Live Free or Die
March 8, 2007- March 31, 2007
Reception: March 10, 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
547 W 27th St
The
Rhonda Schaller Studio is proud to
present Live Free or Die curated by
Rhonda Schaller and Dave Jaquish from
March 8 March 31, 2007. On display in word and image are 27 contemporary
artists from around the country.
This exhibition explores the yearnings within the human soul for expression
& release, dignity & freedom. Exhibiting artistšs work in a variety of media
from video to oil, steel to encaustic. They represent many cultures and give
expression to impulses centered on politics, control, personal freedom, and
spiritual rebirth.
To force the consideration of passive observation and its ramifications,
artist
Rees Shad asks us to consider when are we as citizens responsible for
the actions of our elected officials. In his video installation Mote, Shad
draws comparisons between current members of the Bush administration and
figures from various forms of German and American media. Using a video game
controller, images of Minnie Mouse, an androgynous black face in profile,
and a gold teeth grill, Minniešs Fetish by artist
Cullen B. Washington Jr.
engages us in dialogue surrounding the quest of freedom in America and our
means of achieving it. He questions whether the cost of our authentic
identity is part of the American dream, using references to social
addictions and consumerist fantasies.
Gregory OšToolešs Theft in a Poor Fad Foolish Nation, is a satire on the
messages of mass media today, and asks the viewer to make their own
conclusions about what is significant in this world. His collaged painting with mixed media and India ink utilizes found messages
of text, audio, video and still images juxtaposed against their own or
mis-matched advertisement and ŗnews˛ imagery.
Jenny Pompe embeds text in
textiles, and asks how does the vehicle carrying a particular text affect
its reading and meaning? With her window curtain,
Sophistry made
specifically for the exhibition, the artist embroidered on voile excerpts of
the current administrations speeches and press conferences.
Warhead #16 by photographer
Diane Bush specifically targets the media.
Warhead #16 is part of a series that combines the macro-photographs she took
off the TV set, one for every day of the first Gulf War (43 days) with
bleach and potassium ferry cyanide thrown onto the prints, bringing the
reality of destruction into the medium and the message. Cartoonist Paul D.
Candelaria uses the editorial cartoon to express his belief that to live
free is to never to have to fear speaking the truth. In the modern era when
a simple line drawing may be seen as a criminal act, and engender death
threats, can he dare being heard.
Corie J. Colešs Untitled Decorative Object #1 a ceramic sculpture of George
W. Bush as a revolutionary freedom fighter asks us to consider some of the
complexities and difficulties of understanding, living and working in a free
country.
Caroline Holder states that freedom, like other absolute ideals is
a complex proposition, and wonders if it can rise above its range of
meanings. In her 6pc ceramic dinner service Homeland Insecurity she asks can
we ever be completely free and still function as members of a society? The
complexities of faith and purpose are illuminated in
John Sumneršs black and
white photograph Priest in Jerusalem. Midst the frantic hustle of pilgrims
searching for truth, freedom and salvation in Israelšs old city, Sumner
captures the unnerving glance of the priest, as he floats along the
labyrinth streets.
Rina Pelegšs Idol Family in Pain sprang from her toys r us series, where she
uses recycled thrift shop newspapers and magazine articles of John F.
Kennedy and his family, in combination with clay and resin to memorialize a
symbol of freedom, what he fought for, died for, and within the form of a
toy car his entombment and burial.
Asterio Tecsonšs monumental oil on
canvas Central Park-Fragments of Remembered Time, which took almost a year
for the artist to complete, is a montage of American portraits and images
from history and society, done in marvelous realistic detail, the viewer is
asked to consider the choices, contradictions and consequences of our way of
life, and the pursuit of creative freedom.
Dasha Ziborova was born and
raised in the former Soviet Union, and quit giving any political or social
meaning to the word freedom a long time ago. Her delicate renderings of
fantastical creatures both human and animal invite us to release judgment
and stereotypes that imprison the imagination, as she refuses to sink into a
shape of mind and decreed vision other than her own.
Inner Storm #2 acrylic on canvas by Fernando Ferreira de Arujo reflects an
intuitive process, where we enter the world of the artist, and his personal
struggle to achieve insight and evolve freely through painting. His
beautiful abstract landscape invites us into a contemplative moment of our
own making.
Angie Deal is an abstract painter, who states that freedom is her ability to
paint and express herself without holding back; to create art without
imposed boundaries. Her unrestrained watercolor Untitled #13 is an
expression of the tension between the intuitive inner drive and the formal
canvas.
Barthelemy Atsin takes his inspiration from life experiences in an
unpredictable world where nothing is promised. He states to live freely is
to create personally connected pieces of art by using a variety of artistic
forms without limitation. His acrylic and oil painting Billie Holiday is an
inspired portrait of beauty and compassion, and captures the unpredictable
element of talent and emotion.
Monique Luckšs Made with Dust brings us into
another world, one in which possibilities are held onto, regardless of
circumstances. Her mixed media on canvas considers the growth of good seeds
even when planted in 'bad dirt', the opportunities awaiting an unborn child,
and about living anyway even when all you have to offer is the same world
given to you.
Endure by
Karen Gutfreund uses encaustic and the definitions of the word
endure situated within the chained female form on light box. Working with
hope in adversity, the artist states that we who believe will endure and
effect change.
Karen Abboud states that freedom exists only in moving
through the present moment. A resident of New Orleans, and a Katrina
survivor her enigmatic and poetic encaustic and assemblage series Under -
Flow deals with the remembrance of being and the leveling of self, as
reflected by the waters of the levees as they ebbed and flowed.
Kathleen Moorešs oil paintings show us that living life in freedom and
self-expression are manifest ways of living in genuineness. Her Sound Out
and In Blessed Traditions speaks to the truth she finds living in Spirit.
Carol Goebel takes the spirit into flight with sculpture made with old tools
and welded steel. Her Sweet Flyer comes out of the internal river of life,
creativity and instinct.
Harry Matti Hukkinen paints the goddess in his oil
on canvas Vortex. She has shed her constraints and without shame she chooses
to step courageously into the unknown, willing to face anything, even death,
for the chance of living free.
Aaron Cohick states that to be free is a choice to promote agency, concrete
and palpable. In his series of ŗself binding books˛, he distributes public
domain manuscripts and asks the viewer to construct an experience through
which all involved realize the infectious empowerment of their own
potential. Night Moon by
Judy Aiello is an assemblage of composed fragile
elements, groupings of similar forms alluding to congregation and isolation.
Her forms spin off from her personal process in a search for individual
meaning within the collective.
Stefanie Sciarrinošs photograph
Williamsburg #9 looks at what is unseen by many and explores the human drive
to leave a piece of themselves, literally leaving their mark on the world in
her depictions of the doors and walls of Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
Stina Marshall defines freedom as the essential act of the artist to
surrender ideas, onto canvas and into nature. She presents us with the liberation of inner-monologues; the psychological
elements, the tears, the love, the pain, the confusion -articulated into
tangible shapes and color patterns with her Calculated Chaos, created with
pen and ink, and texture filter.
Ruth A. Block s Synthesis #2, an acrylic
and mixed media collage, takes us inside to the heart and soul of the
artist. Her use of the Mandela form as a focus point, allows the viewer to
travel the lines of the work, simultaneously moving between the inner spaces
of our own humanity and the physicality of the artists palette and
composition.
Rhonda Schalleršs mixed media on paper Orange altar: Rebirth
looks at the meaning of freedom from a spiritual point of view. She states
to be free is her inner hearts need to vibrate and excel its way out of
meaninglessness.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | map | | Gallery | Rhonda Schaller Studio | | Address | 547 W 27th St, #529 New York (Chelsea) NY, 10001 United States | | Phone | 212-967-1338 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 11-5 | |
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