26 January 2006

The Art of The Aphrodisiac

  • Tuesday, Feb. 7
  • 5:30-8:30 p.m. The Art of The Aphrodisiac
    Champagne, Chocolate, & Caviar—What is it about them that makes us want them more?
    Thienot
    Champagne generously donated by Thienot.

    Art SmartLUMA is introducing ArtSmart, a program for young professionals geared toward fun and fine living. We will have regular programs and events that not only allows for networking and meeting and greeting, but will also emphasize the art of developing connoisseurship in all aspects of life, from food and travel to art and design. We are seeking fun, intellectually curious, culturally motivated, young professionals to come together in an exciting downtown museum setting to explore common interests, network, and exchange ideas (and maybe even phone numbers!). Find out more by attending our first ArtSmart event on Tuesday, Feb. 7th, from 5:30-8:30pm at LUMA.
  • LOCATION:
  • Loyola University Museum of Art
    820 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611

  • The Loyola University Museum of Art is dedicated to the exploration, promotion and understanding of art and artistic expression that attempts to illuminate the enduring spiritual questions and concerns of all cultures and societies.
  • The Museum interprets and displays the university's Medieval and Renaissance collection, known as the Martin D'Arcy, S.J. Collection,other museum permanent collections and rotating exhibitions. As a museum with an interest in education and educational programming, the Loyola University Museum of Art reflects the university's Jesuit mission and is dedicated to helping men and women of all creeds explore the roots of their own faith and spiritual quest.LUMA is under the direction of Pamela Ambrose, Loyola's director of cultural affairs.


    The following information has been obtained from the official LUMA website.
    http://www.luc.edu/luma/

    The museum has a prime downtown Michigan Ave. location, easily accessible by public transportation and car. You will greatly enjoy mingling, the atmosphere and the newly remodeled space, and of course the exhibit.

    25 January 2006

    Gallery Review II - 1/20/06

    The place to be last Friday was in West Loop, in the 118 n. Peoria Building for numerous gallery openings and receptions. Perfect on a snowy evening to spend the night cavorting from gallery to gallery and floor to floor, without having to go outside. Team member nepheley and myself were joined by a good humored Canadian who recently moved to Pilsen for love and marriage and the nearby school campus.

    We started at the top floor (4th) and worked our way down. Our first stop was the Giola Gallery, featuring the work of Jeremy Black in the main gallery. Though the color palatte was well done, the work itself bordered on the somewhat disappointing plateau of repetitiveness and just barely escaped through use of minimalist lines and backgrounds and pieces with multiple sections to provoke interest.

    Also at Giola was the work of Martin O'Connor, which seemed to be pencil and highlighters of ambigious looking figures interacting on a blank background (think Aha!'s Take on Me Video in pale yellow or green with less facial details). This work was fascinating rendered as a mural in a small room of the gallery, but lacked an emotional connection to the viewer. Finally, the Giola Gallery had work by Jason Ruhl, similar in style to Black, but with softer lines and colors, and more interaction between subjects on the canvass. The faded look resembled stencil or pressed inkwork, and had a very ethereal quality, almost as if the work captured the moment before a radio station was being tuned into clarity.

    Our next stop was the gescheidle Gallery, which was featuring Fred Stonehouse (Songs and Dreams). His work involves high use of symbolism in an attempt to describe our culture. One piece titled Prepare to be Judged by the Almighty explored the supposed reality of screenwriting in Hollywood; or at least that's what we concluded. What else could a circle of people on their knees kissing the ass in front of them with a bag on money in the middle mean? Work like this is always a pleasure to view, especially because the artist seems to want to reach the viewer on many different levels. His work is slightly reminiscent of Andy Warhol. Michael Noland's work shared the space, but with pieces that make such a powerful visual and political statement, Noland's SouthWestern desert plants with bold lines and color palattes was largely overshadowed by Stonehouse's pieces. Finally, David Brody's Heads, oil on canvas had a slightly unreal quality about them that still felt appealing somehow, especially in a world of overly done celebrities and supermodels. The work was all from the shoulders up and had a very simple arresting quality to it.

    Our next stop was the Walsh gallery, which had many installations as well as some photography, as a previous blog post mentions more in detail. The installations were cool, the sort of thing you might encounter at the Musuem of Contemporary Art. There were five or six different ones, all in different (seemingly unrelated) styles. The first, a kind of space age bachelor pad by Rodney Swanstrom, next a maze of wood and scaffolding by Wang Wei, then a series of mesh tents with scenes laid out by Wang Shugang, and finally, a bunch of vertical lightboxes with images of the five senses by Sheba Chhachhi. This gallery was by far the best of our trip and made me feel like a little kid.

    Our last stop was the Aron Packer Gallery, where the giddy referential pop art of Hank Feeley graced the walls in big broad canvasses and bold colors and Salvador Dali-esque composition. The middle gallery walls were overshadowed, but a sort of Grimms brother fairy tale type work. In the last gallery space, a lot of pieces were collected together from different artists. We enjoyed Brian Detmer's The South Paper. I had too much wine by this point to remember (or write down legibly) why exactly. Also on display, a realistic wooden I-pod, wall art made from beads and more.

    Hit:

    gescheidle Gallery, Fred Stonehouse

    Walsh gallery, (all artists)



    23 January 2006

    Gallery Review I - 01/20/06

    Visited the somewhat new gallery, Giola for the first time. However, the visit was quiet disappointing, as the work there was not of great interest. Some of the most inviting work worth exploration was found in the Gescheidle, and Walsh galleries.

    Gescheidle showed several works by Fred Stonehouse "Songs and Dreams." The paintings in the exhibit usually portrayed a human head at its center often surrounded by letters, quotes, words i.e. dream of ming, ming, dream of st. John, perko,rice lake, chanson de bois, etc. These characters are somewhat exaggerated, as some either lack a torso, or contain an animal body (human-animal morphs). For instance, work entitled "Dream of Ming" displays the head of Ming with a bird torso, holding a snake in its claws. I found his work fascinating, engaging, and meaningful, although I could not figure out exactly what all the words were referring to, i.e. Perko. After goggling that at home, I found that it could refer to a company that manufactures marine products, which does not really explain anything in terms of the imagery in his painting. His work might appear as a social commentary (or it did to me at first glance) but as the titles insinuate these are his songs and dreams, they are not necessarily realistic, and contain both aspects of the real, and the dream world. For instance, he places Ming, or St. John within his own created context, his own dreams which we cannot nor are we suppose to fully understand. By looking at his work, we are looking into a mythical world created by another's mind/hand. His use of subdued colors draws the viewer into his paintings and the use of his "supposed" allegories causes the viewer to engage with his work for a long period of time, hoping for some glimmer of recognition in these "supposed" use of symbols. This is exhibit worth checking out at Gescheidle.

    The gallery is open Tues.-Fri. 10:30Am-5:30Pm. Sat. 11Am-5Pm. 118 N. Peoria, 4th Floor

    The Walsh gallery had several interesting works on display, but the ones I found worth writing about were the photographs by Gao Brothers entitled "Sense of Space." The photogrpahs either show nude males or clothed females cramped into box type constructions. The spaces are not large enough for their body, hence they bend their bodies into various positions, trying to fit them as best as they can into the space provided. As the quote from the Walsh Gallery website states: "As the photographers have explained: “Our series is widely misread as having homoerotic content. In fact we are trying to explore human relations…the cramped circumstances and lack of privacy and freedom in contemporary life, as well as barriers to personal and shared experience.” What the Gao Brothers intended on representing with their photographs is best communicated in the works contianing the females, who are clothed. The nudness of the male body distracts the viewer from the main point of the work. Although, we do see cramped bodies in both, the repetition of boxes and their nude bodies imply that there is something more inherent in them being nude rather than them being in a small/cramped space. Overall, these are worth looking at because of their composition and social commentary.

    The gallery is open Tuesday–Saturday 10:30–5:30 118 N. Peoria, 2nd Floor

    It is worth noting that Gescheidle specializes in Contemporary representational painting/drawing, while the Walsh gallery specializes in Contemporary Asian Art.

    Visited:

  • Giola Gallery -118 N. Peoria, 4th floor
  • Walsh Gallery -118 N. Peoria, 2th floor
  • Gescheidle -118 N. Peoria, 4th floor
  • February 3–April 21, 2006 @ The International Surgical Museum

    "Ruth Chambers: Through the Skin" at the International Museum of Surgical Science

    An Exhibition of Two Ceramic Installations: Beneath the Skin and Materia Medica

    Opening Reception: Friday, February 3, from 5–7 pm (free)

    Combining light with translucent porcelain in the form of human organs and apothecary jars, Ruth Chambers explores thresholds between the internal and the external, the material and the immaterial, as they have been conceived throughout history in medicine and metaphysics. "Through the Skin" is Chambers' first solo exhibition in the United States, and the latest in the museum's "Anatomy in the Gallery" series, which showcases contemporary art with medical themes.(CAR)

    International Museum of Surgical Science
    1524 N. Lake Shore Dr.
    Open Tuesday–Saturday, 10 am–4 pm
    Admission $6, $3 for students and seniors, Tuesdays free

    19 January 2006

    Gallery Review 01/13/06

    As usual, on 2nd Friday's of every month, Pilsen galleries open their doors from 6pm-10 pm for art aficionados to look around, sip on some wine, have some food, etc. This was a quite eventful evening as not only was I able to view some interesting work within the galleries, but I stumbled upon several artist studios right above the 4Art,Inc. gallery. The 2 most notable studios I was very impressed by were: Bryan Sperry and Robert Marshall.

    Bryan Sperry does incredibly interesting sculptural relief using found objects, such as scraps of metal, wood, hub caps, cooking wok, etc., anything he finds abandoned around the neighborhood. He has a great compositional talent for selecting these unwanted pieces, deemed useless by their previous owners and creating something extraordinary that can captivate the viewer for hours. He uses construction glue to hold them together, as he does not know how to weld, but you cannot tell by examining these works closely. Moreover, to emphasize certain forms within these compositions he uses mostly primary colors as well as black. They look well-made and well thought out, although he says they do not take as much time to put together as one would have imagined. (He can make one in a day!) In addition to these sculptures, he creates paintings that focus on a nude female body rendered in a cubist influenced technique. He makes most of his living and commissions from the paintings, hence his studio is affluent with the sculptural reliefs. Actually, all of his work appears to have some influence from the cubist era, which I love.

    Robert Marshall creates stained glass work. He had several of his stained glass light boxes on display which are very captivating not only because of the incredible colors, but also due to the cut of the glass, and the use of composition. His process is very time consuming, preplanned and well designed, which makes these pieces a must have in ones home. He makes most of these works for commissions. If you would like to learn his technique, he holds classes at his studio, and all you need to do is sign up!

    Bryan Sperry and Robert Marshall are located at 1932 S. Halsted, 5th floor. Sperry's studio is on the left hand side as you come in, and Marshall's studio is the first door down the hall on the left hand side.

    Please check their websites:

  • Bryan Sperry

  • Robert Marshall
  • Some upcoming gallery openings this weekend! Friday, Jan. 20

    River East

  • Thomas Gathman Gallery- Tom Gathman, New Drawings

    West Loop

  • Giola Gallery- Martin O'Conner, Jeremy Black & Jason Ruhl: Paintings that make you want to drive fast and punch people.

  • Walsh Gallery- Sheba Chhachhi, Wang Shugang, Rodney Swanstrom, Wang Wei

    River North

  • Nicole Gallery- Gallery 2: Three Nigerian Artists, Abiola Akintola, Nnamdi Okonkwo & Pita Ohiwerei

    Other Areas

  • Contemporary Art Workshop- Drawings by Aline Cautis and Paintings by Alex Lu

  • The Leigh Gallery-Landscapes: Works by Ann Powell (oil), Elvin Griffin (pastel and oil), Barbara Pihos (etching) and Susan Keyes-Hernandez (mixed media)


    As always galleries are open from 5pm - 9pm.For more info check the side bar for gallery links!
  • 10 January 2006

    Gallery Review 1/6/06

    Chicago Arts Team Members nepheley and myself (along with a very patient boyfriend) gathered at Chicago and Franklin Friday evening to partake in the River North Gallery openings.

    Our tour began at The Byron Roche Gallery, featuring the heavily textured paintings of Sandra Dawson. Dawson's work focused on one or two objects (or persons) and highlighted them among thin layers of plaster covered by boldly colored paint. Dawson's work was often matted on canvas by a two or three inch border that contrasted the background of the central image. As we toured the gallery we were taken aback by some "stock paintings" (work that the gallery has previously shown or stores) near the back--which was to happen often during our tour of the galleries--nearly black small canvasses with one detailed object under a bright light by Ronand.

    Next door at the sophisticated and smallish Stephen Kelly Gallery, Lisa Caplan's bright color palettes and perspectives (the show was titled Euphoria and Vertigo) were paired with abstract and dreary (by comparison) paintings of Central Park and other locales in New York. Caplan's use of golds and bronzes made each landscape regardless of its locale (from Venice to the U.S.) look as if they were holding the rising sun.

    The Mary Bell Galleries-Group Show, featuing Betty Fulmer, Leslie Tejada, and Tamar Kander was completely stolen by Leslie Tejada. Her abstract, ethereal scenes were captivating and full of interest.

    Also on display were the lovely sculptures of Greg Milne, which were breathtakingly beautiful. Milne pairs rustic metal fire painted to a brilliant palette of blues, reds and purples with the smallest accent of crackled white ceramic porcelain.

    As on previous River North Gallery Walks, the place to be was the Judy A Saslow Gallery. Not just because of the enormous space and the exciting work on display, but also the excellent food table and bar. The place was packed with people and to encourage their comfort, a coatrack was on hand. As we munched, we looked at work seemingly influenced by comic book art, which felt at once fresh and interesting though slightly repetitive.

    Our next stop was to the Melanee Cooper Gallery to view "Urban Landscapes," Solo Show, Kathleen Waterloo, encaustic work and in the second gallery, James Leonard, squeegee paintings. We walked past all of this to view paintings from a previous show of Cheryl Warrick's that were still up in a smaller space and were so strikingly beautiful that we were compelled to ask about taking images for this site. One canvas is filled with different size squares of paintings, almost to a "quilted" effect. Next to them, Waterloo's delicate yet large abstract pieces featuring soft stripes broken up by bits of color looked like repetitive pieces of bathroom art, which in short means that the color palette reminds one of water and the image is not too displeasing to the eye. Warrick's work showed that restricting one's work to a form does not have to be boring.

    Our next stop was to the relatively empty Andrew Bae Gallery to view wood block prints by artist Kwan Jean Park. The prints were beautiful in rich fall tones and rendered so carefully onto the paper, you could almost sense the pressing happening before your eyes. Layered onto multiple backgrounds, the work was beautiful without any extra framing. We were all drawn to the storage area of "stock" work and the exquisite hand crafted wooden furniture.


    We took a respite at the Catherine Edelman Gallery and viewed photographs taken in New York and Chicago by Bruce Davidson. Black and White scenes of subways and streets from twenty years or more ago had clean lines and excellent contrast.


    We crossed the hallway to the Zg Gallery, an exciting new gallery for emerging artists. A group show that was excellently organized and displayed tried to attempt to show the artist's process from scraps of paper to models and then finally, the finished product. It was extremely interesting, yet if felt like the sort of information you glean in a museum.


    At the Lydon Fine Art Gallery, Trevor Bell's minimalist and oddly sloping canvasses called us past the fussy fresco art of Genell Miller. With bright bold colors, Bell's work evokes a well-someone-had-to-do-it response followed by awe by the size and shapes of his canvasses. A tiny panoramic painting about two inches in height with no identification card was alone worth the winding trek through the gallery.


    We tried to make it in time for the galleries on the northeast corner of Franklin, but they were closing (relatively) early. Pity, since the Schneider Gallery's opening night of Luis Gonzalez Palma's work was considered a must see for this reviewer. The glimpse I got through the darkened windows looked as promising as his last show here; gold leaf covered in layers of resin over a translucent silver gelatin print. Art and Photography have never made such a perfect match.


    We reluctantly entered the library like confines of the Habatat Galleries, only to find the delightful and whimsical work of Toots Zynsky in the main gallery. The artist herself was on hand (even that late) to answer questions, as is customary in most gallery openings. The lighting was perfectly executed to show every detail in molded glass rods that nearly resembled large seashells. Also on display, a select group of Chiluly glass work resembling flowers.


    At the Gruen Galleries, the glazed pottery paintings of Anna Pales' trees were exquisite and far from repetitive. The colors alone were perfect and the glaze only highlighted each stroke of paint. We were also impressed by Dionisio's asian inspired paintings, as well as Erin Parish's geometric work.


    Our last stop of the evening was The Perimeter Gallery featuring the work of Don Pollock. Haunting and evocative, this work ended our evening in the perfect way, leaving us wondering what was ahead for our evening.


    Hit: Mary Bell Galleries-Group Show, featuing Betty Fulmer, Leslie Tejada, and Tamar Kander

    Habatat Galleries-Toots Zynsky

    Lydon Fine Art-Lucy Clink & Genell Miller: Paesaggi e Giardini

    Perimeter Gallery-Don Pollack

    Schneider Gallery-Luis Gonzalez Palma

    09 January 2006

    January 18 &19- artists discussions @ Chicago Cultural Center

    Public Art/Public Conversations: Public Art? Community Art?
    January 18, 6:00 p.m.
    Is the distinction between public art and community art a useful one, or is there really more common ground than is often suggested? How can professional artists create public work that successfully incorporates community concerns with the specific intent of a project?

    As the CTA and the City of Chicago's Public Art Program embark on a major project, which will commission numerous new works for the Red and Brown Lines, this conversation is both timely and instructive. Artists Adam Brooks, Christine Tarkowski, and Theaster Gates join Public Art Program Director and Visual Art Curator Greg Knight in this topical discussion. (CAR)

    Chicago Cultural Center, 1st floor Garland Room
    Admission Free.

    Artists at Work Forums
    Global Thinking: Expanded Practice
    January 19, 6:00 p.m.
    Learn about sourcing materials, finding inspiration and opportunities through residencies, exhibitions, collaborations and self-directed study through the practices of three Chicago-based artists -- Michelle Feder-Nadoff, LaShawnda Crowe Storm and Michael Thompson -- who approach their work from a global perspective.

    Michelle Feder-Nadoff's sculpture and installation practice have grown to encompass documentary videography and publishing since her apprenticeship with the traditional coppersmiths of Santa Clara del Cobre in Michoacán, México. Huele de Noche / Night Blooming Jasmine, Feder-Nadoff's new video, premiers at the Gene Siskel Film Center this month. Founder of the Cuentos Foundation, Feder-Nadoff creates and facilitates collaborative and community-based artist projects crossing disciplines and cultures, giving voice to the stories (cuentos) of diverse communities.

    The thematic and logistical implications of expanding a national practice internationally will be addressed by LaShawnda Crowe Storm. Storm's recent residency at Fundação Sacatar in Brazil enabled her to expand the dialogue she'd built in her Lynch Quilt Project, working with a national network of textile artists and churches on issues of lynching. In Brazil, she took her interest in community, history and textiles to examine the ramifications of the legacy of slavery in the "New World."

    Michael Thompson's notorious stamp art projects as well has his toy-inspired sculptures and elegant kite constructions, rely on an international network of collaborators, guides, and suppliers. His travels - to China, Turkey, Russia, Mexico and elsewhere -- provide fodder for projects, source arcane materials, illuminate techniques and aesthetic distinctions, as well as provide rollicking stories of danger, intrigue and exquisite beauty.

    Addressing current issues of interest and concern in Chicago's art community, Artist at Work Forums invite artists, advocates, and related professionals to discuss the current state of creative living in Chicago. AAWF are made possible through the generosity of the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation. (CAR)

    Chicago Cultural Center -- 1st Floor Garland
    Admission Free

    05 January 2006

    BSD-Opening reception Saturday January 7, 6-10pm

    January 7th, 2006 - February 4th, 2006

    BSD Butcher Shop Dogmatic - presents Stacie Johnson, Lisa Williamson and Kristen VanDeventer

    BSD Butcher Shop Dogmatic
    1319 W. Lake St., 3rd Floor
    Chicago, Illinois 60607

    Chicago Teaching Artists Collective- January 10

    The Chicago Teaching Artists Collective hosts a monthly series of discussions about arts education, the teaching artist field, and community engagement through the arts.

    Place: Association House of Chicago
    Date:Tuesday, January 10.
    Time: 7pm till 9 p.m.
    Gene Booth and Krista Babbitt will demonstrate a bookbinding activity which incorporates poetry, critical thinking, and several skills related to bookmaking. Also, Kimberly Soenen will give a talk entitled “PR for the Artist: The Moat Is Afire.”

    Free and open to the public.

    Association House
    1116 North Kedzie Ave.,
    Chicago, IL
    For more info:
    Contact Luis at 773.727.5251
    decombobulated@yahoo.com
    www.associationhouse.org

    Graffitti inspired art-Opening reception Friday January 13, 2006

    Big Brother, Little Brother
    Two generations of graffitti inspired art, the work of A. Lewellen and W. Kim.

    District 13 Gallery
    1706 W. Chicago
    Opening reception 7 p.m.-11p.m

    Afterparty @ Trevio
    1575 N. Milwaukee
    Chcago, IL

    Numerous gallery openings this Friday, January 6 5pm-9pm

  • Jean Albano Gallery-"...Scapes": a group show investigating the idea of "scapes": landscapes, seascapes, waterscapes, mindscapes, escapes, etc.
  • ArchiTech-Dream Machines: The inventions of R.G. Martelet
  • Mary Bell Galleries-Group Show, featuing Betty Fulmer, Leslie Tejada, and Tamar Kander
  • Roy Boyd Gallery-Carlos Estrada-Vega: Paintings
  • Melanee Cooper Gallery-"Urban Landscapes," Solo Show, Kathleen Waterloo, encaustic work. Gallery 2: James Leonard, squeegee paintings
  • Caro d'Offay Gallery-Unveiling the Lumetype
  • Catherine Edelman Gallery-Bruce Davidson, On the Street
  • Fine Arts Building Gallery (FABG)-"14th Annual Artists' in Residence Group Exhibition." Artists who work and exhibit in the Fine Arts Building. Painting, Drawing, Printmaking, Sculpture, Ceramics, Photo
  • FLATFILEgalleries-Inside The Sphere of Light: Bob Emser, sculpture. Sublucent: Jason Peot, sculpture. Les Helices: Alain Giraud, photography
  • Gallery 500 Wells-Ioan Nemtoi & Dana Malone: Paintings.
  • Gwenda Jay / Addington Gallery-Robin Denevan & Margaret Keller: San Francisco encaustic artist Denevan with St. Louis painter Keller, who uses loosely applied glazes of oil color
  • Habatat Galleries-Toots Zynsky
  • Carl Hammer Gallery-All About Women group exhibition featuring Aimee Beaubien, Lauren Bergman, Phyllis Bramson, Orly Cogan, Lee Godie, Grace Graupe-Pillard, Irene Hardwicke Olivieri, Ray Rapp, David Sharpe, Elizabeth Shreve, Hollis Sigler, Mary Lou Zelasny and others
  • Rhona Hoffman Gallery-Tania Bruguera & Chris Garafalo
  • Stephen Kelly Gallery, Inc.-New Works by the artist Stephen Kelly
  • Lydon Fine Art-Lucy Clink & Genell Miller: Paesaggi e Giardini
  • Ann Nathan Gallery-Bruno Surdo, New Work
  • NIU Art Museum Gallery in Chicago-"NIU Faculty Salon" Biennial exhibition of work by NIU School of Art Faculty. One Fine Art Gallery-Surroundings: Interpretations of Landscapes. A number of artists share their visions
  • Perimeter Gallery-Don Pollack, painting
  • Maya Polsky Gallery-Best works by selected gallery artists, including works by Ed Paschke, Susanna Coffey, Jose Cobo,Velery Koshliakov, Gabriela Morawetz, Pancho Quilici and Vasily Shulzhenko
  • Byron Roche Gallery-Sandra Dawson: New Paintings
  • Judy A Saslow Gallery-Fresh Faces: Five Contemporary Artists featuring Michael Brieger, Philip Stein, Fort Guerin, Emmett Kerrigan and Blair Thornley
  • Schneider Gallery-Luis Gonzalez Palma
  • Carrie Secrist Gallery-New Work by Joy Episalla
  • Skestos Gabriele Gallery-Group show curated by Jennifer Jankauskas

    Openings are from 5pm-9pm.
    To get addresses to these galleries you can check the gallery links on the right side of this blog.
  • Events @ Messhall this month

    Sun 1/8
    Brunchluck 12:00-3:00 p.m.

    Fri 1/20
    Hardcore Histories presents Hardcore Herstories: A Celebration of Women in Hardcore 7:00-10:00 p.m.

    Fri 1/27
    Suppressed Films of the 1980's, Part II: "The Guyana Tragedy: The Story of Jim Jones" (screening on DVD projection, 192 minutes, one intermission). 7:00 p.m.

    Free and open to all!

    6932 North Glenwood Avenue
    Chicago, IL
    Phone: (773) 465-4033
    E-mail: messhall8@yahoo.com
    Website: www.messhall.org

    Karen Reimer @ the Art Institute of Chicago

    Karen Reimer
    Thursday, 12 January 2006
    6:00 p.m. Lecture
    Price Auditorium

    In January every year, The Society for Contemporary Art focuses attention on the very best artists working in Chicago. Karen Reimer explores notions of context and limitation by creating embroidered interpretations of contemporary ephemera. By using the labor-intensive medium of needle and thread, Reimer implicitly addresses women's work and the construction of
    feminine identity. Transformed through craft, throwaway items such as the torn-off edge of a Federal Express® receipt and a Juicy Fruit® gum wrapper turn into unique objects d'art, as the artist replicates by hand what is ordinarily mass-produced. Reimer explains: "Generally speaking, copies are of less value than originals. However, when I copy by embroidering, the value of the copy is increased because of the elements of labor, handicraft and singularity-traditional criteria of value. The copy is now an 'original.'"

    Reimer received an MFA from The University of Chicago. She has had recent solo exhibitions at Goshen College Art Gallery, Indiana and at the Hyde Park Art Center. Her work was included in Stalemate at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago and at Baltimore/Chicago at the Decker Gallery, Maryland Institute of Art, Baltimore, both 2004. (saic)

    Lillstreet Exhibition & SHELTER ME open call for entries

    Lillstreet Faculty Exhibition
    OPENING RECEPTION: January 14, 2-4pm
    Exhibit runs from January 14-January 29, 2006

    Lillstreet Art Center
    4401 North Ravenswood
    Chicago, IL 60640
    773.769.4226

    Office/Gallery Hours:
    Monday-Thursday:
    10am-7:30pm
    Friday-Saturday:
    10am-6pm
    Sunday:
    10am-5pm


    OPEN CALL for entries for an exhibit entitled SHELTER ME.
    Exhibit is about works of metal that evoke shelter from the architectural, emotional and metaphysical.

    Exhibit dates: May 6-June 17, 2006
    Application deadline: April 21, 2006
  • Click here for application
  •