Sunday, November 2, 2008



NEXUS/foundation for today's art in Philadelphia, in conjunction with The Hacktory, is seeking submissions for "Unintended Uses," an exhibition of hacked and repurposed materials scheduled for February 12 through March 6, 2009. Artists and makers working with electronics, video, robotics, and other new media, and particularly those who reside on the East Coast, are encouraged to submit work for review.

"Whatever code we hack, be it programming language, poetic language,
math or music, curves or colourings, we create the possibility of new
things entering the world. Not always great things, or even good
things, but new things. In art, in science, in philosophy and culture,
in any production of knowledge where data can be gathered, where
information can be extracted from it, and where in that information
new possibilities for the world are produced, there are hackers
hacking the new out of the old. While hackers create these new worlds,
we do not possess them. That which we create is mortgaged to others,
and to the interests of others, to states and corporations who control
the means for making worlds we alone discover. We do not own what we
produce - it owns us."
-- from "A Hacker Manifesto" by McKenzie Wark


Deadline: December 1, 2008 by 11:59 PM
Notification: On or around December 15, 2008
Submissions via E-MAIL ONLY


Required content of your E-mail submission:

• Contact information, including name, E-mail address, physical address, and phone number
• Statement of no more than 250 words about your work or practice
• Links to online portfolios, slideshows, or videos representing the work being submitted

You may link to work on YouTube, Vimeo, Flickr, or any other online resource.

E-MAIL your submission to Unintended.Uses@nexusphiladelphia.org.

For more information, contact info@nexusphiladelphia.org or visit www.nexusphiladelphia.org.

Established in 1975, NEXUS/foundation for today's art is an artist-run, non-profit gallery space dedicated to supporting local emerging and experimental artists engaged in new art practices. NEXUS presents challenging, innovative, and compelling exhibitions of contemporary art that stimulate creative thought and dialog among the public, increasing awareness of the meanings and methods behind today's art.
The Hacktory, a project incubated by Nonprofit Technology Resources, promotes the use of technology in the arts through classes, community events, shared facilities and equipment, an artist-in-residence program, art and technology promotion, and materials exchange. For more information about The Hacktory, please visit www.thehacktory.org.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Art Crush featuring Alums

New salons: Homes are where the art is

It's a Saturday evening inside a Rittenhouse penthouse. Music plays from discreetly concealed speakers, and guests wander in pairs at the perimeters of the handsome wood-paneled rooms.

The place is brightly lit - no dimming for atmosphere's sake - because what the people see is the point of it all.

No ordinary party, this is an art salon called Artcrush, an ephemeral group show curated by Jenny Jaskey, owner of the eponymous gallery in Northern Liberties.

The intent of such gatherings, organized by Jaskey and others in the area - sometimes in the organizer's own home - is similar to Gertrude Stein's aim in the early 1900s, when she would include movers and shakers at the Saturday evening salons at her Paris apartment.

"The art became more accepted with conversation around it, when it was in a home," Jaskey says. She'd like to see a similar blending of communities in Philadelphia.

"Except for First Friday, art events here are typically attended by artists, curators, and a handful of collectors," Jaskey says. "Art isn't as embraced by the business and social communities as it is in other cities."

For this salon, Jaskey has teamed with Matthew and Gabrielle Canno, who are lending their Center City home to display the work of two dozen cutting-edge contemporary artists from Philadelphia and New York.

On a sleek glass table in the middle of the Cannos' living room, a taxidermied red fox sits upright and alert. A couple consider it, wondering whether it's art or someone's beloved pet. (It's Twink, by Dan Bruce.)

In the next room, a young fellow in khakis and a crisp sport jacket looks at a quartet of large photographs hanging in a neat square over the Cannos' billiards table. A label on the wall reveals that these are Self-Portraits by Heterosexual Men by Gabriel Martinez.

Opposite, two pieces by Philadelphia video artists Matt Suib and Nadia Hironaka loop on a large screen above a cushy leather couch, where three artist-types powwow and eat Tootsie Rolls from a nearby glass jar.

The rooms grow more crowded - Jaskey estimates 200 guests pass through. She's a laid-back hostess, holding court among an equal number of downtown hipsters and young Rittenhouse dwellers, including some of the children of Philadelphia's most generous art patrons. In a long-sleeve black minidress, the gallerist moves from group to group.

Hugo FitzGerald, 27, a self-described "beginning collector," has never seen Randall Sellers' work before, and he's interested in the artist's meticulous drawings. He's enjoying the party as much as the art.

"This is a great way to spend a Saturday evening," FitzGerald says. If it were an art opening, he might have already had his fill. "Because it's in someone's home," he says, "I feel welcome to hang out longer."

Eye candy abounds on the Cannos' wraparound roof deck, including a spandex piece by Leeza Meksin that stretches from the top deck to the lower deck, creating an abstract shape that's visible from Rittenhouse Square - if you know where to look.

A week after Artcrush, across the city in Fishtown, there's a more intimate salon in progress at the rowhouse independent curator Eileen Tognini shares with her daughter and husband.

A section of living-room wall is hung with vintage silver pocket watches filled with cast-glass ovals printed with images that artist Jen Blazina has manipulated to look like Victorian-era silhouettes.

In the bathroom, surface artist Susan Benarcik has installed wall panels made from toothpicks glued together in a beehivelike pattern.

Twenty-five guests and a few of the artists sip wine and graze on chocolate as they move through the first floor of the house, taking it all in.

"I wanted to focus on the three-dimensional," Tognini says, "to say that it's OK to have installation or sculpture. Having art doesn't have to mean hanging a painting."

Tognini has been staging salons in her own home and with client-collaborators for the last decade.

"Work shown in a home creates a very safe environment for people to render opinions about what they love and don't love," she says.

She cites some work she installed in the branches of a tree outside her 200-year-old stone farmhouse at the base of Hawk Mountain in Berks County during "Gallery in the Garden," her annual salonlike event, which stretches over two weekends each September. The work consisted of sacs made from hair and filled with ice.

Over time, the ice melted, and the hair began to deflate and drip. Tognini was gratified to hear people gathered near the tree, sharing their disgust.

That's one benefit of a salon setting, Jaskey agrees. In a gallery, where art can feel sacred, voicing strong opinions doesn't come as naturally.

"People worry that they need a master's degree to look at contemporary art, to understand it," Jaskey says. "That's just not true. They need to see that it won't bite."

Salons also offer the chance to discover volumes about a piece directly from the artist.

In Tognini's living room, David and Joan Wenger of Center City sit on the couch chatting with artist Julia Stratton, who made the bronze sculpture that stands between them. She tells the Wengers about the Independence Foundation Grant that sent her to Russia to research a series of sculptures based on compositions by Alexander Scriabin, the turn-of-the-century classical composer. The piece they're looking at is one of them.

Tognini thinks hosting art salons satisfies her own need for constant aesthetic change. "My mom remembers that, as a 12-year-old, I'd always stay up late rearranging my room," she says.

Composing vignettes is part of the fun. She decided to place Pazia Mannella's Medusa, an undulating sculpture made from zippers, across the back of a low armchair.

"It's so organic, it looked like it wanted to be something else," Tognini says, "not a piece of sculpture plopped on the floor. I dubbed it 'furniture jewelry.' "

On the wall above Medusa, there are four pieces titled Give and Receive by Mannella, a 2008 Tyler School of Art graduate, that look like antique Elizabethan collars, but they're actually coffee filters dyed with blackberry tea and sewn together into oblong wreaths. A guest of Tognini's, an interior designer, buys one on the spot.

That's one more red "sold" dot than Jaskey got to stick on the wall at Artcrush. Of course, at $90, the coffee-filter sculptures are less of a financial commitment.

And besides, Jaskey and Tognini say, salons are more about fostering community and exposure for the artists than they are about immediate sales.

"Most of the people who came had never been to something like this before," Jaskey says a few days after Artcrush. "I really just want to promote contemporary art.

"This is going to make people think about their environment more - it's going to make them think, 'What's in my home?' And, 'Wouldn't it be great to have something up on my wall that challenges me?' "

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Keer

"Synthetic Experiments"
October 30-November 26, 2008
Please Join us for the Opening Reception at Greenwich House Pottery, Jane Hartsook Gallery: Thursday, October 30th, 6-8pm

Greenwich House Pottery & Dean Project are pleased to present: "Synthetic Experiments", new work by Greg Stewart and Chad Curtis Oct. 30th - Nov. 26th, 2008. This exhibition of sculptural objects and drawings investigates ideas of mutation and synthesis, both as process and concept.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Annual Juried Photography Competition

Project Basho presents ONWARD, our second annual photography competition. Nominees will be invited to participate in a group exhibition in January 2009. Of those nominees, two photographers will be invited to participate in a co-exhibition of their work along with receiving cash awards.

We are seeking work from new and emerging photographers with unique vision and talent. It is an open-themed competition and we welcome all mediums of still-images. Our juror for this year will be Peter Barberie, curator of Photographs at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

To learn more about ONWARD please visit our official website or entry form

You're also welcome to view last year's competition.


DEADLINE: NOV 14 2008


Project Basho is a photography resource center located in Old Kensington, an artist-concentrated and culturally vibrant second of Philadelphia. It is a small but dedicated organization of photographers, rub by photographs, for photographers.






Vote, November 4th

Monday, October 27, 2008

Conversation: Odita and Nasgaard

Whenever Wednesday, October 29 @ 7pm
Tuttleman Auditorium · Free


The eminent historian, critic, and curator Roald Nasgaard, who specializes in twentieth-century abstraction and its regional variations, talks with ICA Ramp Project artist Odili Donald Odita about nonrepresentational art and its manifestation as a form within a global context in the twenty-first century.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

SlowArt Productions
Above: Details of some works from last year's exhibit
CALL FOR ENTRIES
Limner Gallery Exhibition * $1000 Cash Award * $2600 in publication awards
SlowArt Productions presents the 17th Annual Emerging Artists group exhibition and awards. Open to all artists working an any media, this exhibition will be held at the Limner Gallery during March of 2009. A grand prize of $1000 in cash will be awarded to one artist. $2600 in publication awards will be presented to three artists. Winning artists will be exhibited at Limner Gallery and on the Limner Gallery website. Entry deadline November 30. Entry details and information at:
Vice Dean Hester Stinnett and Senior Associate Dean Brigitte Knowles with the help of Project Manager John Moses, were able to set up a few dates for the Graduate Students to tour the new building. The times and dates are as follows:

Thursday, October 23 - Fibers, Ceramics, Metals, Glass Grads at 1PM

You will meet at the Work Trailer directly behind the new building. Wear comfy shoes but no sandals or open toed shoes will be allowed. If you want to sign out the van and carpool, see the Information Desk in Tyler Hall.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Vote, November 4th

Visiting Artist Lecture Series

Dawit Petros
October 22, 2008 11:00am
Presidents Hall

Dawit L. Petros was born in Asmara, Eritrea, and received his MFA in 2007 from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. He has exhibited his work in group shows throughout Canada and in the United States, including Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; Wedge Gallery, Toronto; Jack Shainman Gallery, New York; Photographic Resource Center, Boston; Massachusetts College of Art, Boston; Harbourfront Gallery, Toronto; Observatoire 4, Montreal; Maison de la Culture Frontenac, Montréal; and Prefix Gallery, Toronto. He has received Fulbright and Bombardier Internationalist fellowships, as well as an Art Matters Foundation grant.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Register for classes, MFA candidates!

Friday, October 17, 2008

The Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts announces its new website:


Be sure to check it out and sign up for the IDSVA News and Announcements mailing list!

IDSVA offers a PhD in philosophy, aesthetics, and art theory that is designed especially for holders of the MFA. Study includes online instruction and interrogative travel to major art sites such as Paris and the Venice Biennale. Residencies are held in New York City and at Spannocchia Castle, Tuscany.