Call to Artists and Friends of Raices!

Call to Artists and Friends of Raices!

Raices Taller 222 Art Gallery and Workshop is looking for all of our Associate Members and friends to be part of our “Comadres y Compadres” exhibition opening on September 19, 2009!

If you are a current Associate Member or a friend of the gallery and want to participate, email us at raicestaller222@aol.comTucsongallery or call 881-5335 for more information.

Exhibition Dates: September 19 – October 24, 2009

Regular gallery hours: Friday and Saturday 1:00 – 5:00 PM or by appointment

Raices Taller 222 Art Gallery & Workshop
218 E. 6th Street
(1/2 block east of 6th St. & 6th Ave.)
Tucson, AZ 85705
(520) 881-5335

www.RaicesTaller222.org

Raices Taller 222 Art Gallery and Workshop is Tucson’s only Latino based nonprofit cooperative contemporary art gallery located in the Downtown Historic Warehouse District

African American Artists at the National Gallery

African American Artists at the National Gallery

bearden

The National Gallery in D.C. houses a collection of approximately a 150 pieces of art by African Americans that date back as far as 1807 and up to at least 2004. The collection, while diverse, in part is the story of the African in America. This body of work illustrates a contribution to the overall culture of the United States, sometimes overlooked and overshadowed by the rhetoric of the times. There are many well known artists in this collection as well as names that I was not familiar with. Any trip to the nation’s capital should include a visit the National Gallery.

Jillian McDonald:Alone Together in the Dark

Jillian McDonald:Alone Together in the Dark

Social Studies Project 5
Artist in residence in the gallery: October 5-November 14, 2009
Exhibition: October 5, 2009-January 9, 2010

Social Studies challenges the traditional exhibition format by opening with an empty gallery and an artist in residence who considers social interaction a crucial part of their art-making. Visitors are invited into the gallery to participate with the artist to create objects and installations, or to observe and question the process. Working through public/private partnerships with multiple ASU departments, schools and community organizations, the project brings museum visitors into the art-making process, invites extensive collaboration with community and university students, and greatly enhances the museum’s role as a vital gathering place.

In this, our fifth Social Studies project, Canadian artist Jillian McDonald will explore sustainability in the museum while including grassroots, community conversations. “At this point, my thoughts for the Tempe project circulate around haunted sites, ghosts and abandoned houses, focusing on ideas around sustainable living, ghost towns and The Day of the Dead,” says McDonald. “I will be visiting Arizona in June to get acquainted with the landscape and local customs, and to further develop site-specific ideas.”

Usually, a work of art is created in the solitude of an artist’s studio, shipped to an exhibition space and installed by museum staff; this project will allow museum visitors direct access to a contemporary artist and her creative process. Research, discussion and art-making are the subject matter of Social Studies rather than a behind-the-scenes activity.

The project will culminate in an installation, led by the artist, which will remain at the museum beyond the six-week residency. There are few artists in Phoenix who work in this method and, as the city continues to mature, projects like Social Studies will play an important role in presenting new ways to make, think about and participate in art.

Inquires

Arizona State University Art Museum
Tenth Street and Mill Avenue
Tempe, AZ 85287-2911
t. 480.965.2787
f. 480.965.5254
e. asuartmuseum@asu.edu
w. http://asuartmuseum.asu.edu
blog. http://asuartmuseum.wordpress.com/

Donations to the ASU Foundation

Outsiders Within At Tempe Center for the Arts

Outsiders Within At Tempe Center for the Arts

Last chance to see the exhibition!

Outsiders Within: Contemporary Work from Regional Latina/o and Native American Artists

6 – 8 p.m., Thurs., July 2

Backyard Panchanga by Frank Ybarra

Backyard Panchanga by Frank Ybarra

Free to the public.

Two performances by local band Radio Healer lead by artist and musician Randy Kemp.

Gallery at Tempe Center for the Arts

About the Exhibition

Like many artists today, contemporary Native American and Latino/a artists often refer to personal, cultural and historical experiences for inspiration. The title of the show is a play on words revealing the subtle nuances of artwork that doesn’t always fit exclusively into one or more styles or artworlds. Exhibition features 19 local and regional artists.

Outsiders Preview

Desserts on Canvas

Desserts on Canvas

Dessert on canvas

88 year old American artist Wayne Thiebaud will have images of sugary delights, “Confection Memories”, on view at the Paul Thiebaud Gallery in San Francisco. (Paul is his son)

I love dessert.  I can indulge without increasing the size of my hips. Delicious!

Confection Memories” until June 27, 2009

Paul Thiebaud Gallery

645 Chestnut Street, San Francisco, CA

Images: “Shelf Cakes”, 2008 and “Cakes” 1963


[ad#reviewpost-1**]

Juried Exhibition – Open Call

Juried Exhibition – Open Call

ARTISTS’ CALL ANNOUNCEMENT OPEN CALL FOR JURIED EXHIBITION ,PITZER ART GALLERIES, PITZER COLLEGE

GUEST JUROR: DANIEL JOSEPH MARTINEZ

Deadline: July 20, 2009

Pitzer Art Galleries,1050 North Mills Ave., Claremont, CA 91711

Director, Ciara Ennis

Email, CapinQuestArt@Pitzer.Edu

Web site, http://www.pitzer.edu/artgalleries

Tues.-Fri., 12-5pm

The Center for Social Inquiry at Pitzer College and the Pitzer Art Galleries are pleased to announce an open call for art works addressing the broad theme of “CAPITALISM IN QUESTION (because it is).”

The rampant capitalism of the last decade, and its recent catastrophic crisis, has left us in a peculiar and unfamiliar space. Capitalist economic ideology and practices are suddenly under renewed scrutiny.

“CAPITALISM IN QUESTION (because it is)” invites artists to explore our current economic predicament and to consider a range of alternatives to it. Visual artwork in all media-painting, installation, sculpture and photography-is encouraged.

All materials for consideration should be submitted by 7/20/2009 to Ciara Ennis.

During the 2009-2010 academic year, the Center for Social Inquiry at Pitzer College will be sponsoring a series of lectures and seminars that re-open questions about capitalism and its discontents-rather than treating capitalism, or “markets,” as the all-purpose answer to social questions, as has been increasingly common since the 1980s in both American society and the larger global economy. This thematic inquiry will look backward in time to examine the most recent and earlier “busts” following capitalist “booms,” and will look forward in time to consider the range of forms, both desirable and undesirable, that might emerge when the global capitalist economy “recovers” from its current collapse.

In conjunction with this program of lectures and seminars, the Center for Social Inquiry and the Pitzer Art Galleries are together issuing a call for works of art that examine and represent various moments of capitalism and its discontents, as well as the possible futures following our own moment of crisis, for exhibition at the Pitzer Art Galleries staring in January of 2010.

One aspect of this broad thematic topic that might be explored in such works is the relations, extending either in time or in space, between capitalist prosperity and capitalist discontents. Start, for example, at any physical site of prosperity and select a profitable consumer good-coffee, let us say-and follow the labor chain behind that good, across various borders and geographic formations (or across the often subtle barriers between urban neighborhoods). As a rule, sooner or later, you will find some workers who were intensely exploited in the production of that good. To quote from the March 2009 Gourmet magazine: “If you have eaten a tomato this winter, chances are very good that it was picked by a person who lives in virtual slavery.” In response to this stark observation (taken from a publication that is more likely to aestheticize than politicize food), we seek art works that provide new perspectives on these spatial relations and-of equal importance-on the social forces and practices that keep these relations out of our ordinary sight.

Alternatively, start at a moment of prosperity-Autumn 2006, let us say-and move forward in time. As a rule, at some point moving into the future, you will observe a fantastic economic collapse and evaporation of money-wealth. One could equally well pick February 1637 as Autumn 2006-and then move forward in time to observe the fantastic collapse and evaporation of all of the wealth invested in tulips, rather than houses. Or-to provide a second example of the way the discontents of capitalism are to be found in future moments-one can think about the ways capitalist enterprises, at least since the industrial revolution, have never taken responsibility for environmental damage in real time, but have instead left the costs of such destruction for future generations to bear. Here again, we are interested in art that probes and re-visions these relations across time, that is, these relations between moments that are past and future to each other.

An additional set of questions is also suggested at this juncture. If the discontents of capitalism are typically some where or some time else-that is, some where or some time other than at sites of capitalist prosperity-what is it instead that we find at such sites? What characteristics does their emptiness (of these discontents) possess? What fantasies exist at such sites, about the absence or defeat of capitalism’s discontents? What, in other words, are the fantasies of “financial experts,” the “captains of the universe” and others of their ilk? Here again, we are interested in works of art that explore these complex questions, in whatever ways.

Finally, if we look forward in time from our moment of crisis (rather than from moments of prosperity), we can see in front of us a broad horizon of possible futures, stretching from the dystopian to the utopian and from the fantastic to the banal. Our call for art includes, as well, a call for works that explore and speculate about such futures, relative to our own the troubled moment that is our present.

There are, of course, other dimensions to capitalism and its discontents, beyond those we have suggested. We provide these questions and observations only as starting points-that is, as initial provocations to be taken, we hope, in myriad directions.

About Pitzer College

Pitzer College is a nationally top-ranked undergraduate college of the liberal arts and sciences. A member of The Claremont Colleges, Pitzer offers a distinctive approach to a liberal education by emphasizing interdisciplinary studies, intercultural understanding, and social responsibility.

About The Center for Social Inquiry at Pitzer College

Founded in 2008, the Center for Social Inquiry at Pitzer College operates both a public events series that extends over the full academic year and, in the spring semester, an advanced seminar in social inquiry for up to 22 highly qualified undergraduates from the Claremont Colleges. In keeping with Pitzer College’s pursuit of interdisciplinary learning and public inquiry, the Center’s public events series features public intellectuals and artists, as well as scholars in the humanities, sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. The Center is directed by Daniel Segal, the Jean M. Pitzer Professor of Anthropology and Historical Studies. For 2009-2010, the Center’s thematic focus is “CAPITALISM IN QUESTION (because it is).”

About Pitzer Art Galleries

Pitzer Art Galleries exists to provide visually arresting and memorable exhibitions that promote the value and understanding of contemporary art within a local, national, and international context. The Galleries are comprised of two sites, the Nichols Gallery-committed to solo and group exhibitions by national and international artists both emerging and established-and the Lenzner Family Art Gallery-a space for risk and experimentation dedicated to emerging artists working in all media. Through curatorial creativity and visionary programming, Pitzer Art Galleries seeks to provide context, support, and a critical framework for artists and curators working today and, by doing so, inspire meaningful dialogue that fascinates and invigorates. The Pitzer Art Galleries are directed by Ciara Ennis.