11 questions with artist Leslie Supnet

The 11 Question Interview Series continues with artist Leslie Supnet sharing her thoughts on drawing and animation. Learn more about the artist and visit pivotartgallery to see the featured portfolio.

'Revenge'  by Leslie Supnet

‘Revenge’ by Leslie Supnet

1. When did you first begin to draw seriously? Or rather…take your drawings seriously enough to consider sharing them?

It was after meeting my partner, Clint Enns, that I decided to share my work and have an exhibition at local gallery in 2007 – Semai Gallery, owned and operated by Winnipeg based artist Takashi Iwasaki. Clint was very supportive, and encouraged me to think about actually having an art practice. In return, I did the same for him, pushing him to make films.

2. How did drawing translate into animation? Was there a sharp learning curve?

As my arts practice started to emerge, I became interested in artist-run centers and creative communities in Winnipeg. I signed up for a circuit-bending workshop at Video Pool Media Arts Centre, and after that started voraciously taking workshops there and at the Winnipeg Film Group – animation, filmmaking, Super 8 and 16mm experiments and editing. Definitely the animation process became easier over time.

'Hand Cranked VHS' by Leslie Supnet

‘Hand Cranked VHS’ by Leslie Supnet

3. Can you describe your technical process a bit. Do you sketch out ideas? How do you turn your drawings into animations?

I usually think of an experience, or emotion I would like to concentrate a drawing or animation on, then think of a good title that conveys that experience. Humor has always been a healthy way of coping with grief or tragedy for me, so I try to infuse that in my titles which then carries over into the animated narrative. This is how some of my drawings turn into animations — there’s always a back story in my drawings.

4. If you have artistic/creative role models, who are they and how do you relate to them?

Margaret Kilgallen is someone I look up too. She was a San Francisco visual artist, street artist and musician who passed away, loosing a battle with cancer in 2001. The way she drew from folk art, hand painted signs in her neighborhood, and the beauty of every day life, and created art that was sincere which didn’t need art-speak to justify its existence was really inspiring.

'Sunny Day' by Leslie Supnet

‘Sunny Day’ by Leslie Supnet

5. What is most satisfying to you about the creative process? 

Figuring out a way to communicate an experience or feeling with colour, movement and light. And intuitively knowing you’ve hit on something, that usually I can feel in the gut area. I really really really enjoy that! It’s like that moment you get a joke. Pure joy.

6. Your work seems to have ‘characters’ that are pulled from various sources. How do you define these roles for your ‘cast’?

The characters in my drawings and animations started off to be fairly generic, with the intention to be as universal as possible, rather than be specific. Hence the lack of hair colour, and ambiguous ethnicity in my early characters. But when someone thought I was only drawing Caucasian blondes, I knew I had to address that with specificity. So with my animation Gains + Losses, I decided to draw upon characters in my own life and experience, the central character in that work my cousin who committed suicide in March of 2010. Since then I’ve drawn upon people around me, and also base a lot of the characters on myself.

7. You have also studied mathematics. How does that influence your work?

I graduated with a BSc in Statistics. I’m not sure if that education influences my work at all, on a conscious level anyway.

8. How autobiographical is your work?

Most if not all my work draws on personal experience. Though personal, I focus on experiences most of us go through – loss, grief, longing, loneliness, awkwardness and love.

'The Nature of Schemes' by Leslie Supnet

‘The Nature of Schemes’ by Leslie Supnet

9. How do you feel about contemporary art and your contribution to it?

Since I started animating, I’ve been focusing more on the black box than the white box. I really do enjoy experimental film – making it, watching it (other people’s work!) – over anything else at the moment. I really like the nature and experience of experimental moving images – accessible, ephemeral, hard to monetize. I find it more freeing than making art objects that often gets a value attached to it to be sold to whoever can afford it.

10. What, if anything, do you want viewers to learn from your work?

What I hope people take from my work is a sense of empathy and connection.

11. What can you add that would help us understand you and/or your work better?

I’m an introvert, and spend a lot of time looking inward for answers. I trust my intuition and feel that when I listen to myself, it’s the most honest thing I can do.

The Bay Lights

The Bay Lights is a monumental light sculpture inspired by the 75th anniversary of the Bay Bridge. Artist Leo Villareal will network 25,000 individually programmable LED lights to create  patterns across the western span of the bay bridge. It may be the world’s largest LED light sculpture!

After it is officially lit on March 5, 2013, it will be on display every day from dusk to 2 a.m. for two years, viewable from San Francisco and points north.

More info here: thebaylights.org

Culture Shut Down

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Public call: Day of Museum Solidarity – March 4, 2013

Call on museums and galleries across the globe to demonstrate solidarity with threatened Bosnian cultural institutions.

February 20: Sign up to participate
March 1: Take action, upload image
March 4: Promote the collective action
Organizer:
Dr. Azra Aksamija and the international platform www.cultureshutdown.net

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March 4, the date of this Day of Museum Solidarity, marks the six-month anniversary of the Zemaljski Muzej’s closure. This crisis in Bosnia-Herzegovina requires political, economic, and institutional solutions. By participating in the Day of Museum Solidarity, you will make an important and much needed contribution to resolving this crisis. This call is supported by CIMAM and more than 40 museums, galleries and universities across the globe. To participate, follow the simple directions provided on the CULTURESHUTDOWN website.

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Silence at BAM/PFA

Silence

January 30 – April 28, 2013 at Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific FIlm Archive

Giorgio de Chirico: Melancholia, 1916; oil on canvas; 20 x 26-1/2 in.; The Menil Collection, Houston.Photo: Hickey-Robertson, Houston

Giorgio de Chirico: Melancholia, 1916
Oil on canvas; 20 x 26-1/2 in.
The Menil Collection, Houston.
Photo: Hickey-Robertson, Houston

In today’s digitized world, silence is increasingly elusive. For composer John Cage, the absence of sound was not merely elusive, it was impossible. His groundbreaking composition4’33” contained no actual music, but instead called attention to the ambient sounds surrounding the performance and its audience. He asserted “there is always something to see, something to hear.” On the occasion of Cage’s hundredth birthday, Silence presents nearly a century of modern and contemporary art and film to examine the spiritual, existential, and political aspects of silence.

Co-organized by the UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAM/PFA) and The Menil Collection in Houston, Silence presents a broad range of works, including iconic pieces by Joseph Beuys, Giorgio de Chirico, Marcel Duchamp, René Magritte, Christian Marclay, Robert Rauschenberg, Doris Salcedo, Andy Warhol, and many other leading artists.

BAM/PFA’s presentation of Silence features a host of public programs, including an opening conversation between Toby Kamps, curator of modern and contemporary art at the Menil Collection, and UC Berkeley psychology professor Dacher Keltner; a three-part series of Sunday morning meditations in the galleries; performances by sound artists Jacob Kirkegaard and Loren Chasse; and a series of L@TE: Friday Nights @ BAM/PFAevents inspired by the theme of silence.

Artist Marketing Resources

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ArtistMarketingResources

ArtistMarketingResources provides their artist readers with news and information about art careers, calls for art and exhibitions. Regular updates to the blog make the site a valuable tool for anyone looking to stay informed about calls for work and other art related news.

Check it out here: artistmarketingresources.com

Tell Me a Tale

Tell Me a Tale: An anthology of 20 short stories published by Fluster Magazine & Armida Publications Ltd.

As a celebration of the inspiration and creativity that went into the Tell us a Tale Short Story Competition, Fluster Magazine and Armida Publications put together a collection of the 20 best short stories submitted by authors (published and unpublished alike), the world over. The stories are diverse in scope and theme and were inspired by photographs in Fluster Magazine’s Flickr Pool.

For more information see: armidabooks.com or flustermagazine.com

11 questions with artist Adriana Mosquera

The 11 Question Interview Series continues with artist Adriana Mosquera sharing her thoughts photography and art. Learn more about the artist and visit pivotartgallery to see the featured portfolio.

Adriana Mosquera

Adriana Mosquera

 

1.How did you first become interested in photography?

Desde el comienzo de mi proceso artístico la fotografía ha estado presente, ya fuera como dato inicial, como apunte rápido en mis desplazamientos, como material dispuesto a ser intervenido manual o digitalmente, como pieza capaz de construir un lenguaje en movimiento cuando se utilizan imágenes en secuencia ó como instancia final funcionando como retazo, como fragmento de la presencia de un objeto, un pedazo de circunstancia, de realidad.

Photography has been present since the beginning of my artistic process. Either as an initial idea, as a quick sketch, as material ready to be modified manually or digitally, as part of the language when using moving images, or as the final work functioning as a fragment of the presence of an object, a piece of circumstance, of reality.

2. If you have artistic/creative role models, who are they and how do you relate to them?

Mi proceso artístico se ha basado en la fotografía como herramienta para el estudio de fenómenos naturales y culturales. En la que investigo el concepto de espacio y la relación entre objetos, borrando las fronteras de los espacios públicos y privados. En donde lo fotográfico puede darse como condensación de un hecho performativo o viceversa, o lo escultórico puede anteceder o promover lo fotográfico. Estrategias que permiten, dentro de las dinámicas urbanas,  desdibujar y replantear continuamente su concepto, en un diálogo siempre abierto de imágenes encontradas y construidas. Un encuentro absurdo entre  ready-mades y lugares comunes.

My artistic process has been based on photography as a tool for studying natural and cultural phenomena. In which I investigate the concept of space and the relationship between objects, erasing the borders of the public and private spaces. Where the photo can be seen as a condensation of a performative act or vice versa, or sculptural can precede or promote the photographic. I use strategies that permit, within urban dynamics, blur and continuous rethinking of concepts, in an always-open dialog of images both found and constructed. An absurd meeting between ready-mades and common places.

Adriana Mosquera

Adriana Mosquera

 

3. What is most satisfying to you about the creative process?

Dejarme sorprender por lo que descubro en el proceso, como las ideas se materializan y adquieren un carácter único, muchas veces indescifrable solo hasta el momento que se conciben.
Del mismo modo es impactante cuando las ideas se materializan tal como las imagine, y siento como libero mi mente luego de realizarlas, son retos pendientes que debo resolver antes de continuar y seguir creando.
Es emocionante como lo que creas puede afectar tu realidad inmediata y porque no decir permite crear nuevas realidades.

Allowing myself to be surprised by what I discover in the process, as the ideas materialize and acquire a unique character – they are often indecipherable until they are conceived.
Similarly satisfying is when ideas are materialized as I imagined them, and I feel like I can release my mind after making them – they are challenges that must be resolved before proceeding and creating more.
It is exciting because what you create can affect your immediate reality and why not create new realities?

4. What do you learn through your work?

Realizar mi trabajo, me permite no solo reflexionar sobre el modo en que el ser humano se enfrenta al mundo y las estrategias que construye para personalizar su habitar, sino como desde mi experiencia inmediata puedo catalizar mis propias vivencias y hacerlas comunes, reconocibles. Una especie de espejo donde el espectador, puede reflejar su existencia.

My job allows me to not only reflect upon the way in which human beings face the world and create strategies to personalize their habits, but also on my immediate experience that could make them common and recognizable. A kind of mirror where the viewer can reflect their existence.

5. Do you use tools other than photography for looking at various cultural phenomena?

La fotografía es una herramienta fundamental en mi trabajo, ocupando diferentes estancias e involucrándose simultáneamente con prácticas escultóricas y performativas donde el video y el stop motion han hecho parte de esta búsqueda dentro mi lenguaje artístico.

The photograph is a fundamental tool in my work, occupying different roles simultaneously with sculptural and performative practices. Video and stop motion have also played a role within my artistic language.

Adriana Mosquera

Adriana Mosquera

 

6. Your photography reveals different types of patterns in our urban environment – both in public and private spaces. Do you find that working in series helps you define those patterns? Do you always think in series as opposed to say, individual images?

Estos registros reflejan un interés marcado en lo serial, en lo reiterativo, a veces presente en una misma toma, en otras la serialidad se presenta en múltiples tomas buscando aprehender la temporalidad de los eventos y acontecimientos sencillos e inasibles, incidiendo constantemente en el comportamiento mudo de una cultura a través del rastreo minucioso de sus cuerpos, de sus muros desnudos, de su arquitectura oculta para muchos, visible para pocos.
Así mismo la serial se vincula simultáneamente a un problema de identidad, ser gemela es una historia propia, una realidad vigente y no contingente, donde se pone de manifiesto un ambiente homocigoto, donde la relaciones interpersonales, parten de un mundo compartido, dosificado en partes iguales, homogéneo y regular en sus formas, pero diverso en colores y texturas.

Some works reflect a strong interest in serial and reiterative phenomena, which can be present in the same shot. In other cases the seriality comes in multiple shots and describes the temporality of simple and ephemeral events. I constantly stress the dumb behavior of a culture – which is hidden for many, visible for a few – through careful tracking of bodies, bare walls, and architecture.
Also the seriality is linked to an identity issue. Being a twin is  its own history. It is a reality which reveals a homozygous environment where relationships that begin from a shared world, dosed in equal parts, homogeneous and regular in form, can be different in color and texture.

Adriana Mosquera

Adriana Mosquera

 

7. What is your process like? Do you start with an idea, or do you happen upon a scene that resonates with you and then begin to photograph it? How do you know when an idea is worth pursuing?

Los procesos de creación varían de acuerdo a las especificidades de cada obra y su contexto. La mayoría de las imágenes encontradas o construidas son producto, de encuentros fortuitos al caminar por la calle, puede ser un arrume de bultos de pasto, hombres uniformados en su rutina limpiando las calles que forman patrones, gestos, actos, inclusive mis propios sueños.
Analizo el día a día como si quisiera desmantelar lo que se esconde en los quehaceres comunes, para catalizar la vida y descifrar el comportamiento humano, porque hacemos lo que hacemos y como lo hacemos.
Algunas veces puedo mantener una idea en mi cabeza por mucho tiempo meses , a veces años antes de concebirla o materializarla. Lo comparo con el entrenamiento de una bailarina o un gimnasta que ensaya sus pasos en la cabeza, día tras día, hasta que llega el momento de hacerlo publico. Es un entrenamiento mental, que luego se materializa.

My creation processes vary according to the specifics of each project and its context. Most of the images, found or constructed, are the product of chance encounters while walking down the street; they can be masses of grass, uniformed men routinely cleaning streets that form patterns, gestures, acts, and my own dreams.
I analyze daily life and try to dismantle what is hidden behind the common chores, catalyzing life and deciphering human behavior, why we do what we do and how we do it.
Sometimes I keep an idea in my head for a long time, months, sometimes years, before fully conceiving or realizing it. I compare it to the training of a dancer or a gymnast who rehearse their steps in their mind, day after day, until it comes time to make it public. It is mental training, which is then materialized.

8. Can you talk about your time in Madrid and how it informs your work? Were there major differences to your experience in Colombia?

A diferencia del proceso y las dinámicas de creación un poco mas marcadas en la formación artística colombiana, donde se construye un marco teórico e investigativo al rededor del proyecto a construir, antes de concebir una imagen o en una obra. En Madrid encontré un campo de acción mas flexible, sin pautas establecidas donde la obra puede surgir de un proceso creativo mas espontaneo, menos pretenciosos, que puede confluir en una reflexión teórica o viceversa.

It was a different process with a different dynamic of creating. Colombian artistic training emphasizes a theoretical framework and research around a project to be built, before you conceive an image or a new art piece. In Madrid I found the scope more flexible, without established guidelines where the work can come from a creative spontaneous process – less pretentious, available to converge in a theoretical reflection, or viseceversa.

Adriana Mosquera

Adriana Mosquera

 

9. How do you feel about contemporary art and your contribution to it?

El acto de crear, inherente al ser humano, cualquiera que sea su disciplina y su rol en el mundo, equivale a un compromiso con la sociedad y su contexto inmediato. Ser artista es ser biógrafo de su época,
Es fundamental de acuerdo a los intereses de cada artista reconocer la época mediática en la que nos encontramos ya sea para trabajar desde allí o reflexionar desde la distancia anacrónica, siempre siendo conscientes del lugar geográfico y cultural en el que nos encontramos, somos artistas, somos biógrafos de nuestras épocas. la colectividad es sincera y es vital , la noción de autoría cada vez se diluye en una época en la que todo se copia, se edita, se transforma y en donde la “nuevas” ideas surgen de la reflexión de lo existente.

The act of creating, inherent to the human being, whatever  its discipline and its role in the world, is equivalent to a compromise with society and its immediate context. Being an artist is to be a biographer of time.
It is essential (according to the interests of each artist) to recognize the media age in which we find ourselves and either work from there or reflect it from an anachronistic distance. We always need to be aware of the geographical and cultural context in which we find ourselves: we are artists, we are biographers of our times. The collective is sincere and it is vital to have the notion of authorship which is increasingly diluted in an age where everything is copied, edited, transformed and where the “new” ideas come from reflection of what exists.

10. What is the most important thing you want viewers to come away from your work with?

Las lecturas pueden ser múltiples al contemplar mi obra, todas son validas, mi interés no es imponer un significado, pues no existe una sola manera de ver ni de vivir el mundo.
Para mi es vital todo lo que brota desde allí, desde ese primer encuentro, es allí donde la obra finalmente se completa, es el espectador quien le otorga un sentido propio desde su contexto, desde su experiencia. Lo que me impulse a crear es una reflexión sobre nuestra sociedad contemporánea y el comportamiento humano, la enajenación, la soledad, el sin propósito, el encubrimiento, la manipulación mediática y el espectáculo.

The interpretations of my work can be multiple; they all are valid. My interest is not to impose a meaning, because there is no one single way of seeing and experiencing the world. For me it is vital that everything which comes from there, from that first meeting, is there where the work finally is completed, when the spectator gains a proper sense from its context, from their experience. What drives me to create is a reflection on our contemporary society and human behavior, the alienation, loneliness, doing without purpose, concealment, media manipulation and strategies of the spectacle.

Adriana Mosquera

Adriana Mosquera

 

11.What can you add that would help us understand you and/or your work better?

Mi metodología no se aparta de lo onírico. Sin embargo son los espacios, el habitar colectivo, el comportamiento humano, la realidad latente y cotidiana lo que inspira mi trabajo.
Es una continua transacción con la realidad, para entender mi trabajo hace falta tan solo mirar a nuestro alrededor y reflexionar.

¡Girar un poco mas la cabeza de lo acostumbrado, detenerse unos minutos más, repetir y dudar.

My methodology does not depart from the dreamlike. However spaces, collective living, human behavior and everyday life inspires my work. It is a continuous transaction with reality – to understand my work it is necessary only to look around us and reflect. Turn the head a little more than usual, stop a few minutes longer, repeat, and doubt.

Palimpsest

A Coup d’Espace project curated by Steven H. Silberg and Neil C. Jones

Dates: October 12 – November 9, 2012

Location: 2023 Massachusetts Ave, NW, Wash, DC

Curated by: Steven H. Silberg and Neil C. Jones

Participating artists: Jesse Morgan Barnett, Scott Blake, Patterson Clark, Jarrett Davis, Samantha DiRosa, Gary Duehr, Mark Geil, Julee Holcomb, Ryan Hoover, Miyakawa, Michele Montalbano, Matteo Pasin, Jessica Rowshandel, Sarah Sachs, Ali Seley, s/n coalition, Eric Souther, and Erika Stearly.

Opening Reception: October 12, 6:00-8:00pm

Palimpsest is a Coup d’Espace project curated by Steven H. Silberg and Neil C. Jones. which explores the constant layering of information in contemporary society and the impact technological advancements have on the ways we represent and receive information.

As digital texts—documents, photographs, video—become ubiquitous, we adapt to new ways of reading, adjusting to the layers of information these digital texts contain. In recent years, the QR code has become a common way of relaying additional information, allowing users with the correct technology to access additional data in everything from advertisements and museum exhibitions to business cards and printed books. But what if the QR code became the contemporary representation of information, displacing the original information? It wouldn’t be the first time that newer “text” has superseded the old. Throughout the history of the written word, parchments and vellum have been scraped clean of their original text and reused. Over time, that original text (the scriptio inferior) resurfaces through natural means or scientific research. An immediate relationship between the original text and new text is constructed through their juxtaposition.

Palimpsest alters the experience of viewing individual works of art by forcing viewers to experience the works through the mediation of this new technology. Artwork selected for the exhibition has been documented before being whitewashed or otherwise obliterated. A QR code, which links to the original documentation of the artwork, has been placed on the surface of each individual piece. While the individual works already address the layering of information, the very act of viewing the exhibition will force viewers to experience the layering and mediation the works address. Including work in a range of media—painting, photography, video, and sound—Palimpsest asks what these new methods of representing information mean for artists and their work.

ABOUT THE CURATORS
Steven H. Silberg is an image-influenced, pixel-based cross media artist with a background ranging from photography to book conservation. Working in print, video, and interactive installation, he engages new media as a literalist. For him, the pixel and structure of the digital image is as important as the composition and content. Created in Baltimore, his work has been enjoyed regionally, at venues including Baltimore’s Artscape, the University of Maryland, and the Delaware Center for the Contemporary Arts; nationally, at the University of Texas, Dallas, Missouri State University in Springfield, MO, and Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa, CA; and internationally at the Third Beijing International New Media Arts Exhibition and Symposium. He was selected as the Winner of The Washington Post’s 2010 Real Art DC competition and has been selected as a semi-finalist for the 2012 Trawick Prize. Silberg received his MFA from MICA in 2004 and his BFA from the University of Delaware in 1997. He is a Lecturer in Foundations, concentrating in Photography and Video, at UMBC.

Neil C. Jones is a photographer and faculty member at the Maryland Institute College of Art and Anne Arundel Community College. His work has been exhibited nationally in Atlanta, GA, Baltimore, MD, New York, NY, and Washington, DC, and internationally in Heidelberg, Germany, and Lacoste, France. He holds an MFA in Photographic and Electronic Media from the Maryland Institute College of Art , an MA in Digital Photography from the Savannah College of Art and Design and a BA in English Literature from the University of Delaware. In 2012, he was awarded an Individual Artist Award for Photography by the Maryland State Arts Council.

ABOUT COUP D’ESPACE
Coup d’Espace is WPA’s member-generated programming series. By inviting member artists and curators to plan installations, exhibitions, and events in its office project space, WPA provides a venue for unusual collaborations, exploration of new concepts, and the production of new and experimental work. Coup d’Espace allows artists and curators to utilize the WPA office as a laboratory or workshop space, to introduce new and in-process projects and present challenging ideas.

11 questions with artist Mike Frick

The 11 Question Interview Series continues with artist Mike Frick sharing his thoughts on painting portraits. Learn more about the artist and visit pivotartgallery to see the featured portfolio.

goodbye, goodbye California by MIke Frick

goodbye, goodbye California by MIke Frick

1. How did you first become interested in painting portraits? 

It’s the hardest thing you can do as a painter. And the only way to get good at it is to paint a thousand of them.

2. Who are your subjects? Do you need a certain type of relationship to someone in order to paint them?

I used to go through magazines and books for an interesting face, but now I can go online, and the internet offers an amazing chunk of reference material for the artist — an enormous family photo album, with every weird uncle’s face right there to appropriate. I prefer not to have a personal connection to the subject, most of my portraits are of people I’d rather not associate with anyway; killers, gangsters, hipsters, etc. I’m just an observer.

3. What is most satisfying to you about the creative process? 

It’s stops time.

4. If you have artistic/creative role models, who are they and how do you relate to them? 

All the usual suspects, Picasso, Modigliani, Soutine, Marlene Dumas, Chantal Joffe, Elizabeth Peyton, Lucien Freud. I’m not sure I relate to them at all, other than I’m a painter also, and I appreciate their work.

5. Can you describe your technical processes? How do you make the images, what materials do you use, etc…?

I’m not too concerned with the techincal process or the longevity of a painting. I just want to get an image down, and it doesn’t matter if I’m using mud on cardboard or oil on linen.

illegal 6

illegal 6 by Mike Frick

6. Your pieces have unique titles that seem to be important to your conception of the work. Can you describe the process of titling the work? 

It’s usually something I was listening to or reading. An afterthought. It helps me remember the pieces while keeping the viewer confused about the meaning of the painting..

 

7. Your work ranges from quick sketches to more detailed, built-up surfaces. How do you decide when a certain piece is finished? 

I prefer the sketch, I think I have ADHD, so I get bored painting on the same image. I’m trying to say more with less now. I’d love to be more technically adept and devoted to a painting but as soon as it becomes a chore, it’s done.

 

8. You once conducted an interview over Twitter. Do you see Twitter as a creative tool? What is your relationship to new technology in general? 

Other than being a great place for stealing photos of people’s faces, I could easily live without all the networking sites. I’m a Luddite at heart. Putting paint on hair and sticking it on a surface is about as far from technology as you can get.

9. How do you feel about contemporary art and your contribution to it? 

Of course I love all art — it’s the only thing keeping us out of the muck. The current lowbrow/surrealist scene is amazing, there are painters so technically skilled it’s scary. I can’t compete with that so I’m trying to go the opposite direction–towards children’s scribbles and cave paintings, the opposite of shiny and perfect.

10. What is the most important thing you want viewers to come away from your work with? What do you want them to learn through your work? 

I’m not trying to teach anyone anything. If a portrait connects with someone emotionally that’s great, what else could I hope for as a painter?

wtf

wtf by Mike Frick

 

11. What can you add that would help us understand you and/or your work better? 

I’m not sure I even understand my work yet.

Fluster Magazine

a really great magazine/website that we have recently partnered with. Fluster is a creative project about personal expression, culture, and reportage from many different perspectives published in both English and Italian. It is a great site full of photography, interviews and art. check it out at: flustermagazine.com

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11 questions with artist Inga Pae

The 11 Question Interview Series continues with artist Inga Pae sharing her thoughts on photography, art, life, and more. Learn more about the artist and visit pivotartgallery to see her featured portfolio.

“There is a Field No. 8″ by Inga pae

1. How and when did you first become interested in image making?

I discovered photography at age seven, developing prints in the bathtub with my father in Estonia. Based on reading numerous artist bios, it turns out that many of us caught the bug this way in the 70s and 80s.

2. Who are your role models and how do you relate to them?

I value the visions of many individuals who specialize in the field of photography, and the list is constantly increasing as I view new work. A few of my long time favorites include David LaChapelle, Phillip Toledano, Julia Fullerton-Batten, Julie Blackmon, and Jill Greenberg, just to name a few. In comparison, I recently “discovered” magnificent projects by Brian Christopher Sargent, Matthew Gamber, and Odette England.

Quite often I think to myself: “I wish I would have thought of that, it’s brilliant!” While I don’t wish to imitate anyone, I am selectively picking up on other artists’ insights and approaches to certain projects. Art succeeds and stays alive that way. A kernel of sensibility or perspective is passed on from one person to another and evolves in the process.

3. What is most challenging to you about the creative process?

In theory, a process starts and ends. For me it doesn’t end and this is a challenge. A project keeps moving in my head long after it is finished and new visual solutions keep popping up. It could take a year of incubation before a concept feels ready to shoot. I have learned to “just do it”, get it out of my head and on paper. With a few projects, I am now thinking of “sequel” work to deepen the study.

“Red Shed” by Inga Pae

4. Can you describe your process? How do you make the images? Are they all digital? What tools and techniques do you use?

Yes, I use digital cameras. I am old-fashioned in a sense that I try to get everything “right” in the camera at the time of capture. I do minimal post-processing.

5. Much of your work has a narrative feel to it. How intentional is this? How do you come up with the situations in which your ‘characters’ appear – for example in the series “There is a Field”?

I think it is intentional. We know most of the time what we are seeing in a photograph and how it makes us feel. But what is the story? And we keep staring at the image as if the story is just about to reveal itself in full. There is room for fantasy and interpretation.

I draw influences from a wide variety of gestures in the contemporary culture– lines in a play, song lyrics, text messages, specific movements from a dance performance, for example.

6. Your overall aesthetic is clean and clear and bright. What are your motivations behind this?

Less clutter. Less is more. Our (visual) lives are so busy. Have you noticed that when you go to a museum, it feels as peaceful as standing on a mountain top? I think it’s largely because of high ceilings and a lot of white space – the sparse space gives you room to breathe.

I have thought of adding more “layers” to images, but keep coming back to the fact that all the layers are in the viewers’ mind.

Simplicity of a photograph has always compelled me to keep looking. An image can be clear the same way that language is. A word is precise, but its meaning can change based on the words around it. When a person looks at an image, they will always think of themselves, their own life experience. And even that perspective can change daily.

7. Though in a larger sense, most art can be seen this way, do you see your work as autobiographical?

Absolutely. I think there is a big difference between academic knowledge and experiential knowledge. The latter is what I draw from – it feels authentic to work that way.

8. What are your goals as an artist? Where do you want to be in 5 years? 10 years?

As the cultural and economic landscapes are changing, I am not sure if the traditional success milestones are as desirable in the future as they used to be. I am focusing on how I feel, rather than where to be in terms of achievement. (Of course, they tend to go hand-in-hand.) I currently feel as if I am in the middle school and happy to be learning, exploring. In five years, I would like to feel as if I am college graduate, comfortably getting a “hang of it”. And in 10 years I’d like to feel that I am well on my way – completely comfortable in my skin artistically, fulfilled with the quality of work, peaceful about my creative process.

9. How do you feel about the contemporary art world and your contribution to it?

When I hear “contemporary art”… I immediately think of art museums. I could spend days browsing exhibits and installations, not even come up for air. I find comfort and sincere joy in that type of immersion.

Specific to contemporary photography, I am an active contributor and consumer through contests, portfolio reviews, exhibits, and open studios – at many different levels. I believe it keeps the craft moving forward and encouraging everyone to evolve their work to new levels.

10. What is the most important thing you want viewers to come away from your work with? Who is your ultimate audience?

I would like the viewers to feel “in the know” and “connected” when they view the work. I want it to feel accessible, yet intriguing to new collectors — people who are opening up to different types of work and aesthetics. I believe that there is a crop of new collectors currently emerging, making the art scene a fun place to be.

11. What can you add that would help us understand you and/or your work better?

Perhaps I can tell you where the idea for the image “Gossip” came from. There is a magnificent monolog by Father Flynn character in the play Doubt. He explains to sister James that if someone goes on a high rooftop, stabs a pillow… and thousands of feathers spread wide and far….. one could never put ALL of them back. That is gossip.

“Gossip” by Inga Pae

MOCA TV

The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles has announced that it will launch MOCA TV, a new video channel for original contemporary art and culture programming, in July 2012. It will be part of YouTube’s new original channels initiative, announced in October 2011, to create one hundred new original channels with narrow content. MOCA is reportedly the first contemporary art museum to associate with a major media company in an online video-programming venture of this scale, and MOCA TV is the first contemporary art and culture channel to be included in YouTube’s new initiative.

art and science exhibit in Pasadena

The exhibit titled ’Worlds’ at the Art Center College of Design examines how scientific knowledge shapes our understanding of the world. Go directly to very cool images called The Hall of Moons by following this link: williamsongallery.net

‘Worlds’ continues through January 29, 2012.

Read more from the LA Times here: Art and science collide at Pasadena gallery

new featured artist: Jessica Adams

pivot art gallery is pleased to present the next artist portfolio in the ongoing series at pivotartgallery.com

visit the site to see photographs by Jessica Adams

 

Adams - altered landscape (detail)

Take 5: Art Break Day

What: Take 5: Art Break Day. Hosted by Art is Moving
Where: San Francisco Bay Area, California
When: September 2, 2011

Details: This free public event encourages attendees to “Take an Art Break” and provides supplies and a space to create art. It will happen simultaneously in five different cities – San Francisco, San Rafael, Richmond, Berkeley, and Oakland from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM.

Booths and tables will be set up and there will be free access to art supplies, including paint brushes, paper, pencils, paints, and crayons. Everyone is welcome to make art for free. No prior art-making experience is necessary to attend the event.

More Details: artismovingnow.com

Remixing Revolution: Art, Music and Politics | National Radio Project

For many activists, supporting the arts is fundamental to creating social awareness, environmental sustainability and political change even when economic times are hard.Listen as artists talk about how they make an impact.

radioproject.org.

Surface : Pattern :: Pattern : Surface

pivot art gallery is pleased to announce Surface : Pattern :: Pattern : Surface

An exhibition of works by Hadley Williams and Talulah Terryll, guest curated by Peter Hayes at Local 123 Cafe in Berkeley, CA.

Opening reception Friday, July 15, from 7-9 pm at the Cafe, 2049 San Pablo Ave, Berkeley. Live music, popcorn and, as always, great coffee, wine and beer. On display from July 11 to August 11 at Local 123.

Guest curator Peter Hayes organizes a show around the rich lines of resonance between Hadley Williams and Tallulah Terryll’s work. Attention concentrates on their work’s connection to a framework of a pattern, to a repetition of marks applied to a surface. In every piece, the patterns are interrupted – sometimes subtly, sometimes forcefully – by the nuances of each artist’s material, hand, and vision. The result is a joint collection that inhabits the space between mechanism and gesture, control and flexibility, stencil and spontaneity.

Affecting also the space between art and viewer, the pieces animate their surrounding area — above and below, left and right — with the way they balance rhythm and chaos. Terryll creates her patterns out of paint applied through hand-made stencils in multi-layered designs: what emerges is a vibrational character that lifts pattern off of surface. Williams endows her work with an actual and relentless dimensionality by adhering a range of materials (from bubble wrap to correction tape) to her surfaces. Their approaches to surface and pattern reflect against each other, completing the analogy – the surface is to the pattern as the pattern is to the surface.

After receiving her B.F.A. in 2003 and spending 2 years in Japan, Terryll is currently based in Oakland, California. For more information, see www.tallulahterryll.com. Williams works out of her immaculate studio in Berkeley, CA, and is currently enrolled in the MFA program at John F. Kennedy University, which she will complete in December 2011. For more information, see www.hadleywilliams.com

pivot online shop now open for business

pivot art gallery is very excitied to announce the grand  opening of its online shop.

Click here to browse availiable art for sale. From sound art, to photography, to fine art prints, there is lots to choose from. Plus new work from exciting emerging artists will be added on an ongoing basis.

Reinvesting in Arts Education

The President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities (PCAH) announces the release of its landmark report Reinvesting in Arts Education: Winning America’s Future Through Creative Schools.

After 18 months of research, meetings, and site visits the report represents an in-depth review of the current condition of arts education as well as recommendations for federal, state and local policymakers.

read the pdf document here: Reinvesting in Arts Education

Arts Advocacy Day 2011

The annual Arts Advocacy Day is the only national event that brings together a broad cross section of America’s cultural and civic organizations, along with hundreds of grassroots advocates from across the country, to underscore the importance of developing strong public policies and appropriating increased public funding for the arts. More info here: Arts Advocacy Day 2011.

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