Showing posts with label Fiber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fiber. Show all posts

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Preview: Weavemaker Pro @ The Plaines Project

Opening at 7:00 PM on Friday, June 29, 2012, "Weavemaker Pro" showcases seven fiber artists: all students within, or recent graduates from, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago's Department of Fiber and Material Studies.  Together they explore the conceptual possibilities of a craft (weaving) developed from sets of tensioned threads strung at right angles to one another.

As encountered during the show's installation at The Plaines Project, 1822 S. Des Plaines St., Chicago, IL, the work of four participating artists--Bryana Bibbs, Krystal DiFronzo, Moira O’Neil, and Melissa Leandro--is depicted in 14 photographs below:

Krystal DiFronzo @ The Plaines Project
Above: Krystal DiFronzo's "Sad Sack" hanging in basement

Weavemaker Pro installation @ The Plaines Project
Above: Weavemaker Pro installation viewed from basement stair

Moira O'Neil @ The Plaines Project
Above: Moira O'Neil's Johnny Depp

Moira O'Neil and Melissa Leandro @ The Plaines Project
Above: Moira O'Neil and Melissa Leandro

Melissa Leandro @ The Plaines Project
Above: Melissa Leandro

Melissa Leandro @ The Plaines Project
Above: Melissa Leandro, detail

Bryana Bibbs @ The Plaines Project
Above: Bryana Bibbs, detail

Bryana Bibbs @ The Plaines Project
Above: Bryana Bibbs, detail

Bryana Bibbs and Krystal DiFronzo @ The Plaines Project
Above: Bryana Bibbs and Krystal DiFronzo

Krystal DiFronzo @ The Plaines Project
Above: Krystal DiFronzo

Bryana Bibbs @ The Plaines Project
Above: Bryana Bibbs and Melissa Leandro

Melissa Leandro @ The Plaines Project
Above: Melissa Leandro

Melissa Leandro @ The Plaines Project
Above: Melissa Leandro

Weavemaker Pro installation @ The Plaines Project
Above: Installation in progress at The Plaines Project

"Weavemaker Pro"
Featuring: Bryana Bibbs, Krystal DiFronzo, Susannah Dotson, Cheloie Laggis, Moira O'Neil, Melissa Leandro, and Etta Sandry
June 29 – July 6, 2012
The Plaines Project
1822 S. Des Plaines St.
Chicago, IL
http://plainesproject.wordpress.com/

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Artist's Websites:

http://melissaleandro.com/

http://krystaldifronzo.wordpress.com/

http://ettasandry.wordpress.com/

http://www.moiraoneil.com/

http://fibermaterialstudies.com/advanced_studio/portfolio.php?st=191&p=1895

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Related Fiber Art Posts:

http://paulgermanos.blogspot.com/2011/02/review-anne-wilson-judy-ledgerwood.html

http://paulgermanos.blogspot.com/2011/09/pictorial-el-stitch-y-bitch-antena.html

http://paulgermanos.blogspot.com/2011/08/review-anne-elizabeth-moore-mca-12x12.html

http://paulgermanos.blogspot.com/2011/04/pictorial-sheila-pepe-he-said-she-said.html

http://paulgermanos.blogspot.com/2011/01/review-noelle-mason-thomas-robertello.html

- Paul Germanos

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Pictorial: El Stitch y Bitch @ antena

"El Stitch y Bitch (SyB) was founded in 2008 as a space for knitters, crocheters and crafters in the Pilsen, Bridgeport and Little Village neighborhoods of Chicago. Currently the group is consists of over 20 members, ages 18 and up. Over the years, the group has evolved into a collaborative art group interested in addressing handmade and Do-It-Yourself (DIY) culture. As DIY culture moves into a contemporary state, many members of the group have found themselves astonished and curious by the inheritance of the handmade skill or the need to carry on the tradition in an adapted manner. Tejer y Joder is a compilation of individual SyB members and independent fiber artists, all interested in the themes of gender, identity, tradition and memory. "[1]

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena
Above: antena proprietor Miguel Cortez and guests.

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena
Above: Irasema Gonzalez

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena
Above: Naomi Martinez

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena
Above: Claudia Marchan

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena
Above: Claudia Marchan

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena
Above: Claudia Marchan

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena
Above: Adriana Baltazar 18th Street Immigrants (Dandelion, Chicory, Thistle)

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena
Above: Adriana Baltazar 18th Street Immigrants (Dandelion, Chicory, Thistle)

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena
Above: Esmeraldo Garcia and Maria Rosa Garcia Sabana (Bedspread)

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena
Above: antena after hours.

El Stitch y Bitch @ antena
Above: Downtown as seen from 18th Street in Pilsen.

El Stitch y Bitch
September 23 - October 22, 2011
antena gallery
1765 S. Laflin St.
Chicago IL 60608

Featuring: Adriana Baltazar, Krissy Bodge, Julia Chau, Esmeraldo Garcia, Irasema Gonzalez, Erika Hernandez, Claudia Marchan, Naomi Martinez, Jackie Orozco, Jessica Phillips, Elvia Rodriguez-Ochoa, and Thelma Uranga

[1] http://www.antenapilsen.com

- Paul Germanos

Monday, August 22, 2011

Review: Anne Elizabeth Moore @ MCA 12x12

"For her UBS 12x12 presentation, Moore presents 'Garment Work,' a durational collective performance project in which the artist and visitors deconstruct a pair of jeans. Over the course of the month, in twice-weekly performance/workshop/discussions, Moore creates connections between Cambodia's garment manufacturing industry, where the jeans were made, and Michigan Avenue, where the jeans were purchased,"[1]

Anne Elizabeth Moore @ MCA
Above: Moore's Beautiful Clothing Company, Inc. labor roster, providing a visual record of audience participation in garment deconstruction

Across Chicago, fiber-based group works involving performance and installation have been organized by female leads on a regular if not frequent basis.

Anne Elizabeth Moore @ MCA
Above: Denim fabric subject to deconstruction

Within the not-too-distant past, the city's commercial, storefront, and not-for-profit spaces have hosted at least: Sheila Pepe at "he said she said" in April of 2011;[2] Anne Wilson at Rhona Hoffman Gallery in January of 2011 & 2008;[3] and Julia Sherman at Swimming Pool Project Space in January of 2010.[4]

Anne Elizabeth Moore @ MCA
Above: Individual fibers of cloth being separated

Similar to the temporary environments crafted by the aforementioned artists, Anne Elizabeth Moore's program at the Museum of Contemporary Art provides a hub of activity around which spatial and labor concerns are available for parallel consideration.

Anne Elizabeth Moore @ MCA
Above: Fibers sorted according to color/type

Here, as Pepe and Sherman before her, Moore relies heavily upon audience engagement: work, within the context of the piece, is available--in quantity, in skill, and in intent--as it's given at random by museum visitors.

Anne Elizabeth Moore @ MCA
Above: Moore in background; "Beautiful Clothing" workers in foreground

While Moore has carefully built a conceptual framework, and even an organizational structure: "Beautiful Clothing Company, Inc.," the output, or product, of the undertaking is not able to be entirely predetermined.

Anne Elizabeth Moore @ MCA
Above: Moore hanging documentation of the blue jeans' path of travel through the real world economy

Beautiful Clothing's "employees," in distinction to their factory-working counterparts in SE Asia, enjoy the ability to reflect upon the nature of their undertaking, collectively, in the relative comfort of the UBS 12x12 gallery space; the piece depends upon such awareness and exchange.

Anne Elizabeth Moore @ MCA
Above: The pants' price tag in foreground

"Garment Work," being truly social art, succeeds or fails on its own terms according to the changes in human thought and/or action which follow in the wake of its finite being.

Anne Elizabeth Moore @ MCA
Above: Center of gallery space; site of work activity

The larger (meta) questions raised by Moore's piece are found to spring from social art's relationship to the museum particularly and the "direction" of contemporary art generally.

Anne Elizabeth Moore @ MCA
Above: Waist of denim jeans, as seen in background of previous image

Moore's candor and good cause give little reason to be doubted, wherein lies the problem: Do we accept that value in art is synonymous with efficacy in the service of that which we presuppose to be just?

Anne Elizabeth Moore @ MCA
Above: Moore's labor roster for Beautiful Clothing Company, Inc.

Anne Elizabeth Moore @ MCA
Above: MCA "Garment Work" wall label

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Notes:

[1] http://www.mcachicago.org/exhibitions/exh_detail.php?id=283

[2] Sheila Pepe @ he said she said:
Sheila Pepe @ he said she said
Above: "Common Sense" (Chicago)
April 9 - May 14, 2011
"he said she said"
831 South Grove Avenue
Oak Park, IL 60304
http://hesaid-shesaid.us

[3] Anne Wilson @ Rhona Hoffman:
Anne Wilson @ Rhona Hoffman
Above: "Blonde"
January 14 — February 18, 2011
Rhona Hoffman Gallery
118 North Peoria Street
Chicago, Illinois 60607
http://www.rhoffmangallery.com

Anne Wilson @ Rhona Hoffman:
Anne Wilson @ Rhona Hoffman
Above: "Wind-Up" after "Walking the Warp"
Rhona Hoffman Gallery
January 25 - March 1, 2008
118 North Peoria Street
Chicago, Illinois 60607
http://www.rhoffmangallery.com

[4] Julia Sherman @ Swimming Pool Project Space:
Room-A-Loom @ Swimming Pool Project Space
Above: "Room-A-Loom"
January 24 - February 21, 2010
Swimming Pool Project Space
2858 W. Montrose,
Chicago, IL 60618
http://www.swimmingpoolprojectspace.com

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Full "Garment Work" performance schedule:
- Friday, August 5, 2011:
"First Friday" opening
- Saturday, August 6, 2011:
11:00AM-12:30PM and 1:30PM-3:00PM
- Saturday, August 13,2011:
11:00AM-12:30PM and 1:30PM-3:00PM
- Tuesday, August 16, 2011:
5:30PM-7:30PM
- Saturday, August 20, 2011:
11:00AM-12:30PM and 1:30PM-3:00PM
- Tuesday, August 23, 2011:
5:30PM-7:30PM
- Saturday, August 27, 2011:
11:00AM-12:30PM and 1:30PM-3:00PM

Anne Elizabeth Moore @ MCA
"Garment Work"
Photographed 7:15PM-8:00PM
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
UBS 12 × 12: New Artists/New Work
Museum of Contemporary Art
220 East Chicago Avenue,
Chicago, IL 60611
*Free admission for IL residents on Tuesday*
Tuesday hours: 10:00AM–8:00PM
312.280.2660
http://www.mcachicago.org/exhibitions/exh_detail.php?id=283
http://anneelizabethmoore.com
http://twitter.com/mcachicago

See also Anne Elizabeth Moore interviewed by Amy Cavanaugh, August 8, 2011:
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/top-lists/anne-elizabeth-moore-garment-work/

- Paul Germanos

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Pictorial: Sheila Pepe @ he said she said

Sheila Pepe @ he said she said

Sheila Pepe @ he said she said

Sheila Pepe @ he said she said

Sheila Pepe in:
Common Sense (Chicago)
April 9 - May 14, 2011
he said she said
216 N. Harvey
Oak Park, IL 60304
http://www.hesaid-shesaid.us

"...a large-scale special crochet drawing–informed by compositional ideas of mid-20th Century abstraction and late 20th century notions of construction,"

- Paul Germanos

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Review: Anne Wilson & Judy Ledgerwood @ Rhona Hoffman

Opening night, January 14, 2011: Entering through the storefront's glass curtain facade, Judy Ledgerwood's direct treatment of the surrounding solid walls has the effect of preparing a "color field" ground.  Building upon that foundation she's brushed, freehand, a "lyrical" metallic paint figure, which in this context would be pleasing to consider as a lace motif.  Continuing, her palette shifts from right to left, and top to bottom, while remaining tripartite in both the foreground and also the background.

Judy Ledgerwood @ Rhona Hoffman
Above: Rhona Hoffman's clear, glass curtain wall, and Peoria St. entrance.

Within the piece, between the two distinct planes of action, there is high contrast: in hue, in value, in reflectivity, in painterliness, and in complexity of pattern.  The result is a strong "op" effect.  The large, nearly floor-to-ceiling, scale of the work is helpful in achieving its powerful, visual presence.[1]  Not being bound by a frame, nor even by a single architectural surface: Where it occupies the whole of one's visual field the experience of the painting  is like unto an immersion.

Judy Ledgerwood @ Rhona Hoffman
Above: Judy Ledgerwood, "Chromatic Patterns for Chicago," 2011, detail.

In sum, Ledgerwood's work upon the vertical, two-dimensional area of Hoffman's street-level gallery is immediately accessible, exposed to the variations of natural light, evident of the artist's own involvement, and, while connected to the history of painting and executed on a heroic scale, able to offer itself as playful, colorful and abstract.

That said, the defining experience of the exhibition is not to be found in that one space only, but rather in the dramatic movement from that starting point, upward, in an ascent into twilight.

Anne Wilson @ Rhona Hoffman
Above and below: Anne Wilson, "Rewinds," 2010.

Elevated, at the other end of the building, in a windowless, blackened room, Anne Wilson's somber, three-dimensional installation awaits investigation.  Therein, many small, achromatic or desaturated, glass elements lie carefully placed across horizontal surfaces: within vitrines or upon delicate plinths.  Each was carefully wrought by a team of artisans; all are selectively lit by overhead spotlights.  Control of light is as important, here, as was the handling of the (translucent) solid from which the objects were crafted.

Anne Wilson @ Rhona Hoffman

During Wilson's first solo exhibition at Hoffman, in 2008, interest in the object category of "tool" was evident from the presence of a frame loom at the center of her noteworthy performance-sculpture "Wind-Up: Walking the Warp," even as an interest in the spatial distribution of phenomena was evident in the layout of her "Portable City" group from the same show.

Anne Wilson @ Rhona Hoffman
Above: Anne Wilson, "Wind-Up: Walking the Warp," 2008, post-performance.

Then as now, Wilson co-ordinates the labor of others: seeming to be attentive to the worker's gender.  While tools tend to be, and are here, interesting forms in their own right, it might also be good to remember that such implements appear at the nodal points of (at least some of) Wilson's historical interests: (1) labor; (2) gender; (3) parallel material and social organization.  Those same three, longstanding, concerns remain manifest--only now in a different medium, with new connotations of value being derived from physical qualities of delicacy and semi-preciousness.  Symbolically, tools bespeak laborers engaged in a particular craft.  Though, yet again, Wilson's own role most closely resembles that of the architect.

Anne Wilson @ Rhona Hoffman

Anne Wilson @ Rhona Hoffman

With regard to that interpretation, "Blonde" is idiosyncratic and maybe confounding.  More characteristic of what's understood to be the work of Wilson's own hand, "Blonde" is a vertical, hanging tapestry which incorporates her own hair of the same color.  Maybe, whether intentional, it's a point of connection with the also flaxen-headed Ledgerwood, even as Ledgerwood's mural seems to nod at Wilson with a design imitative of a sagging, wall-mounted, horizontally-orientated textile.

Anne Wilson @ Rhona Hoffman
Above: Anne Wilson, "Blonde," 2011.

Ledgerwood too, for her part, makes difficult a simple reading as a result of her linear hanging of three-dimensional, non-objective, polyurethane "Blob Paintings" in red, yellow, green and blue.  The (partial?) representation of the visual spectrum seems indicative of the careful nature of the pieces' irrationality; the material has been previously employed by Ledgerwood's partner Tony Tasset.

Judy Ledgerwood @ Rhona Hoffman
Above: Judy Ledgerwood, "Blob Painting," in blue. 

Considering the whole, it's the successful synthesis of an environment, and not only a discrete object, which in this place connects Judy Ledgerwood to Anne Wilson.  The two seem otherwise somewhere near antipodes: as much in formal terms as in their artworks' respective locations across the site.  The range of visually interesting material available is probably the (two-part) show's greatest strength, and certainly not its weakness.  It's very much worth seeing.

[1] Describing Ledgerwood's "Chromatic Patterns for Chicago," writers have moved beyond the realm of the visual: Lori Waxman, January 21, 2011, Chicago Tribune, wrote of the "icy cool rush" and "agitated jangle" produced by the "loud, metallic, fluorescent," paint which "rustles and twinkles" in the light, even as Janina Ciezadlo, January 17, 2011, Newcity, commented upon the "heat and light" produced by the artwork.

Anne Wilson
"Rewinds"
Judy Ledgerwood
"Chromatic Patterns for Chicago & Blob Paintings"
January 14—February 18, 2011
Tuesday-Friday, 10am-5:30pm
Saturday, 11am-5:30pm
Rhona Hoffman Gallery
118 North Peoria Street
Chicago, Illinois 60607
http://www.rhoffmangallery.com

- Paul Germanos