Friday, April 29, 2011

Photos from Once Upon a Time at Goucher's Silber Gallery


Once Upon a Time at Goucher's Silber Gallery
Exhibit Dates: Tuesday, April 5, through Sunday, May 8, 2011.
The exhibit, which is free to the public, can be viewed Tuesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Storytelling has always been intertwined with various art forms-artists cull inspiration from scriptures, history, literature, mythology, current social or political events, personal experiences, and their own imagination. Narrative works depict events unfolding, often compressed into a single image or object that implies something has happened or is about to take place. These stories are powerful tools with the potential to evoke a multitude of emotions, allowing an audience to identify with common experiences or imagine situations they might never encounter. In Once Upon a Time..., Rochelle Abramowitz, Libby Barbee, Erin Fostel, Brent Green, Katelyn Greth, Nora Sturges, Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum, and James Allen Swainbank unite characters, plots, and imagery to create a brief escape from the everyday world.


















Artist Libbee Barbee















Artist Rochelle Abramowitz

Artists Erin Fostel and Nora Sturges


Thursday, April 28, 2011

Amy Boone-MCreesh: Ceremonial Splendor at School 33 May 6


Amy Boone - McCreesh: Ceremonial Splendor
Members’ Gallery
May 6- June 17, 2011
Opening Reception, May 6, 2011, 6-9pm

School 33 Art Center is pleased to announce Ceremonial Splendor, a solo exhibition of sculptural works by Amy Boone-McCreesh. One of School 33 Art Center’s 2010 Lotta Art Best in Show winners, Boone-McCreesh is interested in exploring the cultural distinctions between functional items and decoration and revisiting these themes in the context of contemporary art. Found objects, second-hand fabrics, celebratory ephemera, repetition, and the amassing of materials and mark-making are her primary vehicles for expression. She maintains a contemporary aesthetic while evoking imagery of rituals, tradition, and ceremony. The work is colorful, celebratory, vibrant and full of visual rhythms. The sculptures navigate the space between Formalism and enthusiasm; they are contained bursts of energy and artistry.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Thursday Night at 218 Saratoga Street


Opening Night of the Transmodern Festival, 2011: Thursday, April 28

MEDIATIONS curated by Stephanie Barber at the MAP Gallery at 218 West Saratoga Street (between  howard st. and park ave)
Video, Installations, and Performance from 6-9 followed by music, films, and more performance downstairs in the 14KT Cabaret. 

Featuring:
KIRSTEN STOLTMANN (from los angeles)
XAVIER LEPLAE (milwaukee)
OLIVIA ROBINSON AND JESSE STILES (baltimore)
KIMSU THEILER (jersey city)
SMELLING SALT AMUSEMENTS (baltimore)

Followed by Extreme Animals, Andrew Zukerman, and Eve Hanan in the Cabaret below with videos by Martha Colburn and Nancy Andrews

New Urbanite Ezine Feature: The Transmodern Festival

Marsian, performing Thursday night at the Transmodern Festival, photo by Sean Dennie

Across the Line : The Transmodern Festival is all about crossing boundaries, moving not just between spaces, but also between genders, races, ages, media, and philosophies.

by Cara Ober

“Puppet artists are the new rock stars,” says Marsian DeLellis. “Like Lady Gaga, one day I can only hope that the details of my next puppet show will be leaked to the media and that I will have to go on tour early.”

Based in Los Angeles, Marsian has developed a brand of eccentric adult puppetry that oscillates between adorable, abject, campy, and earnest. Inspired by current events, tabloids, and pop culture, Marsian's oeuvre includes short-form puppetry, puppet slams, musicals, video, and performance art. He brings his show to Baltimore this week, for the Transmodern Festival, where he’ll perform Fudgie's Death, a neo-noir tale of desperation and depravity, and give a talk at MICA about “synthetic pleasures.”

“This will be my first foray into Baltimore, which I have always viewed as a sacred place,” Marsian says. “The city that fueled the films of John Waters, Divine, and the Dreamland Studios has been so influential on me and my generation of peers.”

The Transmodern Festival is not easy to explain to those who have not experienced it. “At first, I thought that the Transmodern Fest was gender-related,” Marsian admits. “The title made it sound like it was a synonym for post-gender or some kind of deconstructed version of gender performance and I assumed that I had been selected because I play with gender as one aspect of my puppet shows.”

In fact, the festival is about crossing all manner of lines. “The Transmodern is all about defying genres,” says festival organizer Valeska Populoh. “It blurs boundaries between performance and the performative, installation, video, and sound. There is a unique capacity within the festival to consider different ways of thinking about performance and making in general. This festival is all about transcending boundaries, moving between spaces, as well as gender, race, age, media, and philosophy.”

To read the entire article, go to: http://www.urbanitebaltimore.com/baltimore/across-the-line/Content?oid=1404912

Projections, part of the Transmodern Fest, 2011


PROJECTIONS
April 28 - April 30, 8pm - 12am

A video exhibition curated by Lexie Mountain for Transmodern 2011, occupying the Charles Fish &  Sons Building storefront, corner of Franklin & Eutaw Streets, Baltimore @ 425 N Eutaw St, Baltimore MD 21201.


Live actions & screenings:
blackmoth.org Thursday, April 28 @ 11:35pm
Hermonie Only Friday, April 29 @ 10:15pm
Joe Denardo & Snejina Latev Saturday April 30 @ 10:00pm
Shana Palmer & Dys Hannan Saturday April 30 @ Midnight

with the work of Tamara Alegre, Mark Brown, Liz Donadio, Exploding Motor Car, Amy Lockhart, Lexie Mountain, Nat Munari, and Margaret Rorison running throughout, 8pm - 12am-ish

for schedule updates follow @mountainlex

Artist Lecture with Joe Denardo & Snejina Latev, Kari Altmann &  Jim Drain
Sunday May 1 4:30pm - 6:30pm
Johns Hopkins Homewood Campus, Mattin 101, SDS Room


Friday, April 22, 2011

Maryland Film Festival May 5 - 8, 2011


"The Maryland Film Festival is an essential stop in the festival circuit." - David Simon, Creator & Executive Producer, "The Wire"

Maryland Film Festival is an annual four-day event that takes place the first weekend of each May, presenting top-notch film and video work from all over the world. Each year the festival screens approximately 50 feature films and 75 short films of all varieties -- narrative, documentary, animation, experimental, and hybrid -- to tens of thousands of audience members.

For every North American feature film screened within the festival, a filmmaker attends the festival to present their work. The hundreds of filmmakers who have hosted screenings within Maryland Film Festival include such names as John Waters, Barry Levinson, Kathryn Bigelow, Jonathan Demme, Melvin Van Peebles, Alex Gibney, Matt Porterfield, Joe Swanberg, Lisandro Alonso, and Lena Dunham.

In addition to a wide range of contemporary N. American films, each festival also includes a sampling of cutting-edge international features (including such titles as Dogtooth and Syndromes and a Century), a vintage silent film with live musical accompaniment, a classic 3-D film, and a feature selected and hosted by legendary filmmaker John Waters (whose choices have ranged from Joseph Losey's Boom! to Gaspar Noé's I Stand Alone).

Maryland Film Festival's 2011 Line-Up: The bulk of MFF's 2011 features are now announced -- including Kelly Reichardt's MEEK'S CUTOFF, Palme d'Or winner UNCLE BOONMEE, John Waters presenting DOMAINE, and 40+ more! Among our foreign features, you'll find titles from Thailand, France, Democratic Republic of Congo, Portugal, Japan, Chile, the Ukraine, Quebec, and Uruguay! Also check out our 8 shorts programs, just announced! More features, Opening and Closing night titles, and advance ticket sales coming over the next few business days.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

The 2011 Janet and Walter Sondheim Finalists Announced

The Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts announces the finalists for the sixth annual Janet & Walter Sondheim Artscape Prize. The five finalists are Stephanie Barber, Louie Palu, Mark Parascandola, Matthew Porterfield and Rachel Rotenberg.

The competition awards a $25,000 fellowship to a visual artist or visual artist collaborators living and working in the Greater Baltimore region. The 2011 winner will be announced during an award ceremony on Saturday, July 9 at 7pm at The Baltimore Museum of Art, located at 10 Art Museum Drive. The Janet & Walter Sondheim Artscape Prize is held in conjunction with the annual Artscape juried exhibition and is produced by the Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts.

The finalists and semifinalists exhibitions are presented in partnership with The Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) and Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA). Finalists’ works will be exhibited in the Alvin and Fanny Blaustein Thalheimer Galleries of the BMA from Saturday, June 25 through Sunday, August 7. The fellowship winner is selected from the BMA exhibition after review of the installed art and an interview with each finalist by the jurors.

Stephanie Barber (Baltimore, MD)

Stephanie Barber is a multi-media artist who creates writing, films and videos, as well as performance pieces that incorporate music, literature and video. Much of her work is informed by poetry and the poetics inherent in the formal concerns of all art. Her work has been extensively featured in festivals and venues around the world. These include the Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Museum of Art in New York; The Wexner Center for the Arts in Columbus, OH; London’s Tate Modern; the San Francisco Museum of Contemporary Art and The Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art; the New York Film Festival; Film Festival Rotterdam; the London International Film Festival, among several other art spaces. She has had numerous books published including poems in 2006 and her short book for a lawn poem in 2007 by Publishing Genius. Her book these here separated to see how they standing alone or the soundtrack to six films by stephanie barber was published in May 2008 and 2010 by Publishing Genius - included in this book is her essay the inversion, transcription, evening track and attractor (the soundtrack for the video of the same name) which was nominated for a Pushcart Prize.

Louie Palu (Washington, D.C.)

For the past five years, Louie Palu has focused his photography on a long-term project on the war in Afghanistan. His work has appeared in numerous publications, including The New Yorker, The New York Times, TIME and Newsweek. His work has been featured in festivals and exhibitions nationally and internationally, among them the New York Photo Festival, Centrum for Fotografi in Stockholm, Ping Yao International Photography Festival in China, and the Prix de la Photographie Paris. The Portland Art Museum in Oregon, the George Eastman House in Rochester, NY and The Museum of
Fine Arts Houston have included his work in their permanent collections. He has received numerous awards for his photographs including The Hearst Photography Biennial award, Hasselblad Master Award, and the 2010 Alexia Foundation Photography Grant. Additionally, he was a semifinalist for the 2009 Janet & Walter Sondheim Prize.

Mark Parascandola (Washington, D.C.)

Mark Parascandola is a photographer based in Washington, D.C. A doctor of epidemiology by training, he uses photography to explore patterns of movement in human populations, focusing on architecture as evidence of often-invisible social, environmental and economic processes. Parascandola has family roots in the desert landscape of Almeria, Spain, and he is currently documenting the remains of old movie sets constructed in the region during the 1960s and 1970s. His work has been featured in galleries in the Washington, D.C. area including DC Loft, Nevin Kelly Gallery and the Metropolitan Center for the Visual Arts in Rockville and is among the collection of the DC Art Bank. He is an active member of both the Washington Project for the Arts, as well as Mid City Artists collective.

Matthew Porterfield (Baltimore, MD)

Born in Baltimore, MD, Matt Porterfield studied film at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts and currently teaches screenwriting, film theory and production at Johns Hopkins University. His first feature film, HAMILTON, which he wrote, directed and edited on 16mm film, was released in 2006. METAL GODS, his second feature script, won the Panasonic Digital Filmmaking Grand Prize at IFP’s 30th Annual Independent Film Week in 2008. In 2010, his latest film, PUTTY HILL, premiered at the Berlinale’s International Forum of New Cinema; and in February 2011, it was released by Cinema Guild. His films and videos have been screened in several venues and film festivals including AFI, The
Wexner Center, Centre Pompidou, the Swedish Film Institute, the George Eastman House, Viennale, Edinburgh and SXSW. Locally, Porterfield’s photographs have been shown at The Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore’s Current Gallery and Gallery 229. He has been awarded a media grant from the Maryland State Arts Council and was a Janet& Walter Sondheim Prize finalist in 2010.

Rachel Rotenberg (Baltimore, MD)

Growing up in Toronto, Canada, Rachel Rotenberg began making artwork very early in life. Focusing almost exclusively on sculpture, she received her bachelor of fine arts from York University in 1981. Shortly thereafter, she relocated to Williamsburg, Brooklyn, and settled on wood as her primary medium – ever since, she has continuously created abstract wooden sculptures while raising five children. In 1994, she moved to Baltimore and has actively exhibited her work in many area galleries, including the Greater Reston Arts Centerin Reston, VA, Baltimore’s Creative Alliance at the Patterson, Sub-Basement Galleries in Baltimore, the Bodzin Art Gallery in Northern Virginia and the Decker Gallery at the Maryland Institute College of Art. She was a recipient of a 2009 Creative Baltimore Individual Artist Award and was a 2010 Janet & Walter Sondheim Prize semifinalist.

Atelier x 3 at Fleckenstein Gallery Saturday, April 30



April 30 - June 30, 2011

Atelier x 3 is a studio comprised of Samantha Merrick, Nicole Parker and Nancy Scheinman. Scheinman has mentored Merrick and Parker through NS Studios, a Baltimore based design studio specializing in design, murals and installations for experiential learning environments for schools throughout the US. Through this process these three artists have developed an unique working relationship, sharing collaborative ideas, techniques, and experiences.

Each brings to this exhibition, their individual expression of creativity. Scheinman’s collage paintings reflect the myth of a purer past within the framework of a modernist grid. Inspired by a recent trip to Japan, her series of small works reflect upon her pilgrimage to Buddhist and Shinto Shrines. Her work has been included in Museum and Gallery exhibits throughout the world.

As an emerging artist, Merrick uses her own adventures and life's challenges to explore aspects of nature using graphic colors, shapes and patterns. Through her exploration of layering, subtle stories with intimate and spontaneous moments in life emerge.

Parker's landscapes bring attention to the current ongoing changes occurring in rural settings across the country. By comparing natural working farmland to eclipsing suburban developments, she endeavors to preserve an integral part of our history.

Please join us for an Opening Reception and Artist Talk, Saturday, April 30th, 5pm - 8pm
Fleckenstein Gallery & Archival Framing
3316 Keswick Road, Baltimore, MD 21211
410-366-3669 / www.fleckensteingallery.com
Tues.-Fri. 11am-7pm, Sat. 11am-6pm & by appointment

2011 Baker Artist Award Winners Announced

photo: Ken Hairston, Baltimore Sun

Congratulations to beatboxer Shodekeh, cellist Audrey Chen, and artist Gary Kachadourian for their $25,000 Baker Awards!



Audrey Chen is a Chinese-American musician and performance artist born outside of Chicago in 1976. Using the cello, voice and analog electronics, Chen’s work focuses on the combination and layering of traditional and extended techniques. A large component of her music is improvised and her approach to this is often extremely personal and visceral. Her performance work incorporates sound, movement and visual/sculptural concepts. Chen performs solo and in collaboration with a wide number of musicians and dancers. View her Baker Award Nomination here.




Shodekeh Talifero is a professional beatboxer & vocal percussionist currently working in the Baltimore, MD area & beyond. Boldly taking his craft wherever the passion for music brings him, he works in a number of artistic fields for Dance, Music, & the Visual arts. By channeling the concepts of various instruments & sound scapes, he vocalizes many dynamic emulations of everything from drum sets, turntables, ocean waves, to sleigh bells. These abilities & his keen musical adaptability have brought him far & wide across many genres & artistic traditions within a very short period of time, which has also allowed him to repeatedly become the first Beat Boxer/Vocal Percussionist to serve in array of creative settings. View Shodekeh's Baker Award Nomination here.



Gary Kachadourian worked for the Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts coordinating exhibitions and grants from 1987 to 2009. He currently is in the MFA program at UMBC and makes art in his suburban Baltimore home when not at school. View his Baker nomination here.