Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Veronica Cianfrano @ Salon 1522 in December



Saturday, December 7th 5-8PM
Salon 1522: 1522 N. Lawrence st. Philadelphia, PA 19122

Heavy Hands is a solo exhibition featuring the work of Veronica Cianfrano, curated by Shane Leddy of Salon 1522.  

Veronica Cianfrano is a multi-media, Philadelphia based artist who has been examining "the communication break down" through photographic images and memories of her familial ties and through our current reliance on digital communication. This exhibition serves as a display for these vignettes of examination whether it be through memory decay, new meanings found in old footage, or the effects of the news media on our state of mind.

True to Cianfrano’s style, the exhibition will feature a film screening as well as a varying collection of sculptures, assemblages, drawings, and paintings; all of which invite the viewer in for an intimate discussion about memory, as well as the state of the media and the state of our minds today.


The opening reception will take place on December 7th from 5-8PM and the exhibition will remain up throughout the month of December. Call Shane Leddy for a private viewing: (610) 751-0935

Monday, November 11, 2013

Snap Happy--the video is in!



Snap Happy is an online panel discussion regarding the affect of digital technology and social media on the field of photography. The discussion was hosted by Manifesto-ish, an online artist collective founded by four UArts SUMFA alums. Enjoy!

Saturday, November 09, 2013

F*ck Art Book Party/Beatnik Extravaganza!

http://www.fuckartnyc.com/
Sunday November 17th at 3PM

Come celebrate the publication of F*ck Art (Let's Dance) -- an artist's memoir of the East Village by former CHER contributor Sally Eckhoff. The reading begins at 4PM.

Connie's RIC-RAC 
1132 s. 9th St 

https://www.facebook.com/events/549079178506082/?ref=22 

Sunday, October 27, 2013

This November...



Join Manifesto-ish for a another thrilling online panel discussion:

Snap Happy is a video discussion regarding the effect of digital photography and social media on the field of photography.

The discussion will occur in mid-November

Discussion statement:

Photography has long been a medium of the masses. Accessibility alone has caused an immense proliferation of amateur imagery in this arena. Professional photographers have had a long row to hoe regarding differentiation between low and high skilled snapping. With the onset of digital imaging technology as well as social media, the aforementioned proliferation has sky rocketed. For those of us unfortunate enough to participate in the world of social media with regularity, we find ourselves bombarded by personal photography. I have spent many a misplaced minute scrolling through the Facebook photo albums of friends of friends (aka people I don’t know). Even beyond social media, the internet is photo-laced. These images often appear apart from context and origin.

It feels as though the photographic playing field has changed yet again. Manifesto-ish has invited a handful of photographers and artists to participate in this online discussion. At this point our roster includes:

Mark Havens
Stefan Znoskso
Sean Corbett
Matt Zigler
Lauren McCarty
Christopher J. Butler

Here's a link to the Facebook event:


--Jessie Clark & the Manifesto-ish crew

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

'Making IT' Exhibition to Showcase Work by Recent UArts Alumni

Juried show, featuring the classes of 2003 through 2013, takes place October 10 – 26 in Hamilton and Arronson Galleries



"Vines" by April Field BFA '11 (Jewelry).

Making IT: Alumni Works '03-'13" is a juried exhibition of works by recent alumni. Over 150 works were submitted by UArts alumni from the classes of 2003 through 2013, including undergraduate and graduate alumni. The 57 works that were selected create a coherent and innovative exhibition, showcasing the excellence and artistic diversity of our recent alumni.

This is the first year the exhibit includes an invitational portion. This year's invited artists are Michele Kishita BFA '97 (Painting), MFA '10 (Painting) and John Souter BFA '12 (Crafts), whose work will be featured in Arronson Gallery.

Making IT will be on display October 10 – 26 in the lobby of Hamilton Hall and the adjacent Arronson Gallery (320 South Broad Street), with an opening reception scheduled for Friday, October 18 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.


"Composite 1" by Mason Owens BFA '13 (Multidisciplinary Fine Arts).

Thank you to the Making IT jury for their time and expertise: alumna and faculty member Shelley Spector BFA '94 (Fine Arts); alumnae Veronica Cianfrano MFA '10 (Painting) and Jessica Clark MFA '10 (Painting), both co-founders and curators at CHER (CHampions of Empty Rooms); alumnus and faculty member Jordan Rockford BFA '00 (Photography); student and Gallery One President Sydney Andrews '15 (Multidisciplinary Fine Arts); and Christopher Sharrock, dean, College of Art, Media & Design at the University of the Arts.

The alumni show will coincide with DesignPhiladelphia, the nation's largest city-wide celebration of design being held October 10 – 18;Philadelphia Open Studio Tours, a program of the Center for Emerging Visual Artists October 19 – 20; and the University's Family and Alumni Weekend, which will take place October 18 – 20.


"Disconnected" by Crystal Shephard BFA '09 (Graphic Design).

2013 "Making IT" Selected Artists

Michael Barakat MID '11 (Industrial Design)
David Boyd BFA '12 (Illustration)
Lorenzo Buffa BS '12 (Industrial Design)
Samantha Castrale BFA '11 (Photography)
Jonathan Chase BFA '13 (Painting/Drawing)
Marianne Dages BFA '04 (Photography)
Cory Espinosa BFA '12 (Multidisciplinary Fine Art)
April Field BFA '11 (Jewelry)
Regina Flath BFA '09 (Illustration)
Gina Herrera MFA '12 (Studio Art)
James Kaminski BFA '12 (Illustration)
James Lincke BFA '08 (Illustration)
April Melchior BFA '12 (Illustration)
Kelsey Niziolek BFA '12 (Illustration)
Mason Owens BFA '13 (Multidisciplinary Fine Arts)
Nancy Gail Ring MFA '10 (Painting)
Leontien Rotteveel BFA '06 (Crafts)
Natalie Rzucidlo BFA '10 (Book Arts/Printmaking)
Susan Seaton MFA '04 (Painting)
Crystal Shephard BFA '09 (Graphic Design)
Lindsay Sparagana BFA '06 (Photography)
Timothy Walsh BFA '07 (Graphic Design)
Shannah Warwick BFA '02 (Printmaking)
George Wylesol BFA '12 (Illustration)
Keith Yahrling BFA '08 (Photography0
Matt Zigler MFA '10 (Painting)

Death Do Us Part: a collection of works by Texas based artist Marshall Harris (MFA '10)


Death Do Us Part 
October 12th-November 16th, 2013
Dallas’ Red Arrow Contemporary

Death Do Us Part brings an unprecedented collection of unusually large and startling artworks to Red Arrow Contemporary in Dallas on October 12. Artist Marshall Harris of Fort Worth, noted for his large-scale, hyper-realistic drawings, exhibits more than a dozen creations at his debut solo show.

Winner of the 2013 Hunting Art Prize, Mr. Harris combines a number of works in myriad media – including several of his distinctive graphite-on-Mylar drawings, photography, cast-resin sculpture and a video creation - comprising a multi-faceted perspective on death.

“The term death is most often associated with the end of something – life being the obvious example - but when considered in broader terms, it can be redefined as transition. The finish of something becomes the start of another. Death marks the transitional point from the arrival at an ending and departure to a beginning,” Mr. Harris says.

His compositions in works seen in Death Do Us Part examine the details found in such transitions. He believes that “death can be the moment when a loved one becomes a departed relative, or a functional item transforms into something uniquely familiar but no longer what it was. Life causes an instant and unalterable effect on everything around us– as does death.”

The centerpiece of Death Do Us Part, “Stripping the Flesh and Bone of this Mortal Coil,” is a 2-D/3-D installation. Among its components is a 25-foot-long cloudscape drawing in graphite on Mylar, untraditionally hung in the center of the gallery to allow viewing from both sides. Suspended above the drawing is an installation of thousands of obituary photographs of the dearly departed.

Another study of a subject in post-life, “9”, Mr. Harris’ series of a feline skull provides an illuminating view of a tiny subject, a look at crevices, cavities, teeth and the porous nature of bone in ways impossible to access in life.

A Fort Worth native, Mr. Harris earned his fine arts degree from Texas Christian University in Fort Worth and an MFA from University of the Arts in Philadelphia. While working on drawings, he teaches at TCU in Fort Worth.

Death Do Us Part continues until November 16

Red Arrow Contemporary
1130 Dragon St., Suite 110
Dallas, TX 75207
redarrowcontemporary.com

 www.marshallharrisstudios.com

Wednesday, October 09, 2013

Saturday, October 05, 2013

Zac Pritchard @ Dick Blick

check out the work of a current MFA grad student  
________________________________________________________

What I'm Thinking: Sculptural Drawings by Zachary Saloman Pritchard

This month at Dick Blick, sculptor Zac Pritchard explores his two-dimensional side with a number of 

" Large, Small, Colored, and Black and White drawings."

Dick Blick
1330 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19107

The show runs for the length of October. Here's a link to more information:

click here

Thursday, October 03, 2013

Terri Saulin Frock: The Garden of Forking Paths @ Tiger Strikes Asteroid




Terri Saulin Frock: The Garden of Forking Paths
October 4 – October 27, 2013
Opening Reception: Friday, October 4, 2013, 6pm -10pm

PHILADELPHIA, PA-
Tiger Strikes Asteroid welcomes you to our October exhibition, The Garden of Forking Paths. The show features the work of TSA member Terri Saulin Frock.  This is her second solo exhibition with the gallery. Please join us for the Opening Reception Friday October 4, 2013, 6-10pm

“The Garden of Forking Paths is an incomplete, but not false, image of the universe as Ts’ui Pên conceived it. In contrast to Newton and Schopenhauer, your ancestor did not believe in a uniform, absolute time. He believed in an infinite series of times, in a growing, dizzying net of divergent, convergent and parallel times. This network of times which approached one another, forked, broke off, or were unaware of one another for centuries, embraces all possibilities of time. We do not exist in the majority of these times; in some you exist, and not I; in others I, and not you; in others, both of us. In the present one, which a favorable fate has granted me, you have arrived at my house; in another, while crossing the garden, you found me dead; in still another, I utter these same words, but I am a mistake, a ghost.”
- Jorge Luis Borges

Saulin Frock considers The Garden of Forking Paths a chapter in an endeavor that has been developing over the past ten years.  As drawings and objects accumulate, they function as “visual counterpoint," layering information to produce an imagined time-lapse view/code of a world. The vocabulary of forms is culled from a variety of sources such as maps of her urban garden, home renovation, travels abroad, the writings of Jorge Luis Borges, and Glenn Gould's "Goldberg Variations: The Well Tempered Clavier."

Terri Saulin Frock received her MFA from the University of the Arts and her BFA from Moore College of Art and Design in Philadelphia. Currently, she is teaching the course "Critical Discourse" at Moore College of Art & Design, and a variety of ceramics and sculpture classes in the BFA & Young Artist’s Workshop programs. Additionally, Terri Saulin Frock also teaches Pre-school classes to children at Society Hill Synagogue.

Terri Saulin Frock: The Garden of Forking Paths
October 4 – October 27, 2013
Opening Reception: Friday, October 4, 2013, 6pm -10pm
Tiger Strikes Asteroid
319 N. 11th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107

* Partial funding for this exhibition has come from a Faculty Development Grant from Moore College of Art and Design.
Many Thanks!

* This show is dedicated to the loving memory and history of friendship Terri shared with Deborah Ann Deery.
Thank you Deborah for your constant and generous positive energy, support and brilliant light that shines in all you have touched.

Monday, August 05, 2013

This Friday (August 16th)

Friday August 16th, CHER will be slinging burgers and screening videos with the help of Little Berlin

Champions of Empty Rooms (CHER)  has joined forces with the good people at little berlin to bring you a very special outdoor film festival. From 8-9:30, CHER will be grilling up beef and veggie burgers for just $5 from 8-9:30! Two live music acts will precede the screening. One man band Eddie Sids will get the party started with his unique blend of live loops and video collage. Rap aficionado Gavin Riley will follow with his sick beats and unique choose-your-own-adventure style narrative. The main event will feature a number of short films and videos from both local and national artists.


Please join Champions of Empty Rooms for a night of music, food, booze, and projected art!
This event was originally supposed to occur on August 9th (rain date in effect, yo)



Sunday, July 28, 2013

 
Tiger Strikes Museum: A Curatorial Intervention
July 31, 2013
ONE NIGHT ONLY!
Wednesday, July 31, 2013, 5pm -8pm


Philadelphia-
Tiger Strikes Asteroid is pleased to announce a curatorial intervention at The Philadelphia Museum of Art. This is a one night event! The occasion will take place on Wednesday, July 31, 2013 from 5-8 pm, in cooperation with the museum’s pay as you wish Wednesdays.

The members of Tiger Strikes Asteroid are honored to have been invited to choose works from the museum’s collection to ponder and expound upon. Based on individual member/associate interests, a tour has been developed featuring live-performative components and some very thoughtful reflections in the format of an audio tour. The audio tour has become a highly standardized way for museum visitors to access information about works of art and their rich history. Viewers will be able to access the tour via their cell phones. Signage and provided maps will specify the dedicated areas and codes to dial for information. Please join the TSA members and share their personal views about pivotal inspirations and works that continue to provoke and provide fertile ground for these artists musings.

Participants include: Jaime Alvarez, Rubens Ghenov, Alexis Granwell, Jesse Kudler, Caroline Santa, Leonardo Le San, Ezra Masch, Anne Schaefer, and Douglas Witmer.

Tiger Strikes Museum: A Curatorial Intervention
July 31, 2013
ONE NIGHT ONLY!
Wednesday, July 31, 2013, 5pm -8pm

ICE WATER FLYSWATTER @ Tiger Strikes Asteroid, August 2, 2013 & Correspondence II @ TSA New York, August 9th!

Cary Smith, Splat #25, oil on linen, 17" x 17", 2011

ICE WATER FLYSWATTER: Abstract Painting on Holiday in the Philadelphia Summer
Curated by Douglas Witmer

August 2 - September 1, 2013
Opening Reception: Friday, August 2, 2013, 6pm -10pm

PHILADELPHIA, PA-
Tiger Strikes Asteroid presents a most refreshing August exhibition, ICE WATER FLYSWATTER: Abstract Painting on Holiday in the Philadelphia Summer
Curated by Douglas Witmer,  August 2 -- September 1, 2013. Please join us for the Reception Friday August 2, 6-10pm
The majority of the participating artists will be in attendance

Alain Biltereyst (Belgium)
Mary Bucci McCoy (Massachusetts)
Donald Martiny (North Carolina)
Cary Smith (Connecticut)
Mark Wethli (Maine)
Paige Williams (Ohio)
--with a special poem/drawing by Philadelphia artist Ian White Williams commissioned for the exhibition.

ICE WATER FLYSWATTER is a focused group of paintings, selected by Philadelphia artist Douglas Witmer, conceived specifically as an exhibition for the summer.  The seven international artists represented in the show share an approach to contemporary abstract painting that may be seen as rooted in the tradition of reductivism.  These are painters who begin with cold-minded conceptual intentions about the outcomes of their works. Yet in their varied buoyant colors, off-kilter compositions, and an openness to process-related incident, they sacrifice nothing when it comes to the celebration of visual delight, fun and joy. As the artist Cary Smith has said, “I believe you can make intense rigor that also feels good to have around."

Alain Biltereyst makes small paintings that recall hard edge geometric work of the 1960s. Through his use of raw plywood as a support and the presence of deliberate errors the geometric shapes, Biltereyst teases fresh references to contemporary everyday life. His work has recently been exhibited at Devening Projects in Chicago, Jack Hanley Gallery, New York, and widely throughout northern Europe. He lives and works near Brussels, Belgium.

Mary Bucci McCoy lives and works in Beverly, MA. Her tonal paintings in ghostly pastel colors are often punctuated by moments of heavy impasto application, sometimes addressing the side of the panel, calling attention to notions of scale, the painting surface, and the idea of the painting as an object on the wall.  Bucci McCoy was the recipient of a 2012 painting fellowship from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, and her work has recently been exhibited at Kingston Gallery, Boston and Rhode Island College, Providence.

Donald Martiny's hybrid painting/reliefs appear as single brushstrokes blown up to monumental scale, almost leaping off the wall in jubilant monochrome colors. Recent exhibitions of his work include George Lawson Gallery, Los Angeles, Galerie Urbane, Marfa and Dallas TX, and Carrack Modern Art, Durham NC. He lives and works in Chapel Hill, NC.

With an impeccable sense for color and painting technique, Cary Smith makes what appear to be hard-edge abstractions, often with “goofy” images that suggest deeply personalized narratives. Over the past three decades his work has been exhibited widely in the United States and Europe and is in numerous collections including the Whitney Museum, the Brooklyn Museum, the Yale University Art Gallery, the Fogg Art Museum. He is the recipient of awards from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Gottlieb Foundation, and the Pollock Krasner Foundation. Cary Smith is represented by Feature Inc. New York. He lives in Farmington. CT.

Mark Wethli's imagery is firmly and physically linked with his sensibility for materials. His work evokes the rustic Americana of the early 20th century like folk art, game boards, and architecture. Wethli's work has been exhibited widely and is in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Portland Museum. He is the recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and The Pollock Krasner Foundation. He is Professor of Art at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, ME.

Utilizing the energy of colors interacting with each other and the edges of the painting surface, the work of Paige Williams reveals the tension of one at the edge of relinquishing control and reveling in the absurd and unexpected. Her work has been exhibited internationally and she is the recent recipient of an Ohio Arts Council Individual Excellence Award. She is Professor of Painting and Drawing at The Art Academy of Cincinnati, OH.

Exhibition curator Douglas Witmer commissioned Philadelphia-based artist Ian White Williams to make a hybrid poem/painting specifically for this show. Formerly the lead singer and lyricist of a internationally touring punk band, Williams' work in painting combines delicate surfaces and improvised gestures and often includes or is informed by his poetry. Williams work has recently been exhibited at Parallel Art Space in Brooklyn, Larry Becker Contemporary Art, and FJORD, Philadelphia.


ICE WATER FLYSWATTER: Abstract Painting on Holiday in the Philadelphia Summer

Curated by Douglas Witmer
August 2 - September 1, 2013
Opening Reception: Friday, August 2, 2013, 6pm -10pm
August promises to be a busy month!

Please join the Tiger Strikes Asteroid members as we travel to TSA New York for Correspondence II, August 9 – September 1, 2013.

Opening Reception: Friday, August 9, 2013, 7 – 10 PM



TSA New York is pleased to announce the opening of Correspondence II, a group exhibition featuring the work of Tiger Strikes Asteroid Philadelphia members: Jaime Alvarez, Keith Crowley, Rubens Ghenov, Alexis Granwell, Ezra Masch, Nora Salzman, Caroline Santa, Theresa Saulin Frock, Anne Schaefer, and Douglas Witmer. Correspondence II is the second part of an exchange between the two locations. The first part, Correspondence I, happened in March 2013 and featured the work of TSA New York members in Philadelphia.

Founded in 2009, Tiger Strikes Asteroid Philadelphia is an artist-run and artist-curated exhibition space located at 319A North 11th Street. Their goal is to connect the Philadelphia art scene to the global art community by showing the work of emerging artists from Philadelphia and other cities such as New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles.

TSA New York was founded in 2012 when founding member Alex Paik relocated from Philadelphia to New York. TSA New York seeks to invite a dialogue between an eclectic mix of artists and curatorial visions with a focus on emerging artists from New York and beyond.

Both spaces exist and operate as a result of the diligent efforts of their artist members. The artist-run collective can be an extension of studio, an experimental venue, or provide the possibility of research into how others make things. In both TSA galleries, the role of artist, curator, and administrator is constantly in flux between members. This unique hybrid role provides a new way for each of us to correspond with a larger community.

For more information please contact TSA.
Correspondence II
August 9 – September 1, 2013
Opening Reception: Friday, August 9, 2013, 7 – 10 PM
Hours: Saturdays and Sundays 12pm-6pm and by appointment
Please ring bell to enter during normal hours.

Friday, July 12, 2013

CHER Collective @ Pizza Brain

Do you like pizza? Do you like art? Well CHER has you covered, my friends. On Friday July 5th, Champions of Empty Rooms unveiled their collaborative installation Feels Like the First Time. Frankford Ave's own Pizza Brain has been generous enough to lend CHER some storefront real estate for the month of July. As an installation in the round, FLTFT is can be consumed from the exterior and interior alike. Looks like you've got an excuse to have a slice and a scoop. Bring an umbrella, an empty stomach, and your eyeballs on over to Pizza Brain already...



Saturday, June 29, 2013

End Transmission: Ezra Masch & Alex Braidwood / Opening Reception: Friday, July 5, 2013, 6pm -10pm

 

End Transmission: Ezra Masch & Alex Braidwood
July 5 - July 28, 2013
Opening Reception: Friday, July 5, 2013, 6pm -10pm
 

PHILADELPHIA, PA-
Tiger Strikes Asteroid is proud to announce the opening of its July exhibition: End Transmission, an experimental collaborative installation between gallery member Ezra Masch and sound artist Alex Braidwood. This exhibition is Ezra Masch's first exhibition with the gallery.
The two artists met at a residency in Iowa where they were both fascinated by the area’s vast landscape and its overwhelming effect on the senses. The installation recalls that all-consuming experience by emulating the sensory properties of the Midwestern winds. With audio culled from jet turbines and helicopter blades, Braidwood's field recordings are interpreted and remixed by Masch through the use of speakers and projected light. Air pressure oscillates between physical vibration, audible sound, and visual representation, creating an atmosphere in which the observer becomes immersed in sensory experience.

Alex Braidwood is a designer, media artist and design educator who maintains a practice centered around a process of play, experimentation and research through making. Alex’s current work explores methods for transforming the relationship between people and the noise in their environment. Currently, Alex is Assistant Professor of Graphic Design and a faculty member of the Human Computer Interaction Graduate Program at Iowa State University.



Ezra Masch currently lives and works in Philadelphia PA.  He received his MFA in Studio Art from The University of Texas at Austin in 2012 and his BFA in Sculpture from The Rhode Island School of Design in 2004.  He has exhibited nationally and internationally, including exhibitions in Austin, Philadelphia, New York, Columbus, and Rome.  He also has received numerous awards, the most recent of which being the Continuing Graduate Fellowship from UT Austin.  

 

End Transmission: Ezra Masch & Alex Braidwood
July 5 - July 28, 2013
Opening Reception: Friday, July 5, 2013, 6pm - 10pm
 
 
Tiger Strikes Asteroid is an artist-run and artist-curated exhibition space located at 319A North 11th Street, home to Vox Populi, Marginal Utility, Grizzly Grizzly, and Napoleon. Our goal is to connect the Philadelphia art scene to the global art community by showing the work of emerging artists from Philadelphia and other cities such as New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

(no)Hope Artist Talk: Thursday May 23rd


Please join us at Salon 1522 for a panel discussion with the artists as well as a second crack at our Oh So Hopeful Photobooth!




Salon 1522
1522 N. Lawrence St.
Philadelphia, PA
19122

Monday, April 29, 2013

Saturday, Saturday, Saturday!!


CHER cordially invites you to join us at Salon 1522 on Saturday, May 4th to enjoy art, music, free beer, and some prime time photo booth action. Did you miss your prom? No worries, CHER's got you covered.

Click this for more details (or go to cherpopups.com)



Salon 1522
1522 N. Lawrence St
Phila., PA 19122

7-10pm!


Friday, April 12, 2013

Champions of Empty Rooms presents no(Hope) at Salon 1522

CHER Presents: (no) Hope

An Exhibition opening Saturday, May 4th from 7pm to 10pm

Featuring a live performance from Eddie Sids, a handmade photobooth, and some of the most hope(full)(less) contemporary art you have ever (will ever) see (experience). Come and rejoice (despair) with us about our collective future (fiscal cliff)!

located at: 

Salon 1522 
1522 North Lawrence st. 
Philadelphia, PA 19122
www.salon1522.com

For updates and more information, please visit www.cherpopups.com 
Or visit our FB page at www.facebook.com/cherpopups

Thanks!

Veronica + Jessie
(founders and sometimes Champions)






Living Without Labels: a review by Shawn Beeks


---This review originally appeared on Champions of Empty Rooms's art blog---

 Living Without Labels

Outsider Art has been getting a lot of coverage in Philadelphia over the past few months with exhibitions at the Philadelphia Museum of Art and smaller events such as Interconnection: The Art of Social Change at the Asian Arts Initiative, and Beyond Boundaries at Magic Gardens. Having attended the majority of these exhibits, I began to wonder if labeling the work as "outsider" helps or harms the integrity of artists. I recently showed an acquaintance one of the drawings that caught my eye, providing no information about the artist or the venue. He responded, “I’d say it was genius if it were drawn by a 4 year old.” Granted, this person was intoxicated, but he spoke honestly regarding his opinion of work. This brief conversation provoked me to investigate two things: what the difference is between an artist on the inside and one the outside, and what makes a preschooler a genius.

Artists have been defined as those who are able, by virtue of imagination and talent or skill, to create works of aesthetic value, especially in the fine arts, while outsider artists are defined as untutored, working by themselves, for themselves, without recognizing themselves as artists.

On the surface, the differences between insiders and outsiders are not in the quality of the work, but the recognition and respect gained from others who see their work. By definition, outsiders are viewed as ignorant isolationists, unaware that they possess the same skills and talents of artists celebrated by the public. The differences become apparent when one’s focus shifts to the “aesthetic value” of the work, questioning what determines how much the work is worth.  An artist in isolation may be less aware of their work’s value because others are not present to attribute value to work and the artist. Having others acknowledging the value in one’s work often creates a sense of self-importance in the artist, and pressure to produce work worthy of the praise and labels like “genius” bestowed upon them. Therefore, it’s not the work that makes an artist a genius, but the viewer’s expectations of what the artist should make. The hypothetical four-year-old mentioned earlier is not expected to produce representational drawings with anatomically correct figures or accurate perspective, but adults exhibiting in public spaces are expected to achieve this, or consciously challenge these practices with strong visual arguments.



New Years 2008


The expectations we carry when viewing exhibited work determines whether or not it is labeled (insider) art or outsider art; therefore, individuals lacking academic training or recognition from others, who make challenging work, could be categorized as geniuses. Again, these expectations, not the work, are what form opinions of art and determine the artist’s label. Exhibits like Beyond Boundaries, showcasing the drawings and paintings by artists from Oasis and PDDC Cultural Arts Center (Philadelphia Developmental Disabilities Corporation) Art Centers, fall under the label of “outsider art”. While viewing the work on opening night, I noticed strong narrative qualities -- what some might call brilliance -- from Alonzo Troy Humphreys, Andrea Budu, and John Hoggan. Andrea Budu’s My Friends and New Years 1998 possess a reoccurring theme of overwhelming crowds in which figures are drowning in pools of pigment. Badu’s New Years contains a vacant street seen behind the crowd, which also serves as a spotlight on a green central figure whose significance is unknown.



Guitar Players

Located beside Budu’s work are the drawings of John Hoggan, entitled Guitar Players and Collection. Hoggan seems to have found a way to illustrate complete stories with just a few simple lines. His long-legged stick figures serve as springboards for viewers to write their own versions of Pitchfork documentaries about the best bands that never played.


Peckin’ On Seed

Of all the work at Magic GardensPeckin on Seed makes the strongest argument against the practice of labeling some artists as outsiders. Humphrey’s understanding of composition and color theory imply that academic training and self-awareness of ones artistic abilities may not be required to produce images comparable to fine art.  Furthermore, Peckin’s ability to prompt viewers to ask questions about the work and the artist, keeping their attention on the work rather than what someone else said about it, are what makes it valuable.

We can only speculate what inspired Dubu, Hoggan, and Humphrey to draw and paint. The complete stories behind their art may remain a mystery, but so would anyone’s inspiration for creating without talking directly to them.  What can be determined from viewing the show are their abilities, by virtue of imagination and talent or skill, to create works of aesthetic value. Whether or not they consider themselves artists is not of any importance when one’s attention questions the shadows cast by the right talon on a stump, or the mysterious source of light that also serves as a street, or the mischievous winking eyes of a singing stick figure.  These individuals have created work beyond the implied boundaries set by others through labels like “outsider”, and deserve to be recognized simply as artists.

Beyond Boundaries is currently on display at Magic Gardens through April 14th, 2013, located at 1020 South Street.


Shawn Beeks 

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Call For Art

The Champions of Empty Rooms invite you to participate in an upcoming group show at Philadelphia's Salon 1522.


Sometimes the world seems kind of, well, screwed. Economic upheaval is rampant, bee populations are dwindling, Earth's fresh water wells are running dry while sea levels rise, and it would seem it's suddenly acceptable to shoot adolescents just so long as one does so in “self-defense.” These factors alone are enough to squelch optimism in even the most fresh-faced youth of today.

And yet, somehow we continue to plan, make, build, and even laugh. We continue to create; acts of artistic creation are about as hopeful as you can get. These hopes range from quiet and unassuming to high flying and grandiose—what matters is that hope remains. Without further ado, ChER Collective invites you to submit work running the thematic gamut, from the most furious and hazy dark cloud to the puffiest, perfect white cumulus onward to blue skies shining on me. {No} Hope is to be comprised of work running the spectrum: from unabashed optimism to borderline Emo-eye-liner wearing-pessimism right on down to Apocalyptic despair.



Here is a link to the Facebook Event:

https://www.facebook.com/events/351511964969735/?notif_t=plan_user_joined


Tuesday, February 26, 2013

CORRESPONDENCE I: TSA New York / Opening Reception: Friday, March 1, 2013, 6pm - 10pm



CORRESPONDENCE I: TSA New York

Opening Reception: Friday, March 1, 2013, 6pm - 10pm
March 1- March 31, 2013

PHILADELPHIA-
Tiger Strikes Asteroid is pleased to announce the opening of our March exhibition, CORRESPONDENCE I, a group exhibition featuring the work of Tiger Strikes Asteroid New York members, Alex Paik, Naomi Reis, Rachel Gorchov, Vincent Como, Will Gabadon, Tai Yin Ho, Jackie Hoving, Norm Paris, Matt Phillips, and Andrew Prayzner.

Founded in 2012, Tiger Strikes Asteroid New York (TSA New York) is an artist-run, artist-curated exhibition space located at 44 Stewart Ave, #49 in Bushwick, Brooklyn. TSA New York is our "sister space" and was formed when founding member Alex Paik relocated to NYC and began “corresponding” with the local talent. TSA New York seeks to invite a dialogue between an eclectic mix of artists and curatorial visions with a focus on emerging artists from New York and beyond.

Both Tiger Strikes Asteroid spaces (New York and Philadelphia) exist and operate as a result of the diligent work and efforts of their artist members. The artistic practices and curatorial endeavors of the TSA New York members are varied and distinguished. In the gallery's short tenure, exhibitions have been met with much critical acclaim, reflecting the exciting energy of this new space. The title, CORRESPONDENCE I plays on the way in which the two spaces relate in regard to the word’s two meanings: 1. a close similarity, connection or equivalence.
2. to communicate with a person by exchange of letters. The two TSA galleries maintain a constant hive like hum. We are in conversation with each other like siblings, exchanging ideas and information, organizing this exhibition, in addition to the significant daily correspondence that is necessary to run the respective galleries. But, as members of an artist-run collective, correspondence can be seen as the particular way we choose to be in dialogue with the art making community. The artist run collective can be an extension of studio, an experimental venue, or provide the possibility of research in to how others make things. In both TSA galleries, the role of artist, curator, and administrator is constantly in flux for the members. This unique hybrid role provides a new way for each of us to correspond with the world.

This exhibition is the first part of an exchange between the two galleries. Correspondence II will take place in August, 2013 at TSA New York and will feature the work of TSA Philadelphia members.
About Tiger Strikes Asteroid New York: http://newyork.tigerstrikesasteroid.com/

CORRESPONDENCE I: TSA New York
March 1 - March 31, 2013
Opening Reception: Friday, March 1, 2013, 6pm - 10pm