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Claire Keane
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Kaledo Art

ç„æ„ / Permanent Vacation

@theartofmadeline

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trying on a metaphor

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Show & Tell

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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

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Love Begins

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Misplaced Lens Cap
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@theresaknopf
Mixing it up while waiting...
Works on paper. Works in progress.
San Francisco Zine Fest was amazing. I met some incredible artists, writers, and makers, and made off with a treasure trove of printed and hand-made art objects. I am so happy to have participated in this event with the 429 Collective. I can't wait until next year!
I made a limited run of prints of my hand drawn "Pressed Lace" and my new gilded "Dailies" zines to debut at the 429 Collective table at OC Zine Fest.
Iâm running out of room in my painting racks, so Iâm selling some of my paintings at a discount to make space.
The two watercolors are framed and I am selling them for $200 each. Â The oil paintings are hand stretched canvas on 2âł thick stretchers. I am selling them for $600 each. Â
If you are interested please email me at: Â [email protected] with the subject âStudio Saleâ
Song for a Lady by Anne Sexton
[source:Â http://www.brainpickings.org/2015/05/20/anne-sexton-love-poems-song-for-a-lady-ohara-hale/Â ]
ForYourArt recommends art across #LosAngeles April 23-28.
Making Art Out Of Bodies: Sally Mann Reflects On Life And Photography
Photographer Sally Mann is fascinated by bodies. In the early 1990s, she became famous â or notorious â for her book Immediate Family, which featured photographs of her young children naked. Critics claimed Mannâs work eroticized the children, but Mann says the photos were misinterpreted.
From the interview:
On the critical reaction to her photography book Immediate Family
âI was surprised by the attention. Itâs not so much that I was surprised that people wanted to talk about those pictures, I was just surprised that so many people were looking at them and buying the books. âŠ
One of the interesting things is to go back and look at the contact sheets and you look at picture after picture after picture of the same scene and youâll see in one picture [the children] look mean and in another one theyâre giggling and in another one of them is punching the other and theyâre laughing. Theyâre just doing regular kid things. You just always have to remember that picture â say that iconic picture on the cover of the three children standing there glaring out at the world, thatâs a 30th of a second and to either side of that picture are half a dozen other images that are completely different and warm and friendly and sweet.â
More photos by Sally Mann
ICYMI a discussion from photographer Sally Mann on her images of her family. -Emily
Artist Shirin Neshat Captures Iranâs Sharp Contrasts In Black And White
full story at NPR
Photographs by Larry Barns/Courtesy Gladstone Gallery
D.C. folks can see Neshatâs work in person at the Hirshhorn Museum. -Emily
Temporal Remains
âApparitions: Frottages and Rubbings from 1860 to Now.â Hammer Museum. 10899 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90024.Â
 The Hammer Museum is a relatively small museum with multiple exhibits throughout their galleries including traveling exhibits, historical studies, contemporary and experimental works by emerging artists. One of the current exhibits, âApparitions: Frottages and Rubbings from 1860 to Nowâ is a survey of works created through the rubbing of pigment onto surface to reveal textures and images beneath. According to the Hammer Museum, âthe technique known as frottage, from the French verb frotter, meaning âto rub,â is an automatic drawing method developed by the artist Max Ernst. It involves rendering an image by placing a sheet of paper over an object or dimensional surface and rubbing it with a marking agent such as graphite or wax crayon.â[1] Rather than displaying the works chronologically, Allegra Pesenti, curator at large of the Menil Drawing Institute and former curator of the Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts, chose to create dialogues in themes between the historic and contemporary through this particular artistic technique.
The exhibition was divided into four galleries and the works ranged from small framed works on paper from the early 19th century, to large rolls of fabric that hung from the ceiling and rolled onto the floor, like Sam Fallsâ âUntitled (Studio Floor), 2012. Â The range in size and approaches to art making using this technique made for a fresh and unique exhibit that relied more on drawing emotional connections rather than a historical overview. Â There was a display of works by Ernst and his surrealist contemporaries in one of the galleries which housed a collection of small, textural collages on paper. Â In these instances the textures from frottage were used in controlled shapes to form representational images, while in other parts of the exhibit, some of the more contemporary works used rubbings to reveal selected parts of an object beneath the surface. Â
Some of the most emotionally stirring works were those that used the rubbing medium as a means of preservation. Â Ghostly images of objects ranging from typewriters to clothing, meant to capture an object that represents that moment in the artistâs life. Just as genealogists take rubbings of gravestones as a means to document and piece together their family history, art like Jennifer Bornsteinâs rubbings of her deceased fatherâs belongings, are meant to create temporal memorials to lost loved ones. Â It is this fragility and humble means of image making that seems like an honest expression of the human experience.
Lit well and with a conceptual rather than chronological exhibition design allowed viewers to experience artwork based on ideas and methods. The appropriate if not conservative use of wall text to give context to the individual works helped viewers draw connections to work that spans two centuries. Â The wall text sometimes giving direct quotes from the artists about the works really gave personal insight into the process of their creation. Â Although most of the galleries had works spanning from all generations and included varied uses of the frottage method, one of the galleries was more focused on Max Ernst and the surrealist use of frottage to create textural collages. This gallery, though full of lovely small works, did not seem to have the emotional impact of all the other galleries in the exhibit. Perhaps in this moment of didactic presentation of the history of this particular technique, the curators lost some of the simplicity and humanity that was achieved in the other galleries.
In all the exhibit is a beautiful ode to temporality with the ghostly remains of tangible objects ranging from funerary monuments to the human body. Â Displayed like simple relics to be adored or meditated upon. Â The exhibit asks the audience to confront the impermanence of life by enjoying the haunting beauty of these subtle and exquisite apparitions.
âApparitions: Frottages and Rubbings from 1860 to Nowâ is on view at the Hammer Museum until May 31, 2015.
[1] http://hammer.ucla.edu/exhibitions/2015/apparitions-frottages-and-rubbings-from-1860-to-now/
We are a group of seven artists who made the decision to attend USC Roski School of Art and Designâs MFA program based on the faculty, curriculum, program structure and funding packages. We are a group of seven artists who have been forced by the Schoolâs actions dismantling each of these elements to dissolve our MFA candidacies. In short, due to the Universityâs unethical treatment of its students, we, the entire incoming class of 2014, are dropping out of school and dropping back into our expanded communities at large.
The Roski MFA Program that attracted us was intimate and exceptionally well-Âfunded; all students graduated with two years of teaching experience and very little to no debt. We were fully aware of the scarcity of, and the paucity of compensation for, most teaching jobs, so this program seemed exemplary in creating a structure that acknowledged these economic and pedagogical realities. However, a different funding model was presented to us upon acceptance to the Program by the Roski administration: we would receive a scholarship for some of our firstÂ-year tuition, and would have a Teaching Assistantship with fullyÂ-funded tuition, a stipend, and benefits for the entirety of our second year upon completion of our firstÂ-year coursework. We, the incoming class of 2014, were the first students since 2011 to take on debt to attend, and the first students since 2006 to gain no teaching experience during our firstÂ-year in the program. Moreover, when we arrived in August 2014, we soon discovered that the Dean of the Roski School was attempting to retroactively dismantle the alreadyÂ-diminished funding model that was promised to us, as well as make drastic changes to our existing faculty structure and curriculum.
The Dean of the Roski School of Art and Design was appointed by the University in May 2013, despite having no experience in the visual arts field. She, along with Roskiâs various Vice and Assistant Deans, made it clear to our class that they did not value the Programâs faculty structure, pedagogy or standing in the arts community, the very same elements that had attracted us as potential students. The effects of the administrationâs denigration of our program arrived almost immediately. In December 2014, Roskiâs MFA Program Director stepped down from her position, and was not replaced with another director; in short succession that month, the program lost a prominent artist, mentor, and tenured Roski professor, her pedagogical energies and input devalued by the administration. By the end of the Fall 2014 semester, we quickly came to understand that the MFA program we believed we would be attending was being pulled out from under our feet. In January 2015, we felt it necessary to go to the source of these issues, the Dean of the Roski School.
In a slew of unproductive, confounding and contradictory meetings with the Dean and other assorted members of the Roski administration in early 2015, we were told that we would now have to apply for, and compete with a larger pool of students for the same TAships promised to us during recruitment. We were presented with a different curriculum, one in which entire semesters would occur without studio visits, a bizarre choice for a studio-Âart MFA. Shocked by these bewildering and last-Âminute changes, we reached out to the Universityâs upper administration. We were then told by the Vice Provost for Graduate Programsâ tâhat the communication we received during recruitment clearly stating our funding packages was an âunfortunate mistake,â and that if the Program wasnât right for us, we âshould leave.â Â Throughout this âgârueling process of attempting to reason with the institution, the Roski School and University administration used manipulative tactics of delaying decisions, blaming others, contradicting each otherâs stated policies, and attempting to force a wedge of silence between faculty and students. At every single turn, the Dean and every other administrator we interacted with tried to deÂlegitimize and belittle our real concerns, repeatedly framing us as âdemandingâ simply for advocating for those things the School had already promised us.
As of 5pm on May 10, 2015, after four months, seven meetings that we held in good faith with the administration, and countless emails later, we have no idea what MFA faculty weâd be working with for the coming year; we have no idea what the curriculum would be, other than that it will be different from what it was when we enrolled and is currently being implemented by administrators outside of our field of study; and finally, we have no idea whether weâd graduate with tâwiceâ the amount of debt we thought we would graduate with.
Since February 2015, we have communicated in writing to the Provost of the University, the Vice Provost for Graduate Programs, The Dean of the Roski School, and other USC administrators that we could not continue in the Program if the funding and curricular promises made during recruitment were not honored; thus, the University is not blindsided by our decision, nor has it been denied ample time and opportunity to remedy these issues with us. Perhaps the University imagined that we would suffer any amount of lies, manipulations, and mistreatment for those shiny degrees.
Letâs not forget about the larger system of inequity that we paid into to try to get our degrees. USC tuition has increased an astounding 92% since 20011, compensation for USCâs top 8 executives has more than tripled since 20012, and Department of Education data shows that âadministrative positions at colleges and universities grew by 60 percent between 1993 and 2009â3. Adjunct faculty, the jobs that freshly-Âminted MFAs usually get-Â if theyâre lucky-Â are paid at a rate that often does not even reach the federal minimum wage4 while paying off tens of thousands of dollars of studentÂloan debt. USC follows this trend of supporting a bloated administration with whom students have minimal contact to the diminishment of everyone else. Â Despite having ultimate power over the program structure and curriculum, our experience has shown that the administration has minimal concern for their students. Meanwhile, faculty voices are silenced and adjunct5 faculty expands, affecting their overall ability to advocate for students. We seven students lost time, money, and trust in a classic baitÂ-andÂ-switch, and the larger community lost an exemplary funding model that attempted to rectify at least some of these economic disparities. What we experienced is the true âdisruptionâ of this accelerating trend.
We each made lifeÂ-changing decisions to leave jobs and homes in other parts of the country and the world to work with inspiring faculty and, most of all, have the time and space to grow as artists. We trusted the institution to follow through on its promises. Instead, we became devalued pawns in the Universityâs administrative games. We feel betrayed, exhausted, disrespected and cheated by USC of our time, focus and investment. Whatever artistic work we created this spring semester was achieved in spite of, not because of, the institution. Because the University refused to honor its promises to us, we are returning to the workforce degreeÂ-less and debtÂ-full.
A group of seven students is only a tiny part of the larger issues of the corporatization of higher education, the scandal of the economic precarity of adjunct faculty positions, and the looming studentÂdebt bubble. However, the MFA Program we entered in August 2014 did one great thing: it threw us all together, when we might not have crossed paths on our own. We will continue to hold crits ourselves and be involved in each otherâs work. We will be staging a series of readings, talks, shows and events at multiple sites throughout the next year, and will follow with seven weeks of âthesisâ shows beginning in April of 2016. Our collective and interdependent force is energizing as we progress toward supportive and malleable spaces conducive to criticality and encouragement. These sites are more important than ever in the current state of economic precarityâ tâhat reaches far beyond the fates of seven art students. We invite everyone to reach out to us with proposals, invitations and strategies of their own, dreams not of creating a âbetterâ institution, but devising new spaces for collective weirdness and joy.
Julie Beaufils, Sid Duenas, George EgertonÂWarburton, Edie Fake, Lauren Davis Fisher, Lee Relvas and Ellen Schafer
http://mfanomfa.tumblr.com/
1 âIntegrated Postsecondary Education Data Systemâ, Final Release Data,National Center for Education Statistics, accessed January 2, 2015. 2 IRS 990 Forms FY 2001Â2007, Part 2, Item 25, and Schedule III and IRS 990 Forms FY 2008Â2012, Part IX, Line 5 3 âThe Real Reason College Tuition Costs So Muchâ, Campos, Paul F. The New York Times, April 4th 2015.
4 http://www.adjunct.chronicle.com
5 75% of USC faculty is contigent https://about.usc.edu/files/2015/01/FYÂ2015ÂfacultyÂcountÂforÂfactbookÂcorrected.pdf
Image: detail from Access Points, Lauren Davis Fisher, 2015
http://www.artandeducation.net/school_watch/entire-usc-mfa-1st-year-class-is-dropping-out/
http://conversations.e-flux.com/t/the-entire-usc-mfa-1st-year-class-is-dropping-out/1664
http://hyperallergic.com/207235/entire-first-year-mfa-class-drops-out-in-protest-at-the-university-of-southern-california/
http://artforum.com/news/id=52175
http://artfcity.com/2015/05/15/in-protest-of-unethical-treatment-uscs-mfa-students-drop-out-of-school/
Words can make change.Â
400 studentsâ work now hangs at the Getty, and hundreds of visitors have responded and hung their words on the wall. Voice your thoughts, you never who might need to hear them.Â
CSUN Open Studios
âI wanted to develop my own language, and the minute I started performing, I began to invent in a different wayâthrough my body movements.â âJoan Jonas
In a new episode from the ART21 Exclusive series, artist Joan Jonasâwho represents the U.S. at this yearâs La Biennale di Veneziaâ in an exhibition presented by MIT List Visual Arts Centerâârecalls the beginnings of her performance work from the late-1960s and early-1970s.
For Songdelay (1973), seen here, Jonas worked with artists such as Gordon Matta-Clark, Carol Gooden, Tina Girouard, Steve Paxton, and Penelope. âWe all helped each other and worked together,â recounts the artist, âand people really enjoyed being in other peopleâs works.â
WATCH: Joan Jonas: New York Performances
IMAGES: Joan Jonas, Songdelay, video stills, 1973. Featured in the ART21 Exclusive episode, Joan Jonas: New York Performances. Artwork courtesy of the artist and Electronic Arts Intermix, New York.
Is life as an artist bringing you down? You are not alone. Listen to the best tips from artists, including Miranda July, Tania Bruguera, and Dan Graham.
âYour life right now is as real as it will ever be. It won't be more real in the future, when you get into or out of college or into or out of a relationship or a job or a financial quagmire or a health problem. In fact, the things keeping you backâthese embarrassing, boring, stupid obstaclesâare the heart of what it is to be human. They're the whole reason for making and needing art." Â - Miranda July
Getting situated into a new studio. Iâm sharing the space with Ashley Mistriel in the beatiful Art Deco Bendix Building in DTLA.
Despite being a craft dating back over 30,000 years, fiber work only started to get sculpturally experimental in a serious way in the 1960s and 70s.