Contents for April 18, 2022
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1. Lucy Lippard, Bing Lee, Yong Soon Min, Carol Sun, FF Alumns, now online at BrooklynRail.org
2. Josh Baer, Guadalupe Maravilla, FF Alumns, now online theBaerFaxt.com
3. Kazuko Miyamoto, FF Alumn, at Japan Society, Manhattan, April 29-July 10
4. Tasha Douge, Arlene Rush, FF Members, now online
5. Joseph Nechvatal, FF Alumn, now online at theChurchofNoisyGoat.Bandcamp.com
6. Christy Rupp, FF Alumn, at Howl! Happening, Manhattan, opening April 21
7. Nancy Azara, FF Member, at Carter Burden Gallery, Manhattan, opening April 28
8. Dara Birnbaum, FF Alumn, at Hessel Museum, Bard College, Annandale on Hudson, NY,
June 25-Nov. 27
9. Murray Hill, FF Alumn, now online at BkMag.Com
10. Nicolás Dumit Estévez Raful, FF Alumn, now online at CCNY CUNY Dominican Studies Institute
11. Kiera Brew Kurec, FF Intern Alumn, live online with Bus projects, Yarra, Australia,
April 21-30
12. Amy Khoshbin, FF Alumn, at Governors Island, Manhattan, May 28-Oct. 30
13. Rev. Billy & Savitri D, now online in The Guardian
14. Priscilla Stadler, FF Member, Spring news
15. Nancy Azara, Rachel Frank, Kristin Jones, Patricia Miranda, Aviva Rahmani, Priscilla Stadler, Chin Chih Yang, FF Alumns, at Williamsburg Art & Historical Center, Brooklyn, opening May 7
16. Jerry Kearns, FF Alumn, at Studio Artego, Woodside, Queens, opening May 7
17. Nina Sobell, FF Alumn, at Southampton Arts Center, Southampton, NY, April 21-June 4
18. Barbara Rosenthal, FF Alumn, online at Denise Bibro Gallery, April 20-May 20
19. Louise Bourgeois, Wanda Raimundi Ortiz, Saya Woolfalk, FF Alumns, at Museum of Art and Design, Manhattan, thru Aug. 14
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1. Lucy Lippard, Bing Lee, Yong Soon Min, Carol Sun, FF Alumns, now online at BrooklynRail.org
Please visit the following link:
Thank you.
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2. Josh Baer, Guadalupe Maravilla, FF Alumns, now online theBaerFaxt.com
Please visit the following link:
https://thebaerfaxt.com/mental-health-maravilla/
Thank you.
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3. Kazuko Miyamoto, FF Alumn, at Japan Society, Manhattan, April 29-July 10
Please visit the following link:
Thank you.
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4. Tasha Douge, Arlene Rush, FF Members, now online
Please visit the following link:
For those who missed the talk, please visit the following link:
The Life of Iconic Artist and Health Advocate
Artist Talk with Arlene Rush and the Creative Center Facilitator Tasha Douge’
As a cancer survivor and artist, I wish to express my gratitude to this amazing organization for its contribution to the lives of so many of us who have lived with illness. Arlene Rush
Thank you.
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5. Joseph Nechvatal, FF Alumn, now online at theChurchofNoisyGoat.Bandcamp.com
Bode Gustav MA Bodes & The Church of Noisy Goat have re-released on Bandcamp my 1985 cassette album TRUE and FALSE ~ 2 long collage tracks that correspond to 2 sides of a half hour long cassette tape where I mixed ready made found sound samples from the 80’s No Wave NYC era https://thechurchofnoisygoat.bandcamp.com/…/true-and-false
best regards always
Joseph Nechvatal
Twitter: @twinkletwink
Facebook: Joseph Nechvatal
Instagram: @josephnechvatal
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6. Christy Rupp, FF Alumn, at Howl! Happening, Manhattan, opening April 21
Christy Rupp
Othered
April 21 – May 29
Howl! Happening
6 East 1st Street
New York City, NY 10003
An Installation of Sculpture and Works on Paper
Opening Reception: Thursday, April 21 / 6–8 PM
Howl! Happening is pleased to present Othered, a new installation integrating images and objects by artist, Christy Rupp. The conceptual underpinnings of her long career have consistently called attention to our interconnectedness with non-humans and habitat—transmuting urban detritus through collage, sculpture, public art, and activism to reveal what is hidden away from common view and understanding. A monograph on Rupp’s work, Noisy Autumn: Sculpture and Works on Paper, with essays by Lucy Lippard, Nina Felshin, Amy Lipton, and Carlo McCormick, and poetry by Bob Holman, was published in 2021 by Insight Editions.
As artists rummaged through the remnants of a crumbling city in the mid 1970s, Rupp developed an interest in urban ecology, noting that the city is an ecosystem with a delicate balance. Transforming that discovery, she created work at the intersection of performance and site, joining a stream of artists breaching the boundaries of the gallery system’s white box.
Subversive and prescient, her early intervention into the landscape during New York City’s garbage strike of 1979—when swarms of rats became the symbol of urban decay—“was a seminal episode in the emergence of street art and a paradigm of what urban art can tell us,” says writer Carlo McCormick. “But as much as the deluge of rubbish and rat attack may have constituted the kind of sensationalist scandal this town has always trafficked in, this was very much Rupp’s point—that rats, like the humans whose filth they have long thrived in, are denizens of the city, neither good nor evil, they simply are.” Her work is less concerned with representation of animals than with the framing of our attitudes toward habitat, and how we construct our opinions of nature.
In Othered, Rupp investigates topics including climate chaos, the industrialization of our food supply, and water pollution through the lens of Discard Studies, a discipline that examines the wider role of society and culture, social norms, and power on the waste stream. Her sculptures of birds, fish, mammals, and microorganisms made from plastic, commercial packaging, credit cards, and bits of industrial debris manifest the voices of invisible microbes and species long displaced. Using wall-scale collage, “she juxtaposes scenes of nature and industrial development with biological specimens and nature-based patterns that are stylized, tamed, and made decorative for human consumption,” says art critic Eleanor Heartney in a recent catalog.
Long before the climate crisis confronting us all was headline news, her work was “galvanized by climate chaos and other ecological nightmares,” says critic Lucy Lippard, “and she pioneered a down-to-earth urban eco art at a time when ecology was understood as politically peripheral and nostalgically wilderness-oriented.”
For Rupp, the materiality of the work—plastic debris and other recycled examples of our rampant consumerism—is “both the medium and the message,” and the subject of her practice points to issues that are current here and now.
https://www.howlarts.org/event/christy-rupp-othered/
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7. Nancy Azara, FF Member, at Carter Burden Gallery, Manhattan, opening April 28
VOTIVES
SCULPTURES
Nancy Azara
The Carter Burden Gallery presents Votives: Sculptures by Nancy Azara. The exhibition runs from April 28–May 25, 2022, at 548 West 28th Street in New York City.
Opening Reception: Thursday, April 28, 6-8pm; masks are required.
In Votives: Sculptures by Nancy Azara, the artist presents carved and painted sculptures from 2010 to the present that record a journey of ideas and memories around the unseen and the unknown, reflecting on time and mortality through facets of her personal history. Azara’s use of real tree limbs and vines alongside arboreal imagery act as stand-ins for her own presence and as expressions of the dogged persistence of life. Processes of pressing and rubbing, cutting, and pasting, scraping and gouging are evident throughout the finished images and objects. Azara states, “I often balance instinctive marks against more considered decisions, arriving at a dynamic interplay between the deliberate manipulation of materials and the operation of chance.” Along with her sculptural work, the exhibition features a heraldic crow banner hung in our public installation space On the Wall, depicting birds’ plumage, which can be exhibited indoors or outdoors.
A monograph of Nancy’s work, Votives: Sculptures, Nancy Azara, will accompany the exhibition. Please stay tuned for a book release party and performances in late May.
Carter Burden Gallery, 548 West 28th Street, #534, New York, NY 10001
(212) 564-8405; Gallery hours: Tues.-Fri.:11-5pm; Sat.:11-6pm
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8. Dara Birnbaum, FF Alumn, at Hessel Museum, Bard College, Annandale on Hudson, NY,
June 25-Nov. 27
Please visit the following link:
https://ccs.bard.edu/museum/exhibitions/695-dara-birnbaum-reaction
Thank you.
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9. Murray Hill, FF Alumn, now online at BkMag.Com
Please visit the following link:
https://www.bkmag.com/2022/04/11/murray-hill-podcast/
Thank you.
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10. Nicolás Dumit Estévez Raful, FF Alumn, now online at CCNY CUNY Dominican Studies Institute
Nicolás Dumit Estévez Raful at CCNY CUNY Dominican Studies Institute: Dominican Artists in the United States
https://library.artstor.org/#/collection/87732369
‘Dominican Artists in the United States’ is a digital project of the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute at The City College of New York devoted to disseminating the work of artists of Dominican descent living in the United States. This particular collection focuses on the artist Nicolás Dumit Estévez Raful, whose works gain permanence through audios, photographs, props, drawings, rumors, embodied memories, costumes, websites, videos and publications. For more information, visit: https://www.interiorbeautysalon.com/
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11. Kiera Brew Kurec, FF Intern Alumn, live online with Bus projects, Yarra, Australia,
April 21-30
I am excited to share with you a series of talks that I have programmed at Bus projects to accompany my performance which took place last week. Each talk will be taking place online and bookings can be made via Bus projects at : https://busprojects.org.au/program/archiving-the-temporal-emanate-discussions please note, all times listed is in Australian Eastern Standard Time.
The three panel discussions each address an area of performance archiving and bring together esteemed Australian and International performance practitioners, academics and historians over the month of April. The discussions encompass ritual as a basis for performance making, ethical reinterpretation/re-performance, and methodologies in performance archiving. These talks are facilitated by myself, generously hosted by Bus Projects and supported by the City of Yarra.
Sibyl Kempson and Tony Yap – Ritual and Performance
Thursday, April 21st, 5.30am
Thursday, April 21st, 7.30pm
In this discussion playwright and performer Sibyl Kempson joins dancer, director, choreographer and visual artist Tony Yap to discuss how ritual has informed their performance making. Facilitated by Kiera Brew Kurec the discussion will cover the influence of ritual and ceremony in Kempson’s work 12 Shouts to the Ten Forgotten Heavens, a three-year performance presented at the Whitney Museum of American Art between 2016 and 2018; and Yap’s research on Javanese trance practices and his subsequent work Shadow’s Light 2018 presented at Testing Grounds.
Salote Tawale, Hannah Raisin, and Eugenia Lim – Remembering Memory Screens
Thursday, April 28th, 6.30am
Thursday, April 28th, 8.30pm
Artist and curator Eugenia Lim along with artists Hannah Raisin and Salote Tawale join Kiera Brew Kurec to discuss Memory Screens, a performance event curated by Eugenia Lim and Laura Castagnini at ACMI in 2013 as part of Channels Video Art Festival. Raisin and Tawale and other artists reinterpreted notable performances from performance history including Carolee Schneemann’s Interior Scroll and Susan Mogul’s Dressing Up. The discussion will incorporate the ethics of re-performance, the program’s curatorial premise, and the artists personal process of re-interpretation and Rasin’s later exhibition of ephemera from the performance.
Cori Olinghouse, Amaara Raheem and Robert Lazarus – Methodologies in Performance Archiving
Friday, April 29th, 8.30pm
Saturday, April 30th, 10.30am
Artist, archivist and curator Cori Olinghouse, dance artist Amaara Raheem, and researcher Robert Lazarus join Kiera Brew Kurec to discuss alternate methodologies for performance archiving outside of photography and video. The discussion will explore embodied memory, communication of knowledge systems, audience and institutional responsibility, automated archiving and the processes and research outcomes of guests in their practice and/or research.
If these discussions are of interest to you I hope to see you in the Zoom!
Kiera Brew Kurec
She/Her
Artist
kierabrewkurec@gmail.com
I acknowledge and pay respect to the Gadigal people of the Eora nation, the traditional custodians of the land on which I live and work
Archiving the Temporal Talk Series is generously supported by the City of Yarra
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12. Amy Khoshbin, FF Alumn, at Governors Island, Manhattan, May 28-Oct. 30
The Arts Center at Governors Island
2022 Public Season
May 28 – Oct 30
Featuring exhibitions by
Amy Khoshbin and Jennifer Khoshbin, Elissa Blount-Moorhead and Bradford Young, and Simon Benjamin
LMCC is thrilled to announce that The Arts Center at Governors Island will re-open to the public on Saturday, May 28 with Sun Seekers, a site-specific exhibition with performances by Amy Khoshbin and Jennifer Khoshbin; Back and Song, a four-channel video installation by Elissa Blount-Moorhead and Bradford Young; and Pillars, a participatory sculpture installation by Simon Benjamin.
This season’s exhibitions center around ideas of healing, offering audiences a range of perspectives related to how we manage our experiences, individual and collective, and how we might find paths of recovery.
Exhibitions will run May 28 through October 30, with additional public programs to be announced. All programming and events at The Arts Center are free and open to the public, and all are welcome. Reservations will be available online on LMCC’s website at the beginning of May.
Amy Khoshbin and Jennifer Khoshbin
Sun Seekers
May 28 – October 30, 2022
Friday-Sunday, 12pm-6pm
July – August: Summer Friday and Saturdays, 10am-7pm, Sundays 10am-6pm
Open on Memorial Day (May 30), July 4, Labor Day (Sept 5)
Sun Seekers, created by sisters Amy Khoshbin and Jennifer Khoshbin, is a body of immersive installation, sculptural, and performance work meant to promote healing through disconnecting with technology and reconnecting with the natural world.
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13. Rev. Billy & Savitri D, now online in The Guardian
Dear Friends,
We have some VERY exciting news! The Guardian has nominated Rev. Billy & Savitri D as Climate Heroes. Their profile was featured in Down to Earth, a newsletter featuring the world’s biggest environment stories.
From The Guardian: The American climate evangelist Rev Billy Talen is a one-of-a-kind preacher. He began giving sermons to his Church of Stop Shopping after looking into the hazardous effects of a glyphosate pesticide called Roundup. Ever since then, he has rallied voices against their use in New York’s public parks.
For the past 20 years Talen has broadened his activism to include what he calls “capitalism’s attack on nature”. Alongside his partner Savitri D – “director of our arrest-risking actions and concert-hall performance” – he orchestrates sit-ins, lie-ins and ambushes against multinationals such as Monsanto, Exxon and Amazon.
“Savi and I write books, make movies and get arrested together,” he says.
Last year New York lawmakers voted to ban toxic pesticides from routine use by city agencies and switch to organic gardening techniques.
On Sunday afternoons, Talen’s 30-voice Stop Shopping Choir meets in a former East Village bank to sing the gospel. “Then,” he says, “we go out with the audience to occupy the lobbies of fossil banks or surround pesticide-spraying trucks in the parks and ‘exorcise’ them.”
Wearing his uniform of fluoro-coloured suit over a clerical collar, Talen intensified his work against the “shopocalype” after the 2016 election, when he led a prayer session outside Trump Tower. Since then he and Savi have performed with Extinction Rebellion and launched a podcast of sermons and music, which drops every Wednesday. Their 2021 Earth Riot Tour of the UK ended with two shows at COP26 in Glasgow.
During New York’s first Covid-19 lockdown the choir recorded an original choral work, composed by Talen to lyrics from Yeats’ the Second Coming, from each of their respective homes. You can find it on Soundcloud.
Earthalujah!
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14. Priscilla Stadler, FF Member, Spring news
EARTH DAY for Trees: Fungi
Thursday, April 21
United States: 10am PT, 11am MT, 12pm CT, 1pm ET
Europe:18:00 GMT Australia: 5am AEDT, Friday, April 22
Sarah Hearn, Megan Teutschel, Helena Elston, Priscilla Stadler
The entanglements of a forest are vast, complex and mysterious. Today artists seek to understand and express the interconnectedness of trees with all living beings. ecoartspace members included in the online exhibition and book Embodied Forest will share their diverse artworks and ideas about our human relationship with trees and forests. These four artists focus on fungi.
Co-sponsored by Joshua Tree Center for Photographic Arts
Members and one guest are free. General Public can attend for $10. All participants must register here: https://ecoartspace.org/event-4738703
and
Fair Share Art Auction: A Fundraiser for Ukraine
April 18 – 28, 2022
My drawing, Rooted 9, will be available as part of the auction. To bid, find us on instagram @fairshareartauction. Starting bid = $100. (Retail value = $560) Works by many amazing artists will be available at the auction.
We have vetted 3 organizations doing work to support Ukrainians in this crisis. 100% of proceeds from each work sold go to the organization selected by the winning bidder; this is a donation by the participating artists.
Website
© 2022 Priscilla Stadler, All rights reserved.
priscillastudio@gmail.com
https://www.priscillastadler.com/
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15. Nancy Azara, Rachel Frank, Kristin Jones, Patricia Miranda, Aviva Rahmani, Priscilla Stadler, Chin Chih Yang, FF Alumns, at Williamsburg Art & Historical Center, Brooklyn, opening May 7
Readings is an installation of collected ink paintings responding to science texts as a daily practice. Done during each of the 24 days of my recent residency at I-Park, this work is part of my new Intuitive Research Initiative. Each work is inscribed on the reverse with the quote from the random reading that inspired it. The installation will enable viewers to see both sides of the 24 works.
This installation will be featured in “Fragile Rainbow: Traversing Habitats” at the Williamsburg Art & Historical Center, an extensive exhibition of over fifty artist members of ecoartspace, an international platform for artists addressing environmental issues.
Exhibition Dates: Saturday, May 7 to Saturday, June 4, 2022
Public Opening Reception: Saturday, May 7, 3-5pm
Public Closing Reception: Saturday, June 4, 4-6pm
Location: WAH, 135 Broadway, Brooklyn, NY 11211
This exhibition aims to inspire visitors to view one’s environment as habitat and to realize one’s contribution to habitat.
Featuring work by:
Elizabeth Albert, M. Annenberg, L.C. Armstrong, Nancy Azara, Jeannine Bardo, Jude Norris – Bebonkwe, Lois Bender, Jean Brennan, Michele Brody, Diane Burko, Pamela Casper, Margaret Cogswell, Elisabeth Condon, Katie De Groot, Kate Dodd, Rosalyn Driscoll, Eliza Evans, Rachel Frank, Alice Garik, Tessa Grundon, andrea haenggi, Mara Haseltine, Kristin Jones, Natalya Khorover, Jennifer Kotter, Laurie Lambrecht, Rita Leduc, Stacy Levy, Lenore Malen, Claire McConaughy, Lauren Rosenthal McManus, Emmy Mikelson, Patricia Miranda, Seren Morey, Carol Padberg, Tracy Penn, Aviva Rahmani, Leah Raintree, Laziza Rakhimova, Bonnie Ralston, Lisa Reindorf, Eleni Smolen, Anne-Katrin Spiess, Priscilla Stadler, Linda Stillman, Mary Ann Strandell, Debra Swack, Sandra Taggart, Kate Temple, Deborah Wasserman, Riva Weinstein, Linda Weintraub, Stephen Whisler, Marion Wilson, Chin Chih Yang, Millicent Young
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16. Jerry Kearns, FF Alumn, at Studio Artego, Woodside, Queens, opening May 7
WHAT THE …? Jerry Kearns
May 3 – June 17, 2022
Opening Reception: Saturday, May7, 4:00 to 6:00pm
Join the Event
Studio Artego is pleased to announce an exhibition of recent works by New-York based artist Jerry Kearns.
Since the 1980s, Kearns’ images have explored a personal psychological narrative painted in the glare of the growing power of visual culture to shape the contents of our minds. The artist composes with cartoons, film, photography, television, social media, and fine art, as elements of an alphabet.
When composing the images for the 8 new paintings in this exhibition, Kearns juxtaposed flat/graphic figures within realistic environments. Thus, offering the viewer a formal mechanism which suggests a nature-based world populated by mediated personalities.
When painting, Kearns fuses fragments selected from the media flow to reflect the amalgamation of direct experience with mediated experience which has reshaped our reality over the past forty years. A new social identity has been and is being formed wherein we inhabit both sphere’s simultaneously.
“Before I became a painter, I was a conceptual artist, and then a cultural activist in NYC. Somewhere in that process, I decided to relate my personal narrative using the visual vocabulary our culture sells us to use when forming and describing ourselves. This has led to paintings that have been described as psychological history painting. I can live with that.” – Jerry Kearns
Jerry Kearns has exhibited across the Americas, Europe, and Asia since the 1980s. He has been featured many times in the New York Times, ARTnews, Artforum, and Art in America, among others. His paintings and prints are included in many museums and private collections, including the Museum of Modern Art (New York), Brooklyn Museum of Art (New York), the Metropolitan Museum (New York), The Whitney Museum of American Art (New York), The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (San Francisco)
Jerry Kearns Website: www.jerrykearns.com
Studio Artego Website: www.studioartego.com
Studio Artego is located at 32-88 48th street, Queens, NY, 11103. Please RSVP: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/jerry-kearns-solo-exhibition-what-the-opening-reception-tickets-321407517537?aff=ebdssbdestsearch hello@studioartego.com
Excited to welcome you, Studio Artego LLC.
Copyright © 2022 Artego LLC, All rights reserved.
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17. Nina Sobell, FF Alumn, at Southampton Arts Center, Southampton, NY, April 21-June 4
TECHSPRESSIONISM: DIGITAL AND BEYOND
Opening Reception
Sat. April 23, 6-8 PM
Southampton Arts Center
25 Jobs Lane, Southampton, New York 11968
Exhibition Dates:
April 21 – June 4
Fri – Sun 12-5 PM
Southampton Arts Center presents Techspressionism: Digital and Beyond, the first large-scale physical group exhibition of techspressionist artworks. The exhibition includes a selection of paintings, sculptures, NFTs, video works, animations, installation works and prints.
Notable contemporary artists included in Techspressionism: Digital and Beyond include Victor Acevedo, Suzanne Anker, Frank Gillette, Clive Holden, Patrick Lichty, Chalda Maloff, Paul D. Miller aka DJ Spooky , Steve Miller, Joseph Nechvatal, Michael Rees, Christine Sciulli, Nina Sobell, Anne Morgan Spalter and Nina Yankowitz. The term Techspressionism was coined in 2011 by artist Colin Goldberg and was first described as a movement in the WIRED article “If Picasso Had a MacBook Pro” in 2014.
Below are my two framed images that will be exhibited at Techspressions. In addition, my video Persistent Visions 3:00 (vimeo link) will be screened, and three NFTs will be presented virtually – you can view my NFTs on the Foundation website. Thank you!
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18. Barbara Rosenthal, FF Alumn, online at Denise Bibro Gallery, April 20-May 20
Conceptual Photoworks by Barbara Rosenthal will feature in the Denise Bibro Gallery “Art from the Boros” virtual exhibition April 20 – May 20. https://www.artsy.net/partner/denise-bibro-fine-art/artists/barbara-rosenthal
Rosenthal’s multi-part piece in this show will be “Surreal-to-Conceptual Wafting Connected: Sunrise from Plane Window, Montreal 2020.” The 13 x 19 collaged work was fabricated in an edition of six.“Art from the Boros IX is a digital presentation bringing together the work of ten artists.The mission of the exhibition is to seek and find the pulse of talent in the city that is often overlooked and underexposed,” said gallerist Denise Bibro. For more information, please contact info@denisebibrofineart.com or emedialoft@gmail.com.
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19. Louise Bourgeois, Wanda Raimundi Ortiz, Saya Woolfalk, FF Alumns, at Museum of Art and Design, Manhattan, thru Aug. 14
Garmenting: Costume as Contemporary Art at the MAD museum dynamically curated by Alexandra Schwartz. https://madmuseum.org/exhibition/garmenting-costume-contemporary-art
Artists include:
Xenobia Bailey (USA, 1955)
Raphaël Barontini (France, 1984)
Sanford Biggers (USA, 1970)
Karina Bisch (France, 1974)
Louise Bourgeois (France–USA, 1911–2010)
Zoë Buckman (United Kingdom, 1986)
Nick Cave (USA, 1959)
Enoch Cheng (Hong Kong, 1983)
Sylvie Fleury (Switzerland, 1961)
Jeffrey Gibson (Mississippi Band Choctaw/Cherokee, 1972)
Oliver Herring (Germany, 1964)
Lexy Ho-Tai (USA, 1993)
Jaamil Olawale Kosoko (USA, 1983)
Annette Messager (France, 1943)
Esmaa Mohamoud (Canada, 1992)
Kent Monkman (Cree/Canada, 1965)
Mark Newport (USA, 1964)
Raúl de Nieves (Mexico, 1983)
Wanda Raimundi Ortiz (USA, 1973)
Nazareth Pacheco (Brazil, 1961)
Sheelasha Rajbhandari (Nepal, 1988)
Hunter Reynolds (US, 1959)
Jacolby Satterwhite (USA, 1986)
Tanis S’eiltin (Tlingit, 1951)
Beverly Semmes (USA, 1958)
Devan Shimoyama (USA, 1989)
Yinka Shonibare CBE (Nigeria, 1962)
Mary Sibande (South Africa, 1982)
Jakkai Siributr (Thailand, 1969)
Vivan Sundaram (India, 1943)
Franz Erhard Walther (Germany, 1939)
Saya Woolfalk (Japan, 1979)
A young Yu (Korea, 1993)
Andrea Zittel (USA, 1965)
#alexandraschwartz
#Garmenting
#museumofartanddesign
#culture
#garmentasart
#craftinart
#craftincontemporaryart
#artandcraft
#clothing
#whatweputon
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After email versions are sent, Goings On announcements are posted online at https://franklinfurnace.org/goings-on/goingson/
Goings On is compiled weekly by Taylor Milefchik, FF Intern, Spring 2022
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