Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Camougraphy in Cartopolis: Works by Anna Fine Foer Reception December 4


Camougraphy in Cartopolis: A Solo Show by Anna Fine Foer
11 November-15 December
Maryland Hall for the Creative Arts Martino Gallery

Opening Reception: Sunday, December 4
Artist Talk: Thursday, December 8 noon-1 pm

Camougraphy in Cartopolis is an exhibition of map collage encompassing camouflage, topography, cartography, geography and the digital divide.

Foer says of her work, “My artwork is map collage that offers the viewer a combination of imaginary landscapes with mystical, scientific and ecological themes. The visual description of a three-dimensional world on a flat plane is conjoined with the depiction of the metaphysical. Maps that I incorporate into collages may be part of the regional, geographic, geological or religious narratives; boundaries may have been altered in hopes of furthering certain ends. Usually there is more than one story a map can convey. My work also has more than one story to tell. I may be trying to both describe the curve of the earth on a flat piece of paper and using maps to blur the boundaries between the natural and the manufactured/ technological world, representing simultaneously land, sky, water and architecture.

“Recently my work has incorporated images of mobile and technological devices. All pervasive in our society; cell phones, GPS, and hand held computers have become part of the land or cityscape,” adds Foer. “Integrating images of these devices allows me to further explore the relationship of the natural world and the man-made world and how we, as humans, navigate those worlds. To further that end, I have made imaginary archeological sites, using images of cell phones and digital photographs as the collage material.”

Foer decided she was going to be an artist at the age of 11 when she lived in Paris for a summer and visited every museum and gallery. As a fibers student at Philadelphia College of Art (now University of the Arts) she became fascinated by the relationship between maps and the land they represent, embarking on a lifelong interest in maps and collage. After emigrating to Israel, Foer worked as a textile conservator in Haifa and Tel-Aviv and studied at the Textile Conservation Centre, Courtauld Institute in London, where she received a Post-Graduate Diploma in Textile Conservation. After returning to the U.S., Foer worked in conservation for the Textile Museum in Washington, DC, and for many museum clients as a freelance textile conservator. At the same time, she continued to create map collage landscapes with sacred, political and meta-physical significance, depicting three or more dimensions on a two-dimensional plane.

A resident of Annapolis, Foer has had her work at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, the Maryland Governor’s Mansion, and the Israeli Embassy and is in the permanent collection of the Haifa Museum of Art and the Beer-Sheva Biblical Museum. She was awarded a prize for the Encouragement of Young Artists for work exhibited in the Artist’s House in Jerusalem and received a Maryland State Arts Council grant for Individual Artists in 2008. Her web site is located at www.annafineart.com.

The exhibition will remain on display until December 15.
The Galleries at Maryland Hall are open Monday through Saturday, 10 am to 5 pm and are located on the 2nd and 3rd floors of Maryland Hall, 801 Chase Street, Annapolis. For more information, go to www.marylandhall.org.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Urbanite Arts and Culture Ezine Feature: String Theory: Gulp Yarn Bang at School 33 Art Center




String Theory: Gulp Yarn Bang at School 33 Art Center presents a diverse range of artists reinventing yarn as a contemporary art medium. by Cara Ober

While most of us associate yarn with itchy homemade sweaters, knitting circles, or that unfortunate macramé home economics project circa seventh grade, contemporary artists are reinventing it as a new, cutting-edge art medium. On display at School 33 through December 23, Gulp Yarn Bang is a group exhibit of eleven artists—Heather Boaz, Gina Denton, Alex Ebstein, Clarissa Gregory, Sarah Matson, Jo Hamilton, Mindy Hirt, Ellen Nielsen, Courtney Puckett, Cat Sachse, and Anthea Zeltzman—who use yarn in a number of surprising and interesting ways.

Gina Denton #1

“Yarn is part of our human heritage,” says René Treviño, the curator of Gulp Yarn Bang. “We all share collective images of spinning wheels, afghan blankets, latch hook rugs, and rag doll hair. However, the line between fine arts and craft is becoming more and more blurred by contemporary artists, and yarn has become an important medium that many artists are incorporating into their work. The goal of this exhibit is to show a wide range of art objects that reference our traditional notions of yarn while also taking the medium to exciting new places.”

Jo Hamilton Portrait of Corey Hopper

The use of yarn is historically based in craft techniques, often handed down from one generation to the next. Several of the artists in Gulp use yarn in a traditional way—weaving, sewing, crocheting—to create products which are decidedly nontraditional. Gina Denton's soft sculptures embrace the sewing, felting, and stuffing techniques to create “alien” objects. Roughly the size of a stuffed animal in a range of bright, warm colors, Denton wants her works to be inviting; she wants viewers to touch and hold them, and describes their abstract and sometimes grotesque forms as “adult baby toys.” Another artist in the show, Jo Hamilton, uses yarn and a crochet hook to create highly realistic portraits in two dimensions. Hamilton works from her own photos and, despite their Photoshopped look, uses no computers, or even sketches, in her intuitive process. Using only traditional crochet techniques, Hamilton works one knot at a time, from the inside out, and row-by-row. Each portrait is larger than life and takes the artist about a month to complete. Due to their high degree of technical intricacy, these three portraits are among the most compelling works in the show.

A few artists in Gulp use yarn as an inside joke with their viewers, playing on past experiences with kitsch craft and commodity culture. Heather Boaz's humorous series of photographic yarn portraits depict five different people, each transformed by yarn. In one image, a close-up view of a man's face, brown yarn has been used to create a thick beard and mustache. He looks like an odd hybrid of Muppet and man. In another, tan yarn completely covers the subjects face, like spaghetti. And in a third, the subject is shown in profile, apparently sneezing a giant cloud of twisting, slime-green yarn. All of these scenes are shot in a clear, no-nonsense style, on a simple gray background, which curbs their silliness to a reasonable level.

Heather Boaz 'Dave'

Like Boaz, Anthea Zeltzman's knitted, three-dimensional logs function like a drawn-out inside joke. Arranged in three piles, reminiscent of a fireplace, Zeltzman's logs vary in color and size and invite touching and giggling. Another artist, Ellen Nielsen, uses giant yarn pompoms in videos that are both funny and visually arresting. By amplifying traditional elements of craft, like sequins and pompoms, Neilson uses humor to explore feminist and queerist perspectives, as well as to “assert the value of girl culture and traditionally feminine craft practices.”

Several of the artists in Gulp go in a different direction—they basically ignore the cultural associations with yarn and, instead, exploit its physical characteristics as a visual element. Mindy Hirt's string installation, covering a wall and ceiling in the side gallery, is a visually stunning and complex whirlwind of twine. From certain angles, Hirt's installation disappears, and from others, a chaotic, angular web of string careens out in every direction. Both visually delicate and overwhelming, Hirt's work highlights the versatility of her media, as well as the unique architecture of the gallery with which it interacts.

Anthea Zeltzman 'Soft Logs'

Alex Ebstein is another artist using yarn for abstract, compositional purposes; she draws and paints with the material, often layering it into concentric, textural layers and waves. In three smallish mixed media works that read like paintings, Ebstein creates bold and curious contrasts between bright and dull colors, slick and matte surfaces, as well as areas of implied texture with actual. Ebstein's tight, symmetrical compositions reference framing elements or letters of the alphabet, and she uses “auto-striped” and “self-patterning” yarns to create additional levels of volume, variety, and pattern.

Alex Ebstein 'Soft Sediment'

Courtney Puckett also employs yarn and fabric in a sophisticated, formal way. Although her sculptural forms are inspired by the textiles and décor of her childhood home, she transforms them into simplified, abstract compositions. Hung together in an arrangement on the wall, Puckett's construction of wrapped, braided, and fringed yarn is vaguely reminiscent of domestic objects and devices, but functions visually without any associations, as a curious and complex arrangement of color, texture, and form.

For knitting hobbyists and painting majors alike, Gulp Yarn Bang presents an appealing mix of technique, content, and visual complexity. It encompasses such a wide variety of approaches and skill sets, it guarantees to engage, impress, surprise, and educate contemporary viewers about an age-old material which is finding a new heyday. The exhibit is up in the Main Gallery at School 33 Art Center through December 23, 2011.

Contemporary Printmakers: Artist Talk at the BMA December 3


Sat, Dec 3, 2 PM
Artist Talk: Contemporary Printmakers
FREE FOR ALL

Award-winning artists Daniel Heyman and Andrew Raftery discuss their work with master printer Brian Garner, founder of the Litho Shop, a fully equipped printmaking studio in Baltimore. Both artists are known for prints that explore the range of the human experience, from portraits of prisoners to people's private environments. Participate in this engaging conversation by posting your questions to www.facebook.com/artbma by December 3.



Heyman's work has been exhibited in major institutions across the country and has been acquired by prominent collections. He is a 2010 Guggenheim Fellow in fine arts and a 2009 Pew Fellowship in the Arts recipient.

Raftery trained in painting and printmaking at Boston University and Yale. His work has been exhibited internationally and is held in many private and public collections. He is currently a Professor of Printmaking at Rhode Island School of Design.

After the Artist Talk - Stay for a special reception in Fox Court. Network with artists and art lovers while enjoying seasonal treats. Signed books will be available for purchase.

Certainly So opens December 2 at PentHouse Gallery



Certainly So
Works by David Eassa, Louis Abbene-Meagley, Kevin Jennings, and Taylor Black

Opening Reception: Friday, December 2 from 7-10 pm
PentHouse Gallery, Copycat Building
1501 Guilford Ave. Apt B501

Marty Weishaar's Match Box Heaven





Marty Weishaar: SEA I MADe IT
Rosenberg Gallery at Goucher College
Exhibit Dates: October 25 through December 4, 2011

In Sea I MADe IT, Marty Weishaar forms symbolic relationships between traditional and nontraditional materials with various historical approaches, such as intuitive abstraction and conceptualism. Connections are made-between two-dimensional and three-dimensional projects, battle ships, systematic abstract paintings, diarist drawings, airplanes, and bridges.






From the exhibition catalogue: Geometric abstraction, paintings, and installation. Organized together, sharing space, each element evaluates, mirrors, and criticizes the other-there is no hierarchy of materials, or of symbols, or between drawing, painting, and sculpture, so each system points out the strengths and the pitfalls of the other.

Sea I MADe IT is not just a play of craftily made projects, but an exercise in finding linear and nonlinear organizational strategies between high art and craft. It is an exhibition of the process, the product, and the attitude. It is a rearranging of the discourse between style and technique-text to ships to abstraction; sculpture to drawing to painting; high art and craft.










Shop Locally at Holiday Heap and Merry Mart This Weekend


HOLIDAY HEAP 2011
December 3rd, 2011 - 10am to 5pm
2640 St Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21218, inside St John's Church

This year's fair will have 60 of the best local and national crafters, as well as a yarn-spinning demonstration by Three Ravens and a raffle to win a huge basket full of goodies by supporting Arts Every Day! Check the blog to see vendor interviews and raffle basket sneak peeks. GrrChe, a local food truck, will be outside for lunch and snacks.


MERRY MART Holiday Craft Market
Sun Dec 4, 11am-5pm
Creative Alliance at the Patterson

Made in Charm City gifts! Jen Menkhaus and Allison Fomich host an amazing show with clothing, handbags, ceramics, soaps, kids' toys, mixed media, amazing jewelry, and great art! Indie crafters from the Charm City Craft Mafia, the Baltimore Etsy Street Team (BEST), and more from across Bmore! Food on sale by BlackSauce Kitchen.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Two Events at Guest Spot - December 3 & December 9

image: Carl Gunhouse Kids, Sunland Park, NM 2011


CLOSING ARTISTS BRUNCH for BOUNDARY PROOF
Saturday December 3rd 2011 1pm-5pm
Works by: Gina Dawson Carl Gunhouse Cyle Metzger

Boundary Proof is a group exhibition that features three artists whose works address cultural use of border limitations, and the ability to navigate beyond and challenge specific cultural red lines. Each in their own right justifies expectations associated with their subject and examines contextual and metaphoric limitations, thus pushing past preconceived ideas.

Labels such as “rebel”, “freak” and “prophet” mainly serve to marginalize, thus reinforcing preconceived ideas about cultural boundaries. As didactic as one may be about transformation and innovation, programmatic barriers are still usually fully encouraged, driven by apprehension of existing restrictions. The line is drawn in the sand not to casually walk over, and it is the strained relationship between boundaries that one must supersede. In order to maintain a viable state, keeping up the appearance of boundaries and borders cultivates a close relationship with the opposition, creating a unique exchange that is anything but unpoetic.

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image: Jean Alexander Frater, Learning to write with my left hand. 2010


OPENING FOR STRANGE MAGIC
Opening Reception: Friday December 9, 2011 7pm-10pm
Curated by: Skye Gilkerson
Works By: Jean Alexander Frater, James Johnson, Jassie Rios, Oscar Scantillan.

As protesters congregate in cities around the world, it’s clear that economic and political frustrations are cresting, and many people long for change. Common access to tools and media allows new perceptions to grow, and kindles the desire for collective and individual empowerment. Four artists with divergent practices wave their magic wands to create transformations of all kinds. Embracing wonder and surprise, they challenge reality through interventions to everyday life, shift perspectives through adaptations to architecture and space, and question what is malleable by attempting transformations of the self.

Strange Magic
December 9, 2011 – January 21, 2012
Closing Artist Brunch: Saturday January 21 1pm-5pm
Hours: Saturdays 1-5pm & Wednesdays 5-7pm or by appointment

Director Rod Malin
G U E S T S P O T
1826 Fleet Street
Baltimore, MD 21231

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Paper Chasers Closing Reception Saturday, Nov. 26 from 6-9 p.m.




PAPER CHASERS at Nudashank
A group show of works on paper on view through November 26th

Closing Reception: Saturday Nov. 26th, 6 - 9pm

View installation photos HERE

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Giving Thanks: Ten Baltimoreans propelling the city's arts scene forward.


New Thanksgiving Reading from the Urbanite Arts and Culture Ezine - Movers and Shakers: Ten Baltimoreans propelling the city's arts scene forward.

by Cara Ober

It's that time of year where we take a moment to give thanks for all the good things in life. If you are an artist, musician, author, or actor in Baltimore, or a fan of these pursuits, chances are you've encountered more than a few of the individuals listed below. Each one has weighed in on the issues in a past Ask the Artist Questionnaire, a staple of every Arts and Culture E-Zine, and allowed Urbanite readers a rare opportunity to learn about them on a personal level, in their own words.

I consider myself fortunate to live in a town where such bright, accomplished, hardworking, and, also, hilarious people live and work. This week I chose ten interviews to highlight, giving Urbanite readers another chance to appreciate these cultural movers and shakers.

To read the 10 different interviews, http://www.urbanitebaltimore.com/baltimore/movers-and-shakers/Content?oid=1465587.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Happy Turkey Day!

Happy Thanksgiving! Words of inspiration below...


Jon Stewart: "I celebrated Thanksgiving in an old-fashioned way. I invited everyone in my neighborhood to my house, we had an enormous feast, and then I killed them and took their land."

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

MFA Exhibitions at Towson University November 18 - December 17


Towson University MFA Thesis Exhibitions
November 18 - December 17, 2011

Criselle Anderson: I'm Discreet But I'll Haunt Your Dreams
Callandra S. Cook: Collections and Accumulations
Rusean Myers: The Truest Test - A Visual Exploration of the American Father

Center for the Arts
Holtzman MFA Gallery



Monday, November 21, 2011

Material Girls reviewed in Art in America!



BALTIMORE “Material Girls: Contemporary Black Women Artists” at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture offers a glimpse of the sculptural practices of eight artists hailing from the mid-Atlantic region of the United States. The exhibition brings together a selection of 40 objects and installations by Chakaia Booker, Sonya Clark, Torkwase Dyson, Maya Freelon Asante, Maren Hassinger, Martha Jackson-Jarvis, Joyce J. Scott and Renée Stout. A tour de force of textures, colors and shapes, these tactile works range from small-scale and intricate—Scott’s Virgin Water (2000), a luminous glass sculpture made of beads and metalwork—to large-scale: Hassinger’s Love (2008), a buoyant, wall-hugging pyramid of inflated bubble-gum pink plastic bags containing paper love notes that climbs 20 feet from floor to ceiling.

The modest catalogue and wall texts both delineate each artist’s inheritance of craft-based practices by highlighting her family history and link her subject matter to Africa and the black diaspora. Clark’s Thread Wrapped (2008) weaves together colorful thread and simple black plastic combs (like those dispensed for school photographs) to produce a 4-by-5-foot tapestry that echoes West African kente cloth, while Dyson’s 1-by-2-foot Untitled (West African mask, V-8 Model engine, and bling T-shirt), 2008, an oblong assemblage that resembles an African mask, conflates disparate sources, including a model car engine and hip-hop paraphernalia.

The installations and sculptures by Stout are among the strongest in the exhibition. The Thinking Room (2005) is a reduced version of a space in the artist’s home; it is a colorful domain for her alter ego, the psychic Fatima Mayfield. The bright red walls cluttered with amateur painted and photographic portraits, African masks, crucifixes, wigs, a Byzantine icon, a Buddhist sculpture and other objects wrap around a boudoir furnished with a plush yellow velvet loveseat, acid green silk pillows, gilded wooden tables, mule slippers and myriad jars of herbal remedies and potions. This approximately 10-foot-square room exudes the power of female spiritual and curative practices that cross cultural boundaries. In contrast stands Stout’s Ogun’s Bed (1998), a sparse but quietly authoritative wall sculpture measuring 4 by 6 feet and resembling a rusty bed frame. Rather than evoking a restful place of slumber, this metal lattice bordered by chains hosts such objects as shovels, shackles, hinges and a hatchet, alluding to unspecified histories of violence in the name of the Yoruba god of iron.

“Material Girls” underscores various influences in many black women’s lives, from basket-weaving and quilting to the diasporic condition, spiritual worship and the natural world. But perhaps in asserting racial and gender-based explanations for the artists’ choices in the show’s supporting materials, the exhibition runs the risk of undermining the value of the works as part of a larger conversation about contemporary art.

Photo: View of Renée Stout’s installation The Thinking Room, 2005; in “Material Girls” at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum. To see the original post at Art in America dot com click here.

Paul Chaat Smith Monday, November 28 at 7 pm


Paul Chaat Smith
Monday, November 28, 7 pm
Brown Center: Falvey Hall, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave.

Paul Chaat Smith is a Comanche author and curator whose work focuses on the contemporary landscape of American Indian politics and culture. Smith joined the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian in 2001, where he currently serves as associate curator. He is the co-author of Like a Hurricane: the Indian Movement from Alcatraz to Wounded Knee, a standard text in Native studies and American history courses, and author of Everything You Know about Indians Is Wrong. He served as creative consultant for the PBS television series. We Shall Remain: A Native History of America. This talk is sponsored by the Humanities Department. His residency is made possible by the MFA in Curatorial Practice and Rinehart School of Sculpture programs with the support of the Center for Race and Culture.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Premiere of 'tempest in a bedroom' at MICA, November 21 @ 7 pm

Monday, November 21
7-9 p.m., MICA, Brown Center 320
Free Admission


Laurence Arcadias and Juliette Marchand will screen their short comedy, which began in Baltimore and was shot last year in France. The film pokes fun at class struggles and sexual attraction, and how unleashing desire can lead to a tempest. 

We'll begin with a quick history of animation, followed by a presentation of the making of the film. The filmmakers will discuss behind-the-scenes actions, how stop-motion is made, how armatures and puppets were built for this film, green-screen compositing and special effects, and the use of actors for puppets' faces.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

New Urbanite Ezine Feature: Half a millennia of printmaking, on display at the Baltimore Museum of Art

Roy Lichtenstein. Haystack #3. Screenprint.


Print Matters: Big names like Albrect Dürer, Pablo Picasso, and Marcel Duschamp hang side by side with contemporary printmakers in the BMA's new exhibit, Print by Print. by Cara Ober

Andrew Raftery. Open House Series. Engraving.

If you've ever shopped for real estate, Andrew Raftery's Open House: Five Engraved Scenes, 2008 are all too familiar. Or are they? The large McMansion interiors have been adorned with fresh flowers and the countertops sparkle. Window light streams into the large rooms, while attractive couples inspect the appliances and open closet doors. In one scene, a man wears a smiling baby on his chest, and, in another, interested buyers converse and linger near a gleaming grand piano. It's all too perfect, and Raftery's clean, engraved lines and photorealitic detail reinforce the over-idealized scenario. Reminiscent of the Stepford Wives, Raftery's images are eerie in their perfection and oddly plastic. More importantly, they serve as a fractured mirror for the housing market in America today. As the American Dream of home ownership becomes more and more remote for many, Raftery's sleek environments become, more and more, a bittersweet fantasy.

Raftery's series of five disparate images are in good company in the Baltimore Museum of Art's newest survey exhibition from the permanent collection, titled Print by Print: Series from Dürer to Lichtenstein. The exhibit examines the practice of serial printmaking, a process that has stayed remarkably consistent over the past five hundred years. Like last year's huge photography exhibit, Seeing Now, this show covers a lot of ground. However, while critics of Seeing complained of overcrowding and a surface approach to certain individual works, this exhibit is limited to just twenty-nine artists and emphasizes a breadth of expression from each. Displayed in one complete series, their works include historical approaches to printmaking like woodcut, engraving, etching, as well as more contemporary practices, like lithography and screen-printing.

There are a variety of reasons why printmakers throughout history have worked in series. Sometimes the intent is narrative, with each consecutive print illustrating scenes from a story. Other reasons for creating multiple images around a common theme are purely visual. As the artist works out an idea, testing out different versions and approaches, the idea transforms and grows. Each complete series, whether it includes five versions or fifty, allows the viewer a unique insight into the artist's process. While serial printmaking is not unusual, exhibiting in series is. It is much more typical for an artist to select the strongest image or two for exhibit, so it is a real treat to see a few clunkers in the mix—and to gain a more complete picture of the way artists work through their ideas—rather than giving the impression of simply arriving at a masterpiece.

Ed Ruscha. News. Color Screenprint.

The exhibit starts out on a curious note, with two series composed of experimental materials. Ed Ruscha's six color screen prints, News, Mews, Pews, Brews, Stews, and Dues, 1970, depicts each word in an Old English typeface on a blank background. These particular words were chosen by the artist to communicate essential English qualities. What is particularly unusual about this series is Ruscha's use of food items as pigment, including axle grease over caviar, blackcurrant pie filling over red salmon roe, Bolognese sauce, mango chutney, daffodils, and Branston pickles. Like the words they depict, the materials directly represent what it means to be British. The colors created by these “inks” are subtle, ranging from tan, to beige, to yellow, to almost black. A counterbalance for Ruscha's series, Marcel Duschamp's circular discs, Twelve Rotoreleases, 1935, were originally intended to be spun, creating a sense of three-dimensional space. Record-sized and emblazoned with colorful, swirling patterns, the discs were not a critical success at the time, but Duschamp's offset lithographs were successfully used by doctors to help restore three-dimensional vision to patients who had lost sight in one eye.

Albrecht Dürer. Vision of the Seven Candlesticks. Woodcut print.

Along more traditional lines, Albrecht Dürer is possibly the most significant name in the history of printmaking. His sixteen-part series, The Apocalypse, printed in 1511, embodies all the techniques that established his fame. Initially intended as illustrations for an original book, Dürer's woodcut prints interpret the Book of Revelations with such innovation, both technical and creative, it is not difficult to understand how they have achieved such an iconic status. Despite their age, Dürer's prints retain a contemporary feel. Like many artists today, the artist blends fantasy with reality in intricate detail, and mixes the illusion of three dimensionality with flat, illustrative space.

However famous the Dürer prints, the centerpiece of Print by Print is a wall of forty pochoirs, or color stencils, titled Compositions, Colors, Ideas by Sonia Delaunay. The portfolio of prints was commissioned by Editions d’Art Charles Moreau in 1930. Displayed in a vertical grid on a tall museum wall, it’s a charming array of visual movement and color. The artist, along with her husband Robert Delaunay, used this series to develop the concept of simultaneity, which used bright color contrasts to create a sense of visual movement. These simple, lyrical abstractions became a popular pattern book, and have been used by countless textile designers as a basis for fabric and wallpaper designs.

Sonia Delaunay. Plate 36. Color Stencil. 

Another standout series of prints, and there are many in this exhibit, are eight Drypoint Etchings by contemporary artist Daniel Heyman. Titled The Amman Project, 2006, each print depicts a different man in a spindly, cartoonish style and includes rambling handwritten texts in the background. When you read the quotes, their initial light-hearted impression changes drastically. “We were asked to undress, and stayed under the hot sun for hours, hand-cuffed,” reads one titled Our Eyes Were Covered With Plastic Wraps. “We were not guilty of anything. If I had done something, I would have been proud, but we had not done anything.” The artist created these portraits on site in Amman, Jordan, during interviews between American lawyers and former prisoners of the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. As each man gave graphic accounts of their torture by U.S. guards, the artist struggled to capture not only their physical likeness, but also their words. This series of prints gives a voice to the victims of torture, and also educates Americans about the atrocities committed in their name.

Sonia Delaunay. Plate 24. Color Stencil.

Much of Print by Print includes more traditional topics, like landscapes, classical allegory, and historical narratives. There is enough variety to satisfy a diverse public, and famous names, like Pablo Picasso, Roy Lichtenstein, and Julie Mehretu, are present along with new discoveries, like Italian soldier Lorenzi Fabius and German pianist Max Klinger.

Daniel Heyman. Our Eyes Were Covered. Drypoint Etching.

Prints, in general, tend to be small and this exhibit could have been a dizzying array of small, same-sized frames. However, by physically grouping each series into a larger body, this pitfall was neatly avoided. Another potential problem this exhibit carefully sidestepped is a chronological approach, which would present works as a timeline and allow viewers to focus on their comfort zones, while ignoring the rest. Instead, curator Rena Hoisington used a thematic approach, where prints from different time periods gain depth and relevance from one another, enhanced by the general themes of narrative, design, places, imagination, appropriation, and war.

As a follow up, contemporary printmakers Daniel Heyman and Andrew Raftery will be at the BMA Saturday, December 3, at 2 p.m. to discuss their work with master printer Brian Garner and BMA visitors.

To read the original article at the Urbanite Website, and other Arts and Culture features, click here.