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| Exhibitions |
| Selected Artists shown (1960 - 2005) Anthony Alston |
2005 Exhibitions |
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| current, 2007, 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003, 2002, 2001, 2000 | |
2005 in the Sheppard Gallery
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Patty Wickman Todd Hido captures a momentary shift in our perception of isolated and innocuous places resulting from a confluence of variable elements of place, time of day, light and weather. Wandering alone by car in areas on the edge of cities and towns throughout America, Hido seeks to record the transformation of the seemingly uninteresting to the theatrical, while evidencing his presence as witness. Hido is also interested in the themes of home, family, and memory. His photographs depict anonymous suburban dwellings with their windows glowing in the soft darkness. Throughout these color images there is an unsettling feeling of isolation and unease. |
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Joanna Frueh/ Guest curator Tanya Augsburg Embracing Joanna is a thoughtful, minimalist retrospective of the photographs, texts, performances, and costumes of performance artist Joanna Frueh. The retrospective is meant to be representative rather than comprehensive. It presents early work of Frueh's within new multimedia installations designed specifically for the exhibition |
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| Work of Art July 11 - August 12, 2005 |
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Todd Hido Todd Hido captures a momentary shift in our perception of isolated and innocuous places resulting from a confluence of variable elements of place, time of day, light and weather. Wandering alone by car in areas on the edge of cities and towns throughout America, Hido seeks to record the transformation of the seemingly uninteresting to the theatrical, while evidencing his presence as witness. Hido is also interested in the themes of home, family, and memory. His photographs depict anonymous suburban dwellings with their windows glowing in the soft darkness. Throughout these color images there is an unsettling feeling of isolation and unease. |
Tamara Scronce Tamara Scronce's work gives form to the psychological, sexual, social, cultural, and visual influences of her everyday life. The objects she creates are grounded in a language of symbols that explore unorthodox harmonies of traditional and non-traditional materials and form and content. Materials, process, and structure always implicate and signify meaning. Scronces's work is compulsively uncluttered but far from simple, determined to be both beautiful and smart. This will be Tamara Scronce's first solo exhibition in the Sheppard Gallery, and she will be creating a new body of work for the exhibit. |
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Joe & Jim Joe Zuccarini and Jim Zlokovich have created a body of work using a combination of painting and sculpture to explore decay and deterioration in balance with the natural order of things, the cycle of life and death. Jim Zlokovich is a painter, and Joe Zuccarini a sculptor. " Rust Combines " involves a series of paintings with surfaces that appear to drip or run down into the rusted steel sculptures beneath. The paintings are textured to produce the illusion of aging, rusted metal. The surface appears to drip and decay. There are questions raised about the illusion of painting combined with the three dimensional properties of sculpture. While creating this body of work |
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| Open Labs December 19, 2005 - January 9, 2006 |
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