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.

new featured artist: Leslie Supnet

pivot art gallery is pleased to present the next artist portfolio in the ongoing series at pivotartgallery.com. multimedia artist Leslie Supnet creates drawings and animations that are honest, gentle, and delicate. Click here to visit the featured portfolio.

Leslie Supnet

Legalities (detail) Leslie Supnet

11 questions with artist Clint Enns

The 11 Question Interview Series continues with artist Clint Enns sharing his thoughts on cinema, history, and video games. Learn more about the artist and visit pivotartgallery to see the featured portfolio. Interview with Peter Hayes.

Clint Enns

Clint Enns

PH: How did you first become interested in exploring film, cinema, and photography?

CE: I first began making films in 2006 and I was an avid cinephile for many years before that.  The first film I made was for the One Take Super 8 Event in Winnipeg, Manitoba – an event where filmmakers shoot a roll of Super 8 and the first time they are seen is unedited in an audience full of people.  My partner, Leslie Supnet, pushed me into making it and I had a blast.  Since that time I haven’t been able to stop making films.

I began taking photos in 2010 when my friend Ashley Gillanders, a Winnipeg photographer, shared a disposable camera with me.

In 2011, I made photography a part of my practice while taking a course titled The Practice with Toronto filmmaker Mike Hoolboom at York University. The course was about exploring cinema and our practice through Buddhist philosophy, which may sound cheesy, however, the course was totally amazing.

PH: Can you articulate what you are looking for when creating your work?

CE: I really believe in fun formalism, that is, entertaining films and videos that explore and experiment with the formal elements filmmaking.  I attempt to make works that not only experiment with form but distance themselves from the supposedly “boring” world of avant-garde film.  I am interested in experimenting with the medium itself and its underlying structure.  Currently, pursuing a Masters degree in Cinema and Media Studies at York University has lead me to theorize about medium specific explorations.

PH: What is most satisfying to you about the creative process?

CE: In general, I love making films and videos, however, the most satisfying part is when a work breaks your expectations and you produce something better than you imagined it would be.  It doesn’t happen very often, but when it does it is like “Oh shit, I made that it.  Awesome!”

Clint Enns

Clint Enns

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

CE: The support and camaraderie of the Winnipeg film community means the world to me.  There is definitely something happening there.  Filmmakers and video artists like Michael Snow, Guy Maddin, Shana Moulton, Wendy Geller, George Kuchar, James Benning and Owen Land have had a huge influence on my own practice, specifically their use of humour.  I think the use of sound in Benning’s work is incredibly clever and humorous.

On that note, I believe humour and satire is an effective form of critique.   For instance, consider the way in which Owen Land makes fun of Hollis Frampton in Wide Angel Saxon or the structuralists in Film in Which There Appear Edge Lettering, Sprocket Holes, Dirt Particles, Etc.

Some people take art making too seriously.  Relax, it’s only art.

PH: How does your study of mathematics influence your work?

CE: Mathematics has helped me to develop problem solving abilities.  In addition it has provided me with an interest in abstract structures.

On a practical note, it has provided me with the ability to write basic code and at the very least it has provided me with the ability to hack other peoples more complex code.

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Clint Enns

PH: Your work references history and specifically film history while adding a contemporary twist. What specifically about film inspires you as opposed to, for example, painting history?

CE: Cinema speaks to me more than painting.  I like how the field is fairly new and rapidly evolving.

Some people view seminal avant-garde films as sacred, however, to me, they are another database of found footage.  With that being said, I reference historical works in order to develop a dialogue between my work and the original.  It is also a chance to pay homage to the my favourite films and filmmakers.

PH: In addition to appropriating imagery and technology, how big a fan of video games are you? Thoughts on the evolution of gaming technology?

CE: I like video games, however, I wouldn’t consider myself a gamer.  I am more interested in game art and game technologies than I am in playing video games.  I am convinced that the evolution of gaming technologies, especially in regards to game art, is directly linked to our understanding of the underlying structure of digital video.  Furthermore, I feel that video games provide us with a better reflection of contemporary culture practices than television at this point.  In regards to my own practice, I view video games as another source of found footage.

PH: Where do you want to see your art career in, say, ten years?

CE: I hopefully will be alive in ten years.  If I am there is a good chance I will be making making, watching and writing about films and videos.   In addition, I will continue to be an active member of my local film and video community.

PH: How do you feel about contemporary art and your contribution to it?

CE: I believe strongly that making contributing to the experimental film and video scene means more than just making experimental films and videos.  To me this taking part in the community through writing, programming, interviewing, reading, theorizing and watching.  If artists aren’t interested in each other work and aren’t creating dialogue, how can we expect others to be interested.

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Clint Enns

PH: What is the most important thing you want viewers to come away from your work with? What, if anything do you want them to learn through your work?

CE:  My videos are experiments and explorations.  With that being said, they aren’t intended to be instructional.  I hope people enjoy them.

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

CE:  If anyone has any questions about my work, feel free to contact me.

new featured artist: Clint Enns

pivot art gallery is pleased to present the next artist portfolio in the ongoing series at pivotartgallery.com. Video artist Clint Enns explores a wide range of topics in his work: from cinema, to technology, to spirituality. Click here to visit the featured portfolio.

Clint Enns “Splice Lines” (detail)

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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11 questions with artist Beti Bricelj

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

Beti Bricelj

Beti Bricelj

1. How did you first become interested in painting the geometries that you do? Was there a conscious decision to engage in abstract work rather than another kind?

The decision to dedicate myself to abstract painting of geometries was most likely a subconscious one, made when I completed my studies at the College of Visual Arts in Ljubljana. However, I think that my living in Australia where I spent valuable time doing research into the ancient Aboriginal art of painting for my diploma thesis actually crucially influenced my artistic development. Aboriginal art gave me the opportunity to encounter typical simple geometric elements and patterns, which Australian Aborigines used to enforce their deepest beliefs about nature, rhythm and cycle of life. Incidentally, a significant leap in my artistic growth was caused by a review of my first exhibition in Melbourne, which drew parallels to optical art. From that point onwards, I consciously started to devote my time to geometric abstraction in its fullest manner of expression.

2. Can you articulate in words what you are looking for when creating your work? 

I find myself constantly in the process of exploration, searching for new solutions in terms of composition and colour, which, from series to series, lead me to new options, new work and new opportunities for reflection. I place high importance on studies of colours, and I strive to harness the physicality of colour, its vibrations and influences different colours have on each other. I try to make use of all available artistic elements in order to produce paintings with an added value. This means that each individual work of art does not only represent a carefully thought out geometric abstraction, but also serves as a tool to include the observer as a personified reflection, thus allowing him or her to find something more in the observed art, respond with different associations, emotional states of being, and, to put it simply, be drawn into the work and react to it. Through this interaction, the observer becomes trapped in two different systems of perception – mine and his/her own.

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

What I love most about the creative process is the phase, which I reserve for the development of an idea, as it is this phase that simultaneously leads to the budding of new ones. They appear like sparks, which need to be caught and recorded for future use. All this is an intense game of exploration during which only one sketch can produce several solutions or possibilities of expression. The exact geometric compositions inevitably contain my own personal perceptions, experiences, as well as views of the world and nature – this intimate approach to creation eventually softens up the mathematical exactness of the developed form. Even though the final version of my paintings is often already visible in my sketches, the leap from the rough idea to the final result – a painting that suddenly becomes alive – always manages to excite me.

Beti Bricelj

Beti Bricelj

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

I have never idealized anyone in my life, yet I am sure there were people present during my artistic development who influenced me in an abstract way and whose artistic expressions and thought have left a mark in the studies of colour, which were important for my own growth.

5. Can you describe your technical processes? How do you make the images, what materials do you use, etc…? How do you decide on a specific composition? Do you make sketches?

The manner in which I paint is above all a careful thought process, originating from a net system, which allows me to develop my ideas. The compositions are created from basic shapes subjected to change as I go along. The sketches are in their initial phase merely compositions made up of lines.  They represent the first step – a black and white version. This contrast is extremely important, as it allows me to get a glimpse into the visual effect my idea might have. The first step is followed by playing with coloured surface variations, which may turn out to be numerous. My most commonly used technique involves painting with acrylic colours on canvas in different sizes. On the other hand, when I work on series featuring small-size paintings, which I decided to name “Point of attention”, I also paint with acrylic colours on wooden surfaces. Sketches are, at all times, of crucial importance on the path to the final result.

All of my paintings, when seen as final results, do not allow mistakes and demand extremely exact and disciplined work. Since I possess the nature of a true Aries, I also tend to be driven by my stubbornness and perseverance.

6. Your pieces each have a unique visual movement (grouped in series, for example “geoLOM” ). How do you decide on a specific approach to a series? 

Each series possesses its own specific characteristics. The decision on the structure of any of my series originates from the very first idea for the first painting, which, in its initial form, is only a sketch. This sketch then goes through the creative process and becomes a sort of a continuation of the initial idea. The geoLOM I.,II. series featured smaller sizes of painting that demanded of me to resort to a different approach. I had to put crucial emphasis either on rhythm, the composition, colours or the net basis, thus creating a unique movement in each painting.

With the GEOtransFORM A series, for example, I explore the animate nature of the inanimate world. I ponder on the primal and elementary characteristics of the Earth (gea – geo), I reflect on the origins of the world and, on the other hand, I think about the cold, exact geometry, which, through a transformation of the inanimate, can pass over to the animate flowering, and to crystalline and pyramidal structures. “Geo” as a word, a prefix or even as a concept suddenly becomes a living artistic organism within the painting, as well as a language or a way in which I achieve several associative states and produce symbolic messages.

7. Is there a specific artistic philosophy that you adhere to?

Actually, this is how I view constructivism where everything is determined. There is only one possibility for the unpredictable to happen – and that is a spontaneous, unplanned line or a stroke within the initial sketch, which I use for the creation of a new idea. 

Beti Bricelj

Beti Bricelj

8. Where do you want to see your work progress to in the future?

I remain curious in facing new discoveries and I keep wondering where this path might take me; what will be the results of my artistic endeavours. I would like to see my art being introduced to other fields like ambient art, urban artistic living, and architecture. The latter was actually the first to give me a great opportunity to contribute in terms of design, as in 2007, I was asked to provide an idea on the colour compositions for the façade of the business and commerce building Epicenter B2 in Slovenia. For me as a painter, this project represented a large and a demanding challenge.

 

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

I see myself as a part of a larger diverse whole, which thrives on its own versatility and grows in a very specific era of individualism.

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

The most important purpose of my paintings is to make the observer stop and be immersed in the art, and to be compelled to think, contemplate. My art encourages logical thinking, and stimulates perception in terms of finding one’s own reflective and associative explanations for the observed objects. It is important and it is considered as an achievement, if the observer of my art stores my paintings deep within his/her memory.

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

My art possesses limitless possibilities for interpretation. My purpose is to stir emotions within the observer who has to be open-minded and, above all, not burdened with explanations.

Beti Bricelj

Beti Bricelj

new featured artist: Beti Bricelj

pivot art gallery is pleased to present the next artist portfolio in the ongoing series at pivotartgallery.com. Beti Bricelj creates stunning geometric paintings. Click here to explore the featured portfolio.

Beti Bricelj

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.

new featured artist: Adriana Mosquera

pivot art gallery is pleased to present the next artist portfolio in the ongoing series at pivotartgallery.com. Adriana Mosquera photographs our modern-day urban experience. Click here to explore the featured portfolio.

Adriana Mosquera

Sol Grotto art installation

I went to visit Sol Grotto at the UC Berkeley Botanical Gardens this past weekend. It is, according to the designers website, a “…spartan retreat—a space of solitude and close to nature where one is presented with a mediated experience of water, coolness and light .”

I found it be be a contemplative space filled with the sounds of a running stream and amazingly lit with light streaming in through the glass tubes. Definitely worth a visit.

It is also hard to escape Solyndra’s role as a controversial bankrupt company. The installation re-uses 1,368 high tech glass tubes that would otherwise have been destroyed. For more info, see the website here: rael-sanfratello.com.

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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Creative Mornings

CreativeMornings is a free, monthly breakfast lecture series for creative types. There are chapters in 29 cities across the world, including San Francisco. Some have dubbed it “TED for the rest of us”.

For upcoming events, and a great video archive of past talks, check out creativemornings.com

new featured artist: Ben Rose

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

click to see this months’s featured artist, Ben Rose. using the camera as a way to extend perception, Rose creates a set of images with a unique velocity, movement, and energy.

 

one moment with you (light art photography) – 2010

new featured artist: Matteo Pasin

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

click to see this months’s featured artist, Matteo Pasin’s video investigations – fascinating contemplations of the world around us.

multiplicité moléculaire (video still) - 2010

Souvenirs From Earth

SOUVENIRS FROM EARTH, founded by Marcus Kreiss and curated by Alec Crichton, is an international Cable TV station, broadcasting in France and Germany with a program showing art, video art, film, music, installations and performances. If you are not there, you can still check out excerpts from the curator and a list of the many artists who contribute online here: souvenirsfromearth.tv or watch in online here: playtv.fr/television/souvenirs-from-earth

Glibberings (Lloyd Fachman)

new featured artist: Aaron Leaman

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

visit the site now to see Leaman’s portraits!

Leaman, untitled photograph, 2011

Callfor.org – new online resource

Callfor.org is an new initiative of the Tupajumi foundation that features 
international calls for art where no fees are needed to participate/enter. 
Currently featuring only arts but design & architectural calls will be 
coming soon, according to the site. Looks like it will become a great resource!
Search for calls or post your own open call here: Callfor.org

xs art gallery

very cool online art gallery showing work from artists around the world. check it out here: xs-artgallery.com

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