in his career. It is also interesting to examine the dual nature of his practice—the painting and the filmmaking.

For many years, James Herbert utilized the process of re-photography in his films. He studied each frame of his original footage, editing and then refilming the selected frames to make the final presentation. This deconstruction of the initial film works provocatively, suggesting in its barely perceptible disjunctiveness, a dream-like state. Centered on a concept of beauty as personified by the human body, the work is unquestionably voyeuristic. In contrast to his more distanced stance as a filmmaker, James Herbert’s paintings are direct, with the paint sometimes applied by his hands and other less traditional tools. Where the films are quiet, the paintings are loud. Where the films are fragile and romantic, the paintings are aggressive. To be able to compare and contrast the two will be an exciting and perhaps once-in-lifetime opportunity.

A catalogue accompanies the show with texts by Donald Kuspit, Felicia Feaster, Teresa Bramlette, Genevieve McGillicuddy and Donald Keyes (who also selected the film stills on view).

ATLANTA CONTEMPORARY ART CENTER
535 Means Street NW, Atlanta, Georgia, 30318
thecontemporary.org