Chandi Kelley (Washington, DC)

Chandi Kelley (Washington, DC)

November 2013

Unnatural Histories

Inherently, the photograph is a source of information. It is a representation of the world at a specific moment in time. We take for granted that this information is truth, that it is a confirmation of reality. Photography allows the coexistence of nature and artificiality to reflect both our understanding and estrangement in the world, bringing the unknown into focus and putting what we think we know into question.

In a world of immediacy and instant gratification, things need to be eye-catching, bold, and obvious to be understood. As nature becomes more commonplace through an oversaturation of images, it is increasingly difficult to be surprised by the beauty of the natural world. We now require things to be unnaturally beautiful in order to take our breath away. Unnatural Histories highlights the tension between fiction and documentation through constructed environments and the objects that inhabit them. Kelley seeks blurred lines between the real and the unreal, and the points where these two worlds intersect. In this body of work she has applied artifice to natural objects, and sometimes to artificial objects that mimic the natural. The application of gold in various forms is an over the top gesture to draw attention to natural beauty, create a spectacle of nature, and perhaps even to assign value to waning preciousness. By adding superfluous attributes, she manipulate these objects until they become relics of a false natural history, teetering on a line between the familiar and the unfamiliar.

Chandi Kelley graduated with a BFA in photography from the Corcoran College of Art and Design in 2004. She was the recipient of a Young Artist Grant from the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities in 2009, which led to her first solo exhibition. From 2010 to 2012 she was a member of the DC Arts Center artist collective, Sparkplug. She has presented her work at the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing, and is in the permanent collection of the U.S. Embassy in Malta, as well as in private collections throughout the U.S. She is a Co-Founder and Administrator of the artwork subscription service, Project Dispatch, and Co-Founder of Outer Space. She has served on the Publishers Exhibition Committee for Fotoweek DC, as Artist Nominator for the 2012 Transformer Auction at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, and currently serves on the Visual Arts Committee and the Board of Directors at the DC Arts Center. She lives and works in Washington, DC.

Visit Kelley’s website at chandikelley.com.

Lauren Frances Moore Evans (College Park, MD)

October 2013

WHOLEISM: parts & holes

All holes plead obscurely to be filled. They are appeals to the triumph of the full over the empty, of existence over nothingness. Lauren Frances Moore Evans’ work is influenced by an existential understanding of holes, which is rooted in an ontological (and thus pre-sexual) desire to fill voids. The physical finds its parallel in the spiritual: the body functions as a microcosm, continually giving glimpses into the beyond. Flesh acts as a tangible metaphor – at once a barrier and a carrier of matter and meaning.

Lauren Frances Moore Evans lives and works in College Park, MD where she is in her final year of the University of Maryland’s MFA program. She is a graduate of the Honors College at the College of Charleston, SC and has participated in residencies at Franconia Sculpture Park, in Schafer, MN, Elsewhere Living Museum, in Greensboro, NC, and the Vermont Studio Center, in Johnson, VT.

Visit Kelley’s website at www.laurenfrancesevans.com.

Laura Litten (Washington, DC)

October 2013

OUT OF CONFINEMENT: Soundings from the Inland Sea

Growing up in the vast flat spaces of the Midwest triggered my obsession for the infinite space of the horizontal horizon. Now confined to the urban space of Washington DC, my world is peculiarly claustrophobic. As an artist, my response is to leave my world of filmmaking to work in a medium that allows my physical self to be in the space I create.

Sound tracks enhance horizontal, inked landscape scrolls, together evoking the spaces of the tall grass prairies of America’s Inland Sea, and the conversation between culture, digital media and the industrial landscape.

Variations in space, scale and horizon invite the viewer to enter into the narrative at any point, and travel through the work via self-directed investigation of place. Irony and humor are important (both audio and visual). Our aesthetic pleasure is perpetually modulated by doses of discomfort, the visually vile and ignoble. Vast spaces are peppered with steel mills, advertisements, and gambling casinos over which soar the Great Blue Heron or a steel suspension bridge—all of it rich with a heady and erotic banquet of sound and light.

My scrolls ask how hearing and listening fit together with seeing and looking. Can the sea of culture high and low, the glorious and the hideous, occupy without privilege, a shared space? Can the viewer negotiate a personal experience within the work independently of the artist’s apparent (or not) intention?

Litten has an MA in Art History and is a filmmaker and photographer. She is a former Professor of Television and Popular Culture at Columbia College in Chicago. In 2008, she moved to Washington, DC where she began to experiment with a low-tech narrative form of horizontal inked landscapes accompanied by sound compositions.

Visit her website at www.lauralitten.com.

Site95

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October 2013

City Limits: Urban Interactions

SITE95 is an alternative non-profit organization established to present exhibitions for emerging and established artists in temporary urban locations. Drawing upon available space in major cities, SITE95 will present over five projects per year, each extending up to two months. The impermanent sites create a platform for artists and curators to present innovative ideas in different contexts and allow viewers to experience new work not native to their location. Exhibitions will offer openings, educational talks and tours, screenings, and performances. SITE95 also features the online monthly Journal with contributions by writers, curators, and artists.

Visit Site95’s website at www.site95.org.

Enrique Castanon (Bethesda, MD)

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Fill Circle

Of all the life’s mysteries, Enrique Castanon feels compelled to express the invisible and from the invisible -the origin of things. Castanon sees an eternal movement of life even in death, a constant transformation and exchange of energy at the micro and macro cosmic level. This is what justifies Castanon’s need to know, express and share his findings.

The exploration continues from oil on canvas to digital imagery, a different language and another angle to convey what otherwise would be out of reach to most of us in our busy day. What is visible in the images is the sum of the parts, as if they’re captured in a moment of manifestation, every little cell embodies a thought and intention, making the whole entity an image and reflection.