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Past Exhibitions › 2004

 

2nd Annual Curators' Incubator

August 3 - September 11, 2004

‹ Installation of In This City

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On the Line: Machines, Maps, and Memory:
The curatorial concept for Karey Kessler and Pat Goslee’s exhibition, On the Line: Machines, Maps, and Memory was intended to highlight the increasing prominence of drawing and line in contemporary art. On the Line expanded the more general use of line in recording the connection between the external physical world and the internal experience of memory. The curators believe that memory—like line—is a way of mapping both what is real and what is unreal—creating internal structures that define our inner selves. For On the Line artists Perry Steindel, Andrew Krieger and Katy Uravitch, the paper itself offers up a new landscape, a frontier to conjure by creating new elements or by moving existing ones, adding layers of fantasy and mystery, abstracting what they choose to abstract and inventing worlds that never were. Dylan Scholinski, Sylvie van Helden, and Jennifer Swan concern themselves with the rendering of personal memories of place. Each creates work that delineates how different spaces not only define our lives, but how our memories of those spaces shape how we see the world. Andy Holtin builds devices that are, in essence, three-dimensional line drawings that keep track of the invisible, transient, easily eclipsed aspects of the world, while Scott Reynolds uses line to create ghost-like sculptures that allude to such manufactured objects as the cars and homes of suburbia. Finally, Walter Ratzat based his multi-media installation [located in MAP's public bathroom] on various machines he has built, used, and documented over the course of several years. Using a child’s “cootie-catcher” as a portal providing entry to and unifying a series of semi-fictional narratives, Ratzat’s performance-memoir utilizes the spoken word, drawing, photography, video and sound to create a startling confrontation in the privacy of an intimate space.

All Four Corners:
This exhibition, presented by curator Jackie Milad, is comprised of installation-based work by emerging artists, exploring what art critics are calling Post-Minimalisim. In this exhibition, audiences will see artists using various mediums to explore space through the subtleties of line. A few works may go unnoticed as they blend seamlessly with the surroundings, while others are unavoidable in their presentation due to their chosen mediums. The purpose for exploration is different for each artist, yet a common format is apparent, installation. Featured artists Seong Chun (New York), whose delicately intertwined threads of woven lengths of paper incorporates aspects of language, minimalism and seriality to explore notions of space and time as they relate to one’s creative process. Baltimore artist, Catherine Pancake juxtaposes simple elements: water, air, and sound in a surprising combination, and hopes to inspire others to explore unique internal and external worlds they may have unwittingly marginalized. Minna Philips (Baltimore), exposes aspects of her native India, by subtly combining thread, light and shadow, pencil and paint as components of a system, to interact with each other to form patterns, while the system itself is defined by these patterns. Amy Rathbone (San Francisco) takes advantage of banal situations and makes them of interest, she has also been known to make ironic and humorous commentary by the use of the second and third dimensions. Shannon Young (DC) was born in Salt Lake City, UT and worked in theatrical production. Today, though trained as a painter, Young creates ephemeral works using materials like sugar and silicone caulking. Curator Jackie Milad is a native of Baltimore and has also lived in New York, Boston and Italy. She joined fellow artist Bonnie Jones in founding CHELA, an art space that focused on experimental works by emerging artists and a stopping point for touring artists such as Whitney Biennial artist, Cory Archangel.

In This City:
This exhibition, formulated by curator Jennifer Selden,calls attention to art practices that use the city of Baltimore as a format, in the hope that new attempts of city interaction will be fostered. If In This City was brought to another city, the same devices of interaction that the artists used in Baltimore could be applied, but the outcome would change. In all the categories of living environments and structures, people develop patterns they use to help them navigate through daily life. Different situations prompt different reactions with the environment. Selden believes that social, economic, ethnic, psychological, and climate related events all have an influence on how a place is traveled and experienced. This is clearly evident when considering artist Michael Cataldi. Born in Philadelphia and currently living in New York, Cataldi works with a variety of media to create a discourse about the social conditions of urban surroundings. Since 2003, Cataldi’s projects apply one rule: he must use materials found in a specific location to make the artwork on that same location. His artworks have been as diverse as vending in performance, public installation and sculptural interventions to situationist-inspired wanderings. In this exhibition, Geoff Grace continues his practice of painting directly on walls using clay slip to create a montage of birds found in this vicinity. Amanda Matles (NY) was born in Traverse City, Michigan in 1982, received a BFA in 2004 from the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore. Her artistic practice ranges from event based works and installations, to video and 3D animation. Charles Miller also received a BFA in 2004 from the Maryland Institute College of Art, and has lived in Baltimore since 2000, having spent most of his life on a dairy farm in Hoosick Falls, NY. Jared Paolini was born in Reston, Virginia in 1982, before moving to Baltimore to attend the Maryland Institute College of Art, working in photography, video and music, and he anticipates receiving his BFA this coming year. Rick Sacchetti collaborated with Charles Miller on the digital prints in this exhibition. Elements of this exhibition will transform and change at various times during the installation period.

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