Goings On | 07/01/2019

Goings On: posted week of July 01, 2019

CONTENTS:

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1. Mark Bloch, FF Alumn, now online at brooklynrail.org
2. Nancy Buchanan, FF Alumn, at Kopeikin Gallery, Los Angeles, CA, thru Aug. 24
3. Benoît Maubrey, FF Alumn, at Pallasseum, Berlin, Germany, July 1-Nov. 30
4. Alicia Grullón, FF Alumn, Hunter East Harlem Gallery, Manhattan, thru Sept. 14
5. Cave Dogs, FF Alumn, at Tjarnarbíó Theater, Reykjavík, Iceland, July 1, 5, 6
6. Sonya Gimon, FF Intern Alumn, now online at Pratt.edu
7. Jay Critchley, FF Alumn, at Truro Center for the Arts, Cape Cod, MA, July 29-Aug. 2
8. Katya Grokhovsky, FF Alumn, Summer news
9. Taylor Mac, FF Alumn, in The New York Times, now online
10. Barbara T. Smith, Kiki Smith, Michael Smith, FF Alumns, at Marlborough Gallery, London, UK, opening July 3
11. Murray Hill, FF Alumn, in GQ, now online
12. Brendan Fernandes, FF Alumn, in The New York Times, now online
13. Robert Mapplethorpe, Robert Rauschenberg, Richard Tuttle, FF Alumns, in The New York Times, now online
14. David Hammons, Jenny Holzer, , Richard Prince, Richard Serra, FF Alumns, in The New York Times, now online
15. Agnes Denes, FF Alumn, in The New York Times, now online
16. Adrianne Wortzel, FF Alumn, at Anthology Film Archives, Manhattan, July 17
17. Jessica Hagedorn, FF Alumn, at Ma-Yi Theater, Manhattan, August 23-Sept. 15
18. Marisa Jahn, FF Alumn, in Chatham, NY, July 7
19. Clifford Owens, FF Alumn, at The Baltimore Museum of Art, MD, July 14, 2019-January 5, 2020

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1. Mark Bloch, FF Alumn, now online at brooklynrail.org

Mark Bloch has written an article for the Brooklyn Rail about Mary Bauermeister’s recent show at Michael Rosenfeld Gallery
Mary Bauermeister: Live in Peace or Leave the Galaxy

Text only follows below. For the complete illustrated article please visit this link:
https://brooklynrail.org/2019/06/artseen/Mary-Bauermeister-Live-in-Peace-or-Leave-the-

Galaxy
Best known for her intricate and enigmatic multimedia assemblages, Mary Bauermeister (b.1934), long defied categorization. She matured amidst Pop and Minimalism but instead echoed explorations of the very personal and a multi-layered maximalism.
Beginning in the early 1960s, her unique text strategies of visual poetry and other conceptual practices cemented her seminal role within the Fluxus community, which championed experimental poetry, music, intermedia, and Happenings. Before moving to New York, her studio in Cologne, Germany became the meeting point for a number of artists defining the era including Karlheinz Stockhausen, David Tudor, John Cage, Christo, Wolf Vostell, George Brecht, and Nam June Paik. She became an influential figure in vital discussions between European and US artists at the time. Bauermeister later married Stockhausen, an influential composer of electronic and serial music, in 1967, with whom she had two children before they divorced in 1972.
This exhibit spans six decades, highlighting Bauermeister’s consistent use of writing throughout her career, with new and vintage selections from several specialty areas, each of which employ text: drawings, constructions, rare early light boxes, and stone reliefs. But most prominently, this exhibition features her breathtakingly dreamy lens box constructions. Twenty of those and three of her reliefs, all made from tiny stones collected on seven beaches around the world, are her two trademark pursuits. Both have been exhibited at Michael Rosenfeld before, but this exhibition-Live in Peace or Leave the Gallery-is her first solo presentation with the gallery.

Bauermeister was in attendance for the opening, which she conceived as a Happening, a nod to the Fluxus era. She filled the gallery with helium balloons bearing the message “Live in Peace or Leave the Galaxy,” bobbing against the tall ceilings with her unique hand-made pencils (which she began producing in the late 1960s) suspended magically from them on ribbons. Not tools to make art, the pencils are works of art themselves-hand-colored and crafted in varying lengths and widths that she referred to as symbolic “memor[ies] of a predigital epoch.” Also placed on pedestals strategically throughout the gallery, the pencils create fantastic magical landscapes, with all proceeds from their sale benefitting The Children’s Museum of Manhattan, dedicated to addressing early childhood development, art and creativity.

In addition to the twelve pencil tableaus and the floating balloons, the gallery is filled with dozens of serene, mystical works to be explored: three stone works that form carefully constructed mandalas (enhanced with commentary), two examples of her early backlit light sheet (verbal) experiments, three pieces in which embellished frames (covered with lettering) provide the art, one historic well-labeled “primary structure” work, thirteen ink and/or marker compositions on paper with painted wood adhered and twenty of the lens boxes.

Bauermeister incorporates the glass, lenses, stones, and other unconventional materials, both natural and manmade, into the boxes and language into every work in the show. Through scribbled stories, double meanings, humor, games and visual puns, Bauermeister began to utilize text in her work as early as 1961 and continues vibrantly today in her eighties, allowing personal feelings, doubts and anxieties as well as a spiritual perception of nature to find their way into her art. Her command of materials conveys confidence while the words raise questions and uncertainties, inviting the viewer to restore balance.

Three pen-and-ink works on paper, Title Drawing No. 1, 2 and 3, (all 2019) greet visitors. They resemble ocean waves, wood grain or other organic patterns, ethereally constructed out of delicate lettering in large, medium and small sizes, using upper- and lowercase alphabets. Hypnotic phrases and sentence fragments meander horizontally. Elsewhere, we see earlier examples of the wavy text pieces from 1979 and then 2015. She seems to have perfected it in these elegant 2019 works. Their undulating sine waves draw us in to read or look. Eventually, the words and little squiggles begin to register, revealing a stream of consciousness autobiography, unfolding as interference pattern about Bauermeister’s early years in New York: close encounters with Hans Hoffman, Peggy Guggenheim, Max Ernst, Dorothea Tanning and Marcel Duchamp; recollections of Miles, Monk, and Martin Luther King. One verbal constellation says: “10 blocks north of Jasper Johns who’s American flag painting I had seen in the Amsterdam Stedlijk Museum… 1962 June… when I saw this exhibition of American art… Leslie and Stankiewicz and Jasper and Bob’s ‘Monogram’… I knew: where this is called Art, I want to be…”

As looking turns into reading, these 2019 works telling stories about the early 1960s, we learn her works once displayed on Great Jones Street were reviewed in the New York Times by writers who then became personal friends. Later, we see a lens box is dedicated to that same writer. These pieces and this exhibit create a personal, gossipy, political, and whimsical self-portrait of her moment and her network: 2D and 3D visual poetry by a master.

The airy works are grounded by the copious lens box constructions: painted wooden mini-worlds sporting inscribed surfaces, dense with a vocabulary of objects-clear glass balls, whole or sectioned opaque spheres, and layered glass dividers-that create a myriad of optical effects to disorient us. Frequent bursts of text continually unite everything in the gallery as part of a whole. Bauermeister invites us into her process, offering variations on several themes that form a continuum of this gifted, unorthodox communicator.

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2. Nancy Buchanan, FF Alumn, at Kopeikin Gallery, Los Angeles, CA, thru Aug. 24

K O P E I K I N G A L L E R Y
https://www.kopeikingallery.com/exhibitions/

THE VISION BOARD

June 29th – August 24th, 2019

Reception for the Artists Saturday, June 29th from 6 – 9pm

Curated by Elizabeth Valdez
Participating artists: Rebecca Bird, Nancy Buchanan, Alejandro Cartagena, Jamison Carter, Carolyn Castaño, JooYoung Choi, Kevin Cooley, Joseph Cultice, Jen DeNike, Fabian Debora, Michael Dee, Margaret Griffith, Chris Finley, Carla Jay Harris, Pearl C Hsiung, Bettina Hubby, Salomon Huerta, Elizabeth Huey, Nina Katchadourian, Kiel Johnson, Kysa Johnson, Laura Krifka, Mark Licari, Jordie Oetken, Amy Park, William Powhida, Monique Prieto, Osceola Refetoff, Fawn Rogers, Gretchen Rollins, Erika Rothenberg, Katie Shapiro, Guy Richards Smit, Rodrigo Valenzuela, Elizabeth Valdez, Marnie Weber, Sarah Ann Weber, Christopher Williams and Melanie Wilhide.

Champagne fueled Curatorial Walk Through with Elizabeth Valdez
July 20th & August 10th at 12 Noon

“THE BEAUTY OF THIS CONCEPT IS THAT IT’S APPEALING
FOR MANY ARTISTS WITH DIVERSE BACKGROUNDS.”

KOPEIKIN GALLERY
2766 S. La Cienega Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90034

310.559.0800

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3. Benoît Maubrey, FF Alumn, at Pallasseum, Berlin, Germany, July 1-Nov. 30

ARENA ARENA : a Speakers Corner for Berlin.
From July 1st to November 2019 from 11 AM to 7 PM. Location: Pallasseum, Pallasstrasse 5 (near the corner of Potsdamerstrasse)
Financed from Hauptstadtkulturfonds Berlin. Produced by the Kulturpark 3000 e.V. / Gallery Zwitschermachine.
infos: http://www.zwitschermaschine-berlin.de tel.: 0178 4418783 kulturpark3000@t-online.de

The public, local artists, musicians, choral groups and organisations can participate via a number of ways:
— calling two telephone number 0178 8382615 and 0178 838 2618 and expressing themselves for 3 minutes.
— via Bluetooth and individual Smartphones people can relay songs and messages to the sculpture.
— via direct “line in” people can connect their devices and instruments directly to the sculpture. Or speak through a microphone.
– via an “audio twitter” #speakersarena
Additionally the sculpture can be used as PA system for events , DJs, and small concerts.
The new ARENA project is conceived in the shape of a small amphitheater so that the sculpture can be presented both as a “Speakers Corner” — a low-key
“hotspot” for local participation and self-expression (“Audio Graffiti”) but also function as a stage for small events and concerts.
The sculpture is created from 4 modular elements that are fitted together as a single amphitheater or split up into different elements that
function as concert “boxes” with more sound volume.

Yours,
Benoît Maubrey

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4. Alicia Grullón, FF Alumn, Hunter East Harlem Gallery, Manhattan, thru Sept. 14
What is Here is Open: Selections from the Treasures in the Trash Collection
Curated by Alicia Grullón and Nelson Molina
June 26 – September 14, 2019
Participating Artists: Tomie Arai, Dominique Duroseau, Maria Hupfield, Coronado Print Collective (Pepe Coronado, Leslie Jiménez and Carlos Jesus Martinez Dominguez), Shellyne Rodríguez

For over 30 years, Nelson Molina worked for the New York City Department of Sanitation (DSNY) as a sanitation worker. His regular pick up routes were in Manhattan 11, a district bordered by 96th Street to 106th Street between First and Fifth Avenues. While he worked, he found many objects; some that needed repair and others that were fully intact.

As hundreds and hundreds of objects amassed, Molina created the Treasures in the Trash Collection inside DSNY’s garage. Each object has become a rescued moment, recovered by Molina’s sense for the importance of place, sustainability, and community.

What is Here is Open: Selections from the Treasures in the Trash Collection is an exhibition that places works by seven New York City-based contemporary artists alongside a selection of Molina’s found objects. Molina, along with curator Alicia Grullón, will choose objects from the Treasures in the Trash Collection to accompany the contemporary artists’ works, creating unique, site-specific installations at the Hunter East Harlem Gallery. These ephemeral installations blur the lines between art, memory, and archive, and take on both an anthropological and artistic resolve that rests in community’s vision of itself. The resulting project emphasizes the artistic and curatorial processes of those who make, those who collect, and those who arrange, engaging the similarities among these actions.

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5. Cave Dogs, FF Alumn, at Tjarnarbíó Theater, Reykjavík, Iceland, July 1, 5, 6

Cave Dogs new performance, Liquid States: a watery journey through shadows, will be performed at the 2019 Reykjavik Fringe Festival at the Tjarnarbíó Theater, Tjarnargata 12, 101 Reykjavík. We will perform three times on July 1st at 18:00, July 5 at 15:00 and July 6th at 14:00. Please visit rvkfringe.is for more information about the 2019 Reykjavik Fringe Festival. rvkfringe.is

Cave Dogs presents a startling original way of telling a story. Fluid shadows and images dance in wild imagination across the screen. Each performance promises a healthy dose of the sublime, the exciting, the absurd and the downright fun that will result in something infinitely compelling.

Our new performance, Liquid States: a watery journey through shadows, is a compilation of short stories, which explore water as substance, metaphoric allusion, and engages debates relating to the geographies and socio-politics of water. The performance further focuses on water in its many physical states and cultural circumstances, narratives, histories, memories and journeys. From baptismal fonts to oceanic waves, the work forms a collective narrative that addresses mankind’s complicated relationship to this essential natural resource.

Innovative, large-scale shadow projections cast onto a screen from a variety of props, costumes and performers move in concert with projected video, spoken narrative, and an original soundtrack. The mobility of the light sources allow for multiple, richly layered visual tableaus, and effects that conjure both the dreamlike quality of early experimental film and the humor of contemporary animation. We coax trees to grow and teach whales to sing. It’s magical, like watching dreams cross into the conscious world.

Cave Dogs are Suzanne Stokes, Jim Fossett, Adam Mastropaolo, Trudy Trutwin, Gracie Fossett, Emerson Fossett, Maizy Milliken, and Alchemy Mastropaolo. Dean Jones, Grammy Award winner, created the soundtrack.

cavedogs.org

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6. Sonya Gimon, FF Intern Alumn, now online at Pratt.edu

Please visit this link:

https://www.pratt.edu/news/view/reimagining-place-together-taconic-fellows-and-rockaway-residents-envision

thank you.

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7. Jay Critchley, FF Alumn, at Truro Center for the Arts, Cape Cod, MA, July 29-Aug. 2

“Democracy of the Land Workshop” by Jay Critchley, July 29-August 2, Truro Center for the Arts, Cape Cod, MA

Democracy of the Land
Led by Jay Critchley
https://www.castlehill.org/2019-workshops-calendar/2019/7/29/art-and-the-earth-nbspdemocracy-of-the-land

Open to artists of all genres. July 29-August 2, 1-4pm daily.
The cultural, political and environmental stakes are high in how we understand and regulate our relationship to the land and climate. Like the layers of soil, in this workshop we will dig deep into layers of human occupation on the land to discover our history, and the filters we use when we view and experience its elements.

A landscape has a narrative to tell us, memories to share. What do we know about the terrain we value, both familiar and remote? How was it tread upon? We will reference our personal history with the soil, the water, the air, and the forest including all of its inhabitants. We will also reference relevant and historic documents that have laid the foundation of how Western culture values our land and climate.

Whether mixed media, painting, sculpture, installation, text and performance, the focus will be on the unfolding of creation. Each artist will select a site or plot to explore and experiment with, whether at Edgewood Farm or nearby, or your favorite site or imaginary place.

Collaboration is encouraged with the week culminating in documentation and review of all work. www.jaycritchley.com
Notable historic Documents:
Document of Discovery (1493)
Mayflower Compact (Pilgrims, 1620)
Florentine Codex (16th Century)
Native America (Four-part PBS documentary, 2018)

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8. Katya Grokhovsky, FF Alumn, Summer news

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

I’d like to let you know about my news and events happening this Summer!

*SOLO EXHIBITION
Katya Grokhovsky: Privately Owned
Curated by Overnight Projects
Opening June 27th 5-8pm with a live performance: 6pm
On view: June 27th-July 27th 2019
Karma Bird House Gallery
47 Maple St, Burlington, VT 05401
http://overnightprojects.com/exhibitions/privately-owned

*PERFORMANCE:
She came to Stay by TIAB: Founding Director, Katya Grokhovsky
The Immigrant Artist Biennial (TIAB)
Soft Launch Fundraiser
June 30th 6-9pm
Performances: 7-8pm
Tickets: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/she-came-to-stay-tickets-62831248957
Sidewalk Cellar at Assembly Room
191 Henry St, New York, NY 10002
http://assemblyroom.nyc
https://www.theimmigrantartistbiennial.com

*RESIDENCY
Pratt Fine Arts Department
Studio Residency Program
July 2019
Pratt Institute
200 Willoughby Ave,
Brooklyn, NY 11205
https://commons.pratt.edu/prattfinearts/residencies-2019/

*CURATORIAL
The Immigrant Artist Biennial Soft Launch Fundraising events
July 19th 2019, 6-8pm – Performance by Natacha Voliakovsky
August 4th 2019, 6-8pm – Performance by Kathie Halfin
Sidewalk Cellar at Assembly Room
191 Henry St, New York, NY 10002
http://assemblyroom.nyc
https://www.theimmigrantartistbiennial.com

Recent Press:
Art New England Magazine, May/June 2019
The New York Times, March 2019
The Brooklyn Rail, March 2019
Brownstoner, February 2019
Asylum Arts Magazine, February 2019
Hyperallergic, January 2019

Yours in Art,

Katya Grokhovsky
IG: katyagrokhovsky
FB: Katya Grokhovsky
TW: KatyaGrokhovsky
www.katyagrokhovsky.net
www.theimmigrantartistbiennial.com
https://www.patreon.com/join/katyagrokhovskystudio

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9. Taylor Mac, FF Alumn, in The New York Times, now online

Please visit this link:

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/25/theater/taylor-mac-play-flea-theater.html

thank you.

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10. Barbara T. Smith, Kiki Smith, Michael Smith, FF Alumns, at Marlborough Gallery, London, UK, opening July 3

The Smiths
July 3 – August 2, 2019
London

Opening reception
Wednesday, July 3rd, 6 – 8 PM
Marlborough Gallery
6 Albemarle Street
London W1S 4BY UK

Marlborough is pleased to present The Smiths, a group exhibition inspired by a typically stimulating and amusing conversation with the artist Maurizio Cattelan. As per his imagining, the show consists of over 30 artists with the surname Smith. It spans multiple generations, styles and mediums and includes artists that are both famous and some who are less familiar.

Participating artists include: David Smith, Kambel Smith, Greg Parma-Smith, Joshua Smith, Lucien Smith, Patti Smith, Harry Smith, Cary Smith, Zak Smith, Emily Mae Smith, Adam Parker Smith, Michael Bell Smith, Sable Elyse Smith, Matt Sheridan Smith, Meryl Smith, Clive Smith, Michael Smith, Barbara T. Smith, Michael E. Smith, Shinique Smith, Molly Smith, Cauleen Smith, Greg Smith, Akeem Smith, Kiki Smith, Bridget Smith, Bob & Roberta Smith RA, Anj Smith, Richard Smith, John Smith, Matthew Smith, Sir Paul Smith

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11. Murray Hill, FF Alumn, in GQ, now online

Please visit this link:

https://www.gq.com/story/drag-kings-sasha-velour-roundtable?fbclid=IwAR0IcNVBCClENtIMRohQohTQw-x6cO3JR-bdDF46Xgsjqxk1FjTseVlCKtg

thank you.

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12. Brendan Fernandes, FF Alumn, in The New York Times, now online

Please visit this link

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/28/arts/design/ballet-performance-knots-whitney-biennial-culture.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&fbclid=IwAR2qWSBNeVqjb4B0_sbLXctwRuAYU5WpzHQKohvgSiNOGXHjtaiPqawUOSI

thank you.

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13. Robert Mapplethorpe, Robert Rauschenberg, Richard Tuttle, FF Alumns, in The New York Times, now online

Please visit this link:

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/27/arts/design/joel-grey-show-us-your-wall.html

thank you.

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14. David Hammons, Jenny Holzer, , Richard Prince, Richard Serra, FF Alumns, in The New York Times, now online

Please visit this link:

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/27/arts/design/guggenheim-museum-artistic-license-review.html

thank you.

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15. Agnes Denes, FF Alumn, in The New York Times, now online

Please visit this link:

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/17/nyregion/battery-park-city-beach.html?searchResultPosition=4

thank you.

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16. Adrianne Wortzel, FF Alumn, at Anthology Film Archives, Manhattan, July 17

Greetings Dear Friends and Family:

THE SENTIENT THESPIAN
a short film by Adrianne Wortzel
where a sentient robot
for the fourth industrial revolution
longs for like company.

SCREENING:
NEWFILMMAKERS NY
Location: Anthology Film Archives
32 Second Avenue, NY NY 10003
tickets sold only at door from 5:30 pm on — $7 each

Wednesday, July 17th
The Sentient Thespian at 7:15 PM sharp
Please Join us for a Glass of Wine at 6:30 PM

Made possible by https://thoughtworksarts.io/ Sponsored by https://consortiumrr.com/ With Support from https://reachrobotics.com/

Copyright (c) 2019 Adrianne Wortzel, All rights reserved.
URL: http://adriannewortzel.com

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17. Jessica Hagedorn, FF Alumn, at Ma-Yi Theater, Manhattan, August 23-Sept. 15

Dear Brilliant Friends & Family,

I want to share exciting news about FELIX STARRO, a new musical that I’m doing with composer Fabian Obispo and director Ralph Peña of Ma-Yi Theater. It’s based on Lysley Tenorio’s haunting short story of the same title, about a famous faith healer from the Philippines who’s fallen on hard times.

Set in 1985, our musical play tracks Felix as he arrives in San Francisco for one last healing mission, determined to change his luck.

We’d love for you to come see it, and celebrate Ma-Yi Theater’s 30th anniversary season with us. For complete details please visit this link:

http://ma-yitheatre.org/

With thanks and all my best,

Jessica

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18. Marisa Jahn, FF Alumn, in Chatham, NY, July 7

OPEN STUDIO SNEEK PEAK | UPSTATE NY
Sun, July 7th (3-8 pm)
BBQ, jacuzzi, cucumber mojitos, artworks-in-progress
3-8 pm | RSVP: hello@studiorev.org
Bring a bottle or something for the BBQ!
432 Slate Hill Road, Chatham NY 12037
At the orange mailbox, turn up Nettleton road. Our sky blue studio is the first driveway on the right. Lost? Call/text Marisa at 917-902-5396.

We are 20 minutes northwest of Hudson and 12 minutes away from Art Omi who is also having a brunch 11-1 and open house (1-5 pm) the same day.

Celebrate the onset of summer and meet the superteam working on a new project that you’ll get to sneak peek: architect and MIT Professor Rafi Segal, acclaimed performance artist Caroline Garcia, the genre-bending documentary filmmaker/artist/writer Alix Lambert, and our long-time collaborator, Oscar and Emmy-winning filmmaker Yael Melamede (SALTY Features).

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19. Clifford Owens, FF Alumn, at The Baltimore Museum of Art, MD, July 14, 2019-January 5, 2020

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

I hope this finds you well this summer!

I’m writing to share a few upcoming events and opportunities.

As some of you know may know, I was born and raised in Baltimore City in 1971 and permanently departed in 1994 to study and pursue a life as an artist. After a quarter-century, my work is coming home to make its first appearance at the Baltimore Museum of Art.

The exhibition, curated by Kathy Siegel, is titled “Every Day: Selections from the Collection” and it includes my 10-foot Vaseline and ground coffee drawing in the Pamela J. Joyner and Alfred J. Giuffrida Collection.

This fall I’ll perform several scores from “Anthology” at the Baltimore Museum of Art, including contributions by two Baltimore-born artists, Derrick Adams and Shinique Smith, and a new “Anthology” score commission from a prominent Baltimore-born-and-based artist.

I’m entering my 20th year of a teaching life. Next month I lead a graduate seminar in the low-residency program at Pacific Northwest College of Art (my first visit to the Pacific Northwest). And this spring I’ll be Guest Faculty at Sarah Lawrence College to teach a performance art studio, which, apparently, is the first performance art studio course offered in the department. I’m also slated to teach a graduate seminar at New York Academy of Art this spring.

On another note, I’m in-between a gallery at the moment. I’m no longer represented by Invisible-Exports (they closed), but I did enjoy working with them for several years.

For a few weeks, I’ve enjoyed some productive home-studio visits (my last studio in-situ was in San Antonio, Texas last fall) and I’d like to schedule more to share the work I made in San Antonio and to talk about an ambitious project: the completion of “Photographs with an Audience,” which I initiated a decade ago, in 2021. I envisage five final future iterations of the project in Baltimore, Chicago, New Orleans, Detroit, and Los Angeles, and the release of a limited edition portfolio of photographs from all twelve iterations of the project and a book publication (my second) of reproductions, essay contributions from photography and performance art history scholars, and interviews with select audience featured in the photographs.

All best,

Clifford

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Goings On is compiled weekly by Harley Spiller

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