Author Archives:
Figures
Art on Paper | New York | March 3 – 6
Art on Paper | March 3 – 6, 2016Pier 36, Downtown ManhattanBooth P2Michael Steinberg Fine Art / Eminence Grise Editions cordially invites you to Art on Paper | New York. This fair will showcase recent editions by artists Derrick Adams, Lauren Comito, Yevgeniy Fiks and Sandrine Guerin. We are looking forward to seeing you at the fair.Please visit the following link to get a one day pass. PUBLIC FAIR HOURS Friday, March 4th, 11:00am to 7:00pm Saturday, March 5th, 11:00am to 7:00pm Sunday, March 6th, 12:00pm to 6:00pm |
Art Fairs during Armory Week 2016
I am very excited to participate in the Art on Paper Fair and SPRING/BREAK Art Show. See either link for further details. See press release below for Shifted Memories at SPRING/BREAK ART SHOW.
Shifted Memories @ SPRING/BREAK Art Show, Room 4118, curated by Fanny Allié and Ketta Ioannidou
Fanny Allié, Chris Bors, Lauren Comito, Caroline Falby, Sofia Hager, Ketta Ioannidou, Melissa Murray
In the exhibition Shifted Memories, the works presented by each of the 6 artists encode, store and recall past recollections. As a metaphor for the human memory process, this act of removing selected data from its original position, copying and pasting it to create a duplicate becomes its own entity, logic and eventually new history.
March 1 – 7, 2016
For more information, to purchase tickets, and to purchase art visit https:// www.springbreakartshow.com/
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Shifted Memories
curated by Fanny Allié and Ketta Ioannidou
Fanny Allié, Chris Bors, Lauren Comito, Caroline Falby, Sofia Hager, Ketta Ioannidou, Melissa Murray
We like to think that our memories -recollection of past events – are an accurate record of our history that makes us what we are. A recent neuroscientist’s study (Karim Nader in The Smithsonian Magazine) has shown that the very act of remembering can change our memories. According to him, it is almost impossible to bring a memory to mind without altering it in some way.
What we think we have experienced in the past may be far from what really happened, the truth slowly morphing into a fake, distorted or re-constructed recollection. Memory would not be an “infinite facsimile” but an ever-changing database, which would create self-forged information that we think are genuine.
In the exhibition “Shifted Memories”, the works presented by each of the 6 artists encode, store and recall past recollections. As a metaphor for the human memory process, this act of removing selected data from its original position, copying and pasting it to create a duplicate becomes its own entity, logic and eventually new history.
In her recent collage work, Fanny Allié tears apart and re-assemble pieces of newsprint images to create characters and habitat structures inspired by her on-going observation of street people in New York City. Chris Bors’s 24 Second Psycho video appropriates the entire Alfred Hitchcock movie Psycho and condenses it into twenty-four seconds. Lauren Comito’s work utilizes a combination of art making techniques that alternate between digital processes and traditional modes of art making (material manipulations) to create an inventive form of representation by combining everyday moments and ordinary objects. Caroline Falby uses collage as a stream of consciousness technique to investigate her social beliefs and turn them into mix-media drawings and sculptural installations. In her works, Sofia Hager creates an ensemble of unrecognizable and recognizable objects building spaces and stages for figures that often disobey the laws of gravity. Ketta Ioannidou’s digital collages explore the idea of navigating to a place where something new begins, moving towards a source that is constantly moving like a river, but composed of memories. Melissa Murray’s work focuses on the idea of freezing an active moment of thought, her concepts combining multiple environments in one still image.
Future Past Perfect L.A
Archetypes
Future Past Perfect II
This traveling exhibition originated at Projekt722 in Brooklyn, and has arrived for its
debut in Los Angeles. The artists in this exhibition, currently live and work on the
East Coast. These artists are tied together by their interest in exploring the historical
progression of totemic forms and seek out new forms for the future. The metaphor
of the artifact that these artists use can range from digital fabrication to ancient
cave painting, haiku to personal artifacts; all reflect an unsentimental awareness of
our circumstances, and consider the basic elements of what might and could be
essential.
For more information please contact msbarbersgallery@gmail.com.