Monday, July 29, 2019

Hauser & Wirth: ‘Amy Sherald: the heart of the matter...’ Opening Tuesday 10 September 6-8 NYC runs through – 26 October 2019

Press Release

Fall 2019 US Exhibition Program 

‘Amy Sherald: the heart of the matter...’
10 September – 26 October 2019
Opening reception: Tuesday 10 September, 6 – 8 pm New York, 22nd Street
Amy Sherald documents contemporary African-American experience in the United States through arresting, otherworldly paintings. Subverting the medium of portraiture to tease out unexpected narratives, she situates black heritage centrally in the story of American art and invites viewers to engage in a complex debate about accepted notions of race and representation. The individuals in her paintings are deliberately posed, dramatically staged, and assertive in gaze. Their expressiveness and the variations in their gestures, clothing, and emotional auras reinforce the complex multiplicities of African-American existence. The persistent sense of privacy and mystery maintained in Sherald’s work requires viewers to ponder the thoughts and dreams of those depicted. Debuting new paintings, this exhibition marks Sherald’s first solo presentation with Hauser & Wirth. 
Read more...
www.hauserwirth.com
@hauserwirth 



 
Above
Amy Sherald
'Sometimes the king is a woman' (2019)
Oil on canvas
137.2 x 109.2 x 6.4 cm / 54 x 43 x 2 1/2 in
©Amy Sherald
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Saturday, July 27, 2019

In Miami get out catch Listening & Talk— Gustavo Matamoros & Laura Marsh 6PM.

TONIGHT

Listening & Talk— Gustavo Matamoros & Laura Marsh

SATURDAY, JULY 27, 2019, AT 6 PM

Please join us for Listening & Talk—Gustavo Matamoros & Laura Marsh on Saturday, July 27, 2019, at 6 pm. The event will give visitors an opportunity to sit quietly and listen to Matamoros' sound intervention at DV. After the listening event, Laura Marsh will join Gustavo Matamoros in conversation about the sound instalation and his work. 

SPEAKERS

Gustavo Matamoros was born in Caracas in 1957 and living in Miami since 1979, Gustavo Matamoros is a local sound artist of international repute in the fields of experimental music and sound art. His practice focuses on the exploration of sound as audible description of change and as a tool for developing an ever closer relationship with what Buckminster Fuller referred to as The Environment—that which surrounds the individual.
Laura Marsh is a fiber artist with a socially engaged practice. Her banners, weavings, and installations contain feminist and political quotes, mottos, and emblems that reflect cultural values and belief structures. From two generations of women who sew, Marsh practices an accessible and hands-on tactile approach. She invites viewers to enter, touch, and be immersed in the work. Originally from rural, Montrose, Pennsylvania, Marsh has watched her hometown transform into a fracking region. Marsh received her MFA from Yale University School of Art and a BFA from the Cleveland Institute of Art. Marsh has exhibited nationally at venues including Locust Projects in Miami, The Whitney Museum of American Art, Printed Matter, Field Projects, Newman Popiashvili Gallery, and Tilton Gallery in NY. She is the Director of Programs at Oolite Arts.
VIEW MORE

VISIT

DV is located at 101 NW 79th Street, Miami, FL 33150. Parking is limited in front of our building, but plenty of parking is available on the street.
GET DIRECTIONS
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In LOng Island City today,Catch the Dorsky Gallery opening 5-7 PM

To Ask a Question/
To Carry On Without an Answer 
Emily Brownawell | Jason Paradis 
Betsy Lewis | Kyle Patnaude 
Li Lin-Liang | Yuanmin Lu 
Nick Rouke | John Willis 
Bruce Wahl | Betsy Schneider
  
 
Exhibition: July 27-August 28, 2019
Reception: Saturday, July 27, 5:00-7:00 pm

Hours: Monday-Friday 11am-5pm 

This exhibition is presented by the School of Fine & Performing Arts at SUNY New Paltz in cooperation with Dorsky Gallery Curatorial Programs
The exhibition of five emerging artists and their mentors was conceived by SUNY New Paltz MFA students. 
UPCOMING EXHIBITION

At Sea
September 29 - December 8, 2019

Featuring the work of Zalika Azim, Rina Banerjee, Esteban Cabeza de Baca, Heide Fasnach, Scherezade Garcia, Shirin Kazemi, Franck Lesbros, Roger Clay Palmer, Sky Pape, Jennifer Wynne Reeves, Adrien Segal, Charlotte Schulz, Eve K. Tremblay 


Curated by Zeljka Himbele
Opening Reception: Sunday, September 29, 2019, 2-5 pm
D O R S K Y G A L L E R Y | Curatorial Programs is a 501 (c)(3) not-for-profit organization that presents independently-curated exhibitions of contemporary art. Working with curators, writers, and art historians, DGCP aims to illuminate and deepen the public's understanding and appreciation of issues and trends in contemporary art. 

For further information, please contact Karen Dorsky at (718) 937-6317, via email: kdorsky@dorsky.com or visit our website: www.dorsky.org
Dorsky Gallery Curatorial Programs | 718-937-6317 | info@dorsky.org | www.dorsky.org

HOURS: Thursday-Monday 11:00-6:00
STAY CONNECTED:
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Dorsky Gallery Curatorial Programs, 11-03 45th Avenue, Long Island City, NY 11101

Friday, July 26, 2019

Hi All Invited August for Environmental Reflections August 10, 2019, 4-6 PM

Join us August 10th, 4-6 PM
 Meet the Artists

 Ty Stroudsburg, Janet Culbertson, Carol Hunt, and Anne Seelbach
&
Artists For Peace and The Environment
Woodstock '99 Art Collection 


At the Jamie Forbes Gallery, Ketcham Inn Foundation, and  SunStorm Cultural Arts Center

 90 Montauk Highway, Center  Moriches



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Thursday, July 25, 2019

Good time to show in Tempe Arizona, 51st Tempe Festival of the Arts December 6-8, 2019


51st Tempe Festival of  the Arts
December 6-8, 2019
Apply Here 
Application Deadline 7/31/19 $35
Late Application Deadline 8/15/19 $50
 
 
Call to Artists
     
WHAT: 51st Annual Fall Tempe Festival of the Arts
WHERE: Downtown Tempe, Arizona
WHEN: December 6-8, 2019 | 10am - 5:30pm

Noteworthy:
*Attendance 250,000
*Artist Awards - $10,000
*Thursday Evening Set Up 
*Extensive PR and Marketing
*24 Hour Security
*Booth Sitting
*On-site festival staff
*Artist hospitality area with complimentary refreshments / roving water cart
*Large art delivery assistance program
*Surveyed results show an average of $1.6 million in festival art sales
*Ranked in Top 100 Classic & Contemporary Craft Shows by Sunshine Artist Magazine
*Jury Fee $35 (July 31st) Late Deadline $50 - August 1 - 15th 
*Booth Fee $400-$550 depending on location 10'X10 booth
  Limited Corners, Double Booth and Electricity available for additional charge

Join us for the 2019 Fall Tempe Festival of the Arts, December 6-8th in Downtown Tempe. The festival is celebrating its 51st anniversary and is among the oldest and best loved traditions in the Desert Southwest. More than 250,000 visitors enjoy the festival and approximately 350 artists participate from throughout North America. The Festival occurs in a festive urban street fair atmosphere. 

The Tempe Festival of the Arts is a juried show and features ONLY original work, with all original artists present to greet festival attendees. 
ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS on ZAPP
Application Deadline: July 31, 2019 | $35
Late Application Deadline: August 15, 2019 | $50
Notification: September 3, 2019
Booth Fees Due: October 1, 2019

More Information visit www.tempefestivalofthearts.com

Contact: Kate Borders, Managing Director at kate@downtowntempe.com or call
480-355-6061
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Minneapolis Institute of Art, presents “Artists Respond: American Art and the Vietnam War, 1965–1975” September 9, 2019,- January 5, 2020


Minneapolis Institute of Art To 
Present Two Exhibitions Exploring 
the Impact of the Vietnam War

Artists Reflect: Contemporary Views on the American War

September 29, 2019–January 5, 2020
Organized by the Minneapolis Institute of Art
Artists Respond: American Art and the Vietnam War, 1965–1975

September 29, 2019–January 5, 2020
Organized by the Smithsonian American Art Museum


MINNEAPOLIS—July 25, 2019
 To accompany “Artists Respond: American Art and the Vietnam War, 1965–1975”the critically acclaimed exhibition organized by the Smithsonian American Art Museum (SAAM)—the Minneapolis Institute of Art (Mia) will present “Artists Reflect: Contemporary Views on the American War,” featuring works by Southeast Asian diaspora artists, who explore the impact and legacy of the conflict.

Drawings, textiles, video, photography, and installation work by Tiffany Chung (b. 1969, Vietnam), Pao Houa Her (b. 1982, Laos), An-My Lê (b. 1960, Vietnam), Dinh Q. Lê (b. 1968, Vietnam), Hương Ngô (b. 1979, Hong Kong) and Hng-An Trương (b. 1976, USA), Teo Nguyen (b. 1977, Vietnam), Tuan Andrew Nguyen (b. 1976, Vietnam), Pipo Nguyen-duy (b. 1962, Vietnam), Cy Thao (b. 1972, Laos), and Thi Bui (b. 1975, Vietnam) reflect on migration, memory, the effect of violence on the landscape and on communities, healing, and trauma, while bringing attention to the war’s living effects on the population most affected by its long history (predating and postdating U.S. involvement). Artists Reflect” coincides with “Artists Respond”; both are on view in Target Galleries September 29, 2019, through January 5, 2020. The exhibition is organized by Robert Cozzolino, Patrick and Aimee Butler Curator of Paintings at the Minneapolis Institute of Art.

‘Artists Reflect’ picks up where the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s important exhibition ‘Artists Respond’ ends,” Cozzolino said. “It gives visitors the chance to see how the American War impacted artists whose families lived in Vietnam and Laos. Their artwork explores the ongoing legacy of the war on their communities. It examines migration, the lives of veterans, landscape as witness, and the way memory is passed down through generations. The artists offer a fascinating and emotionally complex perspective of the impact of this war.”

Highlights of “Artists Reflect: Contemporary Views on the American War” include “The opposite of looking is not invisibility. The opposite of yellow is not gold” a collaboration between Hương Ngô and Hng-An Trương exploring immigration and refugee experience through the lens of their family photographs; Pao Houa Her’s photographs honoring Hmong veterans of the American war; Tuan Andrew Nguyen’s memorial to Thích Qung Đc, a Buddhist monk who in 1963 set himself on fire to protest the repressive South Vietnamese government; Thi Bui’s original drawings for her memoir The Best We Could Do and the children’s book A Different Pond; and Tiffany Chung’s large embroidered map tracing migration routes in the wake of the wars in Southeast Asia. 




“Artists Respond: American Art and the Vietnam War, 1965–1975,” curated by Melissa Ho, debuted at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in spring 2019. The exhibition presents art created amid the United States’ pitched conflict with Vietnam and on the home front as Americans bitterly fought over whether they should be involved in this war. The exhibition spans the period from President Lyndon B. Johnson’s fateful decision to deploy U.S. ground troops to South Vietnam in 1965 to the fall of Sài Gòn 10 years later.


“Artists Respond” is the most comprehensive exhibition to examine the contemporary impact of the Vietnam War on American art. It brings together nearly 100 works by 58 of the most visionary and provocative artists of the period, including T. C. Cannon (1946–1978, USA), Judy Chicago (b. 1939, USA), Dan Flavin (1933–1996, USA), Leon Golub (1922–2004, USA), David Hammons (b. 1943, USA), Yayoi Kusama (b. 1929, Japan), Bruce Nauman (b. 1941, USA), Liliana Porter (b. 1941, Argentina), Claus Oldenburg (1929, Sweden), Yoko Ono (b. 1933, Japan), Faith Ringgold (b. 1930, USA), Martha Rosler (b. 1943, USA), Peter Saul (b. 1934, USA), Nancy Spero (1926–2009, USA), Jesse Treviño (b. 1946, Mexico), and others. Galvanized by the moral urgency of the Vietnam War, these artists reimagined the goals and uses of art, influencing developments in multiple movements and media: painting, sculpture, printmaking, performance, installation, documentary art, and conceptualism. 

This exhibition presents both well-known and rarely discussed works, and offers an expanded view of American art during the war, introducing a diversity of previously marginalized artistic voices, including women, African Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans. The exhibition makes vivid an era in which artists endeavored to respond to the turbulent times and openly questioned issues central to American civic life.

A 416-page catalogue accompanies “Artists Respond: American Art and the Vietnam War, 1965–1975.” Published by the Smithsonian American Art Museum in association with Princeton University Press, the hardcover book will be available for purchase at The Store at Mia for $65.

Programming for the exhibition includes the following events:
·         October 17: Third Thursday: Artists Respond invites visitors to connect and create with artist activists responding to relevant contemporary issues today. The free event will feature thought-provoking live performances, visual artwork, and art-making activities, as audiences discover the impact of creativity as a change-maker in today's world. All My Mia members will enjoy complimentary tickets to the exhibition during the event.
·         September 28: Study Day: Artists & the Vietnam War will feature talks by prominent artists and leading scholars, as well as performances, small-group dialogues, and art activations. Featured speakers include curators Melissa Ho and Robert Cozzolino, scholar Karen Mary Davalos, and artists Martha Rosler, Peter Saul, Rupert Garcia, Jesse Trevino, Pao Her, Thi Bui, and Tiffany Chung. Conversations will explore experiences during 1965–75, pose critical questions about our current time, and reflect on the half-century that separates the two. This program is made possible by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Tickets are $30, $20 for My Mia members, and $10 for members of Contemporary Art and Paintings Affinity Groups.

“Artists Respond: American Art and the Vietnam War, 1965–1975” is organized by the Smithsonian American Art Museum with generous support from Anonymous, the Diane and Norman Bernstein Foundation, Sheri and Joe Boulos, the Gene Davis Memorial Fund, Glenstone Foundation, Norbert Hornstein and Amy Weinberg, the Henry Luce Foundation, Nion McEvoy and Leslie Berriman, Cindy Miscikowski, Daniel C. and Teresa Moran Schwartz, the Smithsonian Scholarly Studies Awards, and the Terra Foundation for American Art.

The exhibition was made possible at the Minneapolis Institute of Art thanks to lead sponsor Thomson Reuters. Major sponsors include the National Endowment for the Arts and the Boris Lurie Art Foundation. Additional generous support was provided by Nivin MacMillan, Richard and Jennie Carlson, Hubert Joly, John and Nancy Lindahl, Marianne Short and Raymond Skowyra, Jr., Page Knudsen Cowles and Jay Cowles, Shannon Evenstad, Alfred and Ingrid Lenz Harrison, Martha Head, Diane and David Lilly, Reid and Ann MacDonald, Sheila Morgan, Lewis and Connie Remele, Joan and John Rex, Katie Simpson, Laysha Ward and Bill Kiffmeyer, and donors to the 2019 Mia Gala.


About The Minneapolis Institute Of Art
Home to more than 90,000 works of art representing 5,000 years of world history, the Minneapolis Institute of Art (Mia) inspires wonder, spurs creativity, and nourishes the imagination. With extraordinary exhibitions and one of the finest wide-ranging art collections in the country—Rembrandt to van Gogh, Monet to Matisse, Asian to African—Mia links the past to the present, enables global conversations, and offers an exceptional setting for inspiration.

General admission to Mia is always free. Some special exhibitions have an admission fee.

MUSEUM HOURSTuesday, Wednesday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Thursday, Friday: 10am-9pm
Sunday: 11am-5pm
Monday: Closed
For more information, call + 1 612 870 3000 or visit.artsmia.org
Image Credit: (1) Cy Thao, United States, 1972 #22, 1993–2001, Oil on canvas Gift of funds from anonymous donors, 2010.55.22, © Cy Thao. This work is part of “Artists Reflect: Contemporary Views on the American War” (2) Jesse Trevino, Mi Vida, 1971-73 (detail), acrylic on drywall, mounted on aluminum, Collection of Inez Cindy Gabriel. Image Courtesy of Gabriel Quintero Velasquez. This work is part of “Artists Respond: American Art and the Vietnam War, 1965–1975”
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