Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Semester Break


Check out my cover story
by Rebecca Rafferty
in
ARTVOICES


The semester has come to an end but the show goes on.  Terrence Sanders is a curator and book publisher who is establishing a real presence in the art world, now in Los Angeles, and he is opening the new "Makeshift Museum" in the gallery section of that city this winter.  Along with that he publishes the magazine ARTVOICES, and here he presents my artwork with an interview by our local art critic, Rebecca Rafferty.  Check it out online, and also it will be sold as a magazine in print soon - it is their 9th Anniversary issue, so I am very pleased to be part of this production.  

Now, before we turn the page to the new year, I wanted to share some images and ideas about the practice of the visual arts here at Rochester Institute of Technology.

Program Review



First, we had an engaging opportunity to catch up with what our students have been doing during our recent program review  ( see above with faculty member Christine Shank ).  The reviews created groups of students who might not have been introduced before - and we all looked over our students artworks for the semester with a couple of faculty members.  We are building on our strengths as a college and we invited professors and faculty from other disciplines to come and join in the give-and-take.


Bri Nelson shares her sculpture work-in-progress
during the program review

In the galleries we have had a wonderful cross-section of paintings and prints by Norman Ives who was a well-regarded teacher at Yale University.  Norman Ives was a graphic designer, painter, and printmaker who understood modernism in all of its forms - and employed type in whole or in part in most of the artwork on view.  There is a strength to formalism and we see that in Norman Ive's work - whether it is a painting or a logo like the one we see below.


Norman Ives retrospective
at 
Bevier Gallery and the Vignelli Design Center

Walking over to the NTID Dyer Art Center on campus, I found Danlin Zhao and her wonderful new artwork that she has put together for her Thesis exhibition ( Becoming ) - and it is worth taking the time to go and check it out.  Danlin has a real grasp of what it takes to be an artist, her sculptural works are beautiful and sensitive to behold.



Danlin Zhao upstairs in the Dyer Art Center, at R.I.T.

Finally, down in my classroom in Booth Building, I teach a painting class for non-majors and we had our final reviews for the work done in my class and I found some extremely interesting paintings like this one done by Anna Hall.


Painting by Anna Hall

Every one of my students also created self portraits and there were several which stood out here are two ones that had a good likeness, and some vitality as works of art.  Thank you to my students for a very engaging year!


Painting by Alia


Painting by Alexandra



Friday, May 13, 2016

Graduating


Shwanda Corbett
graduates this week from
the
Studio Arts at R.I.T.

We have a very diverse range of students here in the School of Art, at R.I.T. and this coming week we have graduating ceremonies for many students who we have come to know and work with, and today one of our own students has been featured on the front page of the local paper: The Democrat & Chronicle.  You can find a link here to look at the piece written by James Goodman.  There is also a short video clip of Shwanda working in her studio, take a look and learn..

Here is the link: 

-        http://www.democratandchronicle.com/story/news/2016/05/12/rit-artist-shwanda-corbett-oxford/83869656/

Monday, May 9, 2016

Time for Critique


Final Reviews in A172
School of Art
at Rochester Institute of Technology
May 6, 2016

There was a whole table with food and a whole bunch of people gathered together for the final reviews of the Spring 2016 semester.  What made this gathering unusual was that we had a guest critic visiting on Friday who is an art critic for The New York Times,  and that was Martha Schwendener.  She is regularly in and out of the galleries and museums in the New York City area so she knows her way around the contemporary art scene, and has been writing reviews since the early 1990's.

The group split up into cells, that is a few students and a few guest faculty members to lead the reviews, and we went off into the warren of studios to see the art work and to talk with the student artists.  For many of the visiting faculty - this art was new to them, so they were seeing it with fresh eyes.  A lot of good discussion comes from this, and it isn't limited only to the grad students or upper level undergrads - but all students who have space in A172, or have their work up on the walls to see.



Show and Tell

Each student had a segment of time to explain what they have been doing, and explore the artistic territory with the advisors who came in to see what was happening.  Suggestions were made about the relative value of the artwork on display.  Names of artists to follow were mentioned, and everyone had a chance to have their say.

For the shy artists  in the group, they get over their fears by talking in a conversational way with their advisors.  For the more demonstrative artists, they were able to show their stuff and see how it played to the crowd.. there is always a lot to learn about the studio visit.



Martha Schwendender
guest art critic
checks
her phone

Saturday, May 7, 2016

Martha Schwendender, Visiting Critic


Visiting Art Critic
Martha Schwendender
of the 
New York Times
at R.I.T. this week

Martha Schwendender visited Rochester Institute of Technology on Thursday to give a public talk, which she announced was her "boilerplate" introduction to her work as an art critic for the paper of record, "The New York Times".  At R.I.T. in the past I have invited a variety of art critics to come and visit including Barry Schwabsky from The Nation, Jed Perl who now writes for The New York Review of Books,  Bill Zimmer and Michael Kimmelman who also are associated with The New York Times,
this was over the span of about ten years. 

Martha has also written art reviews for The New Yorker, and Artforum and The Brooklyn Rail among others and she recently received her Ph.D in Art History from the City University of New York, so she knows her way around the art world.  One of her specialties is photography and she has been writing reviews of shows since the early 1990's.


Jasper Johns "The Art Critic"

Early in her talk at R.I.T., Martha offered some highlights of the art critic's life as seen in the creative works of visual artists ( and there is so much to choose from ).  The little sculpture by Jasper Johns features a pair of glasses with two mouths where the eyes should be- and it is a witty clue to his feelings for the art critic.  Being an art critic and getting paid for this work in the digital age is becoming rare indeed, but Martha seems to be doing alright, and I read her work regularly in the paper and am thankful she gets around to seeing as much as she does ( and writes the reviews ).



Painting by Elena Sisto
from her recent show reviewed by Martha Schwendener
in 
The New York Times

What I learned from this talk was that Martha was also engaged by the Occupy movement in New York City and also what that movement came to stand for within the cultural institutions such as The Museum of Modern Art.  Martha talked about shows that have also made a big impression on her and she brought along a selection of images from shows she has recently reviewed.  All in all a very worthwhile talk, and a way to catch up on current events and trends in the Big Apple..

Wednesday, May 4, 2016


Cover of the new May-June 2016
ACS Magazine

Our students were all asked to work up a press release which I sent out to editors and this week our grad student Lingfei Zhao was accepted for publication in the magazine above, edited by Renee LaVerne Rose who works out of Chicago.  Her magazine is a wonderful publication that has a worldwide view of the art world.  Artists are given feature length spreads in this online publication.
Artists like Lingfei Zhao then have their work out for people to see who may want to view the magazine on their tablet or smartphone.

Lingfei's artwork in the majority is figurative, and he also documents his interior life, or the life of the imagination, in very intriguing ways.  In the magazine he has a dialog that is printed out in English and Chinese, and this greatly increases his audience.


Opening page from ACS Magazine
article on the art of Lingfei Zhao
a student at Rochester Institute of Technology

Hopefully you will go online and subscribe to ACS Magazine, because it is a terrific publication, and it is sent to you for free, online.  This kind of e-magazine has become very popular, and a great way of having your artwork viewed by a potential and very large audience.

Congratulations to Lingfei Zhao, and now it is your turn to go out and let people know about the art you create, and the story you want to tell.

Thursday, April 28, 2016


Martha Schwendender
will be
visiting
Rochester Institute of Technology
May 5th

If you read the New York Times for the Friday art reviews, you will have read articles by Martha Schwendener, and she will be giving her art critic talk on May 5th, at 5 pm in the Liberal Arts Auditorium ( A 205 ).  Don't miss it!  All are invited to attend!


Art critic Martha Schwendener (The New York TimesThe New YorkerArtforum, etc.) will be speaking at Rochester Institute of Technology on Thursday May 5th at 5:00 pm in Auditorium A205 in the College of Liberal Arts (building 6). 


Brought to you by the School of Art.

Friday, April 8, 2016

Ready For Take Off


Fine Art studio show 
at
Gallery r
100 College Avenue, Rochester, New York


The six women who participate in the new show at Gallery r are getting ready to take off.  They are about to enter a new chapter in their lives, and we think that R.I.T. has a positive effect on their individual skill levels and on their ability to connect with an audience.  The art scene is more open and willing to take a look, and each of these people have a story to tell with their installations.

Megan Mahaney is the first painter you see when you enter the gallery.  She has powerful paintings in a heightened palette and her figurative work will certainly capture the audience she is looking for.  For this viewer I had to think about the tradition of painting that Megan relates to - and that is an emotional attachment to drama like that of Carravagio, except all of Megan's paintings are centered on a woman's world.  Her paintings have a lustrous surface, but it is really the stories that go on in each work which will capture and hold your attention.  One woman's hair is on fire, while another one ( an Eve figure ) holds a shiny apple while giving birth through a C-Section to a trio of snakes.. Oh My!


Helen's interactive sculpture

Helen Danz has an interactive sculptural installation that allows one to play with the fluorescent forms that are magnetized and grip the large grey steel trapezoids like barnacles on a rock in the ocean.  On one wall there are three distinct stages of Helen's project to take chance sketches and graffiti and make them into something that has a strong sense of color and animation.  Helen is really into the engagement of her audience, and she is moving into a career in Art Therapy.


Paintings by Helen Danz


Shwanda Corbett has video, photos and installations which include three porcelain domes on a plinth on the floor.  The three domes receive a projection from above and the images are of a certain kind of clown.  At our faculty review, Shwanda talked about Charlie Chaplin, but in her work there is also a reference to minstrels and performers in blackface.  Shwanda is the star in all of the rolls she plays in the videos and in the large scale photo portraits where she can be seen in colorful "make-up.


Shwanda Corbett


Shwanda Corbett,
porcelain and projection

Shwanda uses the masking concept in her work, and the colors act like the paints that tribes use to distinguish themselves, and this also is like what one might see in rituals among native peoples of the South Pacific.



Diane Baron with Lauren Miyoko on the back wall to the right

Diane Baron has a variety of artwork on display, and all cross reference nature and the various stages of life and the passing of life, especially in her welded chain sculpture that rises like a snake charmer up and up into the room to end in a metal hook.  Diane also has an accordion book with twigs coming out on top and a wall work that includes decorative paper, found stones, and woodblocks attached to the wall.

Lauren is showing a hairy toy creature, while the drawings on the wall remind me of Edward Gorey. Lauren's artwork is illustrational, and I would love to see how she could build up a scene by using her techniques to build some further atmosphere for her work.



Maria Victoria Savka

Finally, there is a vital set of portraits from Ms. Savka who is also a gifted printmaker and she has something to say in a variety of media - all about the people in her life.  I get the feeling that she is energetic and always on the move and on the lookout for interesting personality and character. Her paintings have a bit of the French artist Redon in them.  This painting above is full of action and one can only speculate on what it all means...