BOS Studio Visit is an ongoing series that seeks to showcase the impressive spectrum of artistic expression on display during Bushwick Open Studios. All interviews were performed during the 2014 BOS weekend.
[AiB] What do you want me to know about your work?
[JL] I want you to know that it’s individual of the work next to it. This is not a gallery. Each piece has a story, and each piece is a…
BOS Studio Visit is an ongoing series that seeks to showcase the impressive spectrum of artistic expression on display during Bushwick Open Studios. All interviews were performed during the 2014 BOS weekend.
[AiB] I’m new to your work. Can you introduce me to what you’re doing?
[KT] Basically, I am trying to subvert the trend of this digital culture being an increasingly accelerated segue to our connections to nature. I’m trying to subvert that through working with imagery in a physical way. So I go to these phenomenal sites – Kuai, the redwood forests, I’m just now returning from Iceland for my next project – and I photograph the elements and the ‘scapes and basically work intensively to transform them to experiential works through geometry and form.
[AiB] Could you walk me through your process?
[KT] It really starts with connecting to the site. I try to get as much time as I can to just study the elements there. I’m noticing a trend where I’m also particularly drawn towards otherworldly representations of our geology. Thus, Iceland was a perfect match for me. I study, I shoot extensively, I archive, and then I return to my studio and I really meditate on that process, of which images want to turn into a physical manifestation. I’ve shot my first videos as well, so I can layer more of an installation environment with the sculptures and projections.
[AiB] You said that you stay in these places as long as you can – what does that mean?
[KT] It means what I can afford! Ultimately. I’d love to get a grant to return to Iceland and go further in the explorations there, but yeah, it all comes down to economy.
[AiB] Why have you chosen to use digital representations of your work as you do?
[KT] I had been shooting successful traditional images of nature, and I was feeling an intense lack in what the experience was providing to my audience. And I wanted to create something that drew more from the site energetically, even potentially spiritually. One of my references is Rudolf Steiner’s writings on supersensible phenomena, which is phenomena that we experience in the real world that can’t be described scientifically.
I’m interested in taking this digital culture and turning it into a more physical one, through transforming the digital experiences into objects. For me it’s also my own personal vision of a contemporary nature culture. There’s something futuristic in the forms and the geometry, but there’s something primitive as well.
[AiB] When you’re putting together a piece after you’re coming back from a trip, how do you know when your work is done?
[KT] That’s a good question, and actually I kind of feel like the pieces could be revisited and not just have one form. [For example,] these are a volcanic boulder that’s almost perfectly spherical and just looks like a miniature planet on the Earth. I don’t think I’m done with it! Even though I’ve found a form for it. So, I think that question is an ongoing one.
[AiB] Anything else you’d want a reader to take away from your work?
[KT] I want readers to create space for a dialogue, to discuss and engage in what our contemporary relationship to nature is. And how we choose to create monumental experiences of that.
For more of Kirsten Kay Thoen's work, visit her website.
BOS Studio Visit is an ongoing series that seeks to showcase the impressive spectrum of artistic expression on display during Bushwick Open Studios. All interviews were performed during the 2014 BOS weekend.
[AiB] How would you describe your work and themes to a layperson?
[JM] I’m a portrait painter--I work with people from my life--so it’s all based on intimate relationships. I’m trained traditionally, but I’m incorporating abstract elements and metaphorical language on top of traditional portraiture structure.
[AiB] Could you tell me about your process?
[JM] I photograph everyone myself, then work from [the photo] as a reference. I use certain techniques to abstract the realism, so I either sand down certain parts of the body, blur, or add color glazes to push the work out of the realm of the real to the more conceptual and metaphysical.
[AiB] How does the work evolve as you go? Do you have a vision when you begin?
[JM] It depends. Sometimes I jump into it with a fully set format that I’ve worked out in Photoshop or just through writing and journaling, and sometimes the painting dictates where it goes, depending on who I’m working on and the person themselves.
[AiB] How do you decide who you want to work with, and why?
[JM] Well, they’re all people close to me, so it usually depends on what’s going on with their life and the moment and if I’m kind of attracted to them.
This portrait on the wall is another artist friend named Sharona, and I was thinking about painting her in a time when I was in this deep lull and I didn’t really know where the next body of work was coming from. I’ve always been really attracted to her work, so I needed to paint her to siphon off some of her energy, in a way! It was a mutual back and forth, but it was about honoring her creative spirit and taking some energy from that.
[AiB] How would you say your work has evolved over the course of your career?
[JM] I’ve always worked with the figure, but in terms of growth it’s become a little more metaphorical and conceptual, jumping away from photography and photorealism and into other layers of abstraction.
[AiB] What else should people know about about your work?
[JM] That it’s based on people, and relationships, and spiritual connections, and cosmic realities and realms and matrices and…yeah.
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For more of Jenny Morgan's work, visit her website: here.
by Nicole Durbin and Aniela Coveleski; photos by Aniela Coveleski
After three days of trekking across more than 600 studios from Metropolitan Avenue to Broadway, Arts in Bushwick organizers, participants, and inexhaustible friends and party people gathered at Bizarre for some well-deserved drinks. After Cinema Sunday wrapped up, AiB organizers gathered outside for a deep breath and a chance to reflect on the weekend. Lucia Rollow, Alex Spinks, and others spoke with untamed relief about how this year’s BOS had gone off without the stressors that have occasionally plagued previous years’ events. The AiB organization had raised enough money this year to fully finance printing of the hundreds of glossy Open Studios directories, the iPhone app was amazingly functional, and the mood across our neighborhood-wide block party was astoundingly positive all weekend long.
Of course, it was impossible to see everything Bushwick Open Studios has to offer in just three days. So, while music from DJ JHVH blasted, people talked around the bar about what they saw and what they loved throughout all six zones. "You missed those layered resin paintings at 56 Bogart?!? Here, let me show you a video on my phone."
Performers at the BOS'14 Closing Party at Bizarre
Meryl Meisler’s phenomenal photo exhibit was on display in Bizarre’s basement. Its images of the disco party era juxtaposed with 1970s Bushwick street culture set the scene for the retro-themed drag show that came later. Before she performed “Age of Aquarius,” Daphne Sumtimez talked about how she and her friends all live near each other by the Halsey “L” stop--a growing community to watch for this year.
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A Tale of Two Cities: Disco Era Bushwick runs May 30—September 10, 2014, at Bizarre Black Box Gallery, 12 Jefferson Street
With Shared Enthusiasm: Seeking Space Exhibition at The Active Space
by Nicole Durbin; photos by Nicole Durbin and Aniela Coveleski
Narcissism by Seunghwui Koo, with Datalog spinning in back
Now in its fifth year, the Seeking Space Exhibition, organized by Arts in Bushwick, was held at the increasingly popular gallery, The Active Space. The opening reception held on Friday, May 31, helped jump-start this year's Bushwick Open Studios. Ready to celebrate, the jubilant crowds often made it hard to view the impressively varied collection of paintings, photography, sculpture, and installations.
I Eat My Words by Jen Hitchings
How does one curate an event whose only true commonality among the submissions is a shared enthusiasm for our particular neighborhood? Such was the challenge presented to veteran AiB volunteers Julia Sinelnikova and Jillian Salik, who co-curated the event. Despite the potential difficulties of working with more than 60 artists, Sinelnikova explained, “I think our biggest challenge is that Jillian and I are both meticulous perfectionists. I'm happy about the high quality of our production, but sometimes we find ourselves bending over backwards--in a good way.”
Untitled (US Map) by Dana Kane
The first few things one noticed when moving around the room counter-clockwise were big and moody, with a muted color palate. Works by Grace Troxell and Raisa Nosova made for an engaging pair: The sculptural work by Troxell literally bursts out of and beyond its frame, whereas Nosova’s painting draws you inward, into the darkness. Continuing around the right edge of the room, the mood slowly brightens but retains a certain unsettling feeling.
(Left) Clytemnestra by Grace Troxell; (right) 27th and 7th, NYC by Raisa Nosova
The left half of the room was divided into several little alcoves, each functioning semi-independently. As Salik explained, “Julia and I decided to treat each nook as its own subdivision or micro-show. The flow between each nook was important, but an easier transition to make.” One group seemed to be composed of introspective portraiture, such as Kelli Thompson’s vivid Self.
Self by Kelli Thompson
Other sections had a distinct sense of humor. Lisa Levy continues to congratulate her audience on our personal growth, whereas Robert Servo’s alterations to found photos breathed new light into what must have been musty garage-sale heirlooms.
You Internalized a Compliment by Lisa Levy
(Left) Gate Keeper and Key Master and (right) Old School by Robert Sevro
The additional images below offer just a small selection of the bounty that awaits visitors to Seeking Space. Although BOS'14 is over (yet not forgotten), the Seeking Space Exhibition will be on view at The Active Space until June 30. Visitors are encouraged to take their own tour through its myriad nooks.
(Above and below) Works on view at the Seeking Space Exhibition, 2014
(Above and below) Visitors at the Seeking Space Exhibition, 2014
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Seeking Space Exhibition will be on view at The Active Space (566 Johnson Avenue) until June 30
Spent the afternoon going in and out of beautiful artist lofts with Petra Magno for Bushwick Open Studios. Sometime we'd only spend a few minutes inside because we'd get too jealous of the of the space... or hated the art.