San Diego Union Tribune Festures ''Social Climbing'' as its Pick - October 3, 2009

Review


Alumni: Seth Augustine, Deanna Erdmann, Gretchen Mercedes, Iana Quesnell and Robert Twomey, and MFA Student Suzanne Wright

San Diego Union Tribune Features ''Social Climbing'' as its Pick

October 3, 2009

'Social Climbing'

Seminal Projects presents the works of over 40 artists, in this two-part exhibition of media works including painting, sculpture, drawing and installation.
(http://entertainment.signonsandiego.com/events/social-climbing/)

Sept. 30-Oct. 24

Luis De Jesus Seminal Projects, 2040 India St., San Diego, CA 92101

PhD Candidate Tatiana Sizonenko: Review by George Varga - ''Electronic instruments take center stage...-SD Union-Tribune 100409

Review

PhD Candidate Tatiana Sizonenko

Electronic instruments take center stage at museum, shows
(http://www3.signonsandiego.com/stories/2009/oct/04/hed-electronic-instruments-take-center-stage-museu/?uniontrib)

By George Varga, Pop Music Critic for the San Diego Union-Tribune, October 4, 2009

Bonnie Wright and Tatiana Sizonenko have never met or communicated with each other. But they are both fascinated by the evolution of synthesizers, the high-tech electronic instruments that have transformed nearly every style of popular music over the past 40 years by creating an array of sounds, via increasingly sophisticated electrical signals.

Fred Lonidier/E Navas/Alumni N Waisman and F Zúñiga/Undergraduate Alum C Ontiveros-TJ/SD: Cooperation & ...-Oct5-Nov25'09-Cali

Alumni_Event | Announcement | Events | Faculty Show


Fred Lonidier/PhD Candidate Eduardo Navas/MFA Alumni Nina Waisman and Felipe Zúñiga/Undergraduate Alum Camilo Ontiveros

Tijuana/San Diego: Cooperation and Confrontation at the Interface

Exhibition runs Monday, October 5 through November 25, 2009

Calit2 Theater / Atkinson Hall, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093

The gallery@calit2 presents "Tijuana/San Diego: Cooperation and Confrontation at the Interface" moderated by Eduardo Navas. The show brings together works by seven artists who draw upon the cultural landscape of the border region linking Tijuana and San Diego. While most of the artists are based in Tijuana, two of them - Lea Rudee and Fred Lonidier - are UC San Diego faculty members. The works in "Tijuana/San Diego: Cooperation and Confrontation at the Interface" range from digital prints to interactive multimedia. José Ignacio López Ramírez-Gastón's interactive spatialized sound installation, 24 Speakers and 24 Sound Sources, deployed in the interior of the gallery@calit2, enacts the concept of the democratization of knowledge and 'reversed migration' in the use of technology. In the main hallway, Media Womb creates an interactive sound cocoon made of recycled egg cartons - visitors' movements inside the womb modulate sounds connected to the media's mis/representations of Tijuana and transborder drug cartels. Media Womb is a collaboration from the artists of the CUBO Project: Giacomo Castagnola, Camilo Ontiveros, Nina Waisman and Felipe Zúñiga, with programming by Marius Schebella. Other works on display include former UCSD School of Engineering dean Lea Rudee's photographs documenting the Tijuana River's path across the border, revealing its many roles as drainage creek, city water supply, border crossing obstacle, and preserved salt marsh. UCSD Visual Arts Professor Fred Lonidier's N.A.F.T.A. #15 "Rio Tijuana Bridge: A Tale of Two Globes or Two Tales of a Globe/Puente del Rio Tijuana: Un Cuento de Dos Mundos o Cuentos de Un Mundo" provides a representation of the problematics of "globalization" from the perspective of the organized efforts by workers to make gains in labor rights and conditions of employment.

Visual Arts Launches New Concentration in Art Practice

Announcement | PHD_Project | Media

Visual Arts Launches New Concentration in Art Practice
http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu/newsrel/arts/09-09ArtPractice.asp
September 24, 2009
By Sheena Ghanbari

This fall UC San Diego’s Department of Visual Arts welcomes the inaugural class for the Ph.D. concentration in art practice, one of the first doctoral programs in the country designed for practicing artists.

Incoming students will have a wide range of resources on campus, including the cutting-edge departments of Music, Theater and Dance, CALIT2 (a center for new computing technology) and the extensive collections of the libraries.

Grant Kester: Social Art (Don't Call it Relational Aesthetics) - A Review by Kathryn Born for Chicago Now on 9.28.09

Review

Grant Kester

Social Art (Don't Call it Relational Aesthetics)

By Kathryn Born for Chicago Now on September 28, 2009

"...Nørgaard recommended a book for me, "Conversation Pieces" by Grant Kester. I've started reading it, and so far it's not only a really good book, but to use "conversation pieces" as the name for Nørgaard's residency artwork would be applicable, because her artwork is the dialogue that's created..."

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Complete story on the Chicago Now website at:
http://www.chicagonow.com/blogs/art-talk-chicago/2009/09/social-art-dont-call-it-relational-aesthetics.html

Alum Nina Katchadourian: Animals' place in nature at UC Riverside's Sweeney Art Gallery-A Review by Scarlet Cheng for latimes.co

Review

Alum Nina Katchadourian

Animals' place in nature at UC Riverside's Sweeney Art Gallery
The show, an homage of sorts to the bicentennial of Charles Darwin's birth, examines spiders, primates and creatures in between.

By Scarlet Cheng for latimes.com on September 27, 2009

"...Brooklyn-based artist Nina Katchadourian finds most human interactions with nature "meddlesome." As part of a series she's called "Uninvited collaborations with nature," she has made "GIFT / GIFT," a video in which she carefully inserts the letters G, I, F and T, made of thread, into a spider web. The spider then methodically expels the letters, one by one. The additional irony is that in Finnish, Katchadourian's native tongue, "gift" means poison..."

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Complete story on the Los Angeles Times website at: http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-ca-animals27-2009sep27,0,495726.story

Kyong Park and Teddy Cruz: MUSAC, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Castilla y Leon presents New Roads, New Urban Conditions

Review


Kyong Park and Teddy Cruz

MUSAC, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Castilla y Leon presents New Roads, New Urban Conditions
(http://artipedia.org/artsnews/exhibitions/2009/09/28/musac-museo-de-arte-contemporaneo-de-castilla-y-leon-presents-new-roads-new-urban-conditions/)

On September 28th, 2009 for Artipedia.org

MUSAC TO HOST NEW ROADS, NEW URBAN CONDITIONS SYMPOSIUM TO COINCIDE WITH THE SHOW KYONG PARK. THE NEW SILK ROADS

ACTIVITIES SCHDULED AROUND THE EXHIBITION KYONG PARK. THE NEW SILK ROADS

- Symposium New Roads, New Urban Conditions. 10 October. Directed by Octavio Zaya with the participation of Santiago Cirugeda, Teddy Cruz and Kyong Park

- Documentary Film Season: Moving Cities. Between Istanbul and Tokyo. 17 September to 29 October.

- Workshop with Lara Almarcegui: Descampados, Demoliciones y Ruinas (Brownfields, Demolitions and Ruins), 3 to 7 November

The exhibition project curated by Octavio Zaya: Kyong Park. The New Silk Roads is the first display of an ambitious ongoing programme of urban research by town planning expert, academic and activist Kyong Park, who, in a number of journeys, is covering the intricate route from Istanbul to Tokyo. Through the exhibition, an architecture seminar to be held on Saturday 10 October, a workshop with artist Lara Almarcegui from 3 to 7 November, and screenings from 17 September of a selection of documentaries related to the region, MUSAC highlights and scrutinises the complex conditions and relationships defining the cultural, social and political spaces to be found between Central Asia and the Far East. The 10 September event will wrap up with a performance of Egyptian artist Hassan Khan’s piece Incidence.

Monica Duncan: 'I Feel Different' at LACE - Oct 20-Jan 24 '10

Announcement | Student Project


Monica Duncan

I Feel Different

October 20 - January 24, 2010

Opening Reception on Tuesday, 20 October 2009, 8PM
with performances by resident artist Niña Yhared (1814) and James Luna

LACE Gallery, 6522 Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90028

LACE is pleased to present I Feel Different, a multi-media group exhibition organized by guest curator Dr. Jennifer Doyle. This provocative project explores both the experience of feeling different from others and the transformative powers of emotion – to make one feel differently. The participating artists each make work about and of emotional intensity, featuring Nao Bustamante, Lezley Saar, David Wojnarowicz, Monica Duncan, Lara Odell, Susan Silton, and Niña Yhared (1814).

Los Angeles-based author and academic Jennifer Doyle examines the way in which personal feelings are often guarded in social settings and deemed inappropriate. When an artist successfully overrides the self-consciousness and the inhibitions that settle on us in social places, it comes as a shock. Finding ourselves overwhelmed with actual emotion – crying, laughing, afraid, disgusted, aroused, and outraged – can leave us feeling more than a little naked.

Movie theaters reinvent themselves to compete with TV - A review on SIlive.com - Mentions Undergraduate Alum Philip C. Wang

Alumni_Review

Undergraduate Alumni Philip C. Wang, Wesley Chan and Ted Fu (Wong Fu Productions)

Movie theaters reinvent themselves to compete with TV

By James P Yates for SIlive.com, September 20, 2009

"...The Internet also has provided new opportunities for young filmmakers, like 24-year-old Philip Wang, who are looking to break into the business.

He and his buddies started making short films in 2003 when they were students at the University of California, San Diego. Now their Wong Fu Productions Web site gets 5,000 hits a day from loyal fans who come to view their frequently updated collection of free short films. They make money by selling T-shirts and other merchandise related to their "brand" and from speaking on college campuses across the country..."

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Complete story on SIlive.com website at:
http://www.silive.com/entertainment/tvfilm/index.ssf/2009/09/movie_theaters_reinvent_themse.html

Patricia Patterson, Ernest Silva, Undergraduate Alum Viviana Lombrozo: She conjures ‘Ghosts’ from a monotype echo - SD Union

Review

Professor Emeritus Patricia Patterson, Ernest Silva, Undergraduate Alum Viviana Lombrozo

Into View

She conjures ‘Ghosts’ from a monotype echo
Adventurous printmaker exhibits commitment to learning, passion for the arts

By Robert Pincus, Union-Tribune Staff Writer, September 6, 2009

“All My Ghosts” is the name that Viviana Lombrozo has chosen for her upcoming solo exhibition and the term has multiple meanings in her art.

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Complete story on the San Diego Union-Tribune
http://www3.signonsandiego.com/stories/2009/sep/06/conjures-8216ghosts8217-monotype-echo/