Sunday, February 28, 2010

Cream: Washington Project for the Arts Auction and Gala Party


The Washington Project for the Arts Art Auction and Gala Party will feature artwork by top local and national artists.

Saturday, March 8 from 8 p.m. to midnight

Katzen Arts Center at American University
4400 Massachusetts Ave. NW / Washington, DC 20016

Go to http://www.wpadc.org for more information and to purchase tickets.

LOS SOLOS SERIES: Final Show of the Season Friday, March 5



Featuring THREE amazing solo artists:

Samita Sinha (NYC)
Ayako Kataoka (Baltimore) (rescheduled from Feb)
Jenny Gräf (Baltimore)

WHEN: Friday, March 5th. 2010. All shows are open to the public. All shows start promptly at 8:30 pm. $6 admission.

WHERE: VENUE CHANGE! The final installment of the Los Series has been moved from the Load of Fun to the Hexagon Space, 1825 North Charles Street, Baltimore, MD.

WHAT: The Los Solos Series is an innovative monthly series of solo performances by groundbreaking female artists including dancers, musicians, writers, filmmakers, conceptual artists, theatrical performers, performance artists, and curators. The series is curated by visual artist Jackie Milad and musician/writer Bonnie Jones.

WHO: The series features nationally and internationally acclaimed artists from Baltimore and throughout the US who are highly innovative within their disciplines. The next show on March 5th features:

SAMITA SINHA (NYC)
Trained in classical Hindustani vocal music, composer/ performer Samita Sinha uses the range of her voice together with electronics and multilingual text in solo performance and multichannel vocal pieces. Besides her solo work, Sinha has a duo project with Marc Cary called ANATOMY (electronic/ Hindustani/ jazz), uses her voice as an improvising instrument in jazz ensembles (in Marc Cary’s FOCUS Trio, Sunny Jain Collective, and Eternal Now), and has toured internationally as a vocalist with the late performance poet Sekou Sundiata’s the 51st (dream) state. In addition to her international performance career, Sinha has been awarded grants from the Urban Artist Initiative and Queens Council on the Arts, a Fulbright Scholarship to study music in India, and has been a composer-in-residence and two-time juror at Millay Colony on the Arts. She has created music for film (Prashant Bhargava’s “Backwaters”) and video installation (Jaishri Abichandani’s “3 Muses”). Her debut CD with her group Kaash (Sunny Jain, Jesse Neuman, Dan Fabricatore), entitled Seep, was named a Top Pick of 2006 in All About Jazz and appeared in Billboard’s “Top 5 Hear and Now.” www.samitasinha.com

AYAKO KATAOKA (BALTIMORE)
Ayako Kataoka is a multidisciplinary artist originally from Tokyo. Born into a family of Buddhist priests and artists, she grew up immersed in an atmosphere of shaka drawings, chant depicted in japanese calligraphy, and the milieu of traditional Japanese temples. Realized in sound, video, installation, and dance performances, her works are often embodied with her heritage dealing with the concept of bringing invisible to visible. Her selected works have been performed and exhibited at spaces including; Tokyo Dance Video Festival, San Francsico International Arts Festival, and High Zero Festival.Kataoka holds MFA from Mills College, Oakland, CA, where she also worked as a technical assistant at the Center for Contemporary Music Center (former San Francisco Tape Music Center). She is a resident of Baltimore, MD http://saisui.wordpress.com

JENNY GRÄF (BALTIMORE)
J. Gräf, a dynamic improvisor and stalwart of the Baltimore freek music scene, creates vivid, compelling soundworlds using intuitive/primitive homebrewed electronics, guitar and voice. J. Gräf is one-half of the noise duos Harrius (with Chiara Giovando, two LP’s on Ehse Records) and Metalux (with MV Carbon, recordings on Hanson, Load and 5RC/Kill Rock Stars, etc). She is also known for her interactive social interventions such as The Guitars Project, in which she worked with a group older women with Alzheimer’s to produce music using electric guitars, Threshold, a piece performed at last year’s High Zero event in which the audience triggered sounds by ordering food, and her Rock Carving Oraclestra, which uses psychic channeling through stone to generate readings for selected audience members. Her recent releases include Proud Flesh, a movie soundtrack to her Western film collaboration with Chiara Giovando (ehserecords.com), a split 7? with Zaimph as well as a split Metalux/K.K. Rampage.

WEBSITE: For more info: http://www.baltimoreperformance.com/lossolos/

WHY: In the city known for its collaborative zeitgeist, the LOS SOLOS Series hopes to also recognize the strength of its solo performers. This is the third collaborative project for curator/organizers Bonnie Jones & Jackie Milad. Previous projects include CHELA art space and Transmodern Festival.

Wasteland opens Wednesday, March 3 at Grimaldis Gallery from 6-8


Thursday, February 25, 2010

New and Improved Website for The Studio Visit Blog!!

Studio Visit with Kristina Bilonick

The Studio Visit, newly located at www.thestudiovisit.com, has been published for several years by DC artist Isabel Manalo and has been a great source of information about the local DC art scene. The blog has been updated into a slicker site with more options, including a twitter feed, a facebook discussion option, and a section for critique and events.

The new site includes thoughtful writing, good documentation - both in photo and video - and will include the addition of several new contributing writers including Deborah McLeod, Jiha Moon, Kristina Bilonick, Elise Richman and Jefferson Pinder as contributors for their respective geographic areas. You will soon see visits from all of them so please check often. To find out more about them, click on 'About'. They're amazing artists and writers themselves.

Studio Visit with Joren Lindholm

Also, if you are interested, please join the Facebook Group 'Studio Visit' where you can also keep up with the latest news, posts, events and discussions. The studio visit already hosted a lively online discussion on the Washington D.C. art scene this past December which culminated in a live panel discussion hosted by Washington Project for the Arts at the Capitol City Skyline Hotel.

The TSV will also soon be hosting bi-monthly critiques!! Venue to be determined......

According to Manolo, "My goal is to have TSV representation in cities nationwide. I am seeking contributors from any city where there is art being made. If you are interested or know of someone who may be, please email a link to your own site and bio to: thestudiovisit@gmail.com."

So get on it, Baltimore artists! This is a great opportunity to get involved.

Blood Weather, Up the Ante, & Forum of 40 Champions at Creative Alliance February 26, 7-9 p.m.

Blood Weather: Becky Alprin and Lauren Boilini
Opens Friday, Feb 26, 7-9 p.m. in the Main Gallery
Free Concert w/ Celebration 9 p.m.
On View: Feb 26 - March 27
Gallery Talk: Weds, March 24 at 7 p.m.

As observers of human activity, Lauren Boilini and Becky Alprin view the world from opposite ends of the telescope. Boilini, who transforms the gallery with a single massive painting covering 2000 square feet, is known for epic canvases—her mark making intense, all encompassing, and fast. She places herself, and the viewer, at the center of the action, like the jostled referee in a boxing match. Alprin, on the other hand, takes the long view. Epochs are compressed and conflated in her fragmented sculptures, which recall both archeological digs and architectural models, recognizable as the fractured cities we live in. As close and passionate Boilini is, so Alprin’s work is pointed and analytic; together, they expose a startling cross section of forces that make and unmake the world every day.


Up the Ante: CA Resident Artists & Others
Amalie Rothschild Gallery (upstairs)
Opens Fri Feb 26 w/ Residents Open House, 7-9pm, On view Feb 26-Mar 13.

The hi-octane artists at The Patterson step it up a notch for this exhibit, each submitting a piece of art on the titular theme, and inviting a colleague from outside the building to do the same. The exhibition coincides with our annual party celebrating the Residency Program.

In the Minstallation Gallery, Gary Kachadourian's Forum of 40 Champions
Open currently and up through April 10

Forty champions, each possessing a special power, have been invited to create a warrior to enter the Minstallation Gallery and face the special powers of their peers. Participants will create their warriors to occupy a 4 square inch hexagon of space, flying included, working with the size and shape parameters of Warhammer 40,000 and Dungeons and Dragons. Participants may use Warhammer stands and modify figurines from any of the gaming and fantasy products or may create their own using Sculpy or other materials. 20 sided dice and measuring sticks will be provided. Gaming rules and booklet will be developed during the course of the exhibition.

The Earth is Flat and Other Truths About the Environment at Park School February 25

Artists: Chris Jordan, Lynn Geesamen, Ken Hale, Jessie Lehson, Jackson Martin, Trace Miller, Ellen Lupton & Abott Miller, Lawrence McFarland, Paul Rutovsky, Rachel Sitkin, Shannon Young

Richman Gallery at the Park School
February 11- March 31, 2010.
Artist's Reception Thursday February 25th from 6 - 7:30 pm

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

2010 Janet & Walter Sondheim Artscape Prize Semifinalists


An exhibition of the remaining semifinalists’ work will be shown during the Artscape weekend in the Decker and Meyerhoff galleries of MICA, located at 1303 W. Mount Royal Avenue. Artscape takes place July 16-18, 2010.

JANET & WALTER SONDHEIM ARTSCAPE PRIZE SEMIFINALISTS
Alzaruba, Baltimore, MD
Christine Bailey, Baltimore, MD
Kathryn Bell, Baltimore, MD
Amita Bhatt, Baltimore, MD
Travis Childers, Fairfax, VA
Leah Cooper, Baltimore, MD
Brent Crothers, Bel Air, MD
Oletha DeVane, Ellicott City, MD
Annie Farrar, Baltimore, MD
Shaun Flynn, Baltimore, MD
Dawn Gavin, Baltimore, MD
Breon Gilleran, Baltimore, MD
Amy Glengary Yang, Washington, DC
Ryan Hackett, Kensington, MD
Michelle Hagewood, Baltimore, MD
Matthew Janson, Baltimore, MD
Evan La Londe, Baltimore, MD
Nate Larson, Baltimore, MD
Lawrence Lee, Baltimore, MD
Kim Manfredi, Baltimore, MD
Ben Marcin, Baltimore, MD
Christina Martinelli, Baltimore, MD
Sebastian Martorana, Baltimore, MD
Alexa Meade, Chevy Chase, MD
Maggie Michael, Washington, DC
Ledelle Moe, Baltimore, MD
Cory Oberndorfer, Washington, DC
Matthew Porterfield, Baltimore, MD
Siobhan Rigg, Washington, DC
Michael Sylvan Robinson, Baltimore, MD
Rachel Rotenberg, Baltimore, MD
Adam T. Rush, Baltimore, MD
Christopher Saah, Washington, DC
Hadieh Shafie, Baltimore, MD
Dan Steinhilber, Washington, DC
Melissa Webb, Baltimore, MD
Karen Yasinsky, Baltimore, MD

This year’s jurors are Robert Nickas, Magdalena Sawon and Hamza Walker. Robert Nickas is an independent New York-based curator, writer and art critic; who over the past 25 years has organized more than 80 exhibitions that have been shown in museums and galleries throughout the world. Responsible for Aperto at the Venice Biennale in 1993 and the 2003 Biennale de Lyon, his most recent exhibition Cave Paintings premiered in July in Berlin at PSM Gallery, and was produced in October and November in New York by Grisham’s Ghost at 511 West 25th Street in Manhattan. This exhibition is an accompaniment to his latest book, Painting Abstraction: New Elements in Abstract Painting (October 2009); a remarkable volume that highlights the current work of 80 contemporary artists. A regular contributor to Artforum and a founding editor of Index magazine, he has also authored countless essays in exhibition catalogues and artists’ monographs. His other books include two collections of his writings, Live Free or Die (2000) and Theft is Vision (2007). From 2003 to 2006, he served as curatorial advisor at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center in New York.

Magdalena Sawon is the owner and director of Postmasters Gallery in New York. Begun in December 1984 in the East Village, Postmasters Gallery relocated to Soho in 1989, and moved to its current 4,000 sq. ft. ground floor space in Chelsea in September 1998. Postmasters Gallery is one of the few commercial galleries that actively seeks both young and established artists working with new technologies to create their work. This emphasis began with their, at the time, unique and now seminal exhibition in 1996, Can you digit?; which was comprised of approximately 30 monitors arranged in a boat-like shape, each showing a singular digital work. Along with artists working in video and new media, Postmasters Gallery’s current roster of artists includes those working in painting, sculpture and installation. Ms. Sawon has also served on Rhizome’s Board of Directors from 2002 until 2005, a New York-based organization whose mission is to support the creation, presentation, preservation and critique of emerging artistic practices that engage new technologies.

Hamza Walker, who grew up in Baltimore, has been the director of education and associate curator of the Renaissance Society at The University of Chicago, a non-collecting museum devoted to contemporary art, since 1994. Prior to his current position, he held the post of public art coordinator in Chicago’s Department of Cultural Affairs. His curatorial projects include the exhibitions Several Silences; Black Is, Black Ain’t; Meanwhile in Bagdad; All the Pretty Corpses; A Perfect Union…More or Less and New Video, New Europe, among several others. He has written for the journals Trans, New Art Examiner, Parkett and Artforum; as well as contributed catalogue essays for several artists including Rebecca Morris, Thomas Hirschhorn and Katharina Grosse. He was the recipient of the 1999 Norton Curatorial Grant, the Menil Collection’s 2005 Walter Hopps Award for Curatorial Achievement, and is one of two winners of the New Museum’s 2010 Ordway Prize. He is among the graduate faculty at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and is currently on the board of The Chicago Public Art Group.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

34th Annual American Craft Council Show in Baltimore to Feature Nation's Top Contemporary Craft Artists Feb 25-28


New 4-day format includes special show features and categories such as the new LAWN & GARDEN category, CRAFT4KIDS, GREENCRAFT, ALTCRAFT and a live demo stage.

More than 700 top contemporary craft artists will present their latest handmade works including one-of-a-kind furnishings, fine decorative items and clothing at the 34th annual American Craft Council Show in Baltimore, this weekend, February 25-28 at the Baltimore Convention Center. Through a rigorous jury process, master artisans from across the country were selected to participate in the event, which has long been a showcase for contemporary craft.

The largest, juried indoor craft show in the nation, The American Craft Council Show in Baltimore has something for everybody.

The American Craft Council Show in Baltimore
Thursday, February 25 – Sunday, February 28, 2010

HOURS: Thursday, February 25 (10 am – 6 pm), Friday, February 26 (10 am - 9 pm), Saturday, February 27 (10 am - 6 pm), Sunday, February 28 (10 am - 5 pm)

WHERE: Baltimore Convention Center, One West Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD

Make sure you check out new work from Baltimore's own Sherry Insley, aka Dandelion Blu at Altcraft Booth 10!

Some Other Local Baltimore Crafters:
Juliet Ames- The Broken Plate Pendant Company www.ibreakplates.com
Danamarie Hosler- Greenstarstudio www.greenstarstudio.etsy.com
Elisa Shere- Elisa Shere Jewelry, elisasherejewelry.etsy.com
Shannon Delanoy- Sweet Pepita, www.sweetpepita.etsy.com

INFORMATION/TO PURCHASE DISCOUNTED TICKETS: www.craftcouncil.org/baltimore

About the American Craft Council: The American Craft Council's mission is to champion craft. As a national, nonprofit public educational organization founded in 1943 by Aileen Osborn Webb, the Council actively promotes the understanding and appreciation of contemporary American craft through its bimonthly magazine American Craft, annual juried shows presenting artists and their work, leadership conferences, awards for excellence, research library, workshops and seminars. For additional information visit www.craftcouncil.org.

Adornamental opens Feb 25 at Goucher College's Silber Gallery

Adornamental

Artists: Liz Ensz, Stephanie Liner, Xavier Schipani, Piper Shepard, Rene Trevino, Emily Uchytil, and Kelly Walker

February 16 - March 28, 2020
Opening Reception: Thursday, February 25, 6-8 p.m.

The Silber Gallery
Goucher College Athenaeum
Towson, MD

Elena Volkova: Proofs on February 26, 5-8 p.m. at 2619 Guilford Avenue

Elena Volkova: Proofs, A Site-Specific Installation at 2619 Guilford Ave., Baltimore

February 22-27, 2010
Reception: Friday, February 26 from 5-8 p.m.

Internet Copyright Workshop at MAP Saturday, March 6

What is fair use on the Internet?
Know Your Rights!

INTERNET COPYRIGHT WORKSHOP
Presented with Maryland Lawyers for the Arts

SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 2-5PM
Artist Stacia Yeapanis shares her experience
Attorney Cynthia Blake Sanders offers advice
Internet Fair Use Do’s and Don’ts + Problem-Solving Work Session

The Internet is a vast networking system for artists to deliver images of their work to the public. Internet regulations are meant to protect everyone. However, the law can be an obstacle to contemporary art production.
Join us to find out why.

Artists Welcome to Bring Examples of Your Digital Appropriations!
Free and Open to the Public - Space Limited
Registration Required to map.submissions@gmail.com

This workshop was created especially for MAP’s current exhibition, Losing Yourself in the 21st Century.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Photos from 'A Complex Weave' at Towson University


A Complex Weave: Women and Identity in Contemporary Art

Center for the Arts Gallery
Friday, February 12 – Saturday, April 17
Gallery Hours: Tuesday-Saturday, 11 a.m. – 4 p.m.

Co-curated by Dr. Martin Rosenberg of Rutgers University, Camden and Dr. J. Susan Isaacs of Towson University. This exhibition presents the work of 16 artists of diverse backgrounds who address aspects of identity, including nationality, ethnicity, gender, and religion. Media includes sculpture, time-based, painting, prints, fibers, and photography.

Artists include: Blanka Amezkua, Sarah Amos, Helène Aylon, Siona Benjamin, Sonya Clark, Zöe Charlton, Annet Couwenberg, Lalla Essaydi, Judy Gelles, Sharon Harper, Julie Haris, Fujiko Isamura, Tatiana Parcero, Philemona Williamson, Flo Oy Wong, and April Wood.

Co-sponsored by the College of Fine Arts and Communication, the College of Liberal Arts, the Departments of Women’s Studies and Art + Design, Art History, Art Education and the Women’s Center.