Thursday, March 8, 2018

STORM KING PRESENTS INDICATORS: ARTISTS ON CLIMATE CHANGE FEATURING WORKS BY MORE THAN A DOZEN ARTISTS THAT EXPLORE THE CHANGING CLIMATE On view from May 19 through November 11, 2018


STORM KING PRESENTS INDICATORS: ARTISTS ON CLIMATE CHANGE FEATURING WORKS BY MORE THAN A DOZEN ARTISTS THAT EXPLORE THE CHANGING CLIMATE 

On view from May 19 through November 11, 2018


Mary Mattingly, Proposal for Storm King in Zone 10, courtesy the artist.

Mountainville, NY, March 8, 2018—This May, Storm King Art Center will present Indicators: Artists on Climate Change, an exhibition featuring artworks by more than a dozen artists. Works included in the exhibition explore the impacts of the changing climate in ways that incorporate scientific, cultural, and aesthetic perspectives. Artists will reveal how the acts of making and viewing art differ in both approach and effect from research, advocacy, or reportage on this multifaceted subject. Both indoor and outdoor installations, including pieces newly created for the exhibition at Storm King, will illuminate the threats of a changing climate to our biological world and to humanity. Indicators provides artists with a platform from which to reflect on the topic of climate change by creating works that can command attention for difficult subjects and catalyze creativity, ideas, and solutions.

John P. Stern, President of Storm King, says, “From its founding in 1960, Storm King has prioritized environmental projects including land conservation, reclamation of industrial sites for sensitive landscaping for art using native plants, and preservation of wildlife habitat corridors in the Hudson Valley. This exhibition features artists whose site-sensitive and site-specific works resonate with Storm King’s mission and history of environmental stewardship and that further the dialogue between art and nature while also speaking to broader issues that affect regional, national, and global ecological health.”

The organizers of the exhibition are Nora Lawrence, Curator; David Collens, Director and Chief Curator; and Sarah Diver, Curatorial Assistant, who collaborated closely with artists to develop their ideas and proposed projects for the exhibition. Participating artists include: David Brooks, Dear Climate, Mark Dion, Ellie Ga, Justin Brice Guariglia, Allison Janae Hamilton, Jenny Kendler, Maya Lin, Mary Mattingly, Mike Nelson, Steve Rowell, Gabriela Salazar, Tavares Strachan, Meg Webster, and Hara Woltz.

“With its mission to foster the bond between art, nature, and visitors, Storm King’s 500-acre setting offers a stunning backdrop for an exhibition of this kind, one that explores new ways for the public to understand the effects of climate change and, hopefully, take action to help curb its advances,” explains Lawrence.

Many artists have created new, site-specific works that use Storm King’s unique landscape and location to examine the challenges and repercussions of this global issue. Although united by this overarching theme, works included in Indicators span a variety of media and represent a wide spectrum of interpretations, perspectives, and ideas related to climate change.

For his newly created work, Permanent Field Observations, artist David Brooks (b. 1975) has identified several natural elements found throughout Storm King’s peripheral wooded areas to cast in bronze. Brooks will cast objects, like rotting tree stumps, tangles of roots, acorns perched atop emerging rocks, and other naturally occurring minutia, and install the bronze renditions back in their original locations, next to the objects from which they were cast, where they will remain permanently affixed in place. These elements that were chosen for their compositional sensibility are, in his words, “ephemeral sculptural situations that act as veritable ready-mades.” Brooks is interested in the relationship between geologic and human timelines; hence, the bronze-cast elements will be in-situ forever, like fossils detailing this climate moment for future generations and species. A map on view in the Museum Building gallery plots the precise locations of these fossilized field observations, which visitors can use to perform their own search for the objects. This project reveals the frustration involved in looking for something difficult to apprehend, like climate change itself.


Dear Climate (2014–ongoing) is a creative-research project that hacks the aesthetics of public information posters and guided meditation podcasts to shift ways of thinking and feeling about the climate. In this, their first outdoor installation, Dear Climate circles Storm King’s first tram stop with a series of banners that invite visitors to reconsider their relationships to species life and climate change. Dear Climate is: Marina Zurkow, Una Chaudhuri, Fritz Ertl, and Oliver Kellhammer.

A sculpture by Mark Dion (b. 1961) will be situated near the pond in Storm King’s South Fields. Recently featured in Prospect.4 New Orleans, the work is entitled Field Station for the Melancholy Marine Biologist, and is a weathered wooden cabin filled with the trappings of a scientific lab station. Once installed at Storm King, the contents of the “lab” will reflect the ecology of the surrounding area, highlighting Dion’s practice of appropriating archaeological and scientific methods to question authoritative knowledge about our environments.
 
Selections from The Fortunetellers, a multimedia project by Ellie Ga (b. 1976), will be on display inside in the Museum Building. The project centers on the artist's experience as a crewmember aboard the 'Tara,' the second boat in recorded Arctic history built to withstand the pressure of pack ice for years at a time. A reflection of her five-month expedition near the North Pole, the project constructs a visual narrative of Ga’s experience as a resident artist alongside the climate scientists and fellow crew aboard the ship, as they collected data to measure and contribute to a future understanding of the Arctic pack ice. The details Ga chooses to highlight are rich with larger symbolism. Ga and the crew aboard the Tara were themselves obsessed with their own future: how long they would keep drifting and when they would get back home. Tarot cards (an element of the installation reminiscent of the ship’s name) signify the uncertainty of this future, and the lines of a palm reading conjure up the image of prematurely cracking ice.
Artist and environmental activist Justin Brice Guariglia (b. 1974) will present a group of topographical works inside the Museum building, featuring aerial imagery of landscapes affected by human activities including mining and agriculture. Guariglia's surprisingly beautiful images incorporate traditional art materials and precious metalsincluding copper, gold, and platinumthat have been abraded with power tools. Guariglia will also debut a large outdoor work entitled Ecologisms (Highway Sign 1.0), a solar-powered traffic sign that displays three-line ecological aphorisms written by the philosopher Timothy Morton, whose work lies at the intersection of object-oriented thought and ecological studies. These ominous but often amusing slogans point to the complicity of mankind in changes to the planet.

Allison Janae Hamilton (b. 1984), a New York-based visual artist, will create a new work entitled The peo-ple cried mer-cy in the storm, comprising a towering stack of tambourines on an island in one of Storm King’s ponds. The installation was inspired by “Florida Storm,” a 1928 hymn written by Judge Jackson about the Great Miami Hurricane of 1926, as well as accounts of the 1928 Okeechobee Hurricane, referenced in Zora Neale Hurston's novel Their Eyes Were Watching God.  Both storms devastated the state of Florida, the latter killing thousands of black migrant workers who were buried in unmarked mass graves. The work contemplates how climate-related disasters can expose existing social inequities and how affected communities contend with this twofold devastation. A performance will activate the installation at Storm King, involving musicians presenting a soundscape arranged by Hamilton and inspired by the original “Florida Storm.”

Jenny Kendler (b.1980), Chicago-based artist and current artist-in-residence with the Natural Resources Defense Council, drew inspiration for her site-specific commission, Birds Watching, from researching local species of birds present in the Hudson Valley. She will present an installation of reflective aluminum signs, each depicting a massively scaled, realistic bird’s eye. Some 50-100 eyes will be included, each representing a species of native bird facing the threat of extinction due to climate change. Kendler emphasizes ideas of reflectivity and reciprocal vision, reminding us that birds are also sentient beings capable of looking back at us.


Brooklyn-based artist Mary Mattingly (b. 1978) will expand upon her past investigations into issues of sustainability, climate change, and displacement in her project, planting several different types of tropical trees, mainly palms, in Storm King’s South Fields. In conversation with the migration of tree species due to climate change, Mattingly’s work offers a visible demonstration of the reverberations of climate change within Storm King’s environment by transforming the landscape.

Mike Nelson (b. 1967), a British artist best known for his labyrinthine architectural installations, will present a work inside the Museum Building entitled 80 Circles Through Canada: The Last Possessions of an Orcadian Mountain Man (2013). Informed by his friend and collaborator, the artist and mountaineer Erlend Williamson, the piece comprises a large set of driftwood shelves laden with Williamson’s last possessions before falling to his death in the Scottish Highlands. The reverse of the structure acts as a screen on which to project 80 transparencies of discarded stone fire circles, found and documented between Banff and Vancouver in 2012-13. The exhibition at Storm King marks the first time this work will be shown in the United States.

A New York-based artist of Puerto Rican descent, Gabriela Salazar (b.1981) will incorporate her family’s history as coffee growers into a built environment in dialogue both with post-hurricane temporary shelters erected in the Caribbean and the semilleros used to protect young coffee seedlings. The installation will feature a tent structure draped with a blue tarp over a platform of cinderblock forms made from both concrete and compressed coffee grounds. Throughout the course of the exhibition, Salazar will exchange select concrete blocks for blocks made of coffee grounds, which will slowly disintegrate. These precarious blocks will leave a new and ever-shifting imprint upon the space, reiterating its impermanence. Salazar’s project raises difficult questions regarding the use of concrete, a material that is vital to climate-change-related hurricane protection and building, yet whose manufacture is also one of the largest sources of carbon emissions in the world.

A work by Tavares Strachan (b. 1979), a New York-based artist who represented the Bahamas in the 2013 Venice Biennale, utilizes scientific and cultural phenomena to explore misconceptions within social conversations. Strachan’s blue neon sculpture, entitled Sometimes Lies are Prettier (2017), will be on view in Storm King’s indoor galleries.

Artist Hara Woltz (b. 1971) will present a work that creates a varied sensory experience incorporating aspects of climate change, predictability, and the collection of data. Weather stations capture and record climate data and contribute to understanding of how environments change over time. A weather station may consist of a single piece of equipment that serves multiple functions, or multiple instruments arrayed across a landscape. Woltz will position ten interactive elements, fabricated from painted aluminum and wood, as part of a weather station where visitors will be encouraged to sit and experience the differences in temperature between various material and color sections. The elements of the piece will be informed by predictions of Arctic sea ice melt by decade and related sea level rise, as well as the process of collecting climate data. A temperature differential between the materials and surfaces of this piece will allow visitors to feel and consider the reflectivity of ice and the heat absorptive properties of sea water.

Details of works by Maya Lin, Meg Webster, Steve Rowell, and others included in the exhibition will be announced in coming months.

Exhibition Catalogue
The illustrated exhibition catalogue will include texts on each work in the exhibition; often in the artists’ own words. It will also include an essay by Curator Nora Lawrence, which will speak to larger themes of works in the exhibition, and reflect on the importance of an exhibition of this nature at Storm King. The catalogue will be available in the Storm King Museum Shop and online beginning June 2018.


About Storm King Art Center
Widely celebrated as one of the world’s leading sculpture parks, Storm King Art Center has welcomed visitors from across the globe for over fifty years. Located only one hour north of New York City, in the lower Hudson Valley, its 500 acres of rolling hills, woodlands, and fields of native grasses and wildflowers provide the setting for a collection of more than 100 carefully-sited sculptures created by some of the most acclaimed artists of our time, including Alice Aycock, Mark di Suvero, Andy Goldsworthy, Zhang Huan, Maya Lin, Richard Serra, Joel Shapiro, and Ursula von Rydingsvard.

Storm King’s 2018 season runs from April 4 through December 8, 2018. For more information, visit: www.stormking.org.
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Wednesday, March 7, 2018

 
                  Chen, Spheres, Stainless steel sculptures,  Lassiter Fine Art, Birmingham 
 
 
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                       CONTACT: Lee Ann Lester:                                                                                                         llester@nextlevelfairs.com
                                                                                             (305) 490-4584 

Art Boca Raton 3rd edition returns
March 15-18, 2018 on Grounds of FAU Research Park 

BOCA RATON, FL (March 5, 2018) The 3rd annual Art Boca Raton fair returns on March 14-18, 2018 to be held on the campus of Florida Atlantic University Research Park. Over forty international galleries will be exhibiting emerging, contemporary and modern master paintings, sculpture, works on paper and photography. The fair has expanded its offerings of events via partnerships with FAU Schmidt Art Center, Boca Raton Museum of Art and Mandarin Oriental Hotel and Residents. 

Art Boca Raton opens with an exclusive Vernissage on March 14, 2018, to benefit the Boca Raton Museum of Art School sponsored by, Neiman Marcus, Andrea Kline, Robin May, Diane & Stanley Miller, Sokol Foundation, Lisa Marie Browne, Jody H. & Martin Grass, J.A.R Moeller LLC and Florence Paley.  Single tickets are $150 may be purchased www.bocamuseum.org/vernissage.

The daily Collector Lecture series at 10- 11 AM offers a wide range of presentations on contemporary art and tours: 

March 15: David Drebin, Dreamscapes, presentation by internationally-renowned photographer and multidisciplinary artist David Drebin who is celebrated for creating spectacular shots of dazzling subjects including photographs that tell a tale, voyeuristic scenes with people and dream-like city/landscapes that evoke emotions, psychological perspectives, and insightful reflections into the viewers’ own imagination and experiences. Book signing to follow the presentation.  Sponsored by Oliver Cole Gallery, Miami.

March 16.  Milagros Bellos Ph.D.: 57th Venice Biennale: A Curators Voice
A presentation on the highlights of the 57th Venice Biennale titled Viva Arte Viva held in 2017 and curated by Christine Macel, director of the Centre Geroges Pompidou, Paris France. Curator Dr. Milagros Bello share's her five-day visit to the world’s largest art show which featured 120 invited artists, 86 National Pavilions and 23 Collateral Events. As a guest of the Biennale, Milagros takes us on a selection of the most striking Pavilions and artists in Il Giardini and the Arsenale, the two key locations of the Venice Biennale.

March 17. Rod Faulds: Presentation & Tour, SouthXeast exhibition at FAU's Schmidt Art Center
Rod Faulds curator of the FAU's 5th triennial exhibition SouthXeast: Contemporary Art of the Southeast. This exhibition of 14 contemporary artists from 8 Southeastern states is a unique contribution to South Florida’s visual arts offerings as it complements and expands upon the region’s Miami-centered contemporary art scene.  Faulds is Director of FAU University Galleries, School of the Arts, Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and teaches courses in Museum Studies and the Bachelor of Fine Arts Senior Seminar.  A special personalized tour of the exhibition at the  FAU Schmidt Art Center will follow the presentation.

March 18 Lanya Snyder, Curator of Alex Katz: Small Works
Ms. Snyder will present an overview of this landmark S. Florida exhibition at the Boca Raton Museum of Art on internationally renowned artist Alex Katz whose works have been collected in over 100 public collections worldwide and major museums including a 1989 retrospective a Whitney Museum of American Art. 

Over 200 international 20th and 21st-century artists will be exhibited from galleries from, London, Monte Carlo, Rome, Venice, Paris, Santiago, New York, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Indianapolis, Birmingham, Miami and Palm Beach. 

•    Ticket prices - $20 at the for one-day passes. Multi-day passes $25.
•    Fair Hours - Thursday, March 15 Through Saturday, March 18, 2018, from 11:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. daily.
•    Artists at Work – live art demonstrations daily
•    Special exhibition and book signing of artist Christopher Marley, hosted by Residences of Mandarin Oriental Gallery Showroom, Cocktails, March 17, 4-7pm; Brunch, March 18, 10am-1pm. 
•    Lecture Series daily at 10- 11 am. Schedule available at https://nextlevelfairs.com/artbocaraton

Art Boca Raton is organized by Miami based Next Level Fairs Principals Lee Ann and David Lester have organized over 120 international fairs since 1990 and founded art fairs; Art Miami (1991), Art Asia Hong Kong (1992) and Art Palm Beach (1997). 
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SCOPE NEW YORK VIP OPENING TOMORROW March 8 2018

Joanne LeahDrumsticks, 14 x 9 inch | Courtesy of McCaig-Welles & Zimmer

SCOPE NEW YORK VIP OPENING TOMORROW

The 18th edition of SCOPE New York returns to its Chelsea location at the Metropolitan Pavilion. Known for presenting groundbreaking contemporary work, SCOPE New York will welcome 60 international exhibitors at its centrally-located venue. In addition, SCOPE will continue its legacy of critically-acclaimed VIP Programming, with a focused schedule of talks presented by ARTnews & Sotheby's.

SCOPE New York opens this Thursday, March 08, with the Platinum First View, 3pm - 6pm, followed by the VIP + Press Preview, 6pm - 9pm. 

The fair will then open to the public Friday March 09 & Saturday March 10, 11am - 8pm and Sunday March 11, 11am - 7pm.
PURCHASE TICKETS HERE
PLATINUM FIRST VIEW       
Thurs | March 8 | 3pm - 6pm
Platinum Cardholders Only
VIP + PRESS PREVIEW      
Thurs | March 8 | 6pm - 9pm
VIP Cardholders & Press Only
SHOW HOURS
Fri March 9 - Sat March 10 | 11am - 8pm
Sun | March 11 | 11am - 7pm 

SCOPE NEW YORK EXHIBITOR LIST

SPECIAL PROJECT | SCOPE VIP PROGRAM
Materiality, curated by Anthony Spinello, of Spinello Projects | Miami
Pioneering Miami gallerist and curator, Anthony Spinello, will present four female artists, recently featured at the critically-acclaimed FAIR exhibition. Featuring a selection of mixed media paintings on canvas, ceramic sculptures and process-based works by Nathalie Alfonso, Nicole Doran, Juana Valdes, and Clara Varas.

SCOPE VIP PROGRAM

SCOPE continues its acclaimed VIP Program in New York with a series of exclusive events hosted by ARTNews & Sotheby’s.**Both events are now at capacity & confirmations have been sent to invitees**
Rammellzee | Photo courtesy of Sotheby's
PANEL DISCUSSION
Presented by Sotheby’s
Before Basquiat


Hear artists John Matos, aka Crash One, and Lady Aiko in conversation with cultural critic and curator Carlo McCormick moderated by Harrison Tenzer of Sotheby's as they discuss how key artists evolved their early street art and Grafitti acts into a fine art studio practice. This transition from the street to the studio, made by such greats as Rammellzee, Futura 2000 and Crash One himself, set the basis for the pervasive street art aesthetics found in institutions, galleries and even retail spaces today. Lady Aiko explains the effect of this legacy on her practice as well as what possibilities this aesthetic and cultural movement have for the future.
Juana Valdes, Colored China Rags I, 2012, porcelain bone china, fired 1234c, 13 x 8 x 4 inch | Courtesy of Spinello Projects
PANEL DISCUSSION
Presented by ARTNews
Materiality - moderated by Anthony Spinello


Anthony Spinello, will lead a discussion addressing intersectional feminism in artistic practice. Joined by several artists featured in the critically-acclaimed FAIR exhibition, Nicole Doran, Nathalie AlfonsoJuana Valdes, and Clara Varas will explore notions of feminist practice, identity politics and the role of the female artist in our attention-economy.
 

REGINA'S GROCERY

The namesake of Regina’s Grocery is a home-cook turn professional cook. Those close to her describe Regina, a Brooklyn native, as one-of-a-kind. From her unique yet trendy look including cat-eye glasses, an all-black wardrobe, and her red hair, to her take it or leave it attitude. Regina’s story begins with the beauty industry – attending cosmetology school and eventually working for Chanel at Bloomingdales for many years. Regina always cooked for family, friends, friends of friends, etc., as cooking is a prominent piece of her Italian and Brooklyn culture; it's how she shows you she cares. This former Studio 54 regular is now sharing her recipes and delicious food with New York City. She will be in the kitchen, and accessible for patrons, giving Regina's Grocery a home-like feel unparalleled to anything else.

Visit Regina's Grocery onsite at SCOPE New York.
 

METROPOLITAN PAVILION | 125 W 18th St, New York, NY 10011


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Our mailing address is:
SCOPE Art Show
PO BOX 170397
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Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Three-day conference between 7-9 March in Kautokeino will find “a common goal to enhance Arctic film industry”. Organised by the International Sámi Film Institute, with the Sámi University of Applied Sciences and the Norwegian Film Institute, the three-day Indigenous Film Conference in the Arctic between 7-9 March


Newsletter March 2018

International focus on Indigenous Cinema

Photo: International Sami Film Institute

Three-day conference between 7-9 March in Kautokeino will find “a common goal to enhance Arctic film industry”. 

Organised by the International Sámi Film Institute, with the Sámi University of Applied Sciences and the Norwegian Film Institute, the three-day Indigenous Film Conference in the Arctic between 7-9 March in Kautokeino (northern Norway) will gather app 120 international film professionals to discuss “a common goal to enhance the  Arctic indigenous film industry.” “A unique opportunity for executives and financiers to meet indigenous filmmakers from all over the Arctic” – not only Norway, also from Denmark/Greenland, Finland, Russia, Canada and the US – as managing director Anne Lajla Utsi, of the the International Sámi Film Institute, described the event, which also will host a board meeting of the European Film Academy. Read more
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