Showing posts with label installations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label installations. Show all posts

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Backstory


So, the path to an art exhibition is not always as straight as one might imagine -- I thought I would share a few of the details here about how "Arroyo Seco Watershed and Surrounding Area" has fared in its evolving life as an eco-conscious installation about water, specifically about the water supply in my immediate area.

"Arroyo Seco" began life as an idea I had for an outdoor installation along the Pasadena gully of the same name. I was going to hang a shower curtain between some trees along the water that you could look through at the scenery in the area.


That never materialized, but I continued to think about the watershed and also about the conventions of traditional landscape composition that artists typically rely on.


I wanted to do something that would make people look at the natural surroundings differently and think about their relationship to water and the water supply with greater awareness.

Then winter came -- a very, very rainy winter. And the Arroyo Seco changed. It became inundated with water. I walked everywhere and shot all kinds of photos, experiencing more water in the usually dry gully than anyone might otherwise imagine possible. Long story short, I took lots of photos and used patterns of them on the shower curtain.

I have shown variations of "Arroyo Seco" in going on five exhibition spaces (Los Angeles, Riverside, Chicago and -- upcoming -- San Francisco). First I used only one shower curtain -- and learned the hard way that the colors of the photo ink were so fugitive that all of the pictures turned sepia when exposed to direct sunlight.

This was actually a lucky accident, because while I was reconstructing the shower curtain I decided to double its size -- and it looked a lot better with two curtains circling the rod instead of one. More recently, I sent it off to Chicago for a national show and somewhere during the installation process a small but crucial bit of hardware from the rod went its own separate way. As a result, as I discovered when I arrived at the gallery opening in Chicago, the curtain was installed without the vertical bar, a key visual element to the work. Oh, well. . . . Since, after subsequently combing the internet, I have lost all hope of finding another part, I will need to replace the whole rod -- perfect timing again, since the installation site in San Francisco has extremely high ceilings and the installers have been worried about how to properly hang "Arroyo Seco" in the space. So the third version of the work will involve a 108" D-shaped rod (big enough to display both curtains) that screws into the wall. No photos yet of course, but it will be interesting to experience the third version of this work.


"Arroyo Seco Watershed and Surrounding Area" will go on display as part of the exhibition Blue Planet: works exploring social, political and economic issues related to water, sponsored by Pacific Region Women's Caucus for Art and juried by Kim Abeles, at SOMARTS Cultural Center, 934 Brannan Street, San Francisco from June 19 through 26. Artist reception June 26, 5-7 pm.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

From the Center: Now!


"From the Center: Now!" opened at Woman Made Gallery in Chicago last Friday -- I wasn't there, of course, so it was an interesting exercise to think about what went on and how everything must have looked. The exhibition was juried by Lucy Lippard, who revisited the question she posed in her 70s anthology, From the Center: Feminist Essays on Women's Art. It was kind of exciting to think that someone who wrote a book I had just been referring to while teaching my contemporary art class had chosen my work for a show! I don't really present myself as a feminist (too much to do walking the walk, I suppose), so it is interesting to me that my work keeps showing up in women's shows ("Material Girls" at the Riverside Art Museum a few years ago).

In any event, I will be going to Chicago on February 10 and will be at the artists' opening on February 12, in addition to attending the Women's Caucus for Art and College Art Association national conventions. I have never been to Chicago (which seems particularly odd for someone who went to school in Ann Arbor) and I am really looking forward to spending time at the Art Institute with all the Impressionist paintings and whatever they are exhibiting in the new wing. I also signed up for a Frank Lloyd Wright architectural tour planned for CAA members, and there will be lots of other interesting things to do.

Oh yes -- the overcoat is ready, the scarves and gloves assembled, and the new boots are broken in!

Sunday, April 05, 2009

Bringing the Past To Light



A photo (by Kevin Hass/Cidne Hart) of the Charles Lummis home in Highland Park, site of the AAC's spring installation project. Lummis was a Harvard-educated man of letters who walked to Los Angeles during the late 19th century and proceeded to learn about the local indigenous culture and live a cultivated life in his own singular fashion. This is the home he built by hand from concrete and river rock -- the center of his literary activities, explorations into photography, and "noises" (meetings of his bohemian salon). We have received over two dozen proposals and are looking forward to an intriguing show. Details to come.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

The Re-Discovery Tour


Sunday was the Arroyo Arts Collective Re-Discovery Tour, and a good time was had by all, as far as I know. I showed work at Suzanne Siegel's home at the foot of Mt. Washington -- Suzanne's daughter Rachel Siegel and Kay Brown were also guest artists at our location. I installed some of my domestic-themed works in Suzanne's vintage bathroom -- one panel of my "Arroyo Seco Watershed and Surrounding Area" shower curtain in front of the bathtub and several textile pieces on washcloths and a bathmat. Also a few diapers from my "porte bonheur" installation, "Road Trip" (my car window piece), and some other textile pieces in the kitchen. I was pleased with the relatedness of the work and look forward to making more of the textile pieces soon. As soon as I have photos of the new pieces I will post them -- photos of the shower curtain and diaper installations are already here somewhere on this blog! (look under installations).

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Christmas Past at Future


Christmas Past at Future was a satisfying show -- it took nearly eight hours to install and the cards and other ephemera attracted a lot of positive attention from interested viewers. HOWEVER, chaos broke out! While I was in St. Louis there were heavy rains in Los Angeles, a leak appeared above the display wall in the gallery, and Amy had to quickly take the show down -- before I got a chance to photograph it. Fortunately a week or two ago I was able to turn up one snapshot taken by a friend of a friend. Here is an edited version that shows about half the wall:

Saturday, December 08, 2007

Christmas Past at Future

Tonight my installation opens at Future Studio, Amy Inouye and Stuart Rapeport's gallery in Highland Park (aka Home of Chicken Boy). Here is a description of the show taken from the press release:

After World War II, sending Christmas cards became a popular way to wish friends well and to keep up with news of new homes and growing families. While dismantling the contents of her parents’ house, artist Deborah Thomas discovered a trove of boxes filled with every Christmas card her parents ever received, beginning in 1948. Appreciating the design and fabrication of these cards – many including singularly whimsical images common to that time, custom family representations, and individualized engraving -- she decided that the cards deserved to be displayed once more during the holiday season. In addition to revisiting holiday festivities of the 50s and 60s, her installation will be an exploration of memory, time and self-perception. Model trains, music and other ephemera will also add to the mid-century holiday atmosphere during “Christmas Past at Future.”

Future Studio is located at 5558 Figueroa in Highland Park; the show opens tonight (December 8) from 7 - 10; also open on Sunday afternoons from noon to 4 or by appointment (323 254-4565 or amy@futurestudio.com.

Monday, November 12, 2007

Buddha garden design project


I have been working for a number of months on a garden design project for a client who wanted a steep slope outside her dining room windows to be turned into a garden. The garden has finally been planted, though there are still some details to be taken care of -- filling the pot with white roses, weather treating the bronze Buddha statue, and letting the plants take hold. I have been documenting the project all along -- here are some photos --

Before -- showing the rampant ivy, weeds and sprinkler pipe:



After -- a close-up of the Buddha on its stone platform surrounded by succulents and groundcovers.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Cry Me a River

Edith Abeyta invited me to be a part of her upcoming project, "Salty: Three Tales of Sorrow" -- comprised of three installations, "Cry Me a River," "Cake & Soup" and "Heart Follows Bird." "Cry Me a River" will run at El Camino College Art Gallery, Torrance, CA, November 19 through December 14. Each of 50 women artists is decorating a hankie provided by Edith along with a souvenir blue ballpoint pen to use on the hankie. My contribution is called "Six Generations of My Family Lived in Fayette County, Pennsylvania" and includes photos from Ohiopyle, Pennsylvania featuring the falls of the Youghiogheny River, a vintage photo of my family sitting on a rock near the river in 1955, and a quotation from a recent environmental study stating that the watershed area of the Youghiogheny has the highest acid rain levels in Pennsylvania. Here is a photo of my hankie:

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Upcoming show at La Sierra University


So "Arroyo Seco Watershed and Surrounding Area" will go on display starting Monday, October 8 at Brandstater Gallery, La Sierra University, in Riverside. It is part of an exhibition called "The Art and Science of Climate Change," which runs through November 1.

Opening Reception -- October 8 from 5:30 - 7:30 pm, with an exhibition program starting at 6:15. For more information, the Gallery phone number is 951 785-2959. Hours: Mon - Thurs 10 am - 4 pm; Sunday 2 - 5 pm.

Driving directions: Exit 91 east at Pierce Street and turn left or 91 West at Magnolia Ave and turn right at Pierce Street. Merge onto Riverwalk Parkway and continue until Sierra Vista Avenue and turn left. Proceed about 1/4 mile then turn left onto Carmine Street. Left onto Blehm Street which curves into Quiet Lane. Turn left into the first driveway. The visual art center and Brandstater Gallery are on the right.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

New installation statement

Summer has been a bit more relaxing -- although I have some projects in process, things have calmed down since my dad's house sold. As far as art goes, I have been focusing on putting together a new installation portfolio. Although I have been working pretty steadily on one or another installation project over the past few years, for some reason I never actually thought of my installations as a coherent body of work, which, in fact, they are. So I wrote a new artist statement referring specifically to the installations. Here is is:

"In my installations I enjoy experimenting in both conceptual and material dimensions, working with themes such as family and the remembered past, or local landscape and the environment. I create each piece by combining photographic images (either from my own or found photos), familiar domestic objects (a shower curtain or diapers, for example), and layers of found text. Imagery, word play and metaphorical suggestion work together visually and poetically, conjuring multidimensional meaning. In addition, each piece is grounded in lived experience – retrieved from memory and/or presented to engage the viewer intimately and move beyond the constraints of intellect to a revised perspective.
In constructing these pieces I usually establish formal groupings of the collected images and materials according to patterns and repetitions only marginally related to the content of the piece. Although the contents of each installation are mundane and typically domestic or local, the pieces themselves speak to larger social or environmental concerns. My goal is to bring the viewer with me as I shift emphasis away from subjective content and personal affect to a more suggestive and universal zone of perception neither purely representational nor non-representational."

New photo of Arroyo Seco shower curtain installation

Here is a view of "Arroyo Seco Watershed and Surrounding Area," my installation from the EcoArt show at Barnsdall.

Monday, April 23, 2007

EcoArt installation - shower curtain redux

The EcoArt show now at Barnsdall Junior Gallery is a group show with art by women interested in environmental issues. I was able to revisit "Arroyo Seco watershed and surrounding environs" -- a water/shower curtain project that I began during the "Intimate Geography" show last spring. This time I doubled the square footage of the shower curtain(s) and made some adjustments to the fabrication process in hopes that the ink won't discolor. I also spent a lot of time modifying the arrangement of the photos and documentation. The photos were taken during the torrential rains of 2005, in and around the Arroyo Seco and Los Angeles River. I added documentation from various water companies in the area and a map, plus some photos of swimming pools to provide contrast with water flowing from the mountains into and through its channel.

Here are a few closeups of the new shower curtain:








































Here is some catalog commentary that explains the purpose of the piece:

My aim was to create an installation in which the viewer is prompted to recall an intimate relation with water (the shower), and where the scale (tiny) and number of photographs (multiples) challenge assumptions about traditional picturesque landscape presentation. I also hope questions about landscape and power, the act of looking, and specific local concerns about water rights come to mind. Who “owns” local water? Who channels or uses it at what price and to what end? By manipulating the way landscape is depicted and viewed, I want to question where a viewer stands, both literally and figuratively, in relation to landscape -- and what a more enlightened role might be in relation to the natural environment itself.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

HAUSGUESTS


William Rabe and Nena Amsler of HAUS gallery recently put together a wonderful show called "HAUSguests" at the Brewery Project in order to raise money to help alleviate the suffering in Darfur. Each piece of art carried the name of a person -- the art works were the conceptual guests. I contributed a small installation called "Frances Jeane Crawford Thomas," consisting of a small towel bar with three huck towels (guest towels) bearing three vintage pictures of Grandmother -- sitting in the garden, in the side yard of the house in New Brighton, and at the kitchen sink.

Although the show has come down, William and Nena have photographed each work and posted the works online so that viewers can still buy art and participate in the fundraiser for Darfur. Please visit the show through the "HAUSguests online gallery" link at right and consider making a contribution.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Roses are Red. . . .

The past two months have been very hectic in the life department, but I have still been able to put up two small installations in two recent group shows. The first piece was for a Valentine show about food at the Acorn Gallery that was organized on the fly -- I put together an installation called "Sweet" that involved word and image play on the old "roses are red, violets are blue" rhyme. Here is what it looked like:



The first bag said "red", the second bag said "blue" and the third bag said "sweet."

Friday, January 12, 2007

"Material Girls" opening reception




Michael and I drove out for the opening of "Material Girls" in what turned into rain last Thursday evening. The show is very interesting -- several quite dramatic pieces, including two enormous embroidered white aprons hung from the ceiling, and a lot of good work. The museum employees installed "Porte bonheur," and it was a treat not to have to show up with a drill, contingency plans, etc. to get the thing on the wall! Here are a few photos of the rest of the show. I'm going to have to take more photos of my piece when we go back out to Riverside -- I didn't get any that look right. There will be a catalog of the show by the beginning of February and the show will remain up through March 10.

Monday, December 18, 2006

Material Girls to open the Riverside Art Museum


I just received cards for "Material Girls" -- the exhibition I have been invited to be part of at the Riverside Art Museum. There will be work in the show from 15 women artists working non-traditionally with fabric. The Museum itself is in a Julia Morgan building in the historic district of Riverside. I am to deliver the work during the week after Christmas (next week!). The reception will take place on Thursday, January 4 from 6-9 pm. The show runs until March 10. I can't wait to see the other artists' work -- a good show and an interesting venue. I am also very excited that my piece with Granddaddy's photos has been so well received. I wonder what he would think if he could know that his pictures were being shown in a museum in California? He really loved traveling to California every winter -- I have another series of beautiful slides he took while traveling. (Another project??) I wonder if he ever visited Riverside?

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Material Girls and EcoArt shows coming up --

One of the nicest results of participating in "Hung Out to Dry" at OneLeaf Gallery in Pomona was having "Porte Bonheur" chosen for a show called "Material Girls" opening on January 4 at the Riverside Art Museum. It is gratifying to experience the positive response that has developed around this piece. From what I have been told, "Material Girls" will be a women's fabric show but the art will be on the experimental side.


The Southern California Women's Caucus for Arts EcoArt group show at Barnsdall is also opening in April, and I am looking forward to expanding my shower curtain installation, "Arroyo Seco Watershed and Environs," for that show. This time I will use two plastic shower curtain panels to give a fuller effect and allow for more images to be displayed.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Beth's work enters another dimension




Beth sent along these pictures after Estate of Mind. As she describes it, she and her daughter forwarded some mail to her parents at the full moon. (This was not one of the pieces in the show, though part of the same series.) Thanks, Beth.

Monday, November 06, 2006

"hung out to dry" in Pomona


Michael and I just spent yesterday installing "Porte bonheur" at a gallery in Pomona -- it was selected for a women's show called "hung out to dry" opening Saturday at OneLeaf, an experimental gallery run by Jena McRoberts. (Invitation image above.) The show will open on Saturday, November 11 during the Pomona Art Colony art walk (6 - 10 p.m.) and run through December 2. Installed on another brick wall -- this one raw, which actually is a nice background for the diapers. We bought a masonry drill bit ahead of time and were glad we did!

Here is the gallery information:

OneLeaf Fine Arts
153 West Second Street
Pomona, CA 91766
323-496-1736

www.oneleaf.us
jena@oneleaf.us

Gallery hours Monday through Saturday 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. or by appointment (worth it to call ahead)

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Future Studio and Chicken Boy


Amy Inouye and Stuart Rapeport host Future Studio in their live-work loft. Stuart is an artist who paints, draws, and makes interesting dog sculptures from reclaimed wood. Among other things, Amy is a talented graphic designer, a lover of pugs and Chicken Boy ("too weird to die"), and a collector of just about anything from funky lamps to Dodger Stadium seats. She also operates a gift shop on the premises (see photo) that stocks items ranging from Chicken Boy memorabilia to snow globes to rubber duckies in the image of James Brown. If you want to find out more about Amy's projects you can navigate directly to her Chicken Boy website from the links section of this blog.