Newly Selected Artist: James Terrell

Newly Selected Artist: James Terrell

James Terrell
Transcendence: Beyond the Terrestrial Plane
December 2 – December 22, 2023

As humans we are more than what we see on the surface. We are more than just flesh, blood and bone. There are multiple planes of existence. There are multiple layers within our physicality and mental capacity. Within and around us are unseen but immensely felt dreamlike realms that intertwine our mind and body and guide our day-to-day existence. We are not just humans that solely exist on the planet, we also exist and are connected to the cosmos. We are simultaneously and figuratively existing within unearthly interstellar planes.

In Transcendence: Beyond the Terrestrial Plane, Terrell incorporates line, shape and pattern immersed and fused together with fabric, paint and paper using the style of collage. The figures in the art seem surreal and otherworldly. The art is optically striking and must be given time to unfold in the eyes as the brain of the viewer processes what is being observed. The art of James Terrell is inspired by the stained glass windows found in churches. Terrell’s artwork incorporates the principles of vibration and movement found in op art as displayed by artists Bridget Riley and Victor Vasarely. The contrasting colors and patterns cause the artwork to vibrate. The use of contrasting colors radiates energy. Terrell also uses the color-blocking technique of color theorists Josef Albers and Johannes Itten to show how various colors and patterns respond and interact with the eye and brain of humanity when placed side-by-side within and around the subject matter of the figure.

About the Artist:

James Stephen Terrell is a native Washingtonian who was reared in Ward 7. His parents are Rev. Dr. James E. Terrell, Pastor of historic Second Baptist Church of Washington D.C. and retired Superior Court Associate Judge Mary A. Terrell of the Superior Court of Washington D.C. He received his high school diploma from Gonzaga College High School, his Bachelor of Fine Art from Howard University, his Master of Fine Arts from Parsons School of Design, and the Master of Divinity Degree from the Union Theological Seminary, with a concentration on theology and the fine arts. While attending Union Theological Seminary, he also pursued fine arts painting elective courses at Columbia University. Terrell has taught art for over fifteen years in DCPS and DCPCS schools, has exhibited his work all over the country and has had multiple solo shows, including at museums. James Stephen Terrell is married to artist Zsudayka Nzinga, and together they have 3 children.

Newly Selected Artist: Kenny Harris

Kenny Harris
Envisivivarium
December 2 – December 22, 2023

In Envisivivarium, Kenny Harris presents a menagerie of meticulously crafted paper figures designed in harsh contrast of pure white and deep black. Each figure presented in the space represents a different mythological being, demonstrating the diversity and ingenuity of human imagination through overwhelming numbers. These figures welcome the viewer, engaging the audience in a conversation of imagination and creativity. The figures’ shadows present a unique frieze of ambiguous forms, providing the audience with an opportunity to create new figures, narratives, and interactions, engaging in the creative process that has inspired humans for millennia. Each installation of Envisivivarium is unique, responding to the space, location, history, and community in which the work is installed.

About the Artist:

Kenny Harris was born in Syracuse, New York, and attended Jamesville-Dewitt High School. He earned his BFA in painting and his BS in psychology from SUNY Brockport in Brockport, New York, while organizing a small non-profit community theatre organization. He went on to earn his MFA in Studio Art from Moore College of Art and Design in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with a thesis focusing on mythology and its role in contemporary art, as well as its role in contemporary media. Kenny currently works as an adjunct professor at Onondaga Community College in Syracuse, New York and has shown in multiple group and solo exhibitions throughout the United States. His solo shows include exhibitions in Garrison, New York, Syracuse, New York, Eastport, Maine, and Barre, Vermont. His artwork explores the cultural and psychological connectivity of mythology through whimsical, graphic, figurative forms.

Newly Selected Artist: Roger Mokbel

Roger Mokbel
Dust in My Mouth
December 2 – December 22, 2023

The Qatar America Institute for Culture’s (QAIC) IMPART Artist Grant awards a cash prize to emerging and mid-career artists to support the creation of a new body of work around a selected yearly theme. Lebanese photographer Roger Mokbel was one of the artists selected in 2022 whose work best exemplified or explored the intersection between sustainability and the arts. In the exhibition Dust in My Mouth, Roger Mokbel explores the intersection of climate change and personal loss, while emphasizing the importance of sustainability as an ecological necessity. Roger Mokbel’s work was on display at QAIC from May—August, 2023, and is showcased here in partnership with IA&A at Hillyer, a program of International Arts & Artists.

About the Artist:

Originally a biotechnology engineer, Mokbel established himself as a self-taught Lebanese photographer by using his visual works as a plea for social justice. His work explores the intersection between the personal and the collective. Always socially engaged, he is fascinated in studying the multiple layers through which a topic can be approached. In his storytelling projects, he has often used human psychology as a point of entry to address societal and environmental concerns. His first project, Describe the Sky to Me, was selected by the Arab Documentary Photography Program in 2018 and received the
Photography Prize from the Boghossian Foundation in 2019. His second project, And Then, They Just Left, was exhibited at the Festival International des Arts de Bordeaux in 2021 and in Madrid as part of the official selection of Photo España 2022.

Newly Selected Artist: Allan Rosenbaum

Allan Rosenbaum
Substratum
November 4 – November 26, 2023

Substratum presents a series of sculptures featuring meticulously modeled and painted surfaces and inset areas of fabric collage and felted wool. Celebrating materiality and a remixing of the personal and the public, the work in the show probes relationships between craft, painting, and sculpture, while addressing issues of invention, memory, and restoration. For this show, Rosenbaum draws inspiration from a collection of neckties inherited from his father as well as scrap from family sewing projects. His abstract constructions develop visual conversations between personal material and material he has collected representing diverse histories and geographies. His palette includes quilting scraps, Dutch wax fabrics, vintage kimonos, and deadstock fabric sourced from donations, estate sales, and the virtual marketplace. Using curiosity as a guide, the exhibition is a quest for new forms and the alchemy that can occur when materials and processes are brought together in the search for the unexpected.

About the Artist:

Allan Rosenbaum is a studio artist and former Professor of Ceramics at Virginia Commonwealth University. Rosenbaum’s practice is materially based and utilizes a range of analogue processes to investigate intersections between craft, art, and design. Rosenbaum has received Individual Artist Fellowships from the Virginia Commission for the Arts in both Craft and Sculpture, three early-career project grants from the Wisconsin Arts Board, and he is a fellow of the Virginia Center for Creative Art. His work has been exhibited nationally and internationally and is represented in public collections including the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum; the Taipei Yingge Ceramics Museum; the City Museum of Varazdin, Croatia; Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts; Madison Art Center in Wisconsin; the Museum of Arts and Sciences in Macon, GA; the Montgomery Museum of Fine Art and the Mobile Museum of Art in Alabama; the City of Richmond Public Art Commission; and the Kamm Teapot Foundation.

Newly Selected Artist: Ellen Hanauer

Ellen Hanauer
The Life The Children Built
November 4 – November 26, 2023

Ellen Hanauer’s exhibition, The Life The Children Built offers visitors a thought-provoking journey into the world of two young child immigrants who arrived in America unaccompanied during the early 1900s. This exhibit visually narrates the immigration experiences of Hanauer’s grandfathers at ages eleven and thirteen, along with her great-grandmother’s challenges working in a textile mill as a child. Like countless other young immigrants, they ventured to America independently, seeking to forge better lives for themselves, and these artworks unveil their emotional odyssey. Through sculpture and installations, this exhibition captures their spirit, resilience, solitude, and hardships, with the aim of fostering understanding, empathy, and appreciation through storytelling. This work shines a spotlight on aspects such as cultural adaptation, language barriers, courage, strenuous labor, ingenuity, homesickness, heartbreak, and the aspirations that drove these immigrants to pursue their dreams. This exhibition invites viewers to reflect on their own immigrant ancestors and to embrace today’s immigrants with the same pride and respect as if they were our own.

About the Artist:

Ellen Hanauer is an international sculptor and installation artist who has spent much of her career depicting the emotive states of the world. She uses mixed media to share her personal history through object-based narratives. Hanauer has dealt with feminist, reproductive, biological, and psychological issues, often portraying the subject matter from the inside out. The inspiration for each piece is derived from its concept, which inspires her to continue evolving techniques and using materials in original ways. Throughout her career, she has continued to integrate social activism into her work. Hanauer is a self-taught artist who began her career studying the human body in the cadaver labs at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School. She has exhibited nationally and internationally in museums, universities and galleries, including solo exhibitions here and abroad. Her commissions are installed throughout the country and her work is in the collections of museums, corporations, townships, and private collectors.