Marisa S. White

Marisa S. White

November 6-28, 2015

The Paradox of Time

The notion of time dances around the intangible. It is ever present and never-ending making us slaves to the ticking clock, to the waxing and waning of the moon, to the sway of the seasons. The great equalizer, it discriminates against no one offering exactly the same amount of hours, minutes and seconds in a day. The sun rises in the East and sets in the West. But how we interact with this invisible dimension remains quite different for everyone.

So what is time? Is it a unit of measurement to account for the sequential passing of events? Is it finite? Is it indefinite? Does it account for the past? Present? Future? Or does it support all of these moments simultaneously? Or is it something we invented to create order and control over an otherwise chaotic string of happenings?
Eckhart Tolle proposes the truth of time lies in the now, the present. We never really truly experience time. It doesn’t occur all at once, but in slow steady progressions. And as an intangible, you can only truly experience what happens during a specific moment. As in the very moment happening right now. And then it’s gone.

But the present is constantly confused within the context of the past and future. It’s nearly impossible for us to “live in the now.” As creatures of incessant worry, regret, anticipation, and goal planning we constantly fluctuate from the past to the future and back again without a thought to what is actually occurring right now. How many times have you come across a photograph that suddenly takes you back 20 years to a point in the past, remembering details of that day long since forgotten? Questioned tomorrow’s purpose and what the next five years will entail? Pondered about an old flame while exiting out of the latest one?

I explore these ideas by trying to fully grasp this abstract notion of time using conceptual photography. How do we let this quantifiably unquantifiable unit of measurement dictate our days, our months, and our lives? Is it possible to live in the now? Are we so rooted in the past to see the day in front of us or even anticipate the future? Do we plan out so far in advance that we can’t see what’s clear as day right in front of us at this very moment?

Each image takes the viewer on a visual journey through space and time, searching for evidence of the intangible, pausing within the past, and glancing forward into the future while grounding you deeply in the present.

Marisa White received her BFA at the University of North Texas. Although a drawing and painting major, she found her passion with photography, capturing that spontaneous and real moment. A truth that sometimes is so fleeting, if only for a second. It wasn’t long before she began combining photographs with her paintings, creating conceptual mixed media collages.

Today, her work has evolved from the physical realm of collages to the digital world, focusing on the truth, darkness and depth of conceptual photography. Each piece is captured utilizing the camera, then digitally manipulated by compositing imagery and textures together for an overall painterly impression. Limited only by imagination and inspired by current happenings, literature, lyrics and emotions, she creates settings, often touched with nuances of surrealism. Her images are personal, sometimes autobiographical, sometimes not; but there is an element of relativity in each image that has a tendency to make the viewer stop and take pause.

www.whitesparksphotography.com

Surya Gied

October 2 – 31, 2015

Looking Into the Distance Becomes Difficult

“Looking Into the Distance Becomes Difficult” is a personal response to upsetting contemporary realities, namely the refugee crisis in Europe. Each work takes as its starting point a journalistic photograph found on the Internet, which is then abstracted and fractured to reflect and deal with the intense emotions surrounding these images and the concomitant stories of people fleeing war, persecution, torture, rape and hopelessness. No attempt is made to create a literal representation or a similar narrative; rather, fragmentation and abstraction function as a means to a more universal comprehension of these deep and fundamental emotions, while a counter-intuitive palette expresses the naive yet arguably beautiful dreams undeniably at play in the midst of this ongoing tragedy. Call it hope.

Born in Cologne, Germany Surya Gied spent her early childhood in South Korea and her adolescence and adult life in Germany. She completed her MFA from the University of the Arts (Universität der Künste) in Berlin, Germany. Working predominantly in the medium of painting and drawing, Surya Gied has also completed site-specific installations and works. Since 2008 she has exhibited in many project spaces, art institutes and galleries in Berlin, Seoul, Sidney and Los Angeles. Her work has been awarded with grants from the German Academic Exchange Service, the Goethe Institute Seoul and the Bosch Foundation.
Surya Gied lives and works between Berlin, Germany and Fairfield, Iowa, where she is an Assistant Professor of Art at the Maharishi University of Management (MUM).

Surya Gied is the recipient of the 2015 Bosch Foundation Exhibition Grant. This is event is made possible with the support of the Robert Bosch Foundation Alumni Association.

Perspective

October 2 – 31, 2015

Perspective: A Fresh Look at Contemporary Painting & Drawing
Curated by Cory Oberdorfer

Having existed for quite a few millennia, painting and drawing are easily dismissed in the digital age as being antiquated mediums. So what keeps them alive? Curiosity. An artist’s job is to explore; both themselves and the world around them. This exhibition is built of artists who reflect on their everyday lives, blend the past and present, and manipulate old ideas in a new way. These drawings and paintings represent unique perspectives on life, death, objects, ideas, people, forms, and truths. Each work exists as the artist communicating with the viewer and with other artists in the room. It is our job to look and listen and see things through their eyes for a moment.

Selected Artists
Mary Anne Arntzen (MD)
Kathleen Benton (NY)
Sarah Boyce (DC)
Jackie Brown (ME)
Emily Campbell (MD)
Marybeth Chew (MD)
Bobby Coleman (MD)
Julian Cushing (PA)
Sean De (VA)
Spencer Dormitzer (DC)
Rita Elsner (DC)
Heloisa Escudero (VA)
Tyler Farinholt (MD)
Andrew Fish (MA)
Ric Garcia (MD)
Marie Gardeski (IN)
Roxana Geffen (VA)
Emily Glass (NY)
Ronald Gonzalez (NY)
Charity Henderson (NY)
Jay Hendrick (VA)
Tom Hill (MD)
Michael Hubbard (TX)
Michal Hunter (DC)
Scott Hutchinson (VA)
Ryan Carr Johnson (MD)
Jenny Kanzler (VA)
Sharon Koelblinger (PA)
Mo Kong (NY)
Yaroslav Koporulin (DC)
Brooke Marcy (VA)
Matthew McLaughlin (MD)
Rebecca Murtaugh (NY)
Daisy Patton (CO)
Victor Perez (FL)
Rikke Kuhn Riegels (DC)
Leslie Robinson (FL)
Pamela Rogers (DC)
Casey Snyder (MD)
Chris Valle (FL)
Jessica Van Brakle (MD)
Dale Williams.(NY)

Kim Llerena

August 7-29, 2015

Ekphrasis

In this body of work, verbal descriptions of visual artworks as well as passages excerpted from books and essays have been transcribed into Braille. Each page is then photographed in a way that interprets an essential element of the text that it features, layering description onto description and questioning what exactly is lost or gained in translation. The transfiguration of tactile code into image here serves as a metaphor, both for the power of photography to aestheticize the mundane and for the limitations inherent in the act of recording the world in two dimensions.

Kim Llerena is a photographic artist currently based in Washington, D.C. She received her MFA in Photographic & Electronic Media from the Maryland Institute College of Art and a BA in Journalism from New York University. She has exhibited nationally and currently has work on view at the Houston Center for Photography and at VisArts in Rockville, MD. She was a finalist for the 2014 Trawick Prize in Bethesda and a semifinalist for the 2013 Sondheim Artscape Prize in Baltimore. Llerena serves as term faculty in the School of Communication at American University. Her work frequently examines various dualities of the photographic medium: memory and aspiration, translation and description, art and snapshot.

kimllerena.com

Michelle Dickson

August 7-29, 2015

Neither Mine Nor Yours

Contemplation of time and mortality is not new in my work, but in “Neither Mine Nor Yours” there is a more inward approach. This series of sculptures uses the form of the self-portrait to investigate identity and my place in a world where the future seems more uncertain than ever. The uncertainty ever-present in life has been a driving force behind my work. Confronting and accepting a constantly evolving state of change has been a recurring theme.

The sculptures start with a plaster cast of my face that is then paired with a piece of wood. The wood was gathered on numerous hikes in the DC and Baltimore area and what happens in the studio is intuitive. My process involves making something and responding to it, adding on and taking away, building up and obscuring. In “Neither Mine Nor Yours” ones relationship with and connection to nature has come forward in ways that I haven’t considered in the past. I have long been interested in the similarity found in shape and texture across different parts of life- especially how the structure of rivers are like highways, veins, and root systems along with the similarity between skin and bark. Just as the contemplation of time and mortality has turned inward in this body of work, so has my exploration of nature. Previous bodies of work have focused on the effect of time on nature, with its cycles of growth, death, and decay. In “Neither Mine Nor Yours” , the effect of the human footprint on the environment is also investigated. The paradox of “man’s destruction of the environment, he needs to survive” rises to the forefront. And with that there is an overarching sense of fragility- both of the body and of the world around us.

Michelle Dickson is a Baltimore based mixed media artist working in drawing, printmaking, and sculpture. Dickson received an MFA in 2011 from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. She has had solo and group exhibitions across the United States among them: Maryland, Chicago, Illinois, Florida, Boston Massachusetts, New Jersey, Providence Rhode Island, and Brooklyn, New York. She was recently included in the Baltimore Artist + WPA exhibition curated by Mera Rubell at Marianne Boesky Gallery in NYC. She was a resident at Pyramid Atlantic Art Center in Silver Spring, MD and at Art 342 in Ft. Collins, CO. Currently she is a resident at School 33 Art Center in Baltimore, MD. She will be having an upcoming exhibition at Julio Fine Arts Gallery, Loyola University, Baltimore, MD.

michelledickson.com