Through the Glass: Bear Kirkpatrick’s work questions the limits of perception and traces “traits of consciousness.” His work seeks to give shape to the non-visible world.
Read moreA Substitute World | Exhibition by Jennifer Greenburg
July 3 – August 31, 2020
The photographs in A Substitute World by Jennifer Greenburg were culled from over 15 years of her personal archive. These images have haunted her from the moment they were made – the weight of these spaces inspired the uncanny necessity to make the image. Today, these works feel eerily relevant devices to experiencing the impermissible.
Read moreRock - Paper - Guillotine | Exhibition by Constanza Piaggio
Through the Glass : Video Screening
July 3 - August 31, 2020
The video Rock - Paper - Guillotine integrate images from the Artist’s personal archive, dry pigments, and color grounds. Together these layers splice, layer, and intersect, and are reprocessed (through still or moving image). This work is playful and smart. Its process addresses the natural human desire to save memory and the intellectual art historical applications of this desire.
Read moreAncient Lands, Recent Expeditions | Exhibition by Ian Van Coller
Through June 27, 2020
Ancient Lands, Recent Expeditions presents work made by Ian van Coller over the past five years. The Montana-based artist was awarded a 2018 Guggenheim for his work on climate change and deep time. The work presented in this exhibition comes from four expeditions to sites in Africa, the Americas, and the Arctic. These works continue on the aforementioned themes and distinguish themselves within the Artist’s greater oeuvre. The subject of glacial loss is for the Artist far more than a signifier for climate change; the glacier is a symbol that embodies time itself.
Read moreWith Solitude, Clarity | Exhibition by Bear Kirkpatrick & More
Bear Kirkpatrick
Tatiana Parcero
RES & Constanza Piaggio
Guillermo Srodek Hart
Jennifer Thoreson
Winter is a quiet season. Nature slows down; the sun traces low and the air cools. As the brilliance of fall fades and our breath hangs in the air we turn inward with a hush. Our primal nature calls for hibernation. To find solitude is also to discover clarity, and a certain sense of spirituality, knowing that rest and reflection is the very source of renewal. The works in this collection draw out these themes and ask us to pause, and situate ourself in the scope of something more.
Read moreD | E V O L V E | Exhibition contemplates stewardship
September 7 – November 30, 2019
D | E V O L V E raises questions around planetary stewardship. Included are recent works by Ian van Coller, Jennifer Greenburg, Tatiana Parcero, and Paul Turounet. D | E V O L V E contemplates ecological ethics through works that address global climate change, pollution, greed, and consumerism. This selection of works asks viewers to assess human’s relationship with the planet they call home.
Read moreCultural Grooming | Exhibition by Jennifer Greenburg
Exhibition Dates: March 9 – May 31, 2019
Artist’s Reception:
Saturday, March 9
6:00 – 8:00 pm
Greenburg will present the latest Revising History images alongside work from a new series, Colored Stories. New Revising History works express a blatant disenchantment with the prevailing white male gaze and the cultural constructs it celebrates. Colored Stories are abstract, minimalistic prints made by sampling colors from mid-century items marketed to American women; joyous palates were used to help this new consumer demographic forget their status as second-class citizens.
Read moreSin & Salvation in Baptist Town | Exhibition by Matt Eich
Exhibition Dates: December 8 – February 28, 2019
Reception & West Coast Book Launch:
Saturday, December 8, 2018
6:00 – 8:00 pm
There is no clean way to address a National History as muddy as the silt in the Mississippi delta itself. This work is set in one of the oldest African American neighborhoods of Greenwood, MS, and addresses the condition and culture of the American South. Viewers are asked to face and acknowledge how the legacies of racism and segregation continue to impact people economically and culturally throughout the country.
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