Thursday, November 18, 2010
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Lee Walton to give talk at Emory
Emory's Own Laura Noel featured on Southern Photography Blog
Monday, October 4, 2010
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Flux this Friday!
FLUX is free and open to the public.
For directions and parking, including how to reserve your parking in advance, visit http...://www.fluxprojects.org/flux/where.php
For a list of artists and projects, visit http://www.fluxprojects.org/flux/projects.php
For a schedule of performances, visit http://www.fluxprojects.org/flux/performsched.php
Emory's own Sarah Emerson will also be participating in the event. In her own words her project is as follows:
The Moon Is Down is a title inspired by the role of John Steinbeck's novel of the same name, a book used as one of the most successful pieces of American propaganda during WWII. In my work I have focused on the idea of a civilization in decay and the beauty and revenge within our natural environment. The viewer can stand as witness to an enlarged scale of small things, a swarm of locusts, puffy explosions, and a cowering girl. We are left to accept our own ambiguity as witness to a strange and familiar scene; what may lurk in the trees, bubbles or bullet holes, what is that red glow in the distance? In our current state what Eden is attainable?
Sunday, August 29, 2010
Monday, July 12, 2010
Sneak Peek on The Abandonment
Two selected photographs from the photo essay "Still Deaths"
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Gallery Opening: "The Abandonment" by Charlie Watts
The Emory Visual Arts presents "The Abandonment" three photo essays by Charlie Watts. In this exhibit Watts explores many abandoned structures with her photography and drawings along with several natural history museums. In her first photo essay "Abruzzo," she shows the absolute destruction of the earthquake that hit this region in Italy two years ago. Dovetailing with this essay is "The Abandonments" which is an exploration of abandoned structures in Atlanta. The last group of photographs "Still Deaths" documents multiple different natural history museums that are on the verge of abandonment as taxidermied hippos begin to decay behind glass cages.
This will be Watts third solo show and first photography exhibit.
Opening reception: Thursday, July 22nd 5:30-7:00
700 Peavine Creek DriveAtlanta, GA 30322
Monday, June 21, 2010
Study Abroad Option: Cortona, Italy
Recently, two study abroad programs for the Visual Arts have been approved by Emory. Both are in Italy and are simply lovely! The one through Syracuse University is specialized in both Art History and the Visual Arts in central Florence while the program in Cortona through UGA focuses just on the arts. Whether you’re looking for an experience in the city or the countryside these two programs provide a very enriching environment to learn the Visual Arts. I recently caught up with Hannah Batsel who is currently living in Cortona.
While in Cortona what are you studying?
I'm taking Advanced Printmaking, Intro Jewelry/Metals, and Italian Art History. You can take just about any type of art class, though...everything from landscape architecture to book arts.
What is your living situation?
We live in a converted convent on top of a hill. I have 3 roommates, some people have 2, and I share one bathroom with 7 other people (which hasn't been a problem… yet). The town we live above is completely amazing, as is the view from our hill; the people are extremely nice -our program alone adds about 10% to their population, and a good deal to their economy- and everything you could possibly need is within walking distance. Laundry is probably the biggest drawback; it's pretty much hand-washing in the sink. Drying is by clothesline. We have wifi, which can be spotty, but is mostly reliable, and we get free breakfast and dinner. The dinner is spectacular, and we get a 3 to 4 course meal every night. Not to be too dramatic, but this is the most wonderful place I've ever been!
How are you enjoying the program!?
Obviously from my previous gushing I love it! We've been touring around Naples and Rome before getting here. Already I've settled into a routine in town and have an awesome chocolate shop guy that I go to and a 3-euro panini place that I have every day for lunch. There are museums, little produce markets, art supplies stores, and tons of alleyways and staircases to explore. It's awesome!
Picturing Hope
Matthew Wiegel is currently a Junior at Emory University
Monday, June 14, 2010
Professor Spotlight: Sarah Emerson
How did you become involved with Manif d’Art 5 Quebec City Biennial?
I met with Sylvie Fortin during my exhibition at Whitespace Gallery in the fall of last year. In my paintings there are overarching themes of collapse and disintegration that are directly influenced by the theoretical dialogue surrounding the idea of catastrophe and how it is defined culturally. Ms. Fortin had already chosen the theme for the Biennial and I was happy to learn that she was interested in including my work as part of her vision. The exhibition had over 30 artists, each with a different angle regarding this conversation so it was a great contextual opportunity for my work.
In your earlier paintings, you seem to have a very organic and painterly feel to your work but in these recent instillations the work is a lot more graphic and simplified. How did you make this transition?
A lot of this has to do with location and the fact that I wanted the works for Catastrophe to be temporary and site specific. My intent for the window project was to have a silhouette image so that the experience for the viewer would be more intense and absorbing, using the entire space for the image. When the light is the strongest the viewer actually becomes a dark shadow in the space of the image, this 2 color or graphic simplicity also intensifies the luminosity of the red background and allows the outside light to play more of a role in the way it flickers and changes throughout the day.
As for the mural, the wall was built specifically to take advantage of the mirrored columns in the space. I didn’t want the viewer to be confronted as much by my technical approach to the image as much as I wanted to confront the viewer with the scale and the intensity of the colors. Sometimes the most complex combination can be made with only 3 or 4 colors. The mirrored columns anchor the wall making the image look distorted as though it is melting off the wall infinitely. In this case, because the mirrors are small tiles covering the column the simple color combination keeps the image from getting lost at the edges and allows the mirrors to reflect small rays of light.
In the end, both projects will be destroyed when the show closes and I strongly consider this reality as I choose my approach to palette and technique.
What was the reaction to the work in Canada? How did the space you were working with compliment the work?
Overall, I think the work was received very well. The residents of Quebec City really look forward to this event and there are so many ways that the public could engage with the exhibition because there were artists placed in locations throughout the city with the main exhibition space at Place Quebec. I was lucky to have work in two locations and the audience was extremely different for both pieces. The Musee de la Civilisation was chosen specifically for the window space but it operates as an anthropological Museum so the audience is less specific and not necessarily expecting an encounter with contemporary art. The mural was in the main exhibition area of Place Quebec so the power and the dialogue is affected by the placement of the work and the audience. The debate between public and private has always been very interesting to me and it is clear that the Director of the Museum, Martin LeBlanc, was very excited to expose his audience to Contemporary art and it’s relationship to the institution he operates.
What initially inspired these intriguing instillations and murals?
They came from the group of paintings I did for “Soft Trap” at Whitespace Gallery last fall. There is a strong focus on the idea of a civilization in decay and the beauty and revenge in the natural environment, the projects for Manif feel like a natural evolution of the ideas I’ve been playing with for a long time. The opportunity to exploit the scale and location was an added bonus as a result of Ms. Fortin’s support. She asked me to submit a dream proposal-to consider something I would do if I had no financial or technical obstacles and then we actually made it happen.
I noticed grasshoppers reappearing in the works multiple times, especially in Feast, do they have a particular meaning within the work?
It’s a combination of locusts, cicadas, and grasshoppers that keep popping up in my newer paintings. I wanted to enlarge these swarming insects to be the same size as the viewer so they are both confrontational and fantastical. The scale also creates a situation where the viewer can be witness to an event and participant at the same time. The value placed on them as images is interesting because they represent a plague in secular and religious imagery but the noise associated with them can be soothing depending on your experience of southern nights. I also hear them less and less as development and progress overwhelm our natural areas. So in many ways they are nostalgic to me but I prefer to rely on them for the purposes of symbol and sign as they relate to our shared cultural mythology.
How did you create the light box instillations? What mediums did you use?
The window project is an inkjet print on linotec film. It’s similar to the material used for car window tint and it is applied using water, it’s used a lot for advertising purposes. I did the initial drawings for the windows to scale with the idea that the overall image would be a panoramic of connecting verticals. The drawings were scanned and printed by Colorchrome Atlanta.
On your blog you mentioned you will be working on a public project for Flux Projects in Atlanta later this year. What will this entail and will it relate back to the Manif d’Art 5 Quebec City Biennial project?
Well, I am doing a window project at 330 Peters Street as part of Flux Projects on October 1st. I’m still working on the imagery because we just found out that the location was approved yesterday so a lot of the details are still being worked out. I keep thinking Leaves of Grass meets Friday the 13th so we’ll see where that leads me visually. I am always thinking of my audience so, for me, finding the right balance between collapse and beauty is the best part of making pictures.
Mainly, I am really looking forward to working with Flux Projects, their mission to make art more accessible to a wider Atlanta audience is wonderful and I appreciate the opportunity to have a window in such an accessible location to the public.
Most importantly, when will you be teaching again at Emory!?
I’ll be back at Emory this summer teaching Beginning Painting and Drawing and I recently found out that I will be back in the fall for the 300 level Painting and Drawing as well as the 200 level in the spring. I’ve really missed my students this year so I can’t wait to be back.
More of Sarah Emerson's work can be viewed here.