“Spirit of the Day” sumi ink paintings by Nishiki Sugawara-Beda

October 1 – 27, 2018
Artist Talk/Reception: Thursday, October 11, 11:30am-12:30pm

 Spirit of the Day offers viewers an essential yet often forgotten engagement—a deeper connection with their own spirit in the contemporary busy society. The paintings present a moment of this spiritual engagement through mindfully cultivated marks on the surface. Sumi-ink brings out subtle and nuanced shifts in values and highlights a myriad of layers so that viewers may lost in them and find the core of humanity.

Spirit of the Day

 “When I say ‘I am’, I am really including everyone else. We are all connected.”

– Nishiki Sugawara-Beda

Nishiki Sugawara-Beda cultivates feelings of honest connection in Spirit of the Day. Sugawara-Beda draws from Japanese culture and language, her own immigration experience, and family life to create these works. Her paintings are exercises in spiritual connection and mindfulness. The artist works in Sumi ink, a staple in Japanese calligraphy. This choice was made largely to hold fast to Japanese culture after moving to the United States. She remembers fondly the slow, laborious practice of making Sumi ink, which is done before one practices calligraphy and serves doubly as meditative preparation for the practice.

In earlier works, the artist uses Sumi ink to draw Japanese characters without picking up the brush, creating an abstract form from line and value. In time, the process evolved to create the lines and subsequent forms without drawing the characters, only by thinking of certain words and phrases.

Through this practice, Sugawara-Beda creates a medium through which she can communicate honestly with viewers. The paintings serve as an opportunity for viewers to engage meditatively with Sugawara-Beda. By getting lost in the lines, viewers see what they wish, learning about both themselves and the artist.

Spirit of the Day is on view in the Merion Hall gallery through October 27, 2018.

~ Devon D’Andrea ‘20
Gallery Exhibition Research Assistant

Inaugural & Hana
22″×30″, Sumi ink and acrylic on paper mounted on wood, 2017/2016

 

 

 

 

 

 

Inaugural, a series characterized by the color blue, was created when Sugawara-Beda became a new mother. After giving birth, the artist had to redefine herself as an artist and a person. These works explore the feelings of excitement and uncertainty associated with new motherhood while staying true to her core process. Additionally, this series is exemplary of Sugawara-Beda’s earlier works, when her process included drawing words and phrases before creating the line.


In contrast, Hana, “flower” in Japanese, did not start with written words. Instead, the artist remembered a story about a Zen teacher and his students.

“Traditionally, Zen practice is learned by question and answer between students and a teacher. One day, a teacher gathered his students, and they all stood ready to receive a question, but the teacher stood there in front of the students, holding a flower and smiling. Eventually, all of the students started to smile, too.”  – Nishiki Sugawara-Beda

For the artist, Hana serves to communicate a positive feeling. With bright pinks and plunging lines, viewers feel a sense of contented peace.

 

How We See It
39.5″×141″, Sumi ink and acrylic on paper mounted on wood, 2018

This piece is a whole greater than the sum of its parts. For Sugawara-Beda, it was a study in her process. It is entirely abstract, and its interpretation is meant to be fluid. Viewers should see what they want to see in the painting. The artist wishes for the piece to serve as a tool in meditation. To engage with it is to engage with oneself and all of humanity.

~ Devon D’Andrea ‘20
Gallery Exhibition Research Assistant

 

“Z” ambrotypes by Rowan Renee

August 20 – September 20, 2018
Artist Talk: September 20, 11:30am – 12:30pm
ALL ARE WELCOME!

Z is a collection of nude ambrotype portraits working with transgender, cisgender, and a spectrum of genderqueer and gender non-conforming individuals. Through Z, I aim to deconstruct conventions of the nude body towards more diverse representations. The title of the collection refers to a proposed gender neutral pronoun.

Each image records a collaborative dialogue between model and photographer that develops over the course of a shoot. These conversations consider the power dynamics of the photographic gaze, the ambiguities of gender performance and embodiment, and the complex intersection of vulnerability and empowerment that arise when one’s body is read as “queer”. Through these portraits I cultivate a connection between subject and viewer that transcends the normative categories of “man” and “woman”, leaving space for the nuances of personhood that remain when these categories dissolve.

I use the 19th century Wet-Plate Collodion process with contemporary subjects as a revision to historic representations of gender non-conforming people. Gender variance has always existed, but Victorian photographers routinely medicalized and pathologized their images, perpetuating a visual violence that fragments, dehumanizes and fetishizes queer bodies. The images in Z are conceived as reparative acts,  superimposing new imagery into the gaps left by history.

The timeliness of transgender visibility in mainstream media makes Z an urgent body of work to reach a wider audience. Recent federal legislation limiting transgender Military service, and discriminatory bathroom bills passed in several cities and states, have highlighted the need for further social and legislative change to achieve full inclusion and equality. Towards this goal I channel a photographic process that creates intimacy; a powerful tool to advance a worldview that is open, malleable and accepting of diversity.

ARTIST INFO:

Name: Rowan Renee

Preferred Pronouns: They/Them

Website: http://rowanrenee.com

Instagram: @brooklyntintype

Artist Bio: Rowan Renee is a genderqueer artist whose work explores themes of gender and power. Renee has received awards from The Aaron Siskind Foundation, The Rema Hort Mann Foundation and The Anchorage Museum of Art. Previous solo exhibitions include “Z” at Pioneer Works Center for Art and Innovation (2015) and “Bodies of Wood” (2017) at The Aperture Foundation. They have received fellowships from The Jerome Foundation, the McColl Center for Visual Art and the Ossian Arts Fellowship at the Jain Family Institute. They have been profiled on NPR, in The New York Times, VICE, Hyperallergic, Huffington Post, American Photo Magazine and Guernica, among many other publications. They are currently living between Brooklyn, New York and Ann Arbor, Michigan.

 

“Easton Nights” photography by Peter Ydeen

August 20 – September 25, 2018

Artist Talk/Reception: September 25, 11:30am – 12:30pm
ALL ARE WELCOME

This piece, “I Want a Yellow House with a White Picket Fence” reflects on the American dream. This environment creates a type of mystical realism, similar to the environment pictured in the pieces by Charles Burchfield. Burchfield painted many townscapes, and nature scenes inspiring Ydeen. Within Ydeen’s pieces, there are not many people pictured, and he tries to focus on lighting and architectural design. So many people desire a home with a white picket fence, this abandoned looking town shows a broken idea. The light coming from the bedroom window is the only sign of life emitted from the piece. The nighttime scene isolates a specific vignette, and creates something that you could not get from daytime photography.

Peter Ydeen moved to Easton based on recommendations from a client. Although this is a medium sized city, Easton is between the major cities of New York City and Philadelphia. When he arrived into the city, Ydeen believed that the city had a sort of dislike towards humankind and avoided society in general. It seemed to be almost lost in time, and only related with the people nearby. After living in the town for a while, he realized that was not the truth. Rather, he believes that the town has a strong influence of Americana. These influences play through in many aspects of the town. From local businesses displaying American flags in their windows to the rebirth and repurpose of old town buildings. Although the commonality of Americana today is dwindling, it has become an important part of Ydeen’s work. Through his photographed materials, he created place that makes you feel you have visited this classic small town on the outskirts of two large cities. Ydeen accomplishes this by paying close attention to the lighting, and architectural layouts of Easton. The idea of taking the photos at night shows to be important in isolating the personal private spaces, and showing the importance of spatial lighting.

~ Gabriella Youshock, Gallery Exhibition Research Assistant

“Somnambulant” mixed media installation by Samantha Parker Salazar

Artist Statement

The fringe of consciousness contains countless moments of affirmation that our reality may be effectively reduced to universal shapes and forms. Such forms can be expressed through the intimate marks excavated from recklessly smeared surfaces. The edge of my scalpel blade regards each happenstance smudge and line, heightening the importance of seemingly less significant areas. Repetitively deconstructing and re-configuring a simple material gives conceptual power to the process of physical transformation. In these works, the negative and positive spaces are visual equals by allowing light and shadow to dance upon the surrounding architecture. The forms, suspended in space, are a quiet reflection on beauty, destruction, and potential.

Junior Art Majors’ Exhibition

O L I V I A   H E I S T E R K A M P

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Olivia’s artwork is a series of miniature acrylic paintings and a second series of pencil and charcoal drawings. She completed her artwork in two separate classes, Painting I and II, both instructed by Professor Dennis McNally. She had the freedom to choose what she painted, which allowed her to be inspired by her peers as well as her surroundings both in and out of the classroom. Olivia’s paintings depict the seascapes and landscapes that surround her.  She describes her attraction to nature,

“I am greatly inspired by nature, and natural forms are what intrigue me most, AS opposed to rigidity. It is my default to portray landscapes/seascapes in a variety of ways. However, many of my drawings are still lifes or body parts. This mainly grew out of necessity – I am not always by the ocean or in the woods. I live in a poorly lit apartment on Lancaster Ave. That doesn’t exactly scream organic. However, it is my belief that beauty can come from anywhere and so can good art.”

You can see the inspiration from nature in all her pieces. A carefully chosen color palette of subtle blues and vivid greens evoke the natural movement of life throughout her paintings. Olivia pays close attention to detail taking care to include the smallest wave and tree branch in her paintings. She also emphasizes the horizontal with two distinct lines across the sky in two of her paintings and an emphasis on the horizon line in her landscapes and seascapes.

~ Rowan Sullivan ‘21
Gallery Exhibit Research Assistant

 

 

N I C O   T A M B O R E L L O
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Nico’s artwork is a collection of three photo series printed on 13×19 inch Glossy + Matte Paper, taken on a digital camera and edited in Adobe Lightroom/PhotoShop. Nico created his two collections in the class “The Constructed Digital Image” instructed by Professor Krista Svalbonas. The photographs focus on light, shadow, and reflection found in urban scenes in Philadelphia. In addition, he emphasizes architecture and geometric shapes. Nico describes the differences among his three series:

“The first focuses on a person in an urban landscape and his shadow. The second is a collection of portraits of the street and found beauty. The last is more abstract, focusing on reflections, and shooting into windows to capture multiple reflections.”

Two artists have influenced Nico’s photography, Eugene Atget, “for his work focusing on shadow and reflections in Paris, which relates a lot to my work capturing shadows and reflections in Philadelphia.” He is also drawn to the work of Alfred Stieglitz “for his documentary-esque photography of the world around him.” You can see the influence of these artists mixed with Nico’s individual style in his use of light and shadow, where the flat planes and sharp angles intersect with soft shadows and subtle light, creating complex and abstract images.

~ Rowan Sullivan ‘21
Gallery Exhibit Research Assistant

 

J U L I A   D O N A H U E
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Julia’s work showcases a variety of mediums, including color and black and white photography, ceramics and mixed media collage.

She completed her collections of photography in “Digital Photography I” instructed by Professor Mary Rhodomoyer and “The Constructed Digital Image” instructed by Professor Krista Svalbonas.

Julia has two collections of photographs, one titled “The Streets of Philadelphia,” which highlights the beauty of Philadelphia. She describes her inspiration for this collection saying,

“This is Philadelphia’s year. The Eagles won the Super Bowl, Villanova won the National Championship for basketball and that’s just two examples of how the underdogs came through. I was inspired by the city of Philadelphia for some of my work. I tried to show just a piece of how beautiful Philly really is.”

Her 8×10 inch charcoal drawing of Carson Wentz and head coach Doug Peterson doing a fist pump was inspired by the city of Philadelphia. Julia says of this drawing, “I wanted to show the unity of Philadelphia and how we really are the City of Brotherly Love.”

The other collection of colored photographs printed on regular matte and glossy paper are of the New York City Hair Show. These pictures focus on the model’s elaborate hairdos and the artistic ability of hair stylists. Julia describes her inspiration for these prints:

“I was inspired by my mother. She is a hair stylist. She took me to the New York City hair show and I was in awe of what my mother and other hair stylists can do.”

In one of these photos Julia weaves fake hair through the photograph in order to create a 3D effect. This artistic addition to the photograph adds her own stylistic twist to the collection of photographs and accentuates the intricate detail and extravagant hairstyle pictured in the image.

Julia created her 13×22 inch self-portrait by printing a photograph onto fabric, and then sewing the lyrics of the Beatles song “Julia” which she was named after, into the background with black thread. The self-portrait is Julia’s personal favorite work on display and says that the portrait is a piece that really speaks from her heart and shows people a little part of who she is.

On the second floor is a series of photo representations on eight pieces of glass picturing rowers on Kelly Drive as the sun is going down. Julia created this piece in the spirit of Philadelphia’s beauty. She was also inspired by the artist, Nobuhiro Nakanishi, who prints photographs of landscapes or sunsets on..glass..panels.
~ Rowan Sullivan ‘21
Gallery Exhibit Research Assistant

Senior Art Majors’ Thesis Exhibition

E L I A N A   A C T O R – E N G E L
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This collection of hand-built sculpture and pottery is an exhibition of vulnerability and complex hope. Personally, I have always been able to rationalize and cope with pain through the artistic process, in particular via its facets of self-exploration, expression, and even beauty. I decided to expand the scope of my project using a survey I devised, with a special interest in seeing how my responses to certain questions differ and align with those of others in the queer community. I disseminated my survey to my queer community and encouraged them to be open and honest; the bowls and sculptures each feature language taken from (and often reworded for clarity) their responses to the following questions:

If you could acquire any quality that you admire — whether it be mental, spiritual, or emotional — what would it be?

Has fear ever stopped you from doing something you wanted to? Describe a time this may have happened.

What is something you haven’t forgiven yourself for?

What are you holding on to that you want to let go of?

Though the answers vary, recurring themes of safety, anxiety, trauma, abuse, and gender dysphoria appear abundantly, suggesting their pre valence in the queer community.

The visual approach to this project is equally important as the messages scrawled across each form’s surface. Each piece adheres somewhat to the traditional aesthetics of Japanese ceramics, making use of porcelain and cobalt surfaces. Additionally, the technique used to repair some of the plates that broke during the firing is the Japanese process of Kintsugi, or to repair with gold. This further suggests to the viewer that simply because something appears broken at first glance, it may be able to be healed in a way that leaves it more precious than before. My theory is that the same is often true of people, in that a sense of brokenness in a person does not decrease their value and that vulnerability can be used to combat the fears that caused the breaks themselves. My experience both in physically creating these works of art and answering the survey have shown me the power of being unapologetically honest with the self in order to dispel the shame and guilt that surrounds fear.

 

J O E   W.   G R E V E R A __________________________________________________________

My sculptural work involves the mending of visual organization with pottery. With my wheel-thrown and large coil-built vessels, I take the traditional view of “pottery as replication” to another level by arranging different—but similar—forms around each other. Hopefully, this challenges how the visual impact of a group (of similar objects) may affect our perception of an individual object(s)—at what point does the group become the unit? I try to personify my pieces by subjecting them to alternative firing methods, allowing fire to do what it will with each piece. “Raku” is an ancient Japanese method of firing a clay piece until it is red hot, then taking it out of the kiln and submerging it into a container of combustibles to “reduce” in an oxygen-starved environment. A unique and unpredictable coloring is formed by the reaction of copper in the glazes. In a similar reducing process, I’ve used a wood fire kiln to allow the ash and heat to imprint on each piece. The beauty these firing methods are very recognizable yet nearly impossible to replicate.

With the large vases, I start by cutting one shape and then additional shapes that are reacting to each other. Once the cut pieces are physically removed, the “mother” vase appears to have lost its purpose and integrity. The cut pieces, or “kids”, are then meticulously refined and raku-fired. Just as with the original vase, each piece influences the next until they fit together. Although the “mothers” may have beauty, the “kids” grow to create something far greater.

Through these arrangements I invite a viewer to pass slowly—especially along the wall piece—to observe the alignments and misalignments, to enjoy the individual pieces, the spaces between and around them, and the arrangement as a whole. We are all unique and when we forget that, we get lost in a crowd.

 

H A N N A H   K E R K E R I N G
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I strive to make all my work simplistic, eye-catching, and powerful, and at the same time visually attractive. I start with a goal of what I want to accomplish, although I don’t always know how I’m going to get there. I always try to put myself in my work as much as possible by incorporating my personal style as well as my opinions and past experiences.

In this series, I want people to start analyzing and discussing social media, and how it often causes women to take drastic measures in order to achieve the “perfect body”. Influenced by the things and people I see every day on social media, I gather pictures of the most common unhealthy beauty habits and use these pictures as a stencil for my illustrations. The images are unrealistic and appear unfinished in order to reiterate how these bodies, as portrayed on social media, are unnatural and unrealistic.

With this body of work, I am encouraging people, especially young women, to consider why they feel they need to change their appearance. Poor body image among women is nothing new. However, the shocking statistics combined with the familiar imagery should provoke dialogue.

 

C.  S O F I A   N A A B
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My art medium is cross stitch. Cross stitch is a craft, where I sew stitches in the form of X’s. I started learning to sew when I was very little. My abuelita, (grandmother) taught me, and introduced me to a craft that isn’t done as often as it was in the old days, when women did embroidery as a pastime. By the time I was in high school, I became so obsessed with the craft that it was suggested that I do projects from my own pictures, but I didn’t actually start doing it until last year. I found the tools that allow me to upload a picture, pixelate it, and decide how big I want the finished piece to be, thereby converting the image into a pattern. The challenge is in the precision of the stitches; I manage this by marking the back of cloth every ten stitches, which is how the pattern is gridded: small squares separated by a bold line every 10 x 10 stitches.

Most artists create work that shows an emotional interpretation of a subject. My work doesn’t give me any sense of emotion; rather, it’s an experimental process that combines contemporary photography with an outdated craft. When I started this project, I wasn’t thinking about what I was going to do, I just wanted to finally try something of my own design. I’m an individual with a mild form of autism, therefore, I often display a repetitive behavior; sewing is a craft with a repetitive motion, so when I do it I’m not thinking about how the project is going to turn out (I have those thoughts when I’m creating the pattern). Once I have a pattern to guide me, the finished product is already mapped out on the fabric, so to speak, and I think I can concentrate on bringing it to life. I thought this would be an appropriate “Senior Project” as I like the idea of creating something that most people haven’t seen before.

 

J U L I A N   A.   S M I T H
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When making my work I seek to create a space that the viewer can project themselves into and explore. The spaces take on the form of fantastical and alien landscapes, but each begins with an individual object from which I expand and build; much like a conversation.

The initial object is an abstraction of an emotion or experience. Often they spring from my struggles with mental illness, specifically depression. I then translate the emotion or experience into a physical object which seeks to convey something that is central to the subject. For example, containment and enclosure are common themes that I visit when exploring my mental illness.

Once the initial object is complete I begin to react and respond to it much as you would follow a line of thinking. I have a conversation with the objects I build and attempt to piece them together like an argument; putting in new ideas when I have them, and taking out ones that don’t work. Eventually, I end up with a landscape of objects that has sprung from a single emotion or experience, much like an argument springs from a single thought.

The spaces are meant to function as places to escape to, but also as spaces that encourage reflection and introspection. Hopefully, the abstract nature of these spaces allows the viewer to step outside the boundaries they unconsciously set for themselves, and explore ideas in a way they might not have let themselves before.

I find it is important to step back and look at things in a new way. Whether they be brand new, or familiar issues. Sticking to our entrenched ways of thinking leads us nowhere and does us, and our communities, a disservice. If we are to grow as a community we will need to step outside our habitual ways of thinking and explore new and potentially uncomfortable ideas.

Student Ceramics Exhibition

Student Ceramics Exhibition
by Devon D’Andrea ‘20, Gallery Exhibition Research Assistant


Kristin Skeuse ’18

Ceramics is an art form dating back to prehistoric times that involves heating and cooling an inorganic solid to create a desired shape. Ceramic vessels have been used functionally and decoratively by almost every culture in the world. This medium is noted for its demand of patience, craftsmanship, and artistry.

Led by Jill Allen, the Advanced Ceramics students offer pieces that express accomplished freedom and personality. Neil Patterson guided Ceramics I students in learning the foundation of ceramics, with pieces displaying a full understanding of shape, texture, and balance.

These works are by art majors and minors, as well as by  work from students who double major or major in disciplines other than art. Although there is no common theme among the pieces exhibited, Allen and Patterson both feel that both the beginner and advanced compositions display the students’ hard work and personal artistry. The variety and diversity of the work these students have produced is a representsation of the diversity of the students’ approaches .

Joseph Grevera, Class of 2018

The pieces Joe, a  major, included in this show are representative of trial and error, and he considers them to be works that he feels are personal success stories. Much of his current work revolves around exploring a certain process, with the final product being more representative of the process than of the form itself. One of his works, a set of three vessels, was created using traditional Raku firing techniques, and are displayed in order according to the length of firing time, the shortest being the most copper in tone, and the longest being the bluest the longest.

Alexandra Herrera, Class of 2018

     

In creating the set of sake cups and an accompanying sake jar, Alexandra, a  major, was inspired by a traditional sake set her grandmother gave her, as well as a trip to Japan when she was a child. The sake jar is rounded and natural, a personal take on traditional cylindrical sake jars. Similarly, the set of Nightmare Before Christmas themed cups and Corpse Bride plate are reminiscent of the movies she loved growing up. All of Alexandra’s works were created all of her works using a non-traditional process, looking at the design process as a culmination of multiple techniques to perfectly represent her vision.

Christopher Stevens, Class of 2018

Christopher, a senior Biology major, floored instructor Neil Patterson with his enthusiasm and talent. One of his pieces, inspired by Avatar: The Last Airbender is a vase meant to replicate an artifact from The Fire Nation, a fictional culture from the show, while employing fundamental pottery techniques.

 

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“Hair Pieces” photography by Rebecca Drolen

 

Rebecca’s Artist Talk 3/1/18

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“Shearing” 30 x 30″

In her explorative Hair Pieces, photographer Rebecca Drolen calls us to consider the place of beauty, of standards, of hair within the context of our society. Through self-portraiture Drolen captures a dynamic collection of images that focus on the roles we place on hair. Her approach is both surreal and tongue-in-cheek. “The imagery and symbolism of hair as strength (mythologically) or beauty and sexuality in contemporary culture, seemed to be such a fruitful territory to spend time making within,” Drolen explains.

Hair Pieces considers the juxtaposition of body hair, the desirable and the disgraceful. In a much broader sense it offers a social critique of identity and self-image in a contemporary context.

One of the collection’s photographs, “Longer Lashes,” Drolen crosses humor with horror; her jarring, hyperbolic response to the question of when unrealistic feminine standards turn sour.  “The theme that I am most interested in is that we have so many double standards for hair,” says Drolen. “We cultivate and embrace hair in some areas of our bodies (indeed we sometimes feel like we cannot have enough), while we compulsively remove and hide that we have hair on other parts of our bodies.  We enter cycles of growth and removal that seem to be a shared exercise in frustration and futility – it keeps growing back.”

Hair Pieces probes the questions of that tension from a fresh and unyielding perspective. A comprehensive meditation, the collection is Drolen’s first major work in her post-graduate career.

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“Toe Hair” mixed media 1.5″ x 1.5″

The collection Hair Pieces in on view in conjunction with the Society for Photographic Education (SPE) National conference, held in Philadelphia this year, March 1-4. The SPE is a nonprofit organization that aims to promote a larger, more comprehensive understanding of the medium public programs and service.

~ Nick Crouse ‘19
Gallery Exhibition Research Assistant

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“Haircut” 30 x 90″

 

Student Digital Photography

Coffee Hour, Tuesday, 2/20 8am – 9am.
Stop by Boland Hall Gallery for coffee and take a look at this series of student photographs


Samantha Hagelbarger

Students in Professor Krista Svalbonas’s Digital Photography I class present their latest images. There are over twenty photographs on display by fifteen students from varying backgrounds covering a wide range of subjects.

 


Natalie Simms

Experimenting with shutter speed, aperture, depth of field, the rule of thirds, and light,  students from Professor Krista Svalbonas’s Digital Photography 1 class explored a particular theme or idea in these photographs Practicing different techniques has pushed students to identify certain technical and aesthetic characteristics of a photograph inside and outside of the classroom.  According to Svalbonas, “Digital Photography 1 introduces students to the fundamental terminology, concepts, methodologies, and techniques of digital photography. It focuses on the principles of composition, lighting, and visual story telling in photography.”

These photos show students’ perspectives on “how to tell a narrative story of the human experience” through digital photography, according to Professor Svalbonas. Svalbonas encouraged students to “photograph something that you feel strongly about, that interests you and you want to learn more about.”

For Dylan Eddinger ’19, Digital Photography 1 has challenged him to come out of his comfort zone as a photographer. As Eddinger reflects on taking Digital Photography 1, he now feels confident that I can effectively create my own narrative in photographs.” Eddinger recalls one of the biggest obstacles he faced:photographing a series of photos thatinvolved something bigger than myself.”         

Eddinger chose to shoot his photographs at different locations throughout the city of Philadelphia. Prior to taking each photograph, he had a specific vision in mind. The man he photographed surrounded by American flags is a Philadelphia native and blues rocker who idolizes Bruce Springsteen.     One of Eddinger’s favorite images in the exhibition is from his long exposure series that contains the tagline for the fight against opioid addiction; “It only takes a little to lose a lot.” In a place where heroin takes over the streets, Eddinger found himself walking past “many struggling homeless people, and witnessed two corner deals” as he stood under the L train in Kensington Philadelphia at 2:45 am. As a result of witnessing what many people face in their daily lives, Eddinger believes that there is hope for these people who have become addicted in our city.” Using photography, Digital Photography 1 had the opportunity to bring social and political issues in Philadelphia to light.

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“Photography can offer you a new way to look at your surroundings. It can surprise, inspire, excite and re-imagine the world around us.”    Professor Krista Svalbonas

—Kelly Smith ’19
Gallery Exhibition Research Assistant

Blaise Knebels

 

Andrew Cornell Robinson “Wishful Thinking”

ARTIST TALK CANCELLED
Unfortunately, because of the Eagles SuperBowl parade, the University is suspending operations on 2/8 and we are not able to reschedule the artist talk.

Artist Talk:  Thursday, February 8, 2018 11:30 am – 12:30 pm in the gallery.
All are welcome!

Wishful Thinking

In Wishful Thinking Andrew Cornell Robinson explores how humans create meaning. These works, primarily ceramics and photography, defy traditional ideas of what objects of worship should look like, while upholding their original function.

Living and working in New York City at the time of the 9/11 terrorism attacks, Robinson took particular notice of the way the people of Manhattan mourned their dead. Specifically, Robinson fondly recalls witnessing sanitation workers fiddling with some flowers, candles, and missing persons posters placed along a bridge. A concerned woman asked if the men were taking down the objects, then realized they were covering them with plastic to protect them. This exchange was proof that the small shrines erected in memory of the victims were important to not only the people who put them there, but to the entire community. This poses the question: how do people create meaning from objects?

In answering this question Robinson also looks back to his childhood in New Jersey, where his grandparents housed “curiosity cabinets” from which he could choose an object and hear a fantastic story of its origin. His grandparents invented these stories, but they were meaningful to young Robinson nonetheless.

These moments of personal history expanded to community and then world history for the artist, prompting him to ask Who and what is worshipped in the rest of the world? One of the artist’s reasons for creating these works was to explore who is glorified and who is forgotten, and why.  For example, the main inspirations for Rebel Heart is the story of the Death of the Marat. When Jean-Paul Marat was fatally stabbed by Charlotte Corday in 1793, he became one of the most powerful martyrs of the French Revolution. After his death, Marat’s organs were removed and placed in elaborate reliquary jars for worship after his murder.

The goal of these works is to prompt viewers to question what we worship, and, more importantly, how we worship. In speaking about this exhibition, Robinson described it as “kind of a riff on altarpieces.” This series of modern shrines and reliquaries emphasize and redefine the physicality of worship.

~ Devon D’Andrea ‘20
Gallery Exhibition Research Assistant


12 x 10 x 8″ slip cast porcelain

ARTIST STATEMENT

Andrew Cornell Robinson has developed an intuitive and socially engaged approach to the production of interdisciplinary art with a particular interest in bridging art, design and craft with design strategies and methodologies. Robinson creates ceramic, sculpture and mixed media objects and images with a rich attention to materiality. He begins most projects with research that is often historical in nature and driven by a fictionalized character derived from design personae; a methodology used by industrial designers. Leveraging this device enables him to reexamine memory through the production of images and artifacts that tell a revisionist history, examining coded languages and mistranslations. His recent work is often focused on the queer and peculiar within the context of forms that include reliquaries and memento mori artifacts. In carefully researching and creating rich narratives and personae represented by a network of images and objects, he aims to engage the ways we understand historical memory and our place in it.

Hidden narratives have always been important to Robinson.[*] Signs and symbols, colors and materials may all convey meaning from the spiritual to the profane. Robinson’s latest project translates his interest in revisionist histories and is partly a meditation upon the discord within American culture and politics. Expressed through a series of secular shrines, reliquaries, artifacts and images the project began with an examination and reinterpretation of the life and death of the French revolutionary Jean-Paul Marat. When Charlotte Corday plunged her knife into the heart of Marat in July of 1793, she created one of the French Revolution’s most powerful martyr heroes. His body and memory were elevated into a ceremonial pantheon. His heart was removed and placed into a makeshift reliquary–a bejeweled urn that had once belonged to the deposed French monarchy. The reliquary served as a focal point for public ceremony and devotion. The cult of the Sacred Heart (Sacré-Coeur de Jean-Paul Marat) derived from Catholic rituals and idolization became a visual and formal sign that Robinson has abstracted and reinterpreted through a grotto like form in ceramic, glass and mixed media; as well as a series of shrine like tableau in a contemporary exploration of the memento mori. Translating stories through fragmentation and layering result in a collection of signs and artifacts that act like a rebus open to interpretation.

Born in Camden, NJ, he studied ceramics and sculpture prior to completing his MFA at the School of Visual Arts in New York City where he studied with Thomas Lanigan-Schmidt, and worked with painter Frank Moore, et al. He received an Albee fellowship residency and was a visiting artist in Port Au Prince, Haiti and at the Agastya Foundation, in Bangalore, India. His work has been presented throughout the world with the Kustera Gallery, David & Schweitzer Contemporary, Joyce Goldstein Gallery, Christopher Stout Gallery, Baltimore Contemporary Museum, Bruce Museum, Ross Art Museum, and the United Kingdom Crafts Council. He lives and works in New York City and is a member of the faculty at Greenwich House Pottery and Parsons School of Design.

Robinson’s interest in hidden narratives and coded languages spans many topics that include cultural bias, the misinterpretation or obfuscation of culture and identity and simply mistranslation. For example, “Le Livre des Sauvages” in the Bibliotheque de l’Arsenal in Paris is of particular interest to him. The work was the subject of an 1860 study by Christian Abbe Em Domenech, a missionary to North America, who discovered a document covered in cryptic pictograms and glyphs, which he assumed was created by an indigenous person of the American plains. Domenech’s theory of its provenance has been in question by several German critics, who point out that many of the glyphs are characters comprising German words written in clumsy handwriting. Contemporary opinion of Le Livre Des Sauvages is that its bizarre pictures and odd text were merely the doodling of a German-speaking child living on the American plains.

Another example of a coded language that interests Robinson, is Polari, an innuendo fueled English slang language used primarily (although not exclusively) by gay men in the United Kingdom between the 1920’s and the 1970’s although it’s history and etymology can be traced further into the past. It fell out of use after the partial decriminalization of homosexuality in England and Wales in 1967. This ‘lost language of gay men’ served simultaneously as disguise and identification, when mere existence in the United Kingdom and beyond was punishable with imprisonment and public disgrace. Polari was a form of resistance, a way of queering language, and the expression of a shared culture and identity. Transforming craft materials, artifacts and narratives by speaking through codes and abstraction underlines some of the themes within Robinson’s work.

12 x 10 x 8″ slip cast porcelain