A laboratory experiment in Hungary has spotted an anomaly in radioactive decay that could be the signature of a previously unknown fifth fundamental force of nature, physicists say—if the finding holds up.Details here.
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Wednesday, May 25, 2016
A 5th force discovered?
Please Touch
Please Touch
Saturday, June 4 – Sunday, July 17, 2016
Reception: Thursday, June 9; 6 – 8 pm with talk at 7 pm
Target Gallery, the contemporary exhibition space for the Torpedo Factory Art Center, encourages people to touch, feel, dine upon, and even lick the artwork in Please Touch, on view Saturday, June 4 through Sunday, July 17, 2016.
Saturday, June 4 – Sunday, July 17, 2016
Reception: Thursday, June 9; 6 – 8 pm with talk at 7 pm
Target Gallery, the contemporary exhibition space for the Torpedo Factory Art Center, encourages people to touch, feel, dine upon, and even lick the artwork in Please Touch, on view Saturday, June 4 through Sunday, July 17, 2016.
Sixteen national and international artists, including four
people from Virginia, were juried into this group show. This all-media
exhibition features 20 works with which audiences should engage.
“I chose work that specifically challenged the traditional
expectation of experiencing art,” said Cynthia Connolly, Arlington County’s
special projects curator and juror for the exhibition. “In this case, one must
touch the artwork in order to completely understand, appreciate and experience
the intention of the artist.”
For example, Colleen Ludwig’s Pod Field is a series of
wooden forms affixed with long pod stalks. The audience is invited to brush
against the pods as they walk through the installation, triggering the bamboo
chimes. The more people in the space, the more it fills the industrial
surroundings of the
Jenifer Hansen’s Project Share is two ceramic dish sets and
a social art project. One set stays in Target Gallery for display, the other is
for visitors to borrow and use for a meal with a stranger. There is no fee for
this project, participants are merely asked to snap a few photos and write a
blog entry. (See the blog from a similar project in Columbus, Ohio.) The dishes
are a vehicle to engage in conversation over the intimate act of sharing food.
Fumi Amano, of Richmond, Virginia, created one of the most
intimate works in the show with Look at Me. An immigrant from Japan, Amano’s
work is a reflection of her sense of isolation and the challenges of connecting
with others through a language barrier. In her work, visitors sit on opposite
sides of a frosted pane of glass, unable to see each other. The person on the
frosted side then licks the pane, revealing a face. This intense and visceral
act mimics Amano’s own desire to break through barriers and communicate with
others.
“We are told not to touch fine art, and definitely never to
lick it,” said Kaitlyn Ward, Target Gallery director. “I want the gallery
experience to be completely interactive, and for the visitor to feel like he or
she is breaking the rules.”
The participating artists are:
· Fumi Amano – Richmond, VA
· Marcelyn
Bennett Carpenter - Bloomfield Hills, MI
· Brielle
DuFlon – Charlottesville, VA
· Sherman Finch – Cypress, TX
· Magdalene
Gluszek – Show Low, AZ
· Jennifer Hansen – West Olive, MI
· Dana Lynn
Harper – Columbus, OH
· Tim Harper – Midlothian, VA
· Katie Hudnall
– Indianapolis, IN
· Young Suk Lee – South Bend, IN
· Colleen Ludwig – Detroit, MI
· Charles Benjamin
Rosecrans – Sandy Hook, CT
· Richard
Starbuck – London, England
· Kurt Treeby –
Buffalo, NY
· Art Vidrine – Alexandria, VA
· Dukno Yoon –
Manhattan, KS