Archive for the ‘Art’ Category

Baltidelphia

Friday, January 8th, 2010

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Collaboration between Baltimore and Philadelphia artists. I was able to get to know Jen Gin over the course of 3 months and it turns out we had a lot in common. Communication came easy and we were able to bounce ideas around right away, but it also turns out we are both really busy and unable to pull through with some of our better ideas. All in all – still a great experience and a great job by Phu and the rest.

read more here.

Most of the Baltimore artists will be heading to Philadelphia for the opening at “My House”, but there will be a soft opening in Baltimore this Saturday January 9th from 6pm – 9pm at the Hexagon Gallery on Charles Street.  A larger, more raucous closing reception will happen with the Philly kids as our guests in February.

Quilter’s Union

Monday, December 21st, 2009

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New project! Website and news to follow in the coming weeks.

Galleries in the Home – the new non-space.

Friday, December 11th, 2009

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Having done a stint as live-in curator for a year of my life and currently living in a gallery (although the current space dynamic functions more as a gallery gallery classically defined as the white cube) I’ve experienced the daily balance of art and life. Yet it seems that people have been doing some variation of this for a while now. It’s not just the recession, it’s about control, it’s about aesthetics, and it’s about redefining both home and gallery.

The white box exists in order to provide the artwork with a blank slate, a space void of external meta-meaning. But over time the white box has collected it’s own repertoire in terms of how we define high and low art. White cube = high, cement wall in an alley = low. Bringing the work into the home, therefore, has become the new non-space. This place where one neither lives nor shows art, but does both simultaneously.

As a visitor in a home gallery you are constantly discerning the difference between art and non-art. It becomes a game of defining semantics: tooth brush – not art, stick tied to chair – art. And the line between what has been made for you to observe and examine and what has been made for you to use and discard becomes blurred.  It’s weird, if you think about it – it’s sort of like bringing grandma to shop for her own coffin. By bringing the art directly to the home, you are bringing it to it’s final resting place. Whether it’s on the wall across from John’s Senior portrait or on the mantle next to that wooden duck, it’s more interesting to discern these objects in context with someone’s life.

Bringing me to the point of this post. My only problem with this article and these spaces is that more often than not they fail to acknowledge the home itself as a gallery. It always has been and it always will be.

Read the full article here: Gallery in the Home

Quilt Frame Built!

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

Big Red and I built the final draft quilting frame over the weekend. Now all i need to do is get the fabric and start the project! Thank god for this handyman and his tools, the first round was a bit…er…rough.