Showing posts with label art exhibition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art exhibition. Show all posts

Friday, April 28, 2017

Waiting to Catch the Sun - Solo Exhibition by Hong Hong



Join Hong Hong for the opening reception of her first solo exhibition, Waiting to Catch the Sun, at Five Points Gallery in Torrington, CT. It features a series of large-scale, poured paperworks created in Georgia, Connecticut, and New York between 2014 and 2017.

Show Dates: May 11 to June 17, 2017
Opening Reception: Friday, May 12, at 6 PM.
Artist Talk: Friday, June 2, at 6 PM.

Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Pulp As Portal: Socially Engaged Hand Papermaking and More at Center for Book Arts in NYC


Pulp as Portal: Socially Engaged Hand Papermaking
February 3 – April 8, 2017

As an extension of the broad survey Social Paper, co-curated by Jessica Cochran and Melissa Potter in 2014, Pulp as Portal adds to growing discourse around the contemporary art of hand papermaking as socially engaged art. The exhibition reveals the artist’s book—specifically bookworks, publications, zines and printed matter—as both artwork and outcome: How do hand papermakers today animate the ethos of social engagement, activism, community, and collectivity in the processes they employ to make paper? How are these ideas at play and embodied in the resulting books and printed matter?

As an important emergent genre of the new century, socially engaged art, or, social practice, is broadly characterized by artists’ emphasis on community, democracy, social change, participation and, in the case of hand papermaking, pedagogy. While bookmaking, printmaking and hand papermaking have long been deeply intertwined as creative practices that naturally lend themselves to collaboration, we are seeing more recently the idea of “the collective” purposefully and reflexively embraced and incorporated by hand papermakers beyond the studio, both in process and product. This is manifest specifically through community-based workshops, papermakers’ gardens, grassroots libraries and participatory installations, and it is happening internationally.

Through such platforms, artists can creatively assert, through collaborative craft, the deep relevance of conviviality, skill sharing and the printed word in an increasingly paperless, technology-driven world.

Artists include: Kevin Basl, Book Bombs/Michelle Wilson & Mary Tasillo, Laura Anderson Barbata, Stephanie Barrale and Michael Dunican, Drew Cameron, Combat Paper Projects, Greg Delanty, Megan Diddie, Angela Fegen, Fresh Press at the University of Illinois, Julia Ann Goodman, Megan Heeres, Karen Heft & Alan Govenar, Helen Hiebert, Tatana Kellner, Alison Knowles, Nathan Lewis, Love Positive Women, Margaret Mahan, Drew Matott, Papermaker’s Pack/Jillian Bruschera & Maxum Bruschera, Alva Mooses, Jeffrey Morin, Heidi Neilson & Chris Patrone, Peace Paper, The People’s Paper Co-op/ Mark Strandquist & Courtney Bowles, The Poetry Foundation/Nick Dubois, Melissa Potter, Robert Possehl, Dallas Price, Maggie Puckett, John Risseeuw, Seeds InService, Megan Singleton, Peter & Donna Thomas, and others.

In support of this exhibition the Center will be hosting two free workshops: 
Keeping The Fire Alive – A Collaborative Pulp Printing Discussion with Book Bombs March 4th and Papermake Manhattan with Chicago 77 April 1st. All are welcome to participate, but space is limited to the first 20 registrants. Please register by clicking the links above to the workshop pages.

The following panel discussions relating to hand papermaking, history, activism, and paper's haptic qualities are offered in conjunction with the exhibition.

Paper as Vehicle for History and Memory
Friday March 3, 6:30 pm
Panelists: John Bidwell, Morgan Library curator and printing historian; Donald Farnsworth, Director of Magnolia Editions; Lisa Gitelman, NYU Media historian; and Alexandra Soteriou, Papermaking historian. Moderator: Robbin Ami Silverberg, professor at Pratt Institute and Proprietor of Dobbin Mill.
http://centerforbookarts.org/event/paper-as-vehicle-for-history-and-memory/

Paper as Social Practice, Engagement, and Intervention
Friday March 17, 6:30 pm
Panelists: Drew Matott, Handpaper Making and Recovery; John Risseeuw, Professor Emeritus at ASU; Melissa Potter, Pulp Feminism: Radical Social Histories in Hand Papermaking Professor at Columbia College Chicago; and Deborah Tlani Salahu-din, Paper and Social Protest in Baltimore Smithsonian Museum Researcher. Moderator: Jessica Cochran, curator and lecturer at School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and curator of the Center’s Winter 2017 exhibition, Pulp as Portal: Socially Engaged Hand Papermaking.
http://centerforbookarts.org/event/paper-as-social-practice-engagement-and-interview-panel-2/

Paper as Haptic Experience
Friday March 31, 6:30 pm
Paper as Haptic Experience
March 31, 6:30 pm
Panelists: Teresa Jaynes, co-founder and past executive director of Philagrafika; Ruth Lingen, Master Papermaker and Printer, and Director of Pace Paper; Mary Ting, Artist and Professor at CUNY John Jay College; and Robbin Ami Silverberg, Professor at Pratt Institute and papermaker. Moderated by Susan Gosin, founder of Dieu Donné Papermill
http://centerforbookarts.org/event/history-of-art-series-paper-as-social-practice-engagement-and-interview-panel-2/

Monday, December 5, 2016

Handmade Paper in Full Bloom Exhibition

Handmade Paper in Full Bloom is a unique solo art exhibit showing over 15 visually inspiring paper art pieces. The show runs from February 1st through March 31st, 2017 at Shumei Hall Gallery, 2430 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, CA. The show is open 10 am - 5 pm,, Mon. - Sat., closed Sunday. A special opening is on Friday, February 3rd, 6 - 9 pm. Visit anniealexanderart.com to preview the artist's work. For more information call 626-584-8841.



Wednesday, September 7, 2016

2016 Nonesuch Art On Paper Awards & Exhibition

The Nonesuch Best Work Award is 5000 dollars plus a 3-week residency at Main & Station (Nonesuch Art Centre) in Parrsboro, Nova Scotia. The award goes to Untitled by Helene deWinter.


Special mention for Will Be Fine II by Karol Pomykala.
 
L’Usine de Papier Award for the most creative paper construction is 1000 dollars plus a 2-week residency at Main & Station (Nonesuch Art Centre) in Parrsboro, Nova Scotia. The award goes to Nectar by Nancy Agati.


Special mention for PaperBridge by Steve Messam.


Special mention for Tear by Kathy Driscoll & Jane Theau.



The Main & Station Award (200 kilometer award for best work by a local artist) is 500 dollars and a 2-week residency at Main & Station (Nonesuch Art Centre) in Parrsboro, Nova Scotia. The award goes to Cocktail by Carlos Gomez.


Special mention for Drawn to Dogs by Krista Wells.
 
The Griffintown Award (Award for best work by a local artist residing on the Island of Montreal) is 500 dollars and a 2-week residency at Main & Station (Nonesuch Art Centre) in Parrsboro, Nova Scotia. The award goes to Fishing Net by Diane Jutras.



The Wellington Church Award (1) (People’s Choice Award) is 500 dollars and a 2-week residency at Main & Station (Nonesuch Art Centre) in Parrsboro, Nova Scotia. The winner will be determined from a vote by visitors to the exhibitions. The winner will be announced in Montreal near the end of the exhibition. 
The exhibition in Parrsboro remains open until 10 September. Hours are Wednesday - Friday, 12 noon -4pm; Saturday & Sunday 11am - 6pm. Also By Chance or By Appointment.
Come to see the artworks and vote for your favorites.
The Montreal exhibition will open on 30 September and remain until 14 October.

Monday, August 29, 2016

Art Exhibition: Paper Translations at Kirkland Art Center

Paper Eight will present their third group exhibition:

Paper Translations, September 16 - November 19, 2016 at the Kirkland Art Center. Participating artists are: Mary Ashton, Dona Anderson, Danielle Bodine, Zia Gipson, Lois James, Dorothy McGuinness, Jean-Marie Tarascio, and Sande Wascher-James.

Opening Reception: Friday, September 16, 6 - 8:30
620 Market Street, Kirkland, WA
Hours: T - F 11 - 6, Sat 11 - 5

Workshops and demonstrations will be offered during this exhibition.
For information call 425-822-7161
Dona Anderson, Letters Totem
Dorothy McGuinness, Dodecahedron

Lois James, Falling Sun
Zia Gipson, Silky
Mary Ashton, Adrift

Jean-Marie Tarascio, Storylines

Sande Wascher-James, Wit and Wisdom
Danielle Bodine, Flight

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Confluence: Twelve Collaborations - Exhibition at Morgan Conservatory

Exoskeleton by Pam McKee and Kyle Holland
This unique exhibition pairs twelve highly accomplished American papermakers with printmakers, calligraphers, and surface designers of their choosing to generate collaborative pieces that range from prints to books and every medium in between, allowing these pairings to foster the production of unique art forms borne out of the creative efforts of both artists.

“For over two thousand years, handmade paper has been used primarily as a substrate for the transmission of information in text form, for visual images, and for furniture,” said Tom Balbo, Artistic Director of the Morgan Conservatory. “This show speaks to the nature of handmade paper and its ability to be an art form by highlighting multiple techniques and traditions as well as variances of scale.” Balbo added, “Each pairing had the challenge of incorporating both the papermaker’s and the artist’s individual sense of the craft to create inventive works that best demonstrate a melding of the two minds. We hope the exhibition showcases many, if not all, forms that handmade paper can take in this digital age, where the craft of papermaking is having a genuine resurgence.”

Confluence: Twelve Collaborations opens Friday, August 12th through Friday, September 16th at the Morgan – 1754 E. 47th St., Cleveland, OH 44103. The opening night reception starts at 6:30 p.m. For additional viewing hours and information visit morganconservatory.org.

About The Morgan Conservatory
The Morgan Conservatory is the largest arts center in the United States dedicated to every facet of papermaking, book arts and letterpress printing and to cultivating the talents of established and emerging artists. An international destination that is free and open to the public, the Morgan Conservatory is a working studio, gallery and gathering place for the community, educational hub and purveyor of some of the finest handmade papers in the world.

Since opening to the public in 2008, the Morgan Art of Papermaking Conservatory and Educational Foundation has been a rising star in the Cleveland arts community and the papermaking world. The Morgan Conservatory’s 15,000-square-foot converted industrial space is home to professional and aspiring artists dedicated to the ancient art of papermaking, book arts and letterpress printing. The Morgan Conservatory has been transformed into an art facility with studios, an 85 foot double-wall gallery, as well as a space for community events, and a unique kozo garden was installed to grow fiber for specialized papers.

Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Art Exhibition: Paper Transformed II at the Vashon Center for the Arts

Jean-Marie Tarascio, Hidden Places 
August 5 - August 25, 2016--Paper Transformed II is the subject and the art of eight Northwest artists to be presented at the Vashon Center for the Arts on Vashon Island,WA. This is the second exhibition of the work of “Paper Eight”, Western Washington artists who transform machine and handmade paper into paper sculpture, artist books, joomchi, paper weaving, paper in space, and any other paper imaginings. The papers used in the works include watercolor, Japanese, handmade Asian and Western, and dressmaking pattern paper. To paraphrase philosopher and communication theorist Marshall McLuhan “the paper is the medium and the message” for our art. Participating artists are: Mary Ashton, Dona Anderson, Danielle Bodine, Zia Gipson, Lois James, Dorothy McGuinness, Jean-Marie Tarascio, and Sande Wascher-James.


Opening Reception and Art Talk: August 5, 6-9 p.m.
Koch Gallery, Vashon Center for the Arts, corner of Vashon Hwy SW and SW Cemetery Road, Vashon Island

Hours: M - F 10-5, Sat 12 - 5

For information call 206-463-5131

Lois James, Ascending/Descending


Sande Wascher-James, Wit and Wisdom

Mary Ashton, Japanese Rain

Art Exhibition: Paper Translations at Kirkland Art Center

Paper Eight will present their third group exhibition:

Paper Translations, September 16 - November 19, 2016 at the Kirkland Art Center. Participating artists are: Mary Ashton, Dona Anderson, Danielle Bodine, Zia Gipson, Lois James, Dorothy McGuinness, Jean-Marie Tarascio, and Sande Wascher-James.

Opening Reception: Friday, September 16, 6 - 8:30
620 Market Street, Kirkland, WA
Hours: T - F 11 - 6, Sat 11 - 5

Workshops and demonstrations will be offered during this exhibition.
For information call 425-822-7161

Danielle Bodine, Sea Anemone

Dona Anderson, Letters Totem

Dorothy McGuinness, Split Decision

Zia Gipson, Silky