Saturday, August 14, 2010

Artist Playground: Must Go.


The New York Times
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    August 12, 2010

    A Playground for the Arts, With Island Breezes

    What kind of culture develops on an island? It is a place that requires a special effort to visit and a special effort to leave. It can keep people out or corral them in. It might serve as an escape, or (like Alcatraz) as a prison. It incubates and isolates. And its culture might become both ingrown and wildly experimental, maybe a bit like Manhattan’s.

    Or, to pick a more eccentric, surprising and artificial example, like Governors Island’s. Technically part of Manhattan and 800 yards from its shores, Governors Island is peculiar by any measure. It has about 100 buildings, but no residents. It has a high school, but no homes. It has roads, but no passenger cars.

    Its 172 acres include empty Victorian houses, imposing forts, a parade ground and ball fields, an artificial beach and an encircling promenade with arresting panoramic views of the Statue of Liberty, Manhattan, Brooklyn and New Jersey. And increasingly over the last four years, from May to October — with visitors now riding hourly on weekend ferries from Brooklyn and Manhattan — the island has been shaping a new culture of its own. Its participants include trapeze artists, bicyclists, conceptual artists, D.J.’s, musicians, dancers and dramatists, and its attractions range from views of the New York Harbor to a free miniature-golf course designed by an arts group, where fanciful stations allow players to take metaphorical potshots at a national missile defense shield or putt a ball in support of carbon-neutral footprints.

    During the past few weeks I have seen a Dutch theater company perform; heard a festival of club dance music blast over a mock sand beach with a view of Lower Manhattan; watched jitterbugging island hoppers dance to a retro jazz orchestra and surveyed artworks ranging from the stupefyingly banal to the whimsically clever, displayed in some of the island’s empty homes or along the sweeping waterfront. With more events added each summer, cultural offerings have included outdoor dance performances in one of the island’s forts, a mock archaeological dig meant to play with ideas of the island’s past, an African film festival, outdoor Shakespeare and Civil War re-enactments.

    In many ways the island is like a toy village, its real buildings drained of function and population. Without visitors it can seem like a purposeless stage set, or like the eerie island village of the 1960s cult television show “The Prisoner.” Whatever happens here now seems to play against that strange setting, putting everything in air quotes. The island is a part of the city that is not-the-city. Bright red Adirondack chairs and hammocks can be moved to comfortable spots on the island’s Picnic Point, where the Statue of Liberty’s face is near enough to be studied. Bicycles can be rented, some designed with bench seats and multiple pedals so entire families can circle the island’s promenade. Free ferries have been disgorging passengers by the thousands each weekend this summer, setting attendance records for the island.

    And with the growing crowds — 250,000 so far this season, twice the rate of last year — come other signs that an island is not necessarily the perfect retreat and can also fail at being not-the-city: at one recent event the ferry back to terra firma was delayed nearly an hour as it was commandeered to rush a festivalgoer, who had reportedly overdosed on drugs, to a Brooklyn hospital.

    The overall effect, though, can be exhilarating and disorienting, soporific and fanciful. It is as if multiple cultural experiments were happening simultaneously, some blowing up in disarray, others puffing along famously. The variety, artifice and playfulness are by design, guided by the overall strategy of Leslie Koch, the 48-year-old president of the Trust for Governors Island.

    When she began leading the island into uncharted waters in 2006, she said, it was a “lonely, improbable place.” There were no bicycles on the island, no free ferry service and no sense of activity. Now, as I accompany her on a bike ride around the island’s perimeter, she is volubly excited about unseen possibilities as much as about what has already taken place.

    Governors Island was originally a military base of strategic importance at the heart of New York Harbor. One of Benjamin Franklin’s nephews designed a state-of-the-art fort with eight-foot-thick walls facing the harbor — Castle Williams — that became obsolete soon after its completion in 1811. But Ulysses S. Grant was stationed on the island; so were his son and grandson. And Wilbur Wright made the first plane flight over water in the United States by taking off and landing here.

    The island has been variously run by the State of New York, the United States Army and the Coast Guard. Finally, in 1997, the base was shuttered by the federal government. Numerous proposals were submitted, with the Governors Island Alliance conceptually victorious in advocating a civic space. In 2003 22 acres became a National Monument administered by the National Park Service (which offers historical tours and is now restoring Castle Williams), while the rest of the island was sold for $1 to New York City and the State of New York. On July 14 the remaining 150 acres were fully taken over by the city, which administers them through the Trust for Governors Island.

    Thirty-three of those acres have been set aside as development zones, which will eventually be the site of as-yet-undetermined uses, adhering to the deed’s requirements of public benefit: a university annex? a conference center? This summer the New York Harbor School opened. Meanwhile, the bulk of the island has been reconceived in a $200 million master plan that will begin its first phase of construction in 2012 and is surveyed in a modest exhibition on the island. Historical areas will be restored, and flat landfill transformed into a landscaped park of hills, harbor vistas and “undulating topography.”

    If fully financed and realized, the plan could make Governors Island the most significant addition to New York’s parks since Olmsted and Vaux designed Central and Prospect Parks. But a key to all this, Ms. Koch has argued, is the creation of an island culture. She has called the island “New York’s newest playground for the arts.” She has argued that if it could house arts programs that were not happening elsewhere and that justified the trip, the island would thrive. But while culture is being placed at the center of her project, she also insists that she is neither an impresario nor a curator. Her annual $12.5 million budget includes no line for programming.

    “We try to stand back and be the venue,” Ms. Koch explained, suggesting that she simply seeks to find new and untried things. In coming weeks, for example, there will be a unicycle festival, free kayaking and a display of vintage Volkswagens. Such events have a vaguely countercultural feel, mixing a hint of retro quaintness with playful enthusiasm; air quotes seem to hover around these events, a bit like the way the island itself must be regarded. The island’s brand, Ms. Koch suggested, is “summer vacation with irony.”

    This aesthetic is already leaving its mark, even though right now arrangements are as changeable as the weather, Ms. Koch stressed. She said she was prepared to try anything. And no properly submitted proposal has been turned away. But she also influences which organizations present exhibitions and events, sometimes, as with the group Figment, for return visits. Figment’s artists designed the miniature-golf course and created a nearby sculpture garden, where objects range from an enormous plastic cicada mounted on a tree to billowing and bulbousinflated tubes and cubes.

    Nearly all the objects and events have a populist slant; aesthetic democracy is the crux of the island’s culture. All participating groups obtain the same permit and must get their financing elsewhere. Longer-term arrangements include a five-year contract with Water Taxi Beach, which operates a concession on the island’s artificial beach (with plenty of sand but no water access) and presents concerts for a fee, including theD.J. festival I sampled. There is also a five-year arrangement with the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, which offers studios to artists and mounts exhibitions in a building near the main ferry landing.

    The emphasis is not just on diversity of entertainment, but also on diversity in demographics. “We are very passionate about attracting a broad array of people,” Ms. Koch said. On the days I visited, the effect was evident, the ferries seeming to sample the city’s various age groups, ethnicities and tastes. Visitors included everyone from the pneumatically pumped-up dancers on Water Taxi Beach to the more staid listeners at a ranger talk about Castle Williams.

    The culture of democratic play: that is the island culture. But there is also something else worth considering. The island could succeed simply as a parklike retreat, but because of the expenses involved, and the place’s unusual character, something more should be expected. And if cultural activities are, as Ms. Koch suggested, the lure around which the park will take shape, the populist emphasis could ultimately become too restrictive.

    There is, for example, no amphitheater or concert hall to host orchestral music, opera or chamber ensembles comfortably, even though in Europe the notion of a pastoral retreat for the experience of culture began with festivals celebrating those arts. The New York Philharmonic was supposed to play on the parade ground in 2008, but canceled because of weather; that would still have been a program like any other outdoor park concert in the city. If, on the other hand, a structure as handsome and acoustically versatile as Tanglewood’s Seiji Ozawa Hall were built here, an entire universe of new performance possibilities would open to New Yorkers. Pilgrimages are inspired by more than sound systems and harbor breezes.

    This would involve another order of cultural budget. And such expansion would not guarantee success. Many who attended the recent stultifying theatrical production of “Teorema” presented on the island as part of the Lincoln Center Festival must have recognized a disadvantage of an island retreat: there is no escape.

    But at the very least, perhaps the embrace of proposed projects might become more judicious without becoming less diverse. Many empty houses along the island’s Colonels Row have become galleries filled with site-specific sculpture, all part of an exhibition called “The Sixth Borough,” created by the arts group No Longer Empty. The works vary so widely in quality that in many cases emptiness begins to seem unjustly undervalued.

    One installation, for example, mounts photographs of the Nazi hand salute in a room with an American flag, asserting a crude association that reappears in other forms in a so-called interactive tutorial exhibition, also run by No Longer Empty. The tutorials, alluding to the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island in the surrounding harbor, are meant to engage visitors in exploring the idea of citizenship.

    But the great hopes once inspired in immigrants by those sights are attacked by one artist as a “triumphalist mythology”; he cheers its transgression. “I look at an American flag,” writes another tutor, “and see nothing but imperialism and military intervention.” And a third seems to admire “anarcho-Islam and the founding of Al Qaeda,” while attacking the American “racist Orientalist fantasy” of Islamic terror.

    These tutorials are, no doubt, meant to rub polemically against the grain of the former military site and its geographical centrality, but their contorted perspectives gave a sour taste to the harbor breezes. Not enough, though, to diminish the sense that outside that conceptually empty house, all around the island, in the leisure ventures of diverse visitors, the traditional promises of the harbor were finding new forms of restless fruition.

    Fanciful Foray to Governors Island

    WHEN 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fridays, and until 7 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays through Oct. 10. On Wednesdays and Thursdays the National Park Service offers tours, but the island is otherwise closed.

    LOGISTICS Govisland.com, for a ferry schedule, list of events and detailed map.

    FOOD Choices include Fauzia’s Heavenly Delights, Veronica’s Kitchen, Water Taxi Beach and Backstage Cafe.

    This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

    Correction: August 14, 2010

    An article on Friday about cultural life on Governors Island referred imprecisely in some editions to the role that the Trust for Governors Island plays in bringing exhibitions and events to the island. While the trust and its president, Leslie Koch, influence which organizations come to the island, they do not select them. (Groups that meet permit requirements are eligible to hold events on the island.)


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    Hey, Hey Hey

    2011 BIENNIAL Exhibition -
    Call for Entry
    Deadline AUGUST 30, 2010
    The NCECA 2011 Biennial is the premier juried exhibition open to all current members of NCECA (both national and international) and to all ceramic artists, 18 years and older, residing in the U.S. Please note: artists from outside the U.S. (including Canada) must be NCECA members to enter. Entered works must have been completed within the last 2 years. Jurors are Glen R. Brown, Julia Galloway, and Arthur Gonzalez. The Tampa Museum of Art will host the 2011 NCECA Biennial from January 29, 2011 to April 24, 2011.
    Deadline August 30, 2010.

    Member and Non-Member pricing offered...if you do not know your current NCECA Membership status, please contact kate@nceca.net


    2011 Biennial Entry Details
    Contact NCECA
    email: office@nceca.net
    phone: 866-266-2322
    web: http://www.nceca.net

    Friday, August 6, 2010

    This Just In:

    This here Thomas Vance is the Adjunct drawing professor at Tyler. I had him as a professor my freshman year. Neat!

    IS this the same Tom Vance that teaches Foundation Drawing?


    Thomas Vance: Plan
    PHILADELPHIA – Tiger Strikes Asteroid is
    pleased to announce the opening of its
    August, 2010 exhibition, Plan, a solo exhibit
    of recent work by Thomas Vance.
    Thomas Vance’s architectonic garden
    arrangements carry themselves both
    magically and serenely. Like isolated
    sections of Cezanne’s finest landscapes,
    pulled out and elaborated upon, they have
    the enigmatic, cerebral grace of
    mathematical equations and cloud
    formations. The workaday, nearly banal
    materials seem to accentuate this magic,
    further heightened by the wry trickery going
    on in many of the pieces: stones are made
    of painted foam or plaster; branches are
    made of light cardboard; leaves are daubed on paint. They are both set and actors. And like
    highly-trained actors or dancers, Vance’s pieces pirouette and pose effortlessly with the best of
    them, but with a knowing wink and nod; an ongoing audience aside which opens up the
    possibility of unforeseen continuances, consequences or connections: of the built to the
    grown; the actual to the faux; the seen to the unseen. Being amidst Vance’s carefully-crafted
    and finely-tuned work is akin to reaching a manicured clearing within an aesthetic wilderness.
    Thomas Vance is a Philadelphia based artist, who has been shown extensively nationally in
    recent years. Most recently, his sculptural work was included in the highly-respected
    Philadelphia International Airport art exhibition program, and in the Stella Elkins Tyler Gallery,
    also in Philadelphia. Others of his works have been included in shows in St. Louis, Cleveland,
    and Wilmington, DE. Vance maintains a studio in Philadelphia, and instructs at both University
    of the Arts and Temple’s Tyler School of Art.
    Thomas Vance: Plan
    August 6th—29th, 2010
    Opening reception: Friday, August 6th, 6pm – 10pm
    Hours: Saturday and Sunday, 2pm – 6pm and by appointment only
    TIGER STRIKES ASTEROID


    Tom is also currently showing 2D workin the "Let's Go Enjoy Nature!" Exhibition at:

    SERAPHIN GALLERY
    1108 Pine Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19107

    tel 215-923-7000
    fax 215-923-7007

    Don't forget to First Friday!


    Posted on Fri, Aug. 6, 2010

    Philadelphia art gallery shows for First Friday and throughout the month

    Many art galleries in and around Philadelphia stay open later on the first Friday of the month. Here's a rundown of arts events tonight and through the month:
    Art in City Hall. Second and fourth floors, City Hall, Broad and Market streets. "Inside/Outside" features works by prison inmates and ex-offenders. Through Oct. 29. Also, Mural Arts Program student exhibit, first floor, west corridors, near the 311 offices. Reception 4-6 p.m. Sept. 7, Conversation Hall, Room 201.

    Artists' House Gallery. 57 N. 2nd St., 215-923-8440. "Summer Exhibition," group show of invited artists. To Aug. 22. Reception 5-8:30 tonight.

    AxD Gallery. 265 S. 10th St., 215-627-6250. "queerArt?" Work by 11 LGBTQ-identified artists. Ends tomorrow.

    Bridgette Mayer Gallery. 709 Walnut St., 215-413-8893. "Inhabit," 12 new paintings and sculptural installations, plus a video installation, "Detour," by Dana Hargrove. Aug. 31-Sept. 10. Reception 6-8:30 p.m. Sept. 10.

    Fleisher/Ollman Gallery. 1616 Walnut St., Suite 100, 215-545-7562. Kate Aberbrombie, "making, joining and repairing," and John J. O'Connor's

    "C'OD(e)R." To Aug. 20.

    Galleries at the Gershman Y. 401 S. Broad St., 215-545-4400. "Mapping: Outside/Inside," works by Leila Daw, Joyce Kozloff, Eve Andree Laramee and Nikolas Schiller. "Capturing Sky," large-scale pinhole photographs by Masaki Kobayashi. To Aug. 15.

    Gross McLeaf Gallery. 127 S. 16th St., 215-665-8138. "Places, Everyone," emerging artists Joe Ballweg, Sarah Gamble, Vera Iliatova, Jay Noble, Sarah Noble, Erin Raedeke and Caroline Santa. To Aug. 11.

    LGTripp Gallery. 47-49 N. 2nd St., 215-923-3110. "RSVP," works by 14 invited artists in a range of media. To Aug. 21. Reception 6-8:30 tonight.

    Philip & Muriel Berman Museum of Art. 601 E. Main St., Collegeville, 610-409-3500. "The Art Gene: The Hutton Family Legacy." To Aug. 8.

    Rodger La Pelle Galleries. 122 N. 3rd St., 215-592-0232. "Artists' Summer Caucus 2010." To Aug. 29. Reception 6-10 tonight and 1-5 p.m. Sunday.

    Sande Webster Gallery. 2006 Walnut St., 215-636-9003. "Click. Print. Collect." Panel discussion on "creating and collecting contemporary photography in the digital age." 6:30-8:30 p.m. Aug. 12. RSVP at artswg@aol.com or call. Also on Aug. 12, reception for "Divergence: Five Views On Photography," 5:30-6:30 p.m.

    3rd Street Gallery. 58 N. 2nd St., 215-625-0993. "Redux," group show of photographers from Light Gallery. To Aug. 29. Reception 5-9 tonight; artists' reception 2-5 p.m. Aug. 8.

    Painting is by Charles H. Lawson- "Uncle Frank" it is included in the City Hall exhibition

    Read more: http://www.philly.com/dailynews/features/20100806_Philadelphia_art_gallery_shows_for_First_Friday_and_throughout_the_month.html#ixzz0vqKilprx

    Friday, July 30, 2010

    Philadelphia Ceramics: Where to go (A work in progress)

    Tryna buy some Ceramics?


    The Clay Studio
    139 N. 2nd Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19106
    p 215.925.3453
    f 215.925.7774
    e info@theclaystudio.org
    http://www.theclaystudio.org


    Philly's best (according to them)
    many famous ceramic peeps filter through here w\during there getting started period.

    John Andulis Gallery (JAG)
    1538 Pine St.,
    Philadelphia, PA 19102
    JAndrulis@gmail.com
    www.jagfineart.com

    Some functional pottery and large decorative sculpture

    Art Star
    623 n. 2nd street
    Philadelphia, PA 19123
    215.238.1557
    http://www.artstarphilly.com
    functional kitschy decals fun younger flavor.


    Philadelphia Art Alliance
    251 South 18th Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19103-6168
    t. (215) 545-4302
    f. (215) 545-0767
    e. info@philartalliance.org


    SOTA: Spirit of the Artist

    1022 Pine Street
Philadlephia, PA 19107
    eMail: info@sotagifts.com
    Local: 215.627.8801 
Fax: 215.627.8801
    1.877.SOTA.123
    artisan pottery - stoneware nature inspired mainly pottery

    Show of Hands Gallery

    1006 Pine Street,
    Philadelphia, PA 19107
    phone:(215) 592-4010‎
    www.showofhands.com

    contemp glass and cerams

    Ten Thousand Villages(215) 574-2008
    1122 Walnut St
    
Philadelphia, PA 19107
    www.tenthousandvillages.com
    Crafts sold from struggling countries- this place is a chain but sells quality stuff


    American Pie/Abode Gallery
    718 South St
    Philadelphia, PA 19147
    (215) 351-8100
    www.americanpiecrafts.com
    This is an interior design/decorative place.

    Little Nook
    (215) 247-1878
    8005 Germantown Ave,
    Philadelphia, PA 19118

    Sweet Mabel Folk Art 

    41 N. Narberth Ave
    Narberth, PA 19072


    Hours:
Tues-Sat 11-6
Sunday 12-5
    Phone: 610-667-3041
    funky recyclable sculptures- where art doesn't have to be serious fun wall pieces

    JMS Gallery
    
8236 Germantown Avenue 

    Philadelphia, PA 19118
    Hours:
Wed - Sat:
12 PM to 6 PM.


    Phone: 215.248.4649

Fax: 215.248.4670


    E-mail: info@jmsgallery.com
    Web: www.jmsgallery.com

    Eyes Gallery
    3510 Scotts Ln. Suite 3113
    Phila, Pa 19129


    Phone: 215.925.0193


    E-mail: juliazagar@msn.com
    Web: www.eyesgallery.com
    latin american crafts

    CerealArt Gallery
    
149 N 3rd Street
Philadelphia PA 19106


    Phone: 215.627.5060
    E-mail: info@cerealart.com
    Web: www.cerealart.com
    distrubtes 3d work thank can be mass produced.

    Biello's
    
148 N. 3rd St.,
Philadelphia, PA 19106


    Phone: 215.923.8737


    E-mail: michael@biellomartin.com
    Web: www.biellomartin.com
    all clay- all lightfixtures. fun and heavily crafted sculpture lights.

    ArtJaz
    53 N. 2nd Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106 


    Phone: 215.922.4800
    Fax: 215.922.7212
    E-mail: info@artjaz.com
    Web: www.artjaz.com
    Largest collection of African-American art



    Tryna look:

    The Crane Arts Building is located at:
    400 n. american street
    philadelphia, pa 19122

    Hours:
    Wed-Sun 12-6pm (please check our calendar for specific show dates)

    Admission is Free

    Crane Arts is located 2 blocks North of Girard and 2 blocks East of 2nd Street. We are 10 minutes from Old City and just a quick walk from Northern Liberties.

    Phone: 215.232.3203

    Phone: 215 232.3616
    E-mail: info@cranearts.com
    Web: www.cranearts.com


    Wexler Gallery
    
205 N 3rd St
    
Philadelphia, PA 19106
    Hours:
Tues– Sat: 10am – 6pm 
or Mon by appointment


    Phone: 215.923.7030

Fax: 215.923 .7031
    sometimes....

    Vox Populi Gallery
    
319 North 11th Street, 
3rd Floor 

    Philadelphia, PA 19107
    Hours:
Wed - Sun: 12 to 6 pm

    Phone: 215.238.1236

Fax: 215.238.1253

    Stratasphere Gallery 

    1854 Germantown Avenue
    
Philadelphia, PA 19122
    Hours:
Sat & Sun: 1-5 pm (during an exhibition's run)


    Phone: 215.235.4726

    Space 1026
    
1026 Arch Street 2nd Floor
    
Philadelphia PA, 19107
    Hours: dont have official gallery hours, but don't hesitate to stop by and ring the bell. Someone is typically there to buzz you in to check out what's in the gallery.

    Snyderman Gallery
    Phone: 215.574.7630
    303 Cherry St. 

    Philadelphia, PA 19106
    Hours:
Tues - Sat: 10am - 6 pm

Phone: 215.922.7775

Fax: 215.238.9351

    Works Gallery @ Snyderman –
    The Works Gallery was founded by Ruth Snyderman in 1965. It is one of the oldest exhibiting galleries in the field of contemporary studio crafts.

    Seraphin Gallery 

    1108 Pine Street,
    Philadelphia, PA 19107
    Hours:
Tues - Sun: 11am - 6 pm
All other times by appointment only.
    

Phone: 215.923.7000

Fax: 215.923.7007
    contemporary sculpture

    Schmidt Dean Gallery 

    1710 Sansom Street

    Philadelphia, PA 19130
    Hours:
Tues - Sat:
11:30 AM - 6 PM 


    Phone: 215.569.9433

Fax: 215.569.9434
    E-mail: schmidtdean@netzero.com
    Web: www.schmidtdean.com
    Contemporary sculpture

    Silicon Gallery 

    139 N 3rd Street,
    Philadelphia –
    between Arch and Race Streets on 3rd
    Hours:
Tuesday-Friday, 9-5:30; Saturday 12-5
Closed Mondays and Holidays


    Phone: 215.238.6062

Fax: 215.923 .7031
    E-mail: sabrina@silicongallery.org
    Web: www.silicongallery.org
    craft gallery some sculpture

    Silica Art Galleries
    
908 A North Third Street
    
Philadelphia, PA 19123


    Hours:
Monday - Friday 10am - 6pm
Saturday 12 - 6pm
Sunday 12 - 5pm

Phone: 215.627.3655
    E-mail: silica@silicagalleries.com
    Web: www.silicagalleries.com
    ALL sculpturezz

    Projects Gallery
    
629 N. 2nd St.
    
Philadelphia, PA 19123
    Hours:
Tues - Thurs 12 - 5 p.m.
Fri & Sat 12 - 7 p.m.


    Phone: 267.303.9652
    E-mail: info@projectsgallery.com
    Web: www.projectsgallery.com
    figurative expressionism?
    sculpted/altered pottery

    Mount Airy Contemporary Artists Space
    25 West Mt. Airy Ave.
    
Philadelphia PA 19119


    Phone: 215.764.5621
    E-mail: info@mountairycontemporary.com
    Web: www.mountairycontemporary.com/
    All media- currently has a Jury Smith Piece (Tyler Grad!)

    James Oliver Gallery (JOG)
    723 Chestnut St. 4th Floor 

    Philadelphia, PA 19106
    Hours:
Wed-Fri: 5-8pm
Sat 12-8pm or by appointment


    Phone: 267.918.7432

    
E-mail: jamesolivergallery@gmail.com
    Web: www.jamesolivergallery.com
    very mixed but had NCECA show and includes sculpture

    Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA)
    
118 S. 36th St.
    
Philadelphia, PA 19104-3289
    Hours:
Wed - Fri: 12pm - 8pm
Sat - Sun: 11am - 5pm
Mon -Tues: closed


    Phone: 215.898.7108
    Web: www.icaphila.org
    large Installation/sculpture- UPenn’s art Gallery

    Fleisher Ollman Gallery
    
1616 Walnut, Suite 100

    Philadelphia, PA 19103


    Hours:
Mon - Fri: 10:30 - 5:30
Sat: 12 - 5
    Phone: 215.545.7562


    E-mail: info@fleisher-ollmangallery.com
    Web: www.fleisher-ollmangallery.com
    sometimes some sculpture also dedicated to self-taught artists

    


    Always by Design (AXD)
    265 S. 10th Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19107


    Hours:
During exhibitions:
Wed-Sat 12- 6pm. ta

    All other times: 
Appointment only 


    Phone: 215.627.6250
    Web: www.a-x-d.com/gallery

    sculpture

    Abington Art Center
    515 Meetinghouse Road

    Jenkintown, PA 19046
    Hours:
Tues-Fri 10am-5pm
    
Thurs to 7pm & Sat 10am-3pm

    CLOSED Sunday & Monday
    
admission free - donations requested


    Phone: 215.887.4882
    
E-mail: info@abingtonartcenter.org
    Web: www.abingtonartcenter.org

    pottery and sculpture

    Friday, July 23, 2010

    Philadelphia: a good place for Ceramicists



    Each year the Biennale chooses a country to showcase it's best current work along with it's own. Last year it was Sweden this year is The good ol' U.S. of A. The best part is three are philly based and a few more are definitely friends of Tyler (School of Art)/the Crane (Arts Building). WOO!

    Fourteen American artists were invited to exhibit in the Vallauris Ceramic Biennial in Vallauris, France. The artists featured are Susan Beiner, Jeremy Brooks, Tsehai Johnson, Sarah Lindley, Tyler Lotz, Jeffery Mongrain, Adelaide Paul, Jeanne Quinn, Joyce Robins, Kathy Ruttenberg, Amy Santoferraro (work shown), Benjamin Schulman, Virginia Scotchie, and Arlene Shechet - a veritable powerhouse of contemporary ceramic sculptors and installation artists. Je l’aime!

    The details...

    Where:
    Multiple galleries and museums including: Salle Eden, Vallauris, France
    What:
    Biennale Internationale de Vallauris Création Contemporaine et Céramique
    When:
    Through November 15, 2010
    Web:
    www.vallauris-golfe-juan.com

    Thursday, July 22, 2010

    RHAPSODY ON A WINDY NIGHT
    by: T.S. Eliot (1888-1965)
    WELVE o'clock.
    Along the reaches of the street
    Held in a lunar synthesis,
    Whispering lunar incantations
    Dissolve the floors of memory
    And all its clear relations,
    Its divisions and precisions,
    Every street lamp that I pass
    Beats like a fatalistic drum,
    And through the spaces of the dark
    Midnight shakes the memory
    As a madman shakes a dead geranium.
     
    Half-past one,
    The street lamp sputtered,
    The street lamp muttered,
    The street lamp said, "Regard that woman
    Who hesitates towards you in the light of the door
    Which opens on her like a grin.
    You see the border of her dress
    Is torn and stained with sand,
    And you see the corner of her eye
    Twists like a crooked pin."
     
    The memory throws up high and dry
    A crowd of twisted things;
    A twisted branch upon the beach
    Eaten smooth, and polished
    As if the world gave up
    The secret of its skeleton,
    Stiff and white.
    A broken spring in a factory yard,
    Rust that clings to the form that the strength has left
    Hard and curled and ready to snap.
     
    Half-past two,
    The street lamp said,
    "Remark the cat which flattens itself in the gutter,
    Slips out its tongue
    And devours a morsel of rancid butter."
    So the hand of a child, automatic,
    Slipped out and pocketed a toy that was running along the quay.
    I could see nothing behind that child's eye.
    I have seen eyes in the street
    Trying to peer through lighted shutters,
    And a crab one afternoon in a pool,
    An old crab with barnacles on his back,
    Gripped the end of a stick which I held him.
     
    Half-past three,
    The lamp sputtered,
    The lamp muttered in the dark.
     
    The lamp hummed:
    "Regard the moon,
    La lune ne garde aucune rancune,
    She winks a feeble eye,
    She smiles into corners.
    She smoothes the hair of the grass.
    The moon has lost her memory.
    A washed-out smallpox cracks her face,
    Her hand twists a paper rose,
    That smells of dust and old Cologne,
    She is alone
    With all the old nocturnal smells
    That cross and cross across her brain."
    The reminiscence comes
    Of sunless dry geraniums
    And dust in crevices,
    Smells of chestnuts in the streets,
    And female smells in shuttered rooms,
    And cigarettes in corridors
    And cocktail smells in bars."
     
    The lamp said,
    "Four o'clock,
    Here is the number on the door.
    Memory!
    You have the key,
    The little lamp spreads a ring on the stair,
    Mount.
    The bed is open; the tooth-brush hangs on the wall,
    Put your shoes at the door, sleep, prepare for life."
     
    The last twist of the knife.

    Friday, July 16, 2010

    Statement- rough draft.


    What fuels my work is the seduction of the past. I am drawn as most individuals of present day to a bygone era, and filled with an indescribable nostalgia. It is an idealization of a simpler lifestyle and a certain peace of mind that we see in the past that now seems lost. I am homesick for a time that I never experienced, a time that never really existed. In memory, this time becomes a transformed period of it's own, only existing in the mind.
    Since I was a little girl I had this wistfulness and saw objects that were (or appeared) battered and worn as wreckage from that time passing. I was and am fascinated by objects, particularly any object you can find at a flea market or yard sale that was a part of someone's life and that is unfamiliar to me because it is now obsolete or "dated". When I touch these objects I can feel the life they were apart of and can imagine their importance when they were created. I see these ordinary things from the past as relics, because they are my passage to the life I never experienced.
    I strive to create art is the tangible form of the lust for the past but is also very present in today's reality. I choose to work with lace and paisley pattern because of it's prominence in history, it's delicate quality, and it's lasting popularity in the decorative world. By working with lace and creating forms that use the pattern or structure within my sculpture, I am able to capture it's delicate beauty and nostalgic quality and turn it into a permanent object. I am so passionate about creating objects that have a diologue of reminiscence because the longing for the past is strangely universal, not just within myself. I find it is a collective need to reverse in progress to move forward and maintain the balance of life. I hope the pieces I make can create the feeling of serenity that we search for in the past, and a comfort in the tangible form of it.

    One finished pea pot



    Here's one finished pea pot from the end of the semester- many more to follow:

    Porcelain Cone 10 with an Amber glaze

    Friday, April 30, 2010

    HM.

    What is your soul animal?

    What song would play if you could choose it every time you walked into a room?

    What is your favorite article of clothing?

    What is your favorite thing to clean?

    What do you do when you are depressed?

    What color do you own the most?

    What is your favorite smell?

    What's one thing that stranger's do that grosses you out?

    Where do you want to be when you don't want to be where you are?


    Tuesday, April 27, 2010

    Inspirs

    Pity This Busy Monster, Manunkind

    pity this busy monster, manunkind,

    not. Progress is a comfortable disease:
    your victum(death and life safely beyond)

    plays with the bigness of his littleness
    -electrons deify one razorblade
    into a mountainrange; lenses extend

    unwish through curving wherewhen until unwish
    returns on its unself.
    A world of made
    is not a world of born-pity poor flesh

    and trees,poor stars and stones,but never this
    fine specimen of hypermagical

    ultraomnipotence. We doctors know

    a hopeless case if-listen: there's a hell
    of a good universe next door; let's go

    - e. e. cummings

    You And I Are Disappearing--Bjorn Hakansson

    The cry I bring down from the hills
    belongs to a girl still burning
    inside my head. At daybreak

    she burns like a piece of paper.
    She burns like foxfire
    in a thigh-shaped valley.
    A skirt of flames
    dances around her
    at dusk.
    We stand with our hands
    hanging at our sides,
    while she burns
    like a sack of dry ice.
    She burns like oil on water.
    She burns like a cattail torch
    dipped in gasoline.
    She glows like the fat tip
    of a banker's cigar,
    silent as quicksilver.
    A tiger under a rainbow
    at nightfall.
    She burns like a shot glass of vodka.
    She burns like a field of poppies
    at the edge of a rain forest.
    She rises like dragonsmoke
    to my nostrils.
    She burns like a burning bush
    driven by a godawful wind.

    -Yusef Komunyakaa



    Monday, April 19, 2010

    This Little Piggy went to The Metropolitan Museum













































    I just saw a commercial for the "Cheltenham Mall" -shout out to all old Tyler inhabitants. Anyway let's get down to busyness. I went to the Met this past Saturday with my Impressionism class. The Impressionist movement is one of my favorites and the work in France shortly made after that period is probably my second favorite. Needless to say I was actually pumped to see some hundred year old paintings. Here are a few documents of the trip. I'm only uploading images that inform my work currently.

    My interest in pattern, specifically the paisley and filigree type floral patterns is an aesthetic that is integral in all visual things I am drawn to. I never really knew why I loved Mucha and Klimt, or why my favorite pattern was paisley and why I loved henna tattoos. After working through this lace extravaganza, I still have not figured out why these patterns are like math equations in my head. But they are what I like and now I realize it is an aesthetic that spans everything in my life. Something for me to investigate further...

    Thursday, April 15, 2010

    Holy Shit.


    http://www.ceramicstoday.com/articles/onggi2.htm


    Article


    Heo Jin Kyu
    Korean folk potter

    Photos courtesy Dan Gallaway.

    Heo Jin Kyu is an onggi potter and is a member the Ulsan Onggi Association. His works are fired in gas, oil, or “noboragama” kiln to 1260°C (cone 8) with an ash glaze. The “noboragama” kiln is fired for 15 days. All of the pots are made for sale.

    1. Wood being stored to dry and await firing.
    2. A “Noboragama” kiln which, when filled fired for 15 days.
    3. Finished work from varies potters from the Ulsan Onggi Association.
    4. Hand made tools used to make the jars
    5. Heo Jin Kyu begins by making a slab from a coil. It is put firmly on the wheel and is thinned.
    6. The slab is hammered down with a wooden tool to thin and shaped what will be the base of the pot.
    7. With the same wood tool he smoothes the foundation and cuts it to the desired size.
    8. The initial coil is attached to the base with a downward turning motion with the hand. This motion simultaneously compacts the clay and removes any air that is trapped in side the clay.
    9. Making sure that the first coil is attached properly to the base is vital, because it must be able to support all the clay that is attached above it. The base also needs to be firmly attached that the pot does not become loose and off center.
    10. More coils are added in the same manner as the first one
    11. The seems of the coils are sealed using his finger so that air does not get trapped which would result in the pot exploding in the kiln.
    12. The process is continued until the desired height for the first segment is reached.
    13. A wooden paddle on the outside and a wooden anvil on the inside are paddled against the clay walls to shape and compress the clay.
    14. The tools have small grooves carved into them that help release the paddle from the clay and also help to further make sure that no air is trapped in the walls of the pot.
    15. Looking down in the pot.
    16. Once the paddling has been complete, the paddle is turned to the smooth side and the pot is paddled once more to remove the texture.
    17. Two medal ribs are used to remove all texture from the inside and outside of the jar.
    18. To ensure total control of the spinning jar throwing is done from top to bottom.
    19. When the first segment is completed, the second part is the begun the same way as the very first coil.
    20. An open can containing fire is hung inside of the jar. Since the jar is so large the bottom portion of the pot cannot support the weight of the upper part. Fire is introduced so that the lower portion can become stiffer and support the added weight.
    21. Coils are then added to the desired height
    22. The final coil is made much thicker than all the rest. This is done so that the potter can flip the rim from the inside of the pot to the outside of the pot while remaining strong.
    23. The body of the jar is paddled once more to remove air and compress the clay.
    24. As a result of the jar’s large size a wooden tool is need so that the potter can reach into the jar. The wooded tool acts just as the potter’s arm and hand would.
    25. The only time water is added to the clay is when the rim is to be made. The water softens the clay enough so that the potter can flip the rim from the inside to the outside of the jar.
    26. Moving the clay from the inside to the outside to form the rim
    27. Final shaping of the rim is done with the fingers and a piece of leather.
    28. The jar is removed from the wheel with a canvas sheet. This technique ensures that the shape of the jar remains the same during the removal.

    Monday, April 12, 2010

    Lacy Business



    Piper Shepard doing some cut gessoed muslin




    probably one of the best pieces I saw all of NCECA




    (*probably because it's just like my porcelian projects)





    This is hung at the Crane, but the rest of the images are some other stuff she's done, and I love her for it. Everything is hand cut.






























    Her labor is inspiring.

    Tuesday, March 16, 2010

    A body is a neat thing.

    Eye Adaptation:

    In ocular physiology, adaptation is the ability of the eye to adjust to various levels of darkness and light. The human eye can function from very dark to very bright levels of light — its sensing capabilities reach across nine orders of magnitude. This means that the brightest and the darkest light signal that the eye can sense are a factor of roughly one billion apart. However, in any given moment of time, the eye can only sense a contrast ratio of one thousand. What enables the wider reach is that the eye adapts its definition of what is black. The light level that is interpreted as "black" can be shifted across six orders of magnitude—a factor of one million.

    The eye takes approximately 20-30 minutes to fully adapt from bright sunlight to complete darkness and become ten thousand to one million times more sensitive than at full daylight. In this process, the eye's perception of color changes as well. However, it takes approximately five minutes for the eye to adapt to bright sunlight from darkness. This is due to cones obtaining more sensitivity when first entering the dark for the first five minutes but the rods take over after five or more minutes.

    Stages of Sleep (NREM):

    Stages of sleep In mammals and birds, sleep is divided into two broad types: Rapid Eye Movement (REM) and Non-Rapid Eye Movement (NREM or non-REM) sleep. Each type has a distinct set of associated physiological, neurological, and psychological features. The American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) further divides NREM into three stages: N1, N2, and N3, the last of which is also called delta, or slow-wave, sleep (SWS).

    NREM
    Stage N1 refers to the transition of the brain from alpha waves having a frequency of 8 to 13 Hz (common in the awake state) to theta waves having a frequency of 4 to 7 Hz. This stage is sometimes referred to as somnolence or drowsy sleep. Sudden twitches and hypnic jerks, also known as positive myoclonus, may be associated with the onset of sleep during N1. Some people may also experience hypnagogic hallucinations during this stage, which can be troublesome to them. During N1, the subject loses some muscle tone and most conscious awareness of the external environment.

    Stage N2 is characterized by sleep spindles ranging from 11 to 16 Hz (most commonly 12–14 Hz) and K-complexes. During this stage, muscular activity as measured by EMG decreases, and conscious awareness of the external environment disappears. This stage occupies 45% to 55% of total sleep in adults.If you sleep 7-8 hours a night, all but maybe an hour and a half is spent in dreamless NREM sleep.


    Thanks wikipedia.

    Thursday, March 11, 2010

    Circle the wagons...

    "You have noticed that everything an Indian does is in a circle, and that this is because the Power of the World works in circles. The sun comes up and goes down in a circle. The moon does the same, and both are round. Even the seasons form a great circle and always come back to where they were. The life of a man is from childhood to childhood."
    Black Elke, of the Oglala Sioux, who was born in 1886.

    "The golden spiral of healing energies... The artistic spiral circling inward... The double helix of DNA... The spiral of the water being channelled down from the bath... The spiral construction of the Milky Way galaxy... All around us is movement. Nothing is ever completely still. And within this continuous spiral dance, we are all connected, all part of the web of life. The Lakota have a saying - Mitakuye Oyasin. It means - All Our Relations. We are all related. The people. The animals. The trees. The air. The water. The stones. We are all ... linked. Connected.

    The Sun Dance can be performed by both sexes in June or July when there is a full moon. The performance takes place in a large tipi with a carefully chosen cottonwood tree placed in the centre. This tree becomes a central feature within the rite of the Sun Dance. This is illustrated through the actions of the dancers. They make pledges of self-sacrifice on the first day, and then dance around the tree wearing a symbol made specifically for the ritual.


    Thursday, March 4, 2010

    My porcelain inspiration, bringin in the metals and shit.





    http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/2N3GnA/acidcow.com/pics/6367-the-most-beautiful-smith-in-the-world-32-pics.html/r:f


    Cal Lane is So Cool

    Wednesday, March 3, 2010

    P Pots

    According to Sioux Lore, a long time ago, during a time of famine, a women appeared wearing a white buffalo skin, carrying a sacred pipe. She explained that the wooden stem symbolized the trees, and everything growing on the earth. She also carried a red bowl symbolizing flesh and blood of the people, and the smoke was the breath of their prayers going to Wakan Tanka., the creator. The people learned of the connection between the sky and the earth and the unity of all life.

    I am creating a red pot everyday as a meditation, on this established symbol and on creating a ritual of my own. Though this idea is taken from a traditional myth, applying it to my modern world, where I make these pots in a clay studio is extremely different. Because I'm choosing to coil these pots with earthenware clay, without any tools, I feel a connection to this ancient myth. But because I'm creating these pots in a studio where porcelian is abundant and in a society where mass produced vessels are also abundant, these forms are not nearly as utilitarian. I've already found I'm in love with the form and roughness of material because of what it symbolizes. Upon looking at the finished pots with my modern disconnected eyes they look like beginner's pots that I would have been embarrassed by. I'm going to update periodically this growing relationship I have with the aesthetic and spiritual developments in each pot. I also read today about the belief that a circle is the basis of all creation. Good thing I'm coiling.

    A pot a day keeps the Dr. away.

    Thursday, February 18, 2010

    I was thinking about icicles today. My first split inclination was that at one moment when the temperature drops, a tendril freezes in mid air. Then I realized the absurdity of that, even though if that were true it would be pretty spectacular. I then worked the obvious out in my brain. A drop, the tiniest drop freezes. Then another on top of that. Then another. Until this one drop is covered and created by millions of drops, until the temperature really does freeze all the moisture.

    Don't forget to Vaseline...






    my apartment now has a dusting of plaster over it.

    I think it's interesting in reviewing that I'm casting parts of my body that are focused on by America (as determining whether women are in shape/attractive/acceptable) in my kitchen. Of course I did it for practical reasons, like the proximity to the sink and that it is easier to wipe up the kitchen floor. But being in an area whether food is stored, prepared and focused on, adds an interesting dimension to my project concept.

    Wednesday, February 17, 2010

    Makelists.Makelists.Makelists.

    I can't really commit to any project without a task list.

    1. Sketch body parts, and how I'd like to sever them. (meep). and how many?
    2. Buy supplies
    3. Make molds
    4. Mold body parts
    5. Mix slip
    6. Cast body parts
    7. Manipulate casts
    8. Low fire casts
    9. Mix alternative slip
    10. Fire

    Where did my sketchbook go?


    Tuesday, February 16, 2010


    First Blog, Testing...