Christine Shmigel (China)

Christine Shmigel (China)

April 1-30, 2016

A Foreigner’s Cabinet of Chinese Curiosities

Christina Shmigel’s installation will give visitors an opportunity to experience the day‐to‐day in Shanghai as she experienced in 2004, after moving there from St. Louis, Missouri. Visitors can experience the dislocating sense of wonder, frustration, puzzlement, and pleasure that accompanies the idea of “otherness.” Drawing on the principles of Chinese garden design, the layout of this installation will also respond to space. Several aspects will invite the viewer to interact with the works.

Christina Shmigel is an American sculptor and installation artist, who left a teaching career in 2004 to create art in Shanghai. Shmigel received an undergraduate degree in painting from the Rhode Island School of Design, and graduate degrees in sculpture from Brooklyn College, NY, and in metalworking from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. From 1995-2004, Shmigel was an Associate Professor of Sculpture at Webster University, St Louis, Missouri, USA. Her work has been exhibited in numerous venues nationally & internationally including solo shows at the St. Louis Art Museum & Laumeier Sculpture Park and the Duolun Museum in Shanghai. She has participated in residencies and group exhibitions in Korea, Australia, Austria, Canada, and Taiwan. Shmigel has also completed several large public and private commissions in the US including projects for Arts-in-Transit in St. Louis, MO and the Greensboro Public Library in North Carolina. In Shanghai, her work can be seen in a permanent installation at the Glamour Bar on the Bund.

cabinetofchinesecuriosities.blogspot.com

Sascha Hughes-Caley (PA)

April 1-30, 2016

No Joke

No Joke is an installation of performance documentation, sculpture, and new video work. The exhibition is framed as a meditation on “endings”: a sunset; a speech never delivered; an interview botched; a rehearsed departure; a miscommunication occurring when symbols of one culture circulate in another.

By examining the economic, political, and social structures of the American wellness market – specifically, how focus on personal empowerment or purpose can become a mania – Hughes-Caley works to deliver an incisive critique of the limits of triumphalism.

Sascha Hughes-Caley is a multidisciplinary artist whose primary artistic concerns are centered on conversations around power, gender, self-help, spirituality, and failure. Also trained as an actor, she is particularly interested in playing with the notion of rehearsal and the potential it has for flattening the language around our experiences. Hughes-Caley received her MFA in Interdisciplinary Art with an emphasis in Time-Based Media and Performance from the University of Pennsylvania in 2015. Her work has been performed, screened, and exhibited in Philadelphia, Chicago, and Los Angeles, as well as in Canada, Mexico, Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, and India. Sascha is currently adjunct faculty in the College of Media Arts and Design at Drexel University. She lives and works in Philadelphia, PA.

www.saschahughescaley.com

TYPECAST

March 4-26, 2016

TYPECAST

Juror’s Statement by Jarvis DuBois
a charged yet relevant undertaking. It can be ever morphing and often difficult to delineate. Particularly stark since the Presidency of Barack Obama, class, ethnic, gender, political, religious and sexual markers have shifted, been embraced and come under attack regarding ‘self’ and ‘others’. In recent month so much focus, often skewed and myopic rhetoric, has been placed on the issues of migration and immigration in the United States and abroad. Their global implications and repercussions are hotly debated in government halls, classrooms, work places as well as individuals’ homes.

The twenty-nine artists exhibiting in TYPECAST both represent and challenge a multitude of identities including: gay, lesbian, trans, Catholic, Muslim, Asian, Middle Eastern, Latino, rural town and urban metropolis dwellers from across the country. Through collage, embroidery, digital photography, mixed media works on paper and canvas, sculpture and video the artists examine their personal, family and national histories. Some take to task societal othering and stereotyping while others affirm the nuanced and, at times, misunderstood individual and group characteristics that comprise our cultural richness and diversity.

Selected Artists:
Sobia Ahmad (MD)
Amna N. Asghar (NY)
Michael Benevenia (MD)
Tanmaya Bingham (NM)
Donna R. Charging (NY)
Gary L. Duehr (MA)
Ric Garcia (MD)
Bradley A. Gay (DC)
Claudia H. Gibson-Hunter (DC)
Tom Greaves (DC)
Kyle Hackett (DC)
Jessica M. Hopkins (MD)
Leena Jayaswal (MD)
Khanh H. Le (DC)
Max Maddox (IL)
Christopher E. Manning (NY)
Suchitra S. Mattai (CO)
Mark Parascandola (DC)
Denise L. Philipbar (VA)
Carol B. Radsprecher (NY)
Anysa Saleh (CA)
Tania Sen (NJ)
Krista M. Sharp (VA)
Siridejchai Nutthawut (NY)
Lien Truong (NC)
Aaron Tsuru (NY)
Sandra Chen Weinstein (CA)
Meghan Willis (NY)
Fina Yeung (NY)

Lina Alattar (VA)

March 4-26, 2016

Embracing Abstraction

I draw from my varied life experiences to explore concepts that deal with evolving identity. Having lived on three continents by the age of 12, my work explores rootlessness, belonging, identity, and our shared human experience. These paintings are part of a series that explores ourselves and the world around us—our light, our shadows, our wholeness.

I have a long and passionate obsession with color, shape and space. I am especially attracted to emotive paradox – serene and chaotic, lush and messy, loose and intense – made tangible through the painted landscape. It is within this paradox that the magic is revealed, bringing a transient experience into view. It nudges me to pay attention to the rhythms, patterns, and colors—the underlying wonders surrounding us.

I constantly hold this same curiosity that once took us out of the caves, across the continents, and even out of our own blue planet. We have always been travelers, expanding the parameters of our identity, searching for aesthetic experience, while guiding us into our own wholeness.

Lina Alattar received her Bachelor of Fine Arts from Middle Tennessee State University with a major in graphic design and minor in painting. She continued her painting education in Gubio, Italy through an Art Study Program. Upon returning to the states, she pursuit painting at The George Washington University alongside a career in graphicdesign.

Lina continued working as a Creative Art Director in the graphic industry, earning numerous AAF Addy awards, as well as freelance work for the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC.

Currently Lina is a full time painter, with gallery representation at Touchstone Gallery in Washington, DC. She works out of her studio in Fairfax, VA. Her work can be seen in several regional galleries throughout the Washington, DC area.

Helen Frederick (MD)

February 5-27, 2016

UNEARTHING: Images of Silence

UNEARTHING: Images of Silence feature three sculptures with videos of water (the river/the lake), walking (over sandy areas), and viewing the trees (into slow moving Northern California redwood trees). Round glass surfaces atop the sculptures provide these edited moving images of algae and rocks, dunes and plants. These are intended to provide light to dark exterior/interior experiences as if the viewer were inside the mind of the artist during exposure to some of the oldest living organisms in the world that now are facing a “hospice” condition.

Also featured are several paintings that further describe the activities of creatures that wonder about the changes in their endangered environment. Metaphors of the primordial forests are indicated, and are featured and developed in a video installation at the The Phillips Collection in Frederick’s ACTS OF SILENCE exhibition, February to May, as part of the museum’s Intersections project directed and curated by Vesela Stretenovic, Senior Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art.

Frederick extends appreciation to and presents fellow artist Sean Watkins with his video assembly and production, ingenious video installation design, and for his collegial assistance and collaboration with the installation. Frederick also extends her appreciation to Matt Nolan for his photographs of the primordial forest taken in Northern California and accomplished during Frederick’s George Mason University provost award for creative study.

Helen Frederick is known mainly for hand-driven media such as custom-formed paper, artist books, paintings, drawings, and prints that often incorporate the use of language. She also adapts electronic media and sculpture in her installations,as seen in the 2016 interactive work exhibited at The Phillips Collection, Washington DC. Frederick’s work is included in the Whitney Museum of American Art, the National Gallery of Art, Library of Congress, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum, DC and many other national and international collections. Major exhibitions of Frederick’s work have been held at the Eleanor D. Wilson Museum at Hollins University, VA, Dieu Donne’ Gallery, NY, Henie-Onstad Museum, Norway, and in traveling museum exhibitions in Japan, Scandinavia, Europe, Greece, The United States and South America. Frederick founded Pyramid-Atlantic, a center for contemporary printmaking, hand papermaking, and the art of the book, which she directed for twenty-eight years. As an advocate for and active participant in the Washington DC metropolitan area art scene, she has served on the directorial boards of various local and national organizations and national peer review panels. She has exhibited and curated exhibitions and fulfilled speaking engagements around the world, always emphasizing collaboration across disciplines. Her recent interest lies in understanding how assimilated technologies grow from indigenous cultures and are a primary trajectory of this century. Currently she serves as Professor of Art, School of Art and Design, directs printmaking and enjoys working with graduate students at George Mason School of Art, Fairfax, VA, where she is director of the department’s imprint Navigation Press, in tandem with her interest in coordinating international cultural projects. In 2008 she received the Southern Graphic Council International Printmaker Emeritus Award. She is featured in the Feminist Art Base, Brooklyn Museum of Art, and serves on the College Art Association Board of Directors.

Recent exhibitions include: IN UNISON: Twenty Washington DC Artists, Kenkeleba Gallery, NY, that featured prints produced in the School of Art, George Mason University printmaking studios, sponsored by Millennium Art Salon, FOUR PERSPECTIVES: Becoming MPA, McLean Center for the Arts, McLean, VA.; Celebrating Six Years of Hillyer Arts, International Art and Artists, Washington DC, anniversary show featuring over 86 artists from the greater metropolitan area, and Personal Patterns, curated by Claudia Rousseau for the Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz. Foundation Art Center, Maryland.

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