Showing posts with label Penland exhibit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Penland exhibit. Show all posts

October 22, 2014

Penland School of Crafts 2014 Core Fellows Show Opening a Success

On October 10 Penland School of Crafts held the opening reception for the 2014 Core Fellows Show. The Core Fellows  (left to right) are Joshua Kovarik, Jamie Karolich, Emily Rogstad, Sarah Rachel Brown, Will Lentz, Tyler Stoll, Meghan Martin, Angela Eastman, Audrey Bell.

See a slideshow of the exhibit opening along with a few pieces by each person HERE.

 

March 27, 2013

Penland School of Crafts Campus Exhibits Four Installations in Conjunction with NCMA 0 - 60

On view simultaneously with the NCMA's exhibition are four temporary installations on the Penland campus. Dan Bailey, Kyoung Ae Cho, Alison Collins, and Anne Lemanski were commissioned by Penland and the NCMA to create these new works for 0 to 60. Each of these works were partially created at Penland where the artists gathered materials, worked in the studios, and did the final work of installation.
Opening events:
Friday, April 19, 8:00 PM, Northlight Building at Penland
Linda Dougherty, chief curator and curator of contemporary art at the NCMA, will present an overview of the project followed by slide presentations from each of the four installation artists.

Saturday, April 20, 1:30 PM, Pines Portico at Penland
Walking tour of the installations: Penland's director, Jean McLaughlin, will make some introductory remarks at the Pines Portico. and then each of the four artists will speak when the group visits their installation.


Information about the installations:    

Filmmaker, animator, and photographer Dan Bailey has created a two-part work using time-lapse and low-altitude aerial photography. Presented on a large monitor, Looking Up is a time-lapse witness of the slowly changing sky, offered to the viewer in silence. This piece allows us to engage with complex patterns and movements that we cannot process in real time. The vantage point is reversed in
Looking Down, a large printed wall piece that combines photographs made from low-altitude helium balloons with satellite imagery, maps, and the artist's personal history of place. In this collage of viewing angles, time shifts, and seasonal variances, an inconsistent and organic perspective undermines the technology and grounds the viewer in a distinctly human journey through the landscape.

Rust gathered from decaying steel sculptures-a remnant of her past creative endeavors-became the muse for Alison Collins' Temps Perdu. Combining that rust with soy milk to create a dye, Collins used a brush to transcribe sections of Marcel Proust's À la recherche du temps perdu (In Search of Lost Time) onto 300 yards of muslin. This cloth will be used, she says, "to protect or mummify the interior of the Dye Shed - walls, stairs, rafters, etc. - to preserve that forgotten space or the memory of its past with Proust's reconstruction of his past." Within that space she will install hundreds of muslin leaves, pinned together to create vines. On the leaves she has painted (also with the rust dye) text that refers to people and things she has lost. "The pins," she says, "act as a means of temporary connection-working as our memory does, resulting in a fragmentary collection of memories that seem to create a whole."

Anne Lemanski's Extirpated reflects the artist's interest in evolutionary time, and also presented her with the technical challenge of making a piece that can withstand the elements. The term "extirpated" refers to a species that once inhabited a region, but has since disappeared, with no hope of return. Lemanski's piece will create a series of clotheslines suspended between steel supports based on the form of Kentucky long rifles. Hanging from the lines will be silhouette images of species that have been extirpated from Mitchell County, where Penland is located: the American bison, the gray wolf, the North American porcupine, the snowshoe hare, the fisher, the Carolina parakeet, and the passenger pigeon. Placing images of these animals back into this environment creates a graphic reminder of how a landscape changes over time and points to the dichotomy of human admiration and exploitation of the animal world.

Kyoung Ae Cho begins each piece as a hunter-gatherer in search of organic matter or manufactured discards-a slow, deliberate process that sets the tone for her work. Shining Ground, Cho's installation at Penland, involves what she calls environmental processing and time-marking. She discovered mica-a flat, shiny mineral-while teaching at Penland in 2004. She gathered a bag of mica particles from a riverbed and kept it as a memory of "the gem" that was her Penland experience. Shining Ground incorporates that same collected material into vertical panels made of silk organza and pins, which will be prominently installed at the Northlight building. The piece is her attempt to recapture, many years later, the moment of quiet surprise when she first saw the ground covered with the sheen of mica sand.

March 22, 2013

the North Carolina Museum of Art and Penland School of Crafts present 0 to 60

Beginning this month, the North Carolina Museum of Art and Penland School of Crafts present 0 to 60: The Experience of Time through Contemporary Art, an exhibition featuring thirty-two international artists with over sixty works of art blurring the boundaries between art, craft, and design. The partnership includes a fully illustrated catalog that documents the projects at both the NCMA and Penland. 

Seventeen new works have been created for 0 to 60 and five North Carolina artists and eleven artists affiliated with Penland are featured in the exhibition. This is the first collaboration between these two highly-recognized North Carolina art institutions.

Tom Shields, Forest for the Chairs
"Focusing on the concept of time and its influence on art, the exhibition looks at how time is used as form, content, and material, and how art is used to represent, evoke, manipulate, or transform time," said NCMA Chief Curator and Curator of Contemporary Art Linda Dougherty. "It's especially notable to have Penland involved in the exhibition, since 'time' is one of the critical resources their facilities provide for the artists who come to the school for a creative retreat where they can work literally around the clock."

The artists represented in the exhibition are Caetano de Almeida, Dan Bailey, Walead Beshty, Jana Brevick, Jim Campbell, Paul Chan, David Chatt, Kyoung Ae Cho, Sonya Clark, Alison Collins, Tara Donovan, Dan Estabrook, John Gerrard, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Hoss Haley, Tim Hawkinson, Lisa Hoke, Tehching Hsieh, Richard Hughes, Anne Lemanski, Jeff Chien-Hsing Liao, Beth Lipman, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Vera Lutter, Peter Matthews, David Shapiro, Tom Shields, Jennifer Steinkamp, Do Ho Suh, Stacy Lynn Waddell, Michael Wesely, and Bill Viola.

The exhibit opens on March 24 and continues through August 11, 2013.