Author Archives: loulandunderground

014.JOB

Mobile Screen-Print Bike

John Hitchcock

University of Wisconsin – Madison

 

As John’s assistant I am often asked to work on projects I normally wouldn’t find myself doing. This project in particular was a lot of fun. With the help from an undergrad in the print department, Alex, we assembled a custom made bike that had been shipped to John’s studio. The bike is set-up with a trailer that carries paper, ink, and a small press.

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Mobile Screen-print Bike

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Alex working on the mobile screen-print bikeAlex – Mobile Screen-print Bike

 

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039.EXHIBIT

Jason Gray & Briony Morrow-Cribbs

Wunderkammer

Overture Center, Madison, WI

September 23 – December 8

Jason Gray and Briony Morrow-Cribbs came together in this exhibit at the Overture Center in downtown Madison. Their individual aesthetics are complimentary to the extent of complete cohesiveness. Mysterious and archaic explorations of scientific study provide an ominous intrigue. Using traditional art techniques such as etching and casting, combined with found object, the artworks are primarily sculptural.

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www.brionymorrow-cribbs.com

overturecenter.com

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036.EXHIBIT

Boys Like Meat

Gallery 1010, University of Tennessee – Knoxville

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Gallery 1010

While in Knoxville for the installation of the Ossuary show I had some time to explore the downtown area. This city may be of the small town variety but carries a solid tradition of good food, art, craft and music. After checking out some local shops and pubs I made my way to the Gallery 1010, a University of Tennessee satellite gallery. Exhibitions often feature MFA shows and the space is regularly operated by graduate students.

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The current show, Boys Like Meat, serves up an intriguing mix of aesthetically pleasing ceramic forms with a side of hilarity. The “meat” being referred to is a direct nod towards male genitalia. The artist went so far as to include a plate of sausages contained inside one of his sculpture. The smell permeated throughout the gallery.

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Boys Like Meat

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Boys Like Meat

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Boys Like Meat

A fun way to think about “meat” and sexuality, the artist uses bright colors and clean forms in his work.

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Boys Like Meat – Meet the Artist

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034.EXHIBIT

Ossuary

University of Tennessee Downtown Gallery; Knoxville, TN

October 4 – 26, 2013

This traveling exhibit, entitled Ossuary, is the brainchild of Professor Laurie Beth Clark  of the University of Wisconsin – Madison. Over a period of 2 years she has collected works from nearly 300 contributing artists. I had the opportunity to assist with the installation of this show in Knoxville, TN. Although this required taking time away from school and making up lost studio time, I jumped at the chance to get on the road and become involved in a new experience. Thankfully with 5 people at work, the installation of close to 300 artworks was an achievable goal.

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Laurie Beth Clark is a professor and curator in the Art Department at the University of Wisconsin – Madison.

Ossuary was inspired by the repositories of bones that have accrued in countries like Cambodia and Rwanda where mass violence has taken place. But Ossuary is not a project about those traumas. Rather, artists counter images of pain with hopeful or poignant rejoinders. Envisioning hope for the world is one of the things that art can do.”

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http://ossuaries.wordpress.com

UT Art Website

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038.EXHIBIT

Wisconsin Triennial

Madison Museum of Contemporary Art

Madison WI

September 21 – January 5

Opening night at the Wisconsin Triennial was well attended with an enthusiastic crowd of artists and patrons. This juried exhibition of artists puts a spotlight on Wisconsin’s cutting edge art scene. The show only happens every three years, it will be up through January 5, 2014.

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Wisconsin Triennial

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Benjamin Grant, Untitled #36, 2012
Acrylic, Automotive Paint, Enamel, Flashe, Metal Flake and Spray Paint on Panel

Benjamin Grant is a recent graduate of the University of Wisconsin – Madison. He is now represented by the Tory Folliard Gallery in Milwaukee.

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Frame Gallery

A mobile gallery with a rolodex of artists’ business cards on top. A small reminder of the immensity of creative people in the world.

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Brett Rees, Benjamin Grant, Heather McCalla

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Fred Stonehouse, Leslie & Diana Smith

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Kim, Jordan Adams

mmoca.org

mobileframegallery

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013.JOB

John Hitchcock

Madison Museum of Contemporary Art

Madison, WI

John Hitchcock is a well-known printmaking professor at the University of Wisconsin – Madison. His work is very autobiographical, dealing with a broad spectrum of subject matter from his Native American heritage, war, and his story of surviving a severe brain tumor. He recently gave a talk about his life and work at the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art (MMoCA) during the Triennial.

It is an honor that I was selected to work as his Project Assistant during the 2013-14 school year.

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hybridpress

www.mmoca.org

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032.NOTE

Print Labs and Rachel Jochem

Herron School of Art

Indianapolis, IN

During a brief visit to the Herron School of Art in Indianapolis I took a quick peek around the print department. During an open house the labs weren’t filled with classes, but its easy to see how the well planned space could accommodate a good number of people. If you are serious about printmaking, the facilities and quality of work on display this school seems like a great place for undergrad.

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Serigraphy Studio – Herron School of Art

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Etching Studio – Herron School of Art

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Lithography Studio – Herron School of Art

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Litho Stones – Herron School of Art

Herron has a couple of student galleries throughout the school. This series of photographs on glass by Rachel Jochem were particularly noteworthy. This piece is titled, Vicissitude.

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Rachel Jochem – Vicissitude

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Rachel Jochem – Vicissitude

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Rachel Jochem – Vicissitude

www.herron.iupui.edu

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033.EXHIBIT

///Some, The Definitive 3rd Year Review

Art Lofts Gallery, University of Wisconsin – Madison

111 North Frances St.

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///Some, A Definitive 3rd Year Review

As the fall semester gets off to a busy start, graduate students working towards their MA and MFA degrees are exhibiting their latest artworks. This year’s review show is entitled: ///Some. Eighteen graduate students in the art department are each exhibiting one piece that best articulates a culmination of their previous two years of study.

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Art Lofts Gallery

Upon first entering the exhibition space, the viewer’s initial response may be one of surprise. The seemingly sparse amount of art housed in the large room sets a quiet tone. This initial confrontation of stark openness mellows out after a few moments of adjusting to the mood. The calmly lit, concrete gallery and it’s white walls, demand a sense of quiet observation from the viewer. Focusing with such intensity as if you are listening to hear the art speak, rather than simply looking at it. The tone is aptly set complimenting the generality of a muted palette amongst the paintings, prints and sculptures speckled throughout. Effectively drawing the viewer in for further examination; each individual piece begins to provide evidence of greater detail through craftsmanship, and in some cases, significant conceptual meaning. Kendall McMinimy’s piece, Eminence Dissipated, is a fine example of exploration of materials and well controlled technique. He uses white plaster to produce geometric shapes in an off kilter arrangement. A circular relief form presents color and pattern of unrecognizable imagery. McMinimy’s piece draws the viewer’s eye in every direction that the seemingly subtle characteristics of the plaster material is now alive with rhythm.

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Kendall McMinimy, Eminence Dissipated, Plaster and Acrylic

On the opposite side of the room a small plastic tarp hangs nonchalantly by two pins on each corner of its horizontal length. Unusually shaped with cut in square edges and the occasional organic hole shape, the clear plastic has been carefully embroidered with thread and encased in a blanket stitch. Large powder pink and rose colored lettering across the lower half read, “I could just give up and be my mother.” The piece is titled Dowry by Dominique Haller. Without having the luxury of seeing any other work by the artist, it is difficult to the level of sarcasm that Haller is striving for. Undoubtably every viewer will take away a different response.

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Dominique Haller, Dowry, Plastic Tarp, Thread

Almost hidden, on the back right wall of the gallery is Eulogy, by Jordan Adams. This large scale oil painting on panel has an unusual quality mark-making. Unlike traditional oil on panel seen through the eons of art history, Adams’ approach challenges medium and application. Dark ruddy black-browns and a center vignette of fuschia tinted oils melt across the surface creating an illusion of a wondrous landscape. Some portions have been tightly controlled to juxtapose the gravity induced dripping with straight edges. The title lends a melancholy atmosphere to the work, yet the technique provides a more magical one.

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Jordan Adams, Eulogy, Oil on Panel

The overall exhibit holds together in continuity with a muted palette. Amidst the silent nature of the show characteristics of movement appear to create “noise” however subtle it may be.  The level of ability that each artist is able to express their own theory and stand out in a room of highly trained artists is impressive.

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Jason Gray, Rhyk’th the Cannibal, Glass, Wood Veneer, Steel, Skull of Rhyk’th

The art department at the University of Wisconsin – Madison’s reins with prominence in the academic art world. In a national survey conducted by U.S. News, UW-Madison’s overall graduate art program ranks in at number eighteen. Scoring even higher in printmaking and metals at second and third place.

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Natasha Hovey, 1,4 – Alpha Glycosidic Bond, Ceramic Cone 4 Oxidation, Flocking

The show runs through September 20th

art.wisc.edu

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006.PROJECT

Emily L. R. Adams

Shibori

In the studio, shibori fabric dying. Yes, I’ve done this many years before in undergrad, and now here I am experimenting with the traditional technique once again. Without any desired outcome I had fun folding, wrapping and tying fabric for the dye bath.

“Shibori (絞り染め Shiborizome) is a Japanese term for several methods of dyeing cloth with a pattern by binding, stitching, folding, twisting, compressing it, or capping.”

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Fabric, folded and wrapped with wood and twine to create a resist.

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Fabric, folded and wrapped with wood and twine to create a resist. (detail)

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Results of the first shibori dye.

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The dyed fabric has been re-folded and again placed between boards to form a resist.

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Soaking in the dye bath the wood is allowed to float to achieve a “bleed”.

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After an hour in the dye bath.

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The affect of the dyed wood resist is interesting.

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Final results, a funky plaid.

loulandunderground.com

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shibori

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