Oceanside Museum of Art Features MFA Students and Alumni
Submitted by sghanbari on Wed, 09/02/2009 - 11:38am.San Diego NOW: Eight UCSD Visual Artists
November 20 - December 6, 2009
Oceanside Museum of Art
Discover the artistic talent emerging from one of the finest conceptual art institutions in the nation. University of California, San Diego Visual Arts department was rated by U.S. News & World Report among the top 15 programs in the country. San Diego NOW presents the work of eight graduate artists: James Enos, Jesse Mockrin, Zac Monday, Omar Pimienta, Lesha Rodriguiz, Tim Schwartz, Julia Westerbeke, and Suzanne Wright.
Cauleen Smith: Art Institute Lecture Series - The Kansas City Star - Aug 31 '09
Submitted by yolietorres on Mon, 08/31/2009 - 2:20pm. ReviewArt Institute Lecture Series Launches with FBI Suspect
(http://www.kansascity.com/entertainment/columnists/alice_thorson/story/1409680.html)
The Kansas City Star, Aug. 31 -- Hasan Elahi, an artist who once was investigated by the FBI as a terrorism suspect, heads up this fall’s Current Perspectives lecture series at the Kansas City Art Institute, with a 7 p.m. talk Thursday in the school’s Epperson Auditorium. Also part of the lecture series will be talks by leading African-American art scholar Krista A. Thompson and award-winning filmmaker Cauleen Smith, who is on the UCSD faculty.
Jean Lowe, Suzanne Wright, Alum Iana Quesnell: 'Social Climbing' Part II: A Painter's Journey-Luis de Jesus Seminal Proj Sep 09
Submitted by yolietorres on Mon, 08/31/2009 - 1:04pm. Alumni_Event | Announcement | Student Project | Faculty ShowJean Lowe, Suzanne Wright, Alum Iana Quesnell
'Social Climbing'
Part II: A Painter's Journey
Exhibition runs October 2 through December 5, 2009
Luis de Jesus Seminar Projects, 2040 India Street, San Diego, CA 92101
Kim MacConnel and Alumni Iana Quesnell and Brian Dick: A Review by Robert Pincus for the SD Union-Tribune Aug 30 '09
Submitted by yolietorres on Mon, 08/31/2009 - 8:09am. ReviewKim MacConnel and Alumni Iana Quesnell and Brian Dick
Fair aims to put San Diego on binational art-lovers’ map
(http://www3.signonsandiego.com/stories/2009/aug/30/fair-aims-put-la-jolla-binational-art-lovers-map/?features&zIndex=156881
A Review by Robert Pincus for the San Diego Union-Tribune on August 30, 2009
Art fairs became the place where galleries had to be in the last decade. They were the centers of commerce for contemporary art, as much as — maybe even more than — auction houses. A city became a brand name; Basel, Switzerland, long the site of the biggest art fair, spawned Basel Miami. And the Miami event has been such a success that it’s given rise to dozens of satellite fairs in Miami, which take place at the same time in December. The size of the other big fairs, in Chicago and New York, has burgeoned, too.
Ernest Silva, Iana Quesnell: 'Moving Points' Exhibit Showcases Drawings by 8 Southern CA Artists-A Review on the N. County Times
Submitted by yolietorres on Thu, 08/27/2009 - 2:46pm. Alumni_Review | Review
Ernest Silva and Alum Iana Quesnell
'Moving Points': Exhibit showcases drawings by eight Southern California artists
(http://www.nctimes.com/entertainment/arts-and-theatre/visual/article_e162e190-6728-59f2-8c55-a1e1b0a7e107.html)
By PATRICIA MORRIS BUCKLEY for the North County Times on August 26, 2009
As an art student at Saddleback College, Karen McGuire promised one of her professors that some day she'd have an art exhibition featuring drawings created by hand. It has taken her 10 years to fulfill that promise but "Moving Points: Contemporary Drawing in Southern California" has finally arrived, and McGuire's former teacher is one of the featured artists.
"There seems to be so much interest in computers, technology and the media," said McGuire, director of the Cannon Gallery in Carlsbad, which is hosting the exhibit. "But the basis of every great artist is someone who is knowledgeable about the fundamentals. Drawing is our most primordial art form and something that a lot of great artists are still doing, in one form or another."
McGuire has gathered the works of eight artists, who draw in a myriad of styles and media. They work in pencil, crayon, charcoal, chalk, pastel, pen and ink, watercolor or gouache ---- and each artist's work is unique and an intimate vision that's translated into drawings.
For instance, Orange County artist William Riley (her former teacher) creates abstract works, which encompass images of hearts and skulls as a representation of energy and spirit. Pat Warner of Los Angeles creates installations that speak about our ideas of home and its relationship to nature, as the insides of the walls feature drawings of a garden.
Tom Morgan of Orange County (another of McGuire's former teachers) draws landscape scenes of rivers and trails, as well as exploring Eastern philosophies. Ernest Silva of San Diego uses the allegories of animals to look at nature and family. San Diego's Iana Quesnell's work looks at ancient Mexico while L.A.'s Enjeong Noh's drawings of men and women study human character.
Babette Mangolte: Men Carouse; Women Clean - A Review on the NY Times by Dave Kehr
Submitted by yolietorres on Mon, 08/24/2009 - 1:55pm. ReviewMen Carouse; Women Clean
The New York Times, Aug. 20 -- Two major films of the 1970s, John Cassavetes’s “Husbands” (1970) and Chantal Akerman’s “Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles” (1975) have recently reappeared on DVD, a coincidence that’s almost an act of film criticism in itself. Akerman’s cinematographer was UCSD Visual Professor Babette Mangolte.
Story at: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/23/movies/homevideo/23kehr.html
Similar story in:
FOX 31, Denver, Colorado
http://www.kdvr.com/entertainment/la-ca-secondlook23-2009aug23,0,3932275.story
'QUINT: Three Decades of Contemporary Art' - San Diego Union-Tribune - Aug 15 '09
Submitted by yolietorres on Mon, 08/17/2009 - 9:58am. Review'QUINT: Three Decades of Contemporary Art'
(http://entertainment.signonsandiego.com/events/quint-three-decades-contemporary-art/
A long look back at the influential Quint Contemporary Gallery. As presented by the California Center for the Arts, Escondido Museum.
Art work was borrowed from Southern California museums and private collections to give a sense of the beauty, variety, and notoriety of the artists supported by the Quint in its 30-year history.
Those artists include: Wick Alexander, Adam Belt, Robin Bright, Kenneth Capps, Stephen P. Curry, Roman de Salvo, Tom Driscoll, Manny Farber, Raul Guerrero, Jay Johnson, Jean Lowe, Kim MacConnel, Richard Allen Morris, Patricia Patterson, Marcos Ramirez ERRE, Allison Renshaw, Ellen Salk, Italo Scanga, Ernest Silva, Robert Ginder, Byron Kim, Gary Lang, Roy McMakin, Matthew Offenbacher, Derek Stroup, Mel Bochner, Elinor Carucci, Tara Donovan, R. Luke duBois, Lee Materazzi, Ryan McGinness, Ruth Pastine, Lincoln Schatz, Aaron T. Stephan, Birgir Andresson, Peter Dreher, Hreinn Fridfinnsson, Johannes Girardoni, Thomas Glassford, Simon Linke, Roman Opalka, Melanie Smith, Eric Snell and Jan van Munster.
Works by some of the featured artists as well as Brian Dick, Steve Ilott, Perry Vasquez and Jimmy Nocito of Retrofit Designs will be for sale.
Alum Tristan Shone: A Review from San Diego CityBeat - 'Man and Machine' by Kelly Davis on Aug 11 '09
Submitted by yolietorres on Fri, 08/14/2009 - 1:29pm. Alumni_Review
Alum Tristan Shone
Man and machine
(http://www.sdcitybeat.com/cms/story/detail/man_and_machine/8373/)
Tristan Shone’s sound-producing sculptures redefine music technology
By Kelly Davis for the San Diego CityBeat on August 11, 2009
To fully understand Tristan Shone’s artwork, you need to read the explainer that accompanies a piece he created for the group show SouthwestNET: Techno at the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art. “Aphanisis” consists of a precision drill press, built by Shone, with a syringe in place of the drill bit—a sort of sci-fi automated drug-implanting device—enclosed in a glass box.
“The life of the high tech cleanroom research and development engineer is one of constant restraint,” Shone writes. “The extent of physical exertion involves tweezers, microscopes, mouse clicking and constant meticulous calibration. Your hands become dainty and weak from the latex gloves, your skin turns a Victorian white, your muscles slowly atrophy. Working on the micro-scale, unable to use any real bodily force, you lose touch with your primal desires; your sexuality shrinks down to the scale of your work.”
M Farber/P Patterson/K MacConnel/E Silva/R Guerrero/J Lowe/JJ: QUINT: Three Decades of Cont Art at the CA Ctr for the Arts, Esco
Submitted by yolietorres on Thu, 08/13/2009 - 7:08am. Announcement
Manny Farber, Patricia Patterson, Kim MacConnel, Ernest Silva, Raul Guerrero, Jean Lowe, Jay Johnson, and Alumni Brian Dick and Roy McMakin
QUINT: Three Decades of Contemporary Art
August 15 - December 31, 2009
California Center for the Arts, Escondido Museum, 340 N. Escondido Blvd., Escondido, CA 92025
The California Center for the Arts, Escondido Museum is pleased to present Quint: Three Decades of Contemporary Art. The exhibition, based on the program of one of San Diego County's most influential galleries, will open on August 15th and continue through December 31st, 2009. Works in the exhibition, the majority of which have been borrowed from Southern California museums and private collections, present an extraordinary survey of the range of regional, national, and international artists supported and promoted by Quint Gallery over nearly thirty years.
Since opening his first gallery in La Jolla in 1981, Mark Quint adopted a unique, almost nomadic approach to the business of contemporary art. Rather than establishing itself in a permanent location and then expanding over time, Quint Gallery would more often adapt its spaces and program according to the needs of the artists it was interested in presenting. From formal gallery and raw open spaces in downtown San Diego, to large industrial workspaces for artists near Miramar Naval Air Base, to unexpected (and often elegant) spaces secluded in back alleys in Hillcrest or La Jolla, Quint Gallery has maintained the flexibility to represent artists employing a wide variety of practices, mediums, and formats.
Review in North County Times Features Manny Farber, Jean Lowe, and Kim MacConnel
Submitted by sghanbari on Wed, 08/12/2009 - 9:27am. Faculty Project | ReviewQuint exhibit looks at past, present, future of local contemporary art scene
http://www.nctimes.com/entertainment/arts-and-theatre/visual/article_8db7861e-20e9-5095-bf0e-abb88d115cc4.html
PATRICIA MORRIS BUCKLEY - For the North County Times | Posted: Wednesday, August 12, 2009 7:30 am
"Earth, Fire, Air, Water," a 1984 painting by Manny Farber, one of the works featured in "Quint: Three Decades of Contemporary Art" opening at the California Center for the Arts, Escondido Museum.
