Saturday, December 02, 2006

New Hoyas

DC area artist John Murray has been commissioned to create four religious paintings for the Jesuit Chapel of Georgetown University. He has just finished the first one:


John Murray for Jesuit Chapel of Georgetown University

More details, including prep sketches, here.

Friday, December 01, 2006

Another one heading down South

In addition to all the galleries and dealers mentioned here (and elsewhere since), the Black Artists of DC (BADC) are also heading to Miami where they will be exhibiting during the Art Basel extravaganza in the LoGlo exhibit at the Buena Vista Building in the Design District.

O'Sullivan in the WaPo

"Hoping to foster a little cross-pollination in the visual arts scenes of Washington, Baltimore and Richmond, the Washington Project for the Arts/Corcoran's ongoing series of "Exchange" exhibitions -- in which art spaces from those cities have been trading shows with one another -- is a great idea, if for no other reason than it saves gas. Washington art lovers curious about what's going on in the Baltimore scene, for instance, had the recent opportunity to find out (without driving an hour) when the WPA/C, in a collaboration with Baltimore's Creative Alliance, brought a slew of Charm City's finest to the Warehouse for a showcase earlier this fall. At the same time, Baltimoreans could check out what Washington had to offer at a simultaneous roundup of D.C. artists there. (Both have since closed.)

The final two "Exchange" installments are on view now: "Richmond @ DC" at the D.C. Arts Center, and its counterpart, "DC @ Richmond," at that city's Gallery5. (Oddly, the triangle was left incomplete, with no art-swap planned between Richmond and Baltimore. Oh, well. Maybe next year.)"
Read the WaPo review here.

Thursday, November 30, 2006

New Baltimore Gallery

Diliberto Gallery recently opened in Fells Point in Baltimore and this Friday they are having a show titled "Land, Sky and Water," showcasing the work of five landscape artists: David Shevlino, Lisa Egeli, Eva Carson, Mary Bickford and Michael Diliberto. The opening reception is Friday, December 1 from 6-9PM.

Of these I am quite familiar with Lisa Egeli's technically superb work, and I think that she still holds my personal record for the most expensive painting that I've ever sold, sight unseen (not the most expensive painting that I've sold ever, but the most expensive "unseen" painting), to a collector (in Texas if I recall): $11,000 as I remember (it was a few years ago).

Diliberto Gallery website here.

New DC gallery

Gary A. Christopherson (Chris) has opened a new art studio/gallery called GChris "Progressive Art" Sculpture Studio/Gallery on Dumbarton Street in Georgetown.

Details here.

Corcoran Finally Closes MAC Deal

Jacqueline Trescott reports in the WaPo today that the Corcoran finally closed the deal to buy (for 6.2 million) the building where the Millenium Arts Center is located.

Gallery officials announced yesterday that they had signed the contract Tuesday night to give the city $6.2 million for the Southwest Washington property and had hired Monument Realty to oversee the project, in which the Corcoran will occupy part of the building and the rest will be converted to apartments.
When this deal started brewing a while back, there were some flies in the ointment.
When the Corcoran's plans were announced two years ago, advocates for the homeless protested, as did the artists, who complained about the lack of affordable studio space in Washington.
But apparently the artists will be given an option to move:
As part of the purchase contract, the Corcoran is offering some of the space at Randall to the artists who used to lease space there when it was called the Millennium Arts Center. "If they are interested in coming back, we are offering them space," said Rebecca M. Gentry, the gallery's vice president of institutional advancement.
I'd like to hear from some of the MAC artists to see what their point of view on this issue is...

Read the WaPo article here.

By the way, the MAC artists currently have an exhibition (opened yesterday) at Zenith Gallery's Alternative Space located at 901 E Street NW (entrance on 9th Street). On exhibit are works by my good friend Richard Dana, Inga McCaslin Frick, Wendy Garner, Georgia Goldberg, Lucy Hogg, Bonnie Holland, Judy Jashinsky · Kevin Kepple, Sherrell Medbery, Mark Planisek, Russ Simmons, Ellen Sinel, Walter Smalling, Frances Sniffen, Charles St. Charles, Betsy Stewart, Karen Joan Topping, Andres Tremols, Bert Ulrich, and Ellyn Weiss.

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Dorkbot

I am somewhere over the Mid Atlantic coast, airborne on an ailing Freedom Air (the little guys who do the puddle jumps for Delta) prop job which was four hours late out of New York this morning, and yet through the wonders of technology, and my new laptop with the little wizard box that allows me Internet access practically everywhere in the nation, here I am, ahem... blogging.

And it is appropriate that the subject is to announce the next Dorkbot DC meeting of that strange group of area artists who (in their own words) are "artists (sound/image/movement/etc.), designers, engineers, students and other interested parties from the DC area who are involved in the creation of electronic art (in the broadest sense of the term)."

These geekartists will host Paras Kaul, a.k.a. "The Brainwave Chick."

Paras Kaul is an adjunct professor and Web developer at George Mason University, but when she pulls on her electrode-studded headband and steps out in front of an audience, she is “The Brainwave Chick.”

Why?

Kaul uses "a brain wave interface as a neural artist, researcher, and music composer. She creates brain wave music for multimedia productions that have been performed at the Kennedy Center, Millennium Stage, the Walker Art Center, and at SIGGRAPH conferences. Kaul’s research also involves the development of neural games for attaining preferable brain states for learning. Her neural art and games are intended to call attention to brain matters and to invoke a dialogue to discuss neurological learning to develop human potentials for self-healing, nonverbal communication, and remote viewing."

I'm sorry whaaa?

Also presenting at the Dorkbot DC meeting will be Philip Kohn, an artist whose interactive video art explores audience participation. He will be discussing his recent collaborative work “Your Two Cents” which records video of viewers opinions, then distorts them using video effects including face part identification

Maybe it's just me, but there's something slightly fascinating in a weird way about the ability of these, uh... scientists cum artists to create artwork that jumpstarts the 21st century into an area where (Blake Gopnik should love this), almost everything is new.

And the DC area, with its large technogeek base of cutting edge technology companies, R&D outfits and megahuge defense contractors, is the perfect place to fuel artistic development that marries real cutting edge science with "new" forms of art.

And these artists are working right here, in the DC area, under the noses of DC area museum curators. And if you or I were a young, up-and-coming curator, say Anne Ellegood, or Kristen Hileman, or Sarah Newman, maybe dropping in and seeing what these geekartists are up to could be worth the visit.

I think that they might see something new.

Date/Time: Wednesday, December 13, 2006 7-9 PM
Location: Provisions Library
Suite 200
1611 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20009
Price: Free admission
Public Contact #: 202-299-0460