Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts

Monday, April 25, 2011

Pictorial: UIC MFA Thesis Exhibition 3 @ Gallery 400

UIC MFA Thesis Exhibition 3 @ Gallery 400

UIC MFA Thesis Exhibition 3 @ Gallery 400

UIC MFA Thesis Exhibition 3 @ Gallery 400

Featuring: Rebecca Beachy, Mike Gibisser, Chris Meerdo, and Joe Pankowski

April 19 - 23, 2011
Gallery 400
Art and Design Hall, First Floor
400 S. Peoria Street (at Van Buren Street)
Chicago IL, 60607
http://www.uic.edu/aa/college/gallery400

*Exhibition 4 opening April 29, 2011*

- Paul Germanos

Monday, March 28, 2011

Pictorial: Barbara Kasten

Barbara Kasten @ 845 W. Washington

Above: Barbara Kasten, audio-visual installation
Remix, with Lucky Dragons
March 12 – May 31, 2011
Applied Arts
845 W. Washington
Chicago, IL 60607
http://barbarakasten.net

See also: Barbara Kasten's Remix treated in the company of recent video works by Ben Russell, Eric Fleischauer, and Nicolas Grospierre, as found within the article Eye Exam: Stand in the Light, by Jason Foumberg of Newcity Art,
http://art.newcity.com/2011/03/28/eye-exam-stand-in-the-light/

Barbara Kasten @ Monique Meloche

Above: Barbara Kasten, photographic print
Group show including works by Karl Haendel, Walead Beshty and Sheree Hovsepian
March 20 – May 15, 2010 (one year ago)
Monique Meloche
2154 W. Division
Chicago, IL 60622
http://moniquemeloche.com

- Paul Germanos

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Review: Molly Zuckerman-Hartung @ Julius Caesar

Molly Zuckerman-Hartung lifted a small format (APS-C) DSLR to her eye and slowly turned round her studio space; at fairly regular intervals she depressed the camera's shutter-release button. Then, without post-processing, Zuckerman-Hartung employed a consumer-grade lab to print her documentary photography. Finally, overlapping one of the little (A6) pictures upon another she assembled five different projections: working as a geographer to map the spatial distribution of phenomena within her environment.

Molly Zuckerman-Hartung @ Julius Caesar

"Scrying," meaning an effort to gain knowledge through object-assisted visualization, is the title she's chosen for her show. Here, in lieu of a crystal ball, Zuckerman-Hartung has found the glass of an optical viewfinder, and lens elements, through which to gaze. And, mounted upon the gallery walls, a record of her objective, albeit Cyclopean, "vision" is available for public consumption.

In contrast, a low platform in the center of the space contains a collection of what the artist refers to as "scries." Said objects are small-diameter metal and plastic lids, each containing a little nonobjective abstract painting. These peculiar products look like the work of Zuckerman-Hartung's hand; they offer no explanation for their being, other than their maker. Whatever it is that Zuckerman-Hartung, or any other observer, "sees" in the scries is subjective.

Molly Zuckerman-Hartung @ Julius Caesar

While linked by a circular framing device (lens/lid) and a rectangular presentation (print/platform) the whole is otherwise characterized by a rough juxtaposition of the literal to the fantastic. And, the strongest connection between (a) and (b) is cleverly conceptual: it's usually from brief glimpses only, each colored by our imperfections, that we're able to cobble together some framework of understanding...

Molly Zuckerman-Hartung
"Scrying"
November 7 - 28, 2010
Julius Caesar Gallery
3311 W. Carroll
Chicago, IL
http://juliuscaesarchicago.com

Molly Zuckerman-Hartung,
http://www.mollyzuckermanhartung.com

Jason Foumberg's November 2010 review in NewCity,
http://art.newcity.com/2010/11/29/eye-exam-thing-and-its-other/

Alicia Eler's April 2008 review in Time Out Chicago,
http://chicago.timeout.com/articles/art-design/28304/molly-zuckerman-hartung

MW Capacity's December 2010 blurb and comments,
http://mwcapacity.wordpress.com/2010/12/29/molly-zuckerman-hartung/

- Paul Germanos

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Review: Harvey Moon & Xiao Tse @ Studio 1020

Harvey Moon's drawing machine hangs precariously.  From time-to-time its stylus drops briefly but precipitously: each jerking motion appearing to threaten the device's connection to the gallery wall.

Harvey Moon @ Studio 1020

The whole affair is an informal tangle of common-looking parts, strung out to resemble a grandfather clock, controlled by a telephone, for the purpose of operating a tattoo gun.  The 24x36 (?) paper attached to the gallery wall, upon which a drawing is--slowly--being formed by the jerking stylus, is almost beside the point.  Moon's chief artistry seems to lie in the creation of the thing (machine) which creates what was formerly known as art, viz. a drawing.

Harvey Moon @ Studio 1020

Meanwhile, on an opposing wall, Xiao Tse's photographic prints are sustained by the steady glow of lightbox backlight.  Tse's display shares a nominally "DIY aesthetic" with Moon's machine, as the re-purposed construction materials used by Tse are exposed to view, easily identifiable by the visitor.  Curiously, Tse's chosen imagery is normally considered to be background rather than subject; and he's caused it (imagery) to be segmented, with white space left between individual units in a series.

Xiao Tse @ Studio 1020

While it's possible to count the number of aperture blades visible in Tse's lens' bokeh, or study the quality of Moon's machine's drawings, the meaning to be found in the exhibition (in toto) seems to stem from the peculiar manifestation of technology in the gallery space.  In form and in spirit, Rob Ray's Deadtech is recalled from the not-too-distant past; and the Antena of Miguel Cortez is remembered from the present day.

Xiao Tse @ Studio 1020

The activity of Moon and Tse might be taken to indicate that it is possible to modestly harness science in the service of art; but, too, that indication might have more to do with the moderate nature of Moon and Tse than with the relationship they've (indirectly) proposed.  Moon's machine in particular is infinitely scalable; the effect of the singular, rickety prototype ought not to be taken as the end towards which the machine might be made to progress.  It's possible, for example, to imagine a large room filled with many similar mechanical artisans--each ticking away at the likeness of some predetermined form.  Is the thought unappealing?

It seems good, now especially, to consider wherein the artistic act might be lost or found.  Harvey Moon and Xiao Tse, taken together, do much to provoke such consideration.  Though they seem not to have planned to exhibit their works together, their works are resonant--and timely.

Harvey Moon & Xiao Tse
"Mad Love"
Closing: Thursday, August 19, 2010
The Studio at 1020
1020 N. Marshfield
Chicago, IL
studio1020(at)gmail.com

Harvey Moon,
http://www.unanything.com

Xiao Tse,
http://jpgmag.com/people/forhours

- Paul Germanos