Pop-Up Gallery Looking for Assistant
Immediate job opportunity for work at a pop-up gallery for 2 months, through April, Weds-Sun 11-6. On the upper east side, right near the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Primary duty would be to sit at the front desk and greet visitors, probably the sole staff person on site most of the time so ideally a personality suited to that task. If interested please contact Janna Bullock, [email protected].
Museum of Art, Fort Lauderdale, Nova Southeastern University
Primordial:
Paintings and Sculpture by
Isabel De Obaldia
http://www.moafl.org/exhibits/deobaldia.html
Sept. 25, 2011-May 27, 2012
Essay by Susan Aberth:
Emissaries from the Primordial Realms: The Presence of Pre-Columbian and Indigenous Art in the Work of Isabel De Obaldia
Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art, SUNY New Paltz
Eugene Ludins: An American Fantasist
Curated by Susana Torruella Leval
February 11 — July 12, 2012
Catalog includes an essay by
Tom Wolf, Art History, Bard College
Opening Reception:
Friday, February 10, 2012, 5-7 pm
Circa 1971
Circa 1971
Early Film & Video from the EAI Archive
September 17, 2011 – September 4, 2012
Curated by art history alumna Lori Zippay ’80, Executive Director of Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI) on the occasion of EAI’s 40th anniversary.
DIA: BEACON
Riggio Galleries
3 Beekman Street, Beacon, New York
www.diaart.org/circa1971
www.eai.org
Gallery Talk with Lori Zippay: Saturday, February 11th at 2:00 pm
Update from our Fulbright Scholar
Rachel Heidenry, ’11, received a Fulbright Fellowship to study murals in El Salvador. She recently emailed an update: “I split my time between San Salvador, the westernized capital, and Suchitoto, a small town about two hours north. In San Salvador, I tend to hop on the bus with my camera concealed in my backpack and head to spots where I know murals are. Once there, I photograph the murals from every angle and ask whoever I can for information. Often I just come across sprayed or painted walls, mostly graffiti or tags, documenting them through photography without knowing too much about their origins. In Suchitoto, life is much more laid-back. Based at the Centro Arte para la Paz (http://capsuchitoto.org/en/), I taught two drawing classes twice a week from October-December. One group was of young women, incredibly patient and eager to learn. The other was a mix of 10-12 yr olds (mostly boys) who struggled to draw for 2 hours without also practicing wrestling moves. Either way, it was a lot of fun and we ended the year with a final exhibition of students’ self-portraits while feasting on chocolate-carmel donuts.
So far, I have photographed over 300 painted walls, including fine art murals, community murals, graffiti, tags, advertisements, and political propaganda. I’ve conducted 3 formal interviews with established Salvadoran muralists, helping one get a commission to paint in Suchitoto. Informally, I have had countless conversations with Salvadorans about art and memory, finding support in my research and ideas. I also had the opportunity to design and paint a mural with a group of youth in Copapayo for the anniversary of the town’s massacre. This is just a little update to share with you all. I’m leaving out the countless pupusas, latin dance classes, and sponge-bob piñatas, but it is still a taste of my daily life and research. Also, please look at my photography blog (rheidenry.wordpress.com)
Alum’s Outsider Art Project
Clare Conniff’s Post-Grad ’11 Project
My whole life I have watched my grandfather, Jim Conniff, create weird and
wacky, but beautiful, art. When I was young I just thought of it as something he did for fun. I never realized how truly wrong I was until my last semester at Bard, when I took a course entitled “Outsider Art” with Susan Aberth. In the class Susan taught us about artists, usually termed outsider, folk, naïve, or visionary, that were removed from the accepted art world. The separation could be compulsory, as for artists in mental asylums or prisons, or it could be self-imposed. I spent most classes thinking about how much everything Susan was teaching us seemed applicable to my grandfather, who is now 91 years old, and his art. After graduation, I began to look more closely at my grandfather’s work. After he finished a piece, he would place it somewhere in his home, and for the most part, they remained wherever he put them, gathering dust, and, in some cases, breaking, until I started poking around. I took some pictures, asked him some questions, and eventually decided that I needed to do something about the rapid and ongoing decay of the art that had been sitting around his house for decades.
In order to raise money to preserve Jim’s art, I have started a fundraising campaign on a website called Kickstarter, a platform for funding creative projects through many small donations from varied sources. I am trying to raise funds in order to preserve Jim’s art. With the donations I receive, I will repair and clean the pieces, catalogue them, create a book, and interview Jim on camera. You can view my Kickstarter campaign at http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1050509672/the-accidental-artist and read more about the project at theaccidentalartist.tumblr.com. The Kickstarter closes on January 22, and if I haven’t reached my goal of $5000, I will not receive any of the donations. Please check out my project and consider supporting it in whatever way you are able. Whether that means donating $10, $100, or just simply passing on the link to someone you think might be interested, thank you. I truly appreciate any help you can give me.
Wolf to Lecture
Prof. Tom Wolf will give a talk entitled “Isami Doi and Asian American Artists in New York Between the World Wars” at the Arts and Humanities Conference sponsored by the University of Hawaii, Monday, January 10, 2011.
Announcement
Patricia Eichenbaum Karetzky, has published in the Yishu, Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art, November/December 2011 issue, “Xu Yong’s This Face,” an article about Xu Young’s latest works marking his continued concern for the plight of prostitutes in China.