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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Anne Bouie's Art Journal: Check Out WPA's The Critique Session

On Saturday, August 14, 2010, I arrived to check out The Critique
Session, hosted by "http://thestudiovisit.com/ the Studio Visit @ WPA "http://thestudiovisit.com/. The Studio Visit is a web
journal with a dedicated focus on visual artists and their process. (http://thestudiovisit.com/"http://thestudiovisit.com/),
and was created in 2008 as a virtual public access forum by WPA
member, Isabel Manalo. As part of WPA's Coup d'Espace initiative,
Manolo and TSV held an open forum where artists discuss current work
and works in progress. Five artists presented work: Kendall Nordin,
Amy Glengary Yang, Lisa K. Rosenstein, J. Jordan Burns, and Mei Mei
Chang. The critique was moderated by curator and arts leader Karin
Miller, formerly with Conner Contemporary and now Program Manager for
Visual Arts and Creative Communities Fund. Karin is also responsible
for the management of the artist selection and recruitment process in
the Flashpoint Gallery, as well as the coordination of the gallery’s
advisory panel.

Although the work shared spanned a number approaches and
genres, the common theme was the artistic process. Four of the five
artists shared that their work had been spurred by profound and deeply
felt challenges in their lives, and two in particular resonated with me deeply—confounded memories, and the loss of one’s father.

J. Jordan Burns shared that his work was created after a brain tumor.
Memory loss caused him to be able to remember bits and pieces but
unable to place them in context. His work uses an array of materials:
acrylic- and oil-based enamels, shellacs, and wood stains. I
resonated with one piece in particular where part of the work was very
figurative and the abstract seemed to have emerged out of and from the
concrete reality. He and I chatted after the presentations, and shared
the experience of remembering an event but not being able to remember
anything that prompted, preceded, or followed it. His work seeks to
depict these experiences. Like many artists, including Michael Platt and Aziza Gibson-Hunter. He was insistent about the use of both abstract and figurative modes in his work, stating that, he does not see or feel the need to pose abstract against figurative, use one instead of the other, or choose between them. I sensed that surviving grad school, and battling for his health have given him resolve and confidence to work as he feels it to be.

Lisa K. Rosenstein’s work also emerged from a period of “chaos
struggle and pain where she wanted to be released from the experience
of constraint and the desire for freedom." Her woven objects made from fishing wire. Most striking for me was work that served as a kind of totem and memory keeper of her father who died two weeks short of his ninety-second- birthday. The piece was done on a 12 x24 canvas, using white on white acrylic and consisted of 92 narrow columns which represented each year of her father’s life; each row consisted of 52 dots, each representing the weeks of the year. The last row was missing those final two weeks….

There was ample dialogue throughout the critique. It had the feel of
a comfortable, intentional, and focused conversation with lots of
thought and reflection by artists, the audience, and facilitator. I
was especially taken with the questions Karin posed to the artists.
While she posed them to each artist specifically, based on her
research of each artist’s work and review of the websites, they are
useful for any artist, so I will simply roster them for reflection:

Is this work in keeping with what you’ve been doing, or does it
represent a departure?

• How and why do you choose your materials?
• What is the intention behind the work?
• How do you approach a painting or a larger body of work?
• How do title your works?
• How does the viewer come into, or connect with it?
• What do you want the viewer to leave with?

I left the critique with that sense of what Judith Cameron says
is the mark of a good session: where the feedback and questions prompt that “aha” response as opposed to the “ouch” that can cause an artist to put their tools away and shut down their creative process—which, when you reflect on it, is akin to crushing a person’s spirit. It was the kind of feedback and sense of camaraderie that I have often experienced at critiques sponsored by Black Artists of DC (BADC), and just as that group incubates and nurtures, the critiques hosted by The Studio Visits and Washington Project for the Arts provide space and room to grow and breathe as well.














All content © 2007 Black Artists of DC all rights reserved.For permission to reproduce contact: editor@blackartistsofdc.org

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Black Artists of DC: “BLACK ABSTRACTION” Exhibit Prospectus

Produced by: Black Artists of DC
Sponsors: Black Artists of DC & Harmony Hall Regional Center/Arts

Location: Harmony Hall Regional Center/Arts
10701 Livingston Road
Fort Washington, MD 20744
Tel. 301.203.6069

Curator: Jarvis DuBois

Open to all Media

Submission Fee: (non-refundable)
BADC Members: (who have paid their annual dues) $30 US dollars for up to 10 images;

Non-Member: $45 US dollars for up to 10 images (or $30 with $25 membership fee to join
BADC)

Dates of Exhibit: January 17, 2011 – Saturday, March 12, 2011

Submission Deadline: November 12, 2010

Exhibit Description:
What comes to mind when you think of abstract art? Too often we think of abstraction as just expressively rendered colors, geometric shapes on flat canvas, but it encompasses a range of styles from naturalistic to nonobjective, the intangible (social and political ideas, dreams, fears) made tangible (use of deep hues, heavy brushstrokes, untraditional formats). In this exhibition, Black Artists of DC takes on the concept of abstract art in the 21st century. Our goal is to explore the many dimensions, layers, mediums, and possibilities of this often misunderstood movement.

Notification of Selected Artists: Artists will be notified of acceptance or non-acceptance no later than November 26, 2010. Notification will be made by email and/or by phone.

Delivery of work to Harmony Hall gallery on Friday, January 7, 2011: 9am – 5pm and Saturday, January 8, 2011: 10am – 4pm

Distribution of Invitations: To Be Announced

Opening Reception: Saturday, January 22, 5-7pm

Dates for picking up work: March 16, 2011: 9am – 5pm; March 17, 2011: after 4pm;

Submission Guidelines:
Artists may submit up to 10 digital JPEG images, at 300 DPI. For sculptural or three-dimensional pieces, 2 images may be submitted for each work. The images must be submitted on a CD, in JPEG format only. No files larger than 1MB. Image files on the CD should be titled as follows: number (corresponding to the Submission Form), last name, first name and title. The same information must also be written on the Submission Form/Image List, including additional requested information. Artwork submitted must be no larger than: for 2D – 36” x 48”. Please do not send originals. CDs will only be returned if a self-addressed stamped envelope (SASE) with sufficient postage is included. Also, submit a bio and artist's statement (1 page total).

Payment:
Entry fee can be paid by cash, check or money order payable in US dollars. Please make check or money orders payable to Black Artists of DC.
Please note on check: BADC “BLACK ABSTRACTION” Exhibition.

Please send Payment, CD and submission form to:

BADC: Black Artists of DC: “BLACK ABSTRACTION” Exhibition
c/o T. H. Gomillion, Treasurer
Address: 3218 Chestnut Street, N.E.
Washington, D.C. 20018
Contact Number: 202-269-2757
Email Address: freegomillion@yahoo.com

Terms: Work not for sale should be marked NFS. All work must remain for the duration of the exhibit.

Sales: Sale price is determined by the artist. A 25% commission will be retained by the M-NCPPC from a sale of a work through this exhibition.

Insurance: Damage and theft insurance will be provided throughout the duration of the exhibit once work is received at the Harmony Hall gallery.

Frames and Mounting: Must be of fine quality, consistent with painting/photographs, with attached wire. For sculpture or three-dimensional, pedestal or vitrine requests must be made in advance.

Shipping and Handling: The artist is responsible for all costs of shipping and handling of their artwork. We suggest the artist insure their artwork through the shipping company. All shipped artwork must include prepaid return shipping label enclosed in the packaging.

*We reserve the right to use submitted images and information for inclusion in the exhibition, catalogs and/or other promotional endeavors to publicize the exhibition.


Submission Form/Image Identification List
Artist and Contact Info Name:_________________________________________________¬_
Address:_____________________________________________________________________
Email Address: _______________________________________________________________
Phone: (Day) ___________________________ Phone: (Evening)_______________________
FOR 3D ART-PLEASE ADD DEPT DIMENSION
Last name, first name, title, medium, size, date completed and price.
# (ex: 01. Brooking, Daniel, Sankofa, Digital archival print, 20"x20", 2009, $500)

01.


02.


03.


04.


05.


06.


07.


08.


09.


10.

[ ] BADC Member, $30 [ ] Non-member, $45 (or $30 plus $25 membership fee to join BADC)
Fee enclosed $____________________

Artist's Signature_____________________________________________Date___________

















All content © 2007 Black Artists of DC all rights reserved.For permission to reproduce contact: editor@blackartistsofdc.org

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