Monday, August 1, 2016
Wednesday, June 22, 2016
Friday, June 17, 2016
SO EXXXCCCIIITTTEEEDDD. I am the 2016 Fellow.
The Saint-Gaudens Fellowship is an annual award presented to an emerging American artist. The policy of the committee is to award the Fellowship to artists or scholars who are practicing primarily in the United States and have a demonstrated exhibition record that shows them to possess exceptional talent, but who are not yet firmly established in the field and may benefit from the recognition and financial assistance that accompany the Fellowship.
In addition to a grant, the Fellowship entails an exhibition of representative examples of the Fellow’s work in the following year at the Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site in Cornish, New Hampshire, and the submission of a brief artist’s statement concerning the work. The mounting of these exhibits is funded through the Memorial’s Exhibits Committee.
It was the intention of the Fellowship when it was created that the Fellows’ Memorial-sponsored exhibits be relevant to the ideals of Saint-Gaudens, as an artistically innovative artist, a mentor to emerging artists, or to the enhancement of public interest in his life, work and the creative process.
Fellows of the Saint-Gaudens Memorial
2015 Shellburne Thurber*
2014 Kirsten Hassenfield
2013 Jane Marsching
2012 Elana Herzog
2011 Darren Blackstone Foote
2010 Mary Temple
2009 Rachel Hayes
2008 Claire Watkins
2007 Alyson Shotz
2006 Ann Carlson & Mary Ellen Strom
2005 Hirsch Perlman
2004 No Fellowship Awarded
2003 Tara Donovan
2002 Willie Cole
2001 Do-Ho Suh
2000 Peter Shelton
1999 Carlos Dorrien
1998 Amy Hauft
1997 Alison Saar
1996 Judy Pfaff
1995 Jon Kessler
1994 Win Knowlton
1993 Judith Shea
1992 Jene Highstein
1991 No Fellowship Awarded
1990 Cameron McNall, Susan Rodgers
1989 Kate Ericson & Mel Ziegler
1988 Michael Gitlin
1987 Petah Coyne
1986 Andrew Topolski
1985 No Fellowship Awarded
1984 Walter Dusenbery, James M. Wolfe
1983 Alex McFarlane
1982 No Fellowship Awarded
1981 Nicholas B. Edmunds
1980 Philip Livingston
1979 Edwin Rothfarb
1978 Daniel Sinclair
2014 Kirsten Hassenfield
2013 Jane Marsching
2012 Elana Herzog
2011 Darren Blackstone Foote
2010 Mary Temple
2009 Rachel Hayes
2008 Claire Watkins
2007 Alyson Shotz
2006 Ann Carlson & Mary Ellen Strom
2005 Hirsch Perlman
2004 No Fellowship Awarded
2003 Tara Donovan
2002 Willie Cole
2001 Do-Ho Suh
2000 Peter Shelton
1999 Carlos Dorrien
1998 Amy Hauft
1997 Alison Saar
1996 Judy Pfaff
1995 Jon Kessler
1994 Win Knowlton
1993 Judith Shea
1992 Jene Highstein
1991 No Fellowship Awarded
1990 Cameron McNall, Susan Rodgers
1989 Kate Ericson & Mel Ziegler
1988 Michael Gitlin
1987 Petah Coyne
1986 Andrew Topolski
1985 No Fellowship Awarded
1984 Walter Dusenbery, James M. Wolfe
1983 Alex McFarlane
1982 No Fellowship Awarded
1981 Nicholas B. Edmunds
1980 Philip Livingston
1979 Edwin Rothfarb
1978 Daniel Sinclair
*This was a special Fellowship for which the Trustees invited Ms. Thurber to create an exhibition of photographs to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site.
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Tuesday, May 17, 2016
Transaction
Jun 10 – Jul 17
Opening reception: Jun 10, 6-9pm
Opening reception: Jun 10, 6-9pm
Energy is neither created nor destroyed; rather, it changes form…
This curatorial experiment will present 25 artists’ personal artifacts exposing small natural take-aways from a creative’s beloved landscape.
The suspended installation will showcase small physical remnants of a single journey, or moment in time, which an artist wanted to remember and take away, opposed to the carefully crafted work they usually complete to show the public. Through these remnants, the artists willingly share their inspiration, intention and momentum with participants.
Viewers will be invited to explore and bask, if you will, in the echoing auras that these talismans cast. There is a recreating of sacred space for each object, which ultimately has an intimate value to the artist, alongside their manufactured conception.
Just as chest x-rays of Marilyn Monroe, Buddy Holly’s glasses, Elizabeth Taylor’s jewels or Andy Warhol’s wig were sold at auction for a significant price tag, could these talismans of established artists become a valuable collector’s item? Or are these geographical remnants truly priceless? We invite you to discover the energy transactions.
Organized by Elijah Wheat Showroom (Liz Nielsen and Carolina Wheat)
Featuring:
Aaron Johnson
Alex Chowaniec
Aliza Morell
Angelina Gualdoni
Austin Eddy
Alyssa Gorelick
Brent Garbowski
Brook Sinkinson-Withrow
Carol Jackson
Carol Bove
Edie Fake
Katie Bell
Kenrick McFarlane
Lisa Yuskavage
Marcel Alcala
Marcel Dzama
Mike Schreiber
Philip-Lorca diCorcia
Shara Hughes
Shannon Goff
Wendy White
Yevegenia Baras
Young Sun Han
Alex Chowaniec
Aliza Morell
Angelina Gualdoni
Austin Eddy
Alyssa Gorelick
Brent Garbowski
Brook Sinkinson-Withrow
Carol Jackson
Carol Bove
Edie Fake
Katie Bell
Kenrick McFarlane
Lisa Yuskavage
Marcel Alcala
Marcel Dzama
Mike Schreiber
Philip-Lorca diCorcia
Shara Hughes
Shannon Goff
Wendy White
Yevegenia Baras
Young Sun Han
special map by Michael Merck
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Thursday, February 25, 2016
SPRING/BREAK Art Show
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Wednesday, February 24, 2016
Monday, February 8, 2016
Upcoming at Transmitter (Brooklyn, NY)
FAULTED VALLEY FOG
KATIE BELL, ELLIOTT GREEN, KEVIN COOLEY and PHILLIP ANDREW LEWIS
FEBRUARY 19 – MARCH 20, 2016
OPENING RECEPTION FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 6–9 PM
“I am interested in scenarios and artifacts where the artificial and natural are confused.”—Katie Bell
In Faulted Valley Fog, Katie Bell, Elliott Green, and Kevin Cooley and Phillip Andrew Lewis subvert and distort preconceived notions of space, material, and functionality, creating illusory environments, which we must struggle to understand.
In “Casualties,” as with all of her site-specific installations, Katie Bell utilizes her surroundings to provide her materials. She forms relationships with neighbors and strangers and scavenges from their detritus to fashion what she considers “future ruins,” time capsules of sorts, existing only briefly until she deconstructs and transforms them into something else. Bell embraces and investigates the physical qualities of such construction materials as Formica, linoleum, and drywall—overlooked yet always present in our environment—allowing them to support or pierce one another, forming shattered arenas, an explosion missed by mere seconds.
Elliott Green’s paintings contain expansive planes of color reminiscent of hillsides, deep oceans in the midst of ravaging storms, or psychedelic states, while rendering deceptive and contradictory spaces unexpected in landscape painting. Green, who has been painting for over 30 years, shifted his focus to considering the landscape after a 2009 visit to Segesta, a Roman temple in Sicily, from which vast expanses—both in space and in human history—can be seen. The application of paint varies greatly in each composition, with small portions rendered tightly amidst large swaths of color. Highly considered and often subdued color palettes evoke both weather patterns and emotional states—subjects of great interest to Green. Waves, bands, and blocks seamlessly intersect and overlap, collapsing against and fading into one another. The results of this process subtly defy the constraints inherent in two-dimensional painting, concealing both beginnings and ends.
In “Keep Pushing On,” Kevin Cooley and Phillip Andrew Lewis assemble a pair of common box fans, running with concealed smoke-producing mechanisms, to conduct a visually compelling experiment, the purpose of which is left unknown. Cooley and Lewis bring together opposing forms, glorifying tension and unison, creation and destruction. Their process- and material-based projects—often taking the form of durational actions documented with photography and video—are fused with their shared interest in the unexpected and unresolved, resulting in sublime and uncanny experiences which tend to raise questions rather than provide answers.
Katie Bell was born in Rockford, IL in 1985. She received her MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design, RI, and BA from Knox College, Galesburg, IL. She received a New York Foundation for the Arts painting fellowship in 2015, was awarded the Marie Walsh Sharpe Foundation Space Program in 2011/12, and has exhibited extensively in the US. Her work has been reviewed in Art F City, the Boston Globe, City Paper (Baltimore), and has been featured in numerous magazines in the US and abroad. Bell currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.
Elliott Green was born in Detroit, MI in 1960 and attended the University of Michigan. He has had solo exhibitions at John Davis Gallery (Hudson, NY) Tibor de Nagy (NY, NY), and Postmasters (NY, NY), and has exhibited collaboratively as Team SHaG with David Humphrey and Amy Sillman at various US locations including the Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art (Ridgefield, CT). He has been reviewed in The New York Times, Art in America, and Artnews, among others, and has received the Rome Prize (2011-12) and a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant (2005). He currently lives and works in Athens, NY.
Kevin Cooley was born in Los Angeles, CA in 1975 and received an MFA in Photography from the School of Visual Arts, NY and a BFA from Lewis and Clark College, Portland, OR. He currently lives and works between Los Angeles, CA and New York, NY. Phillip Andrew Lewis was born in Memphis, TN in 1973, and received an MFA from the Memphis College of Art, TN and BA from the University of Memphis, TN. He currently lives, works, and teaches in Chattanooga, TN. Lewis and Cooley met during a residency at the Bemis Center for Contemporary Art, Omaha, NE in 2013 and have since exhibited collaboratively at Kopeikin Gallery (Los Angeles, CA), Sonoma State University (CA), Pierogi (Brooklyn, NY), and Zeitgeist Gallery (Nashville, TN), among others. Cooley is a 2013 recipient of a Central for Cultural Innovation Grant and Lewis received a 2012 Creative Capital Grant for his ongoing project SYNONYM, and their first collaborative project won the 3-D Award at ArtPrize, Grand Rapids, MI in 2013.
Monday, February 1, 2016
Monday, November 23, 2015
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